I posted 35 times in June.
There were some announcements last month.
Early in the month, I went to World Science Festival in New York and did a panel. There was coverage of it.
I teamed up with Perrin Ireland and reported from The Bezos Scholars Program at the World Science Festival.
I keep interviewing attendees of ScienceOnline2011 – see the latest Q&As with Bonnie Swoger and John Hawks.
I made sure that the Scientific American Guest Blog was busy all month as well, full of great posts on a diversity of topics – check them all out:
Living Interplanetary Spaceflight Experiment–or Why Were All the Strange Creatures on the Shuttle Endeavour? By David Warmflash
Cell Phones, Cancer and the Dangers of Risk Perception By David Ropeik
Does Quantum Mechanics Flout the Laws of Thermodynamics? By Vlatko Vedral
Thorium, Polonium, Radium, Oh My! Marie Curie and Maggie Gyllenhaal Kick Off the 2011 World Science Festival By Neda Afsarmanesh
Too Hard for Science? Joan Slonczewski–Reshaping Ourselves for Our Changing World By Charles Q. Choi
All about Stories: How to Tell Them, How They’re Changing, and What They Have to Do with Science By Lena Groeger and Perrin Ireland
Too Hard for Science? Seeing If 10,000 Hours Make You an Expert By Charles Q. Choi
Simply Brilliant Science: Creating Healthier Eggs for a Healthier You By Kiyomi Deards
What Does the New Double-Slit Experiment Actually Show? By Matthew Francis
The Renaissance Man: How to Become a Scientist Over and Over Again By Ed Yong
A World Ocean By Kevin Zelnio
To Turn Up the Music, Cochlear Implants Need a Software Update By Allison Bland
It’s Your Virtual Assistant, Doc. Who Is Watson? By Karthika Muthukumaraswamy
Lindau Nobel meeting – courting Minerva with Ragnar Granit By Lucas Brouwers
Too Hard for Science? Regaining the Element of Surprise By Charles Q. Choi
Ant Thrills: Seeing Leaf-Cutter Ants through an Artist’s Eyes By Jessica Wapner
Weinergate: Private Records in a Public Age By Krystal D’Costa
When Cells Discovered Architecture By Jennifer Frazer
What Bats, Bombs and Sharks Taught Us about Hearing [Video] By Bradley Voytek
Stranded Whales on the Key Largo Shore By Michelle Bialeck
Linking Erosional and Depositional Landscapes By Brian Romans
The Power of Theory in Science By Ethan Siegel
From the Shadows to the Spotlight to the Dustbin–the Rise and Fall of GFAJ-1 By Rosie Redfield
Arsenic-Eating Bacteria Have Changed Science Education By Marie-Claire Shanahan
Too Hard for Science? Neutrinos from the Big Bang By Charles Q. Choi
Good Dads and Not-So-Good Dads in the Animal Kingdom By David Manly and Lauren Reid
Stem Rust Ug99–the Agricultural Bully By Tiffany Stecker
Book Review: The Future of Water By Matthew Garcia
The Intelligent Homosexual’s Guide to Natural Selection and Evolution, with a Key to Many Complicating Factors By Jeremy Yoder
#WSF11: The Invisible Language of Smell By Bora Zivkovic and Perrin Ireland
Close Encounters of Science and Medicine By Iwona Fijalkowska
Too Hard for Science? Experimenting on Children Like Lab Rats By Charles Q. Choi
Lindau Nobel Meeting–The Cross-Pollination of Ideas By Christine Ottery
Stick to the Science By Michael E. Mann
Lindau Nobel Meeting–Bearing the fruits of global health research By Christine Ottery
Education Reform in the Wrong Direction: High-Stake Consequences for New York State Teachers and Their Students By Jeanne Garbarino
Lindau Nobel Meeting–Monday’s Researcher: Madhurima Benekareddy by Christine Ottery
Lindau Nobel Meeting–Stressed Mind, Stressed DNA by Christine Ottery
Lindau Nobel Meeting–Beef Bug to Blame for Bowel Cancer? by Christine Ottery
Lindau Nobel Meeting–Ada Yonath: Climbing the Everest with polar bears By Lucas Brouwers
Lindau Nobel Meeting–If HIV Is Attacked, It Adapts By Lucas Brouwers
Lindau Nobel Meeting–Sentences That Win Nobel Prizes By Lucas Brouwers
A Journey in Sharing Science: From the Lab to Social Media and Beyond By Jason A. Tetro
Lindau Nobel Meeting–Joke van Bemmel, Chromatin and Epigenetics By Christine Ottery
Beauty Pageants and the Misunderstanding of Evolution Meet….Again By Susanna Speier
Lindau Nobel Meeting–Evolutionary Chemistry with Jean-Marie Lehn By Lucas Brouwers
Lindau Nobel Meeting–Peter Agre and Torsten Wiesel: Nobel laureate scientific diplomacy builds bridges By Christine Ottery
Lindau Nobel Meeting–Buckminsterfullerene and the Third Man By Lucas Brouwers
Overprescribing the Healthy Elderly: Why Funding Research and Drug Safety is Paramount By Laura Newman
Lindau Nobel Meeting–Cowboy hats and countesses By Lucas Brouwers
Lindau Nobel Meeting–The future of biomedicine By Christine Ottery
Lindau Nobel Meeting–Glowing brainbows By Lucas Brouwers
This month we said good-bye to the USC scientific diving class – Problems Without Passports: Scientific Research Diving at USC Dornsife – written by a whole collection of instructors and students:
Reflections at the Edge of the Pacific Ocean By David Ginsburg
Making a Difference: Environmental Students in Palau By Patrick Talbott and Gabrielle Roffe
Preserving Biodiversity By Wendy Whitcombe
Palau Protects and Conserves By Kirstie Jones
Peleliu: 67 Years after the Battle–a New and Different Conflict By Jim Haw
Last Child in the Reef By Emilie Moore
Just When You Think It Can’t Get Any Better By Genivieve McCormick
Looking Ahead By David Ginsburg
Experiential Learning and Communicating By Jim Haw
Thank You, Scientific Research Diving at USC Dornsife by me.
The South Pacific Islands Survey continues with new posts, written by Lindsey Hoshaw:
One Illness Threatens a Cook Islander’s Way of Life
And we started two new expeditions on the Expeditions blog – first one is from Montana – New Expedition–MSU Student Research with Dinosaur Eggs in China, posted by me.
New season starts with division of egg duties, petrified trees, soybean Popsicles by Betsy Kruk
Beautiful window serves as escape hatch for baby dinosaur by Betsy Kruk
Fossil hunting in China very different than in Montana by Ashley Poust
Incredible Find in Temple Museum, Harrowing Rescue on Crumbly Mudstone By Betsy Kruk
Rock Mapping a Challenge for Biology Student By Amanda Wregglesworth
Go to Landfill, Find a Dinosaur Footprint! By Christi Lorang
We Visit Fishy Relatives, Geology Wonderland By Ashley Poust and Hannah Susorney
The other new Expeditions trip is all about squid, all posts written by William Gilly:
Squid Studies: Back to the Sea of Cortez
Squid Studies: Scientists Seeking and Savoring Squid
Squid Studies: Changing Seas and Shrinking Squid
Squid Studies: Correction, Connections and Calamar
Squid Studies: “It Is Not Down in Any Map; True Places Never Are”–Herman Melville, Moby Dick
Previously in the “Best of…” series:
2011
May
April
March
February
January
December
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
March
February
January
December
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
March
February
January