BBC 6 minute English-Are humans a messy species
Transcript of the podcast
Note: This is not a word-for-word transcript
.Neil:Hello. This is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I’m Neil
.Sam: And I’m Sam
Neil: If you live in a city, you’re probably familiar with this very modern sight: a man walking his dog drops a little black plastic bag into a rubbish bin. Inside the bag is dog poo
Sam: It might make it seem that humans are hygienic creatures – certainly cleaner than dogs, who go to the toilet wherever they want. But is this the whole story
Neil: How do us humans compare with other animals when it comes to keeping ourselves and our environment clean? In this programme, we’ll be asking whether humans as a species are naturally clean and tidy
Sam: In fact, from dumping raw sewage into rivers to littering the streets with trash, humans aren’t always good at dealing with waste
.Neil: While some animals, on the other hand, are instinctively clean
.Sam: Right – cats for example dig a hole to bury their poo
Neil: In the past, humans got rid of their waste by throwing it into the street or into streams and rivers, hoping the water would wash it away
Sam: Out of sight out of mind! That’s a phrase used to say that it’s easier to forget something when you can’t see it
Neil: But this doesn’t always work, as we’ll discover from my quiz question, Sam. In Victorian times, the population of London boomed and so did all the pee and poo being thrown into the River Thames. It got so bad that by the 1850s the awful smell had its own name – but what? Was it ?,A) The Great Stench B) The Great Stink?, or ?C) The Great Smell
.Sam: Ugh! All sounds pretty disgusting, Neil, but I’ll go for A) The Great Stench
Neil: OK, Sam, we’ll find out if that’s right later. Earlier you mentioned cats as examples of animals who hide their waste, but leaf-cutter ants go even further: they kill any dirty ants trying to re-enter the group
Sam: Zoologist, Professor Adam Hart, has spent years studying ants and other clean creatures. Here he is speaking with BBC World Service programme, The Conversation
Prof Adam Hart
Some animals, you’ll be watching, and it is just pouring out of the back end and they don’t seem to care. Other animals will go to quite great lengths to go to a specific area. Some antelope for example will go to a sort of latrine area. It’s really linked to their ecology so quite often animals are using dung and also urine as marking posts and territorial markers to say to other groups of animals and other individuals that, well, this is my territory not yours
Neil: Like cats and ants, antelopes go to great lengths, meaning they try very hard to do something, in this case to leave their poo – or dung – in a specific area, away from their home
Sam: Antelopes leave smells, called territorial markers, secreted in urine, or pee, to tell other animals that an area of land is already occupied
Neil: OK Sam, but just because most of us don’t pee at the bottom of the garden, does that necessarily mean humans are dirtier
Sam: Well, no, not according to psychologist, Dr Michael De Barra. He thinks that human attitudes to cleanliness are related to the problem of infectious diseases, something we’ve all experienced during the Covid pandemic
:Neil: Here is Dr De Barra, explaining more to BBC World Service’s, The Conversation
Dr Michael De Barra
So, in humans it seems like the emotion disgust is a big part of how we deal with infectious diseases problems. It’s characterised by avoidance, by sometimes feelings of nausea and what’s interesting about it is that it is elicited by many of the things that are infectious disease threats in our environment… so that might be particular smells, or particular substances, body wastes, physical signs of infectious disease – coughs, sneezes
Sam: Our natural reaction to something which is dirty, and which therefore may be diseased and harmful to us, is disgust – a strong feeling of dislike or repulsion
Neil: We might feel so disgusted at the sight or smell of human waste that we actually want to vomit – a feeling known as nausea
Sam: These bodily reactions are the immune system’s way of saying: keep away! – this will make you sick
Neil: So, although getting a bit dirty won’t kill you (unless you’re a leaf-cutter ant), human evolution has developed a psychological way of keeping us clean. What’s the matter, Sam? You look a little green
Sam: I am, Neil! All this talk of pee and poo is disgusting! And just image how bad it must’ve been in the old days
Neil: Like in Victorian times before the invention of modern sewers and sanitation. In my quiz question I asked you what people called the awful smell in London in the 1850s
?Sam: And I said it was A) The Great Stench. Was I right
Neil: You were… wrong! In fact, the answer was B) The Great Stink, which stunk up the River Thames all the way to Westminster. It was only when the smell reached the noses of politicians in Parliament that something was done about it
Sam: …so starting another useful phrase – to raise a stink about something, meaning to make a strong public complaint
Neil: OK, let’s recap the other vocabulary, starting with out of sight, out of mind, a phrase meaning that it’s easier to forget something when you can’t see it
.Sam: To go to great lengths means to try very hard to achieve something
.Neil: Territorial markers are smells in animals’ dung or urine marking their territory
Sam: These may fill you with disgust – a feeling of strong dislike or repulsion. Or even give you nausea – the feeling that you are going to vomit
Neil: And that’s all for this stinky edition of 6 Minute English. Join us again soon for more topical chat and useful vocabulary. Bye for now
!Sam: Bye