Science, AntiScience and Geology
Lord J-Bar For Democracy, Not Theocracy
Malaria, Bedbugs, Sea Lice, and Sunsets-For the Love of Ocean
Science, AntiScience and Geology
Lord J-Bar For Democracy, Not Theocracy
Malaria, Bedbugs, Sea Lice, and Sunsets-For the Love of Ocean
Posted in Housekeeping
After a whirlwind trip to Thailand and a love affair, Jenna is back in school and her mind is focused on science again. Check out her new pictures from the Herpetology class.
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Posted in Blogging
I mentioned before that Archy is about to get laid off. Now, he explains his educational beckground, work history and acquired skills so, if you are reading this, and you are in a position to find him a new job, please take a look.
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Posted in Blogging
Under attack, Pandagon has been down all day. But you can see here (and re-posted here) what scum of the Earth resides on the political Right in this country. This is a good time to read this again. And please find time to read all ten parts of this series on eliminationism in America. Sensing a long-term, if not permanent loss, the wounded beast of the Right is lashing at everything in sight and they are not shy to use physical force if needed.
Also on the topic, three must-read posts by Liza Sabater: Hell hath no fury like a feminist scorned, Aldon Hynes: In praise of Icarus, and Kagro X on DailyKos: Getting separated from the herd.
Two important and thoughtful posts by Chris Bowers on MyDD: Politics and the Inhuman and Why Attacks Against Bloggers Fail
Interesting discussion in the comments on this post on DailyKos: Has anyone seen Pandagon?, on Ezra’s blog: Competence Matters and on Pharyngula: Edwards for President!. In all three cases, the comments are much more informative than the original posts.
Dave MB: Amanda Marcotte’s Departure.
And if you haven’t already done so, you can read my takes on the initial response by the Edwards campaign – On Edwards, Bloggers, and Religion, and on Amanda’s resignation – Amanda now free to expose the Donohue creature
Also today, Shakespeare’s Sister posted her Announcement:
I regret to say that I have also resigned from the Edwards campaign. In spite of what was widely reported, I was not hired as a blogger, but a part-time technical advisor, which is the role I am vacating.
I would like to make very clear that the campaign did not push me out, nor was my resignation the back-end of some arrangement made last week. This was a decision I made, with the campaign’s reluctant support, because my remaining the focus of sustained ideological attacks was inevitably making me a liability to the campaign, and making me increasingly uncomfortable with my and my family’s level of exposure.
I understand that there will be progressive bloggers who feel I am making the wrong decision, and I offer my sincerest apologies to them. One of the hardest parts of this decision was feeling as though I’m letting down my peers, who have been so supportive.
There will be some who clamor to claim victory for my resignation, but I caution them that in doing so, they are tacitly accepting responsibility for those who have deluged my blog and my inbox with vitriol and veiled threats. It is not right-wing bloggers, nor people like Bill Donohue or Bill O’Reilly, who prompted nor deserve credit for my resignation, no matter how much they want it, but individuals who used public criticisms of me as an excuse to unleash frightening ugliness, the likes of which anyone with a modicum of respect for responsible discourse would denounce without hesitation.
This is a win for no one.
[bold mine]
First reactions are by Benny on MyDD: Shakes Decides to Be Shakes and Sinister Rae on DailyKos: Shakespeare’s Sister Resigns From Edwards Campaign.
Also:
Majikthise: Blogger Marcotte resigns from the Edwards campaign and Edwards’ netroots coordinator Melissa McEwan resigns
Donna Bogatin: John Edwards: Be my MySpace pal!
Matt Browner Hamlin: More Potential Catholic League IRS Problems
Ed Cone: Talking about religion
This guy will run for Congress next time here in NC – Marshall Adame: Why America needs John Edwards as our next President
Phoenix Woman: Sow The Wind, Reap The Whirlwind
Last week I had lunch with a good old friend of mine, Jim Green. He got his degree in Zoology, then a law degree (patent law) and is now coming back for yet another degree in biological and chemical engineering. He did his research on snakes, so we reminisced and laughed about the time several years ago (that was before Kevin joined the lab, which is why I was recruited for this study in the first place) when we were taking blood samples from copperheads.
What we wanted to do is see if snakes have melatonin and if so, if it shows a diurnal rhythm in concentration like it does in other Vertebrates (believe it or not, nobody’s done that yet) and the copperheads were the only snakes he had, about ten of them, each in its own terrarium in a tiny shed outside of campus.
So, we needed to take blood samples at noon and, after a few days of recovery, again at midnight. So, we went in at noon one day. Jim would pick up a snake and hold it by its head. My lab budy Christ Steele was holding the body of the snake. Jim’s advisor Hal Heatwole was taking the blood samples straight from the heart, and I was the “nurse assistant” taking care of needles, syringes, anticoagulant, test-tubes, etc. The whole thing, ten snakes, took perhaps an hour or so and worked out perfectly without any glitches.

About a week later, when we came for a repeat session at midnight, we were starkly reminded that copperheads are nocturnal animals. They were active. And I mean ACTIVE! Due to acute effects of light on depressing melatonin release, we had to take samples in very dim red light, with some highly uncooperative snakes. The process took hours!
At one point one of the snakes got lose in the room and, since the room was practically completely dark, I could not see where it was underneath the cages. So I said “OK, you snake guys figure out where it is and call me back once you have it under control” and I slid out of the door. I got teased for this act of cowardice for years afterwards.
Unfortunately, the melatonin essay repeatedly did not work and we did not have enough blood volume to try with a new kit, so the study was never completed. The snakes got used in other experiments, Jim finished and defended his Thesis and left town and nobody else wanted to try to do a repeat. I hope one day someone will. Perhaps with a non-venomous snake species for a change – makes midnight sampling much safer and easier!
[image]
Ten months later (this was posted first on March 22, 2006), he has a tenure-track position there. Not a bad idea to give a good talk at various places….
Scientists Clone Mice From Adult Skin Stem Cells:
For cells that hold so much promise, stem cells’ potential has so far gone largely untapped. But new research from Rockefeller University and Howard Hughes Medical Institute scientists now shows that adult stem cells taken from skin can be used to clone mice using a procedure called nuclear transfer. The findings are reported in the Feb. 12 online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
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Posted in Science News
If you are going to be in Chicago in early May, consider attending (or at least donating towards) the Seventh Dinner With a Dinosaur, an annual event organized by Project Exploration – a worthy investment in science education for inner-city kids.
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Posted in Science Education
A very, very sweet edition of Grand Rounds is up on Chronic Babe
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Posted in Carnivals
Time is just something that we assign. You know, past, present, it’s just all arbitrary. Most Native Americans, they don’t think of time as linear; in time, out of time, I never have enough time, circular time, the Stevens wheel. All moments are happening all the time.
Robin Green and Mitchell Burgess, Northern Exposure, Hello, I Love You, 1994
Posted in Clock Quotes
Amanda resigned.
You know, if they were going to hurl this kind of crap at me every day, I’d have resigned, too. Not just that they lie about what she said and what that means, they even lie about who they are:
The Catholic League is the nation’s largest Catholic civil rights organization. It defends individual Catholics and the institutional Church from defamation and discrimination.
Yeah, right! Didn’t we just spend the last couple of days showing that this is a loudmouth organization of anal sphincters defending other individual anal sphincters from the – oh, horror! – hearing the truth every now and then.
We do not know the complete story yet, but of course trolls arrived on Kos insisting that she was fired, not that she quit. I don’t know, but I do not expect Amanda to lie – she would have not posted anything until she could post everything.
The dominant mood, though, at comments there and elsewhere is that this means we need to redouble our efforts in countering the rightwing swiftboaters of all kinds, religious nuts included. Especially religious nuts. Not just Donohue-The-Major-Anal-Sphincter.
Also, support Amanda by blogrolling Pandagon and hit her paypal button. If you think she was too mild on Donohue and religion so far, wait until she unleashes her real wrath on them, now that she is free of editorial shackles. This is going to be fun to watch.
Posted in Politics
[Moved to the top of the page. First posted at 1:43am]
Last year, I collected the links to notable posts about Darwin Day and posted them here. That was fun, so I decided to do it again.
I checked the Technorati and Google Blogsearch and took my picks that you can see below. I will update this post several times today and move the post to the top in the evening. If you want your post to appear here, please e-mail me at: Coturnix AT gmail DOT com.
Also, later today, I will update this post with a special announcement (pending the approval by the person in question) – naming the winner of my ten-day Rebuild The Beagle contest. The winner will get a copy of The Open Laboratory.
Update:
The Grand Winner is (drumroll, please…):
Susan Davies
So, the book will be travelling to the UK later today.
If you are new here, check the ten posts about the Beagle contest (Day 1, Day 3, Day 4
Day 5, Day 6, Day 7, Day 8, Day 9 and Day 10) and see what “The Open Laboratory” is all about here.
I decided to split the posts into two groups, the first focusing on yesterday’s Evolution Sunday and the second focusing on today’s Darwin Day.
Here we go (under the fold):
Posted in Blogging, Evolution, History of Science
The 8th Edition of the International Carnival of Pozitivies (ICP) is up on 2sides2Ron.
Posted in Carnivals
Way back when, while I was still an active grad student, I was a student representative on the departmental seminar committee for about four years (going through four faculty members rotating through the position). So, I pushed for a Darwin Day seminar – inviting someone to give a talk that is not all about data, a historian or philosopher, for instance.
So, I managed to get Bob Brandon, from the Philosophy Departament at Duke one year. He talked about multi-level selection, which was great introduction to a couple of more speakers (including David Sloan Wilson himself – that was one of my big scoops) who came later in the semester. Brandon’s talk managed to “soften up” some of the core Dawkinsians in the department to be more receptive to the notion of group selection.
One year, we got Matt Cartmill, from the Biological Anthropology and Anatomy Department at Duke, who explained why Creationism – of any stripe – is bad theology, not just bad science.
And of course, we used our local talent, William Kimler, a biologist turned historian and a Darwinian scholar (student of Will Provine) who gave two lectures while I was there. I can’t wait for his new book to come out. It is “…a book on how Charles Darwin has been used as a symbol of science and the idea of evolution.”
Apparently, Will gave another one this year – I am so glad that the tradition took and that they are continuing with Darwin Day special speakers after all these years.
The first year we did it, we actually had the speaker blow the candles on the cake inscribed (with frosting) with “Happy Birthday, Chuck”.
I wish I could still manage to go to the seminars, but they are at the time of day when I can never go (even when they finally managed to get some speakers that I worked for years, unsuccesffuly, to invite, I had to miss it).
Perhaps next year….
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Posted in Evolution, History of Science
Encephalon #16 is up on Mind Hacks
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Posted in Carnivals
This post is a modification from two papers written for two different classes in History of Science, back in 1995 and 1998. It is a part of a four-post series on Darwin and clocks. I first posted it here on December 02, 2004 and then again here on January 06, 2005:
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Posted in Chronobiology, Clock Tutorials, Evolution, History of Science
OK, this is really ancient. It started as my written prelims (various answers to various questions by different committeee members) back in November 1999, and even included some graphs I drew. Then I put some of that stuff together (mix and match, copy and paste) and posted (sans graphs) as a four-part post here, here, here and here on December 2004. Then I re-posted it in January 2005 (here, here, here and here). Finally, I reposted two of the four parts here on this blog (Part 2 and Part 3) in July 2006.
This all means that all this is quite out of date. The world has moved on, more research has been done, and I have learned a lot since then. But still, today being Darwin Day, this may be a good opportunity to move the Part I here as well and you decide if it is out of date or not….
Part 2 will be reposted here again in a just a few minutes…..
Posted in Evolution, History of Science, Philosophy, Science Practice

Yes, I was never a member of Boy Scouts (no such thing in Yugoslavia, of course), but I will gladly join the Order of the Science Scouts of Exemplary Repute and Above Average Physique, the brand new organization founded by the folks of World’s Fair and the Science Creative Quarterly. Steve of Omni Brain and John Lynch have already signed up.
Above Average Physique? I am super-skinny. But OK, I am tall. And energetic. And have a deep bass voice. That should count…
So, of the possible badges, which ones apply to me? Let’s see…
Posted in Fun, Science Practice
…when painted base-by-base.
Go ahead, rip into them. I know you want to…
No Missing Link? Evolutionary Changes Occur Suddenly, Professor Says:
Jeffrey H. Schwartz, University of Pittsburgh professor of anthropology in the School of Arts and Sciences, is working to debunk a major tenet of Darwinian evolution. Schwartz believes that evolutionary changes occur suddenly as opposed to the Darwinian model of evolution, which is characterized by gradual and constant change. Among other scientific observations, gaps in the fossil record could bolster Schwartz’s theory because, for Schwartz, there is no “missing link.”
Posted in Science News
Doing a thing well is often a waste of time.
Robert Byrne
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Posted in Clock Quotes
Utter Transformative Joy – The Tarheel Tavern #103 is up on Scrutiny Hooligans.
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Posted in Carnivals
…memes. Especially when someone tries to track its spread. Especially when they call me “The Thinking Blogger”, originating from the eponimous Thinking Blog. Tagged by Greg Laden, so it is really quite simple:
1. If, and only if, you get tagged, write a post with links to 5 blogs that make you think,
2. Link to this post so that people can easily find the exact origin of the meme,
3. Optional: Proudly display the ‘Thinking Blogger Award’ with a link to the post that you wrote
I am tagging:
Archy
Jenna
Sir Oolius
Elayne Riggs
Mustang Bobby
Posted in Blogging
A bunch of new links on the Basic Concepts and Terms in Science list (or my ‘enhanced’ list, if you prefer).
Bitch PhD has a new (paying!) gig at Suicide Girls News Blog and starts out with a post explaining the Plan B: How Does This Plan Work?
Revere on Effect Measure: Freethinker Sunday Sermonette: the Edwards blogger dust-up
Ezra Klein, in an op-ed in The Guardian (online only): We want a divider, not a uniter, and more on the topic on his own blog: More Shamefaced Obama Skepticism
Chuckles1 puts it even better: The OTHER Abraham Lincoln
A comment by Elizabeth Edwards – Response to a Rhetorical Analysis – on the MyDD diary: The Problem with John Edwards’ Urban Radicalism (Or you can see the same Diary and the same comment in the context of different other commenters on DailyKos)
Catchawave: The Man Who Saved Bill Clinton’s Ass, An Anniversary 2/12/99
Kos: ‘I Was Wrong’
Digital Journal: John Edwards Blog Has A Very Refreshing Hands-Off Policy
Neil the Ethical Werewolf: Welcome Chris Bowers!
David Neiwert on Orcinus: Donohue and the Jews
Chris Bowers on MyDD is on a quest:
This Isn’t Over
Keep Piling On The Pressure
Donahue As An Example of a Large Problem
First Democratic Campaign Disses Edwards
As I indicated a couple of days ago, I’ll be collecting a big linkfest of tomorrow’s Darwin Day posts.
This is like an annual carnival I like to do.
Make my job easier by letting me know by e-mail when you post one. You know that both Technorati and Google Blogsearch are slow and untrustworthy – get your link in on time!
Update Today’s posts on ‘Evolution Sunday’ are also eligible.
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Posted in Blogging
Yup, like Amanda, Atrios and Ed, I hate the telephone.
That is why I don’t have the cell phone. That is why my landline phone has an answering machine.
If you call and the machine picks up and I actually want to talk to you at that particular moment, I’ll pick up. If not, leave a message and I’ll get back with you….by e-mail.
And if you use a phone with me, stick to the brief exchange of information. Business only. Chatting over the phone is reserved for my mother and my brother only.
I prefer to communicate on my own time, in my own way and do not like the tyranny of the phone ring.
Influence Of The Menstrual Cycle On The Female Brain:
What influence does the variation in estrogen level have on the activation of the female brain? Using functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Jean-Claude Dreher, a researcher at the Cognitive Neuroscience Center (CNRS/Université Lyon 1), in collaboration with an American team from the National Institute of Mental Health (Bethesda, Maryland) directed by Karen Berman, has identified, for the first time, the neural networks involved in processing reward-related functions modulated by female gonadal steroid hormones. This result, which was published online on January 29, 2007 on the PNAS website, is an important step in better comprehension of certain psychiatric and neurological pathologies.
The human brain has a recompense system that predicts different types of reward (food, money, drugs…). The normal functioning of this system plays a fundamental role in many cognitive processes such as motivation and learning. This reward system, composed of dopaminergic neurons(1) situated in the mesencephalon (a very deep region of the brain) and their projection sites(2), is crucial for neural coding of rewards. Its dysfunction can result in disorders such as addictions and is also implicated in various psychiatric and neurological pathologies, such as Parkinson’s disease and schizophrenic disorders. Many studies on animals prove that the dopaminergic(3) system is sensitive to gonadal steroid hormones (estrogen, progesterone). For example, female rats self-administer cocaine (a drug that acts on the dopamine system) in higher doses after estrogens have been administered to them. The influence of gonadal steroid hormones on the activation of the reward system remained to be studied in humans. A better knowledge of this influence should make for better understanding of the differences between men and women, particularly as observed in the prevalence of certain psychiatric pathologies and in vulnerability to drugs, (for which the dopaminergic system plays an important role.) It is known, for example, that the female response to cocaine is greater in the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle(4) than in the luteal phase(5). Moreover, schizophrenia tends to appear later in women than in men.
I’d appreciate it if someone could send me a PDF of the actual paper.
More….
Posted in Science News
Half our life is spent trying to find something to do with the time we have rushed through life trying to save.
Will Rogers (1879 – 1935), New York TImes, Apr. 29, 1930
Posted in Clock Quotes
There are several journals dedicated to biological rhythms or sleep. Of those I regularly check only two or three of the best, so I often miss interesting papers that occur in lower-tier journals. Here is one from December 2006 that caught my eye the other day:
Mammalian activity – rest rhythms in Arctic continuous daylight:
Activity – rest (circadian) rhythms were studied in two species of Arctic mammals living in Arctic continuous daylight with all human-induced regular environmental cues (zeitgebers) removed. The two Arctic species (porcupine and ground squirrel) lived outdoors in large enclosures while the Arctic summer sun circled overhead for 82 days. Would local animals maintained under natural continuous daylight demonstrate the Aschoff effect described in previously published laboratory experiments using continuous light, in which rats’ circadian activity patterns changed systematically to a longer period, expressing a 26-hour day of activity and rest? The outdoor experiments reported here, however, showed that under natural continuous daylight, both species (porcupine and ground squirrel) had specific times of activity and rest on a nearly 24-hour scale, and their activity peaks did not come later each day. The daily rhythms of the two species were recorded using implanted physiological radio capsules, and from direct observation.
You may recall that I wrote about a similar study in a much larger Arctic mammal – the reindeer, which loses the overt behavioral rhythmicity during the long summer. Apparently, these two small mammals, the porcupine and ground squirrel are different.
In the press release, they explain:
It seemed that although the scientists were very careful not to provide time cues of any sort, the animals had managed to latch onto something that gave them regularity.
“I have written for years that experimental animals seem to be hungry for cues, or time signals, to keep on a regular cycle,” Folk said. “So we tried to figure out what cue the wild animals were using, and we could find only one thing that kept a 24 hour periodicity. At Barrow, the sun travels in a circle overhead for 82 days, but at midnight the circle is tipped to the north.
“We postulate that the animals are conscious of where the sun is in the sky and that the nearness of the sun to the horizon could be a clue to animals, and even plants, to keep on a 24-hour schedule.”
This is an interesting hypothesis: not just using the clock to orient by Sun, but also using the Sun posiiton to entrain the clock. I hope this gets tested and that this was not just a case of investigators missing an alternative environmental cue. Changes in the Earth’s magnetic field show daily oscillations and are potentially one of such alternative cues that animals could use. Just like Dr.Folk states in the article, I’d also like to see this study replicated in Arctic birds, as they are known to be sensitive to the magnetic field which they can use for migratory orientation.
Posted in Chronobiology, Clock News, Clock Zoo
It is midnight, Day 10, so the contest is officially over. The winner will be announced tomorrow. But that does not mean that you should abandon reading the Beagle Project blog or helping the Beagle Project get advertised and funded.
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Posted in History of Science

Hold the dates: October 19-20, 2007 for ConvergeSouth ’07 at NC A&T State University. Things are brewing on two coasts to make sure that the 2007 ConvergeSouth is more special than ever.
The Web site and blog will be online by March 1 (crossing fingers).
We are seeking proposals for interactive discussions, DEMOs and how-to sessions in these areas:
1. New media and journalism
2. New creative online models and tools
3. Blogger how-to and blog improvement
4. Music performance (evenings)
5. Original video and film
This year’s ConvergeSouth features a new track: screening original video and and film. Guidelines can be found at the ConvergeSouth ’07 site after March 1, 2007
Simultaneous hat-tips to Sue, Ed and Anton.
You bet I’ll be there.
Posted in Blogging, North Carolina
OK, I have a huge sleep debt to pay back this weekend after a long, tough week of sleep deprivation.
I taught my lab this morning which is always exhilarating yet exhausting.
Today is always a sad day – this is the fourth anniversary of my Dad’s death. I’ll have a sip of slivovitz before bed in his honor and memory.
Regular programming will return whenever I recover, likely by Monday…..
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Posted in Housekeeping
This is interesting:
Study: Sleep linked to brain cell creation:
The Proceedings of the National Academy of Science research on rats found that the hippocampus portion of the brain was directly affected by a lack of sleep for a long period, the BBC reported.
By depriving rats of sleep for 72 hours, the researchers found that those animals consequently had increased amounts of the stress hormone corticosterone, and produced significantly fewer new brain cells in the hippocampus.
When the rats’ sleep patterns were returned to normal a week later, their levels of nerve-cell production remained hindered for two weeks.
The lack of production appeared to prompt the brain to increase its efforts to maintain an appropriate balance.
British sleep expert Dr. Neil Stanley called the finding “interesting,” but said more study on sleep depravation might be useful.
“It would be interesting to see if partial sleep deprivation — getting a little bit less sleep every night than you need — had the same effect,” he told the BBC.
But does that have anything to do with memory?
Posted in Sleep
This book, Darwinian Reductionism by Alex Rosenberg, arrived in the mail today. I do not recall ordering it, and I know it used to be on my amazon.com wishlist, so the only explanation is that this is a gift from one of my readers who chose to remain anonymous.
I happen to know Alex Rosenberg and think that he has vastly evolved in his thinking about biology since he joined the Duke faculty several years ago (at which time he was a very genocentric Dawkinsian). He is also a wonderful person, and I hear a great teacher and advisor. I am really looking forward to reading this book.
Thank you!
Posted in Books
Your results:
You are Poison Ivy
| You would go to almost any length for the protection of the environment including manipulation and elimination.![]() |
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Posted in Fun
This time, like all times, is a very good one, if we but know what to do with it.
Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803 – 1882)
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Posted in Clock Quotes
The very first edition of the Carnival of Mathematics is up on Abstract Nonsense
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Posted in Carnivals
Children’s Sleep Problems Can Lead To School Problems:
It is obvious that young children who have difficulties sleeping are likely to have problems in school. A new study shows that African-American children and children from lower socioeconomic backgrounds fare worse than their counterparts when their sleep is disrupted. The study offers one of the first demonstrations that the relationship between children’s performance and sleep may differ among children of different backgrounds. Conducted by researchers at Auburn University and Notre Dame University, it is published in the January/February 2007 issue of the journal Child Development.
More….
Posted in Science News
Alliance For Science is starting the First Darwin Day Essay Contest for high school students. Go to Neurotopia for all the details about it. I am assuming that this is going to become an annual event.
On the other hand, the rebuilding of the HMS Beagle is going to happen only once, for the Darwin Bicentennial in two years. Of course, once the ship is built and is done with its maiden voyage with all the media spotlight on it, the ship will continue to be used for scientific exploraiton and education for many years to come. [Day 9]
Comments Off on Darwin Day – Essay Contest and Beagle Rebuilding
Posted in History of Science
The call for submission has been issued:
This week’s Tarheel Tavern (#103 for those of you keeping score) comes on the Sunday before Valentines Day. In a declaration of vitality and ecstasy, the theme of the Tavern is Utter Transformative Joy. While all submissions will be received like family, take the opportunity to gush your gushiest goodness for our readers all over North Carolina.
This week’s Tavern will be a week to get your blogfriends and neighbors involved. Invite new voices and feel free to submit the work of other NC bloggers. I’m ready for a deluge.
This week’s Tavern will appear at Scrutiny Hooligans, with a front page link at BlueNC, BlogAsheville, and American Samizdat. Please use this opportunity to spread the word about our amazing NC blogging community.
Send your gear to scrutinyhooligans AT yahoo DOT com – Get it to me by Sunday morning at 7am.
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Posted in North Carolina
Mendel’s Garden #11 is up on Genetics and Health Blog: We Love Genetics… We Love Genetics Not!
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Posted in Carnivals
Time is not like pocket money that you can spend because time is the person spending the pocket money and the pocket money is you.
from “The Dead Fathers Club” by Matt Haig
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Posted in Clock Quotes
Ah, why do I have to be so busy on a news-filled day (no, not Anna Nicole Smith)? I barely saw the computer today. I’d get home, have about 5 minutes before I have to go out again and so on. NPR did not mention Edwards until 4pm or so (that I heard in the car), so when I first got home I only had time to open e-mail, scan about 50 new messages, home in to the one that had the news, open it, get the links and quickly post without more than a quick skim of the statements by Edwards and others, let alone any time to add commentary (except for what the title implied I felt at the time). And then there were comments I did not have time to respond to. And all the other blogospheric responses I was missing…Ah, well. The family is asleep so I’ll try to catch up now.
John McKay is about to become unemployed. I hear political campaigns are hiring bloggers with forceful voices who speak truth to the power. Perhaps anti-mammoth attack-groups will object if he gets hired.
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Posted in Blogging
I and the Bird #42 is up on Neurophilosophy blog. Beautiful rendition, formatted like Charles Darwin’s diaries from the “Beagle”, which – the ship, I mean – as you know (Day 8), is planned to be rebuilt and sailed again, but only if you help.
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Posted in Birds, Carnivals, Evolution, History of Science
John Edwards: Statement about Campaign Bloggers:
The tone and the sentiment of some of Amanda Marcotte’s and Melissa McEwan’s posts personally offended me. It’s
not how I talk to people, and it’s not how I expect the people who work for me to talk to people. Everyone is entitled to their opinion, but that kind of intolerant language will not be permitted from anyone on my campaign, whether it’s intended as satire, humor, or anything else. But I also believe in giving everyone a fair shake. I’ve talked to Amanda and Melissa; they have both assured me that it was never their intention to malign anyone’s faith, and I take them at their word. We’re beginning a great debate about the future of our country, and we can’t let it be hijacked. It will take discipline, focus, and courage to build the America we believe in.
Amanda Marcotte: About My Personal Blog
My writings on my personal blog Pandagon on the issue of religion are generally satirical in nature and always intended strictly as a criticism of public policies and politics. My intention is never to offend anyone for his or her personal beliefs, and I am sorry if anyone was personally offended by writings meant only as criticisms of public politics. Freedom of religion and freedom of expression are central rights, and the sum of my personal writings is a testament to this fact.
Melissa McEwen: My Words:
Shakespeare’s Sister is my personal blog, and I certainly don’t expect Senator Edwards to agree with everything I’ve posted. We do, however, share many views – including an unwavering support of religious freedom and a deep respect for diverse beliefs. It has never been my intention to disparage people’s individual faith, and I’m sorry if my words were taken in that way.