Category Archives: Carnivals

Brand spankin’ new carnivals!

Carnival of the Arid #1 is up on Coyote Crossing. Get all your deserted bloggy goodness all in one place.
A new carnival is in the making – Diversity in Science – covering the minorities in science and engineering. February being the Black History Month, the inaugural edition of the carnival will have a special focus on African American experience in the world of science. Deadline is Friday, February 20th. DNLee will host the first edition on Tuesday, February 24.

ScienceOnline’09 – Saturday 3:15pm – Blog carnivals

scienceonline09.jpg
The very first blog carnival was conceived right here, in Chapel Hill, some four-five years ago or so. Since then, the idea took off and there are now thousands of blog carnivals, some generalist, some regional, but most are topical with topics ranging from food to sports to politics. But, probably due to the funny name, new bloggers and observers are often baffled at the concept. I thought it would be a good idea to have a session that explains the concept of the carnival, specifically how the carnivals related to science, nature and medicine are somewhat different from other kinds of carnivals, and why they are Good For You.
Well, there are two people who have spent a lot of time studying and writing about science-related carnivals. I am one of them (read this for the latest, as well as for the links to older material) but as an organizer I did not want to tie myself down with actually leading the session. The other one is Mike Bergin, so he was the obvious choice to invite to lead this session – Blog carnivals: why you should participate.
Mike has written probably the most comprehensive guide to blog carnivals ever – a must read if you intend to participate in, host or start a carnival. So, in his session, he delivered – a good explanation of what a carnival is, how to approach it as a new blogger (or an old blogger for that matter) and why carnivals are an important aspect of the blogosphere.
Science-related carnivals are similar to popular science magazines, or, in some cases, even to lightly peer-reviewed journals. A well-maintained archive of a carnival is like a human-managed search engine on the topic: you can use it to start your search of a topic and how science blogosphere covered it at the moment it was hot news. This function will become more and more important in the future, as blogosphere becomes older.
Sure, you can go to Google or Technorati and search blogs for a topic, but what you’ll get are millions of hits, most of them simple links or copy+paste jobs – useless waste of time. A carnival will contain the best examples of blog coverage of the topic and the included posts will often also contain links to other worthwhile coverage of the same topic – thus a good start for a smart, targeted search. Not to mention how much more fun it is to read stuff with a human touch and an editorial hand as compared to just using an automated, soulless application.
But carnivals have several other functions. And I was happy to see some of them mentioned in other sessions at the conference.
For instance, many bloggers use carnivals for self-discipline in their blogging. Yes, you post LOLcats and YouTube videos most of the time, but once every week or two you make yourself sit down and do some research and write a serious, carnival-worthy post, just so you can submit it to your favourite carnival.
Furthermore, the existence of a particular carnival may make a blogger get outside of regular topics and explore something different. For instance, The Giant’s Shoulders has provoked many science bloggers to start digging into the history of science and writing posts about classical papers or historical concepts in science. This was, I understand, stressed strongly in the ‘History of Science’ session that day.
One function of carnivals that many appreciate the most is the community building it enables. For intance, in her analysis of the connectivity of science blogs, Christina Pikas discovered an unusually tight cluster of female scientist blogs. Several of those bloggers were present at the conference and, in a few sessions, all credited Scientiae carnival as one of the key community-building tools.
We could also see (and hear, oh did we ever!) that marine bloggers are also a tightly-knit community. In another session (on blogging networks, for instance) they mentioned that Carnival of the Blue is a key tool for building their community, discovering and introducing new marine biology bloggers, introducing each other and organizing events (even if it’s The Invertebrate War – a wonderful community-building tool in itself).
I And The Bird was mentioned as an important tool for building communities in the ‘Nature blogging’ session as well. A carnival similar to Scientiae but focused on minorities in science may come out of discussions at the conference as well.
Finally, usually around Christmas when everyone is either busy or offline, some carnivals suffer gaps or start appearing dead – managing them takes work! The discussions at the conference led to appeals to rescue some of those, with immediate results – Circus of the Spineless has a new manager and will re-start publishing on Monday. Likewise, Tangled Bank (the carnival equivalent of Nature) is about to stage a comeback.
I hope that Mike’s session has informed new people about the importance of carnivals and spurred others to revive old or start new ones.
More coverage of this session:
10000birds: Talking Blog Carnivals at ScienceOnline09
Nature Blog Network: What is a Blog Carnival?
Deep Thoughts and Silliness: Semi-live Blogging Scienceonline09: Day 1
Living the Scientific Life: What Happened to Tangled Bank?
Living the Scientific Life: Science Blog Carnivals: Another Endangered Species
Other sessions in this time-slot that I missed:
Open Notebook Science:
bjoern.brembs.net: ScienceOnline09: Open Notebook Science
Highly Allochthonous: ScienceOnline Day 1: generalised ramblings
Science in the open: The integrated lab record – or the web native lab notebook
Art and science — online and offline:
The Flying Trilobite: ScienceOnline09 – Art & Science afterword
Ideonexus: ScienceOnline09: Science and Art
Bioephemera: Art vs. Science, Part One: Semiconductor
The Flying Trilobite: Art & Science at ScienceOnline ’09 discussion continues…
Expression Patterns: ScienceOnline09 – Day 2
Nobel Intent: ScienceOnline 09: History, art, and science
Anonymity, Pseudonymity – building reputation online:
HASTAC blogs: Liveblogging ScienceOnline ’09: Anonymity and Pseudonymity – Building Reputation Online
Knowledge Sharing: ScienceOnline’09: Anonymity, Pseudonymity
Confessions of a Science Librarian: ScienceOnline ’09: Saturday summary
Christina’s LIS Rant: Science Online ’09: Saturday PM
Extreme Biology: Anna’s Favorite Moment from Science Online ’09
The blog/media coverage linkfest is growing fast (perhaps start at the bottom and work your way up, posting comments on the way and saying Hello to your new friends), there are ongoing discussions on FriendFeed and new pictures on Flickr. Also, if you were there, please fill up this short form to give us feedback, so we can make next year’s meeting even better.

Circus of the Spineless – call for submissions

Circus of the Spineless is back! Under the new management of Kevin Zelnio, this lovely carnival will re-start this month.
The next edition will be this Monday, February 2nd, on The Other 95% so send in your entries (kzelnio at gmail dot com) on all things invertebrate, anything carnival-worthy that you have written since August 2008!

Today’s carnivals

Berry Go Round #13 is up on Watching the World Wake Up

Today’s carnivals

Carnival of Evolution #8 is up on Biochemicalsoul
The fifty-ninth Four Stone Hearth is up on A Very Remote Period Indeed
Friday Ark #228 is up on Modulator

Today’s carnivals

104th Skeptics’ Circle: The Skepticism Review and Education Program Edition…..is up on Space City Skeptics
Carnival of the Liberals #83: Obacalypse Edition is up on And Doctor Biobrain’s Response Is…

Today’s carnivals

Grand Rounds, totally Babelicious! Vol. 5 No. 19, are up on ChronicBabe
Carnival of the Green # 164! is up on GetWithGreen
The 161st Carnival of Homeschooling is up on Life on the Road

Today’s carnivals

Carnival of Space #87 is up on The Martian Chronicles
Friday Ark #227 is up on Modulator

Today’s carnivals

I and the Bird #92 is up on The Marvelous in Nature
Change of Shift: Vol. 3, Number Fifteen is up on Emergiblog

Today’s carnivals

Hourglass VII, the monthly carnival of the biology of aging, is up at brain health hacks
Grand Rounds 5:18: Ten Suggestions For Healthcare Reform, hosted by Dr.Val, now available on MedPage Today

Today’s carnivals

The Giants’ Shoulders #7 is up on The Questionable Authority
Encephalon #62 is up on The Mouse Trap
Gene Genie #42 is up on Genetic Future
Friday Ark #226 is up on Modulator
Carnival of the Green #163 is up on SustainaBee

Praxis Blog Carnival – Your Graduate Guide To Succeeding In 2009

Praxis #6 is up on Podblack Cat

Today’s carnivals

Four Stone Hearth (58th Edition) is up on Moneduloides
Skeptics’ Circle #103 is up on Bug Girl’s Blog

Today’s carnivals

Carnival of the Liberals # 82 is up on Accidental Blogger
The 159th Carnival of Homeschooling is up on Alasandra’s Homeschool Blog

Today’s carnivals (and calls for submissions)

The next edition of Praxis will be on January 15th 2009, at the Pod Black Cat.
There are only 2 days left until the deadline for the 7th edition of The Giant’s Shoulders, to be held at The Questionable Authority.
Next Carnival of the Liberals will be on Accidental Blogger tomorrow, but you still have a couple of hours left until the submission deadline.
And in the meantime, check out Carnival of the Green #162 now up on Teensy Green and the latest Grand Rounds Vol. 5 No. 17 up on In Sickness & In Health.

Carnival of the Arid – call for submissions

Did you know that the largest desert on Earth is Antarctica? And the second largest is Arctic? And only then comes Sahara!
Well, I knew that because Hal Heathwole taught a Desert Ecology course that many of my buddies in grad school took. But if you don’t believe me, check out the Wikipedia page about deserts.
And then, don’t stop at that. Do you have a blog? If not, start one. If yes, sit down and write a post about a desert. Then send it to the very first edition of the Carnival of the Arid:

Submissions should have something to do with a desert somewhere in the world. (If you’re not sure whether your work is desert-related, check out this definition at Wikipedia, and if you’re still not sure, send it in anyway.) Submissions can be scientific in nature, or history, or travelog. Images are welcome, photographic or otherwise. Discussions of culture and politics are welcome if they’re desert-related. The one restriction, other than geographical, is that — at least when I’m compiling it — paeans to destroying the desert probably won’t make it. (Developers and ORVers take note.) Paeans to preserving or protecting the desert are fine, as are alerts of current pressing issues.

If you are not sure about participating in a carnival, read this first. Then tune in on Saturday for the session Blog carnivals: why you should participate at ScienceOnline’09 and you may change your mind.

Today’s carnivals

The Best of Anthro 2008 Prizes, a kind of an annual carnival, is up on Neuroanthropology
Friday Ark #225 is up on Modulator

Today’s carnivals

I and the Bird #91 is up on From the Faraway, Nearby

Today’s carnivals

Mendel’s Garden No. 27 is up on Another Blasted Weblog
The latest Carnival of Education is up on Right Wing Nation

Today’s carnivals

15th Monthly edition of the blog carnival Linnaeus’ Legacy is up on Greg Laden’s blog.
Grand Rounds Vol.5 No.16 are up on Edwin Leap.
Carnival of Homeschool: Week 158 – The 3rd Anniversary is up on Why Homeschool

Today’s carnivals

20th Carnival of the Blue is up on Biomes Blog
Carnival of the Green #161 is up on Tao of Change (a blog very local to me, here in Carrboro, NC).
Cabinet of Curiosities #12 is up on Walking the Berkshires
Edition #12 of Berry-Go-Round is up on Foothills Fancies
Festival of the Trees # 31 is up on Rock Paper Lizard
Encephalon #61 is up on SharpBrains
Change of Shift Volume Three – Number Thirteen is up on Nurse Rached’s Place
Four Stone Hearth the New Year edition is up on Testimony of the spade
Gene Genie #41 is up on ScienceRoll
Cancer Research Blog Carnival #17 is up on Blind.Scientist
Carnival Of Space #83 – The Antipodean Edition is up on Astroblog
The 46th Carnival of Mathematics is up on Walking Randomly
Medicine 2.0 Carnival #35 is up on ScienceRoll

Call for submissions for ‘Praxis’ and ‘The Giants’ Shoulders’

The next edition of Praxis will be arriving on January 15th 2009 at Pod Black Cat.
The 7th edition of The Giant’s Shoulders will be held on January 15th 2009 at The Questionable Authority.
Start submitting your entries.

Today’s carnivals

The 31st edition of the Festival of the Trees is up on Rock Paper Lizard
Friday Ark #224 is up on Modulator

Today’s carnivals

The most awesome January Scientiae is up on Thesis – with Children
Carnival of the Liberals #81 is up on Rust Belt Philosophy

Today’s carnivals

Edition #12 of Berry-Go-Round is up on Foothills Fancies
Grand Rounds 5.15: At the interface of evolution and medicine are up on Moneduloides
Carnival of the Green is up on Ruscombe Green
Carnival of the Elitist Bastards: Stardate 62453.9 is up on Submitted to a Candid World
Friday Ark #223 is up on Modulator

Today’s carnivals

Four Stone Hearth #26 is up on The Greenbelt
Carnival of Space Week #84 is up on Next Big Future
Grand Rounds 5.14 are up on Highlight HEALTH

Today’s carnivals

Encephalon #61: Brain & Mind Reading for the Holidays is up on SharpBrains
Friday Ark #222 is up on Modulator
159th edition of the Carnival of The Green is up on Lighter Footstep

Today’s carnivals

The 102nd Skeptics’ Circle: [Bleeping] Edition is up on Happy Jihad’s House of Pancakes
The 202nd Carnival of Education is up on Steve Spangler’s blog
The 155th Carnival of Homeschooling is up on Small World

Today’s carnivals

The Giant’s Shoulders #6 is up on Rigorous Trivialities
The December edition of Oekologie is up on Greg Laden’s blog
Carnival of the green #158 is up on The christian environmentalist

Praxis

Praxis #5 is up on Effortless Incitement

Today’s carnivals

Molecular and Cell Biology Carnival #4 is up on The Daily Transcript
Gene Genie #41: Carnivalome – is up on ScienceRoll

Don’t forget to submit your posts for these carnivals!

Have you written something about the world of/in science since November 15th? Next edition of Praxis will be on Effortless Incitement on December 15th.
Have you written a History of Science post lately? Next edition of The Giant’s Shoulders will be on Rigorous Trivialities also on December 15th.

Today’s carnivals

I and the Bird #90: Christmas Count Tally Rally – is up on Jeffrey A. Gordon
December Change of Shift is up on Marijke: nurse turned writer
Friday Ark #221 is up on Modulator

Today’s carnivals

Linnaeus’ Legacy No. 14: A Carnival of Diversity, is up on Agricultural Biodiversity Weblog
Carnival of Education, #201 is up on Scheiss Weekly
Carnival of Homeschooling #154: Anniversary Gifts, is up on The Daily Planet

Today’s carnivals

Hourglass VI: A carnival of biogerontology is up on Ouroboros
Encephalon 60, A Neuroscience Blog Carnival, is up on Living the Scientific Life
Grand Rounds 5:12 – Healthcare Reform Q&A – is up on Sharp Brains

Today’s carnivals

Festival of the Trees #30 is up on A Neotropical Savanna
The 16th Edition of the Cancer Research Blog Carnival is up on Bayblab

Today’s carnivals

The Totally Hot December Scientiae is up on On Becoming a Domestic and Laboratory Goddess
Friday Ark #220 is up on Modulator
79th Carnival Of The Liberals is up on Capitol Annex

Today’s carnivals

Carnival of Evolution #6 is up on Observations Of A Nerd
Mendel’s Garden #26 is up on A Free Man
Skeptics’ Circle 101: The African Edition, is up on Ionian Enchantment

Today’s carnivals

BONEYARD #26: “My Favourite Museum” – is up on Traumador the Tyrannosaur
Carnival of the Blue #19 is up on WaterNotes
December 2008 History Carnival is up on Frog in a Well
The 54th issue of the Four Stone Hearth Anthropology Blog Carnival is up on Cognition and Culture
The 153rd Carnival of Homeschooling is up on Po Moyemu–In My Opinion

Today’s carnivals

Berry Go Round # 11 is up on Catalogue of Organisms
Carnival of Elitist Bastards, VIII is up on Cafe Philos
Carnival of the Green #156 is up on Healthy Child Healthy World

Today’s carnivals

MetaCarnival: Volume One, Number 2 is up on Emergiblog

Today’s carnivals

Friday Ark #219 is up on Modulator
Change of Shift Volume Three, Number Eleven is up on RehabRN

Today’s carnivals

I and the Bird #89 is up on Bird Ecology Study Group
The 152nd Carnival of Homeschooling is up on The Common Room

Today’s carnivals

Grand Rounds 5:10 are up on Canadian Medicine
The 59th edition of Encephalon is up on Ionian Enchantment

Today’s carnivals

Carnival of Space #80 is up on Starts With A Bang!
Carnivalesque 45 – a blog carnival of Ancient and Medieval findings – is up on The Cranky Professor
Friday Ark #218 is up on Modulator

The 100th Skeptic’s Circle!

The round-number edition is up on Respectful Insolence.

Today’s carnivals

The 24th edition of the Four Stone Hearth is up on Moneduloides
Gene Genie Edition #40 is up on Human Genetics Disorders

Today’s carnivals

Carnival of the Liberals #78 is up on Greg Laden’s blog
The latest Carnival of Journalism is up on One Man and His Blog
The 151st edition of the Carnival of Homeschooling is up on Tami Fox’s Thought and Views

Today’s carnivals

Carnival Of The Green #154 is up on Fake Plastic Fish
Grand Rounds: 5.9 are hosted by Dr.Deb

Oekologie is back!

Oekologie #19, after several months of a break in this carnival, is up on The Infinite Sphere