I’ve got your missing links right here (24 September 2011)
Top picks
In India’s lush Kaziranga National Park, a new policy allows rangers to shoot rhino poachers on sight. As a result, rhinos and tigers are thriving. An absolutely stonking piece of journalism.
Plant RNAs switch genes on and off in mammals. Wow. We really are what we eat.
“Somebody else can clean up this mess.” But no one did.” New study challenges the role of so-called longevity genes
Robert Krulwich’s paean to the awesome bar-tailed godwit, the toughest little bird you’ve never heard of
A useful rape analogy.
Singapore is growing by importing sand, at other nations’ environmental expense
Science “partially retracts” XMRV-chronic fatigue paper, and a nine-lab study fails to confirm the link. More from the NYT
This week a team of London surgeons separated twins joined at the head. How did they do it? Great explainer by Ferris Jabr
Premature particles perplex physicists. Phil Plait pontificates
Data – what the military have and what scientists get to see, from Geoff Brumfiel
Why being relaxed makes us spend more money, by Jonah Lehrer
With “utter disregard for the extraordinary environment”, a shrimp swims through liquid CO2. By Calbeb Scharf
“Don’t start bathing in the blood of virgins just yet,” advises Scicurious. Could a single injection make your older or younger? No. But the science is still awesome.
“In many respects, the history of technology is a history of failed machines”- Alice Bell on how the fridge got its hum
Good debate here on whether journos should ever fact-check content with sources. Hosted by David Kroll.
Science museums are failing grown-ups. And it’s a failure we can’t afford. Spot-on piece by Maggie Koerth-Baker
Brain scanner can recreate movie scenes you’ve watched. What this does do: after recording your brain activity as you watch movies, it can predict what scenes you’re watching later based on your brain activity. What this doesn’t do: record fresh brain activity and tell you what you’re looking at. Cool though.
Pretty. Emission spectra of the elements. Check out thallium and tungsten.
Science/news/writing
“It’s not the bad apples, it’s the bad barrels that corrupt good people.” Philip Zimbardo on evil
Neuroscience of the intense Amazonian hallucinogen ayahuasca. Featuring a vomiting Vaughan Bell
NASA monitors over 20,000 bits of space junk circling Earth?
Heh. 50 Reasons I Reject Evolution
Neutrino stories move faster than the speed of science, by Martin Robbins
Don’t believe what other people think they see. Eyes (and Minds) Deceive: Witness Unreliability Casts Doubt on Death Penalty Rulings.
Newly Discovered Plant Bows Down and Buries Its Own Seeds
“No fewer than seven possible explanations for eggshell color”
The first Aboriginal genome has been sequenced.
Scientists Successfully Induce Hibernation in Animals for the First Time
Chemistry’s 10 grand challenges. Misses out No. 11, which is getting people to care about chemistry.
“Eye movement is one sign that things have gone wrong.” On unvetted drugs & the death penalty
Pack Your Umbrella: Friday’s Weather is Sunny, with a 1-in-21-Trillion Chance of Getting Hit by Orbital Debris
Measles cases in California reach 10-year high, mostly due to unvaccinated kids.
DEET scrambles insects’ sense of smell
Resurrected Woolly Mammoth Protein Proves to Work Well in the Cold
Too Hard For Science? Might investigating brains of conjoined twins helps shed light on consciousness?
How to Resurrect a Terror Croc.
The mind-blowing cost of patent trolling – £500bn since 1990.
Former Trainer Says Killer Whale Captivity Causes Attacks. Or mebbe making an apex apex predator do tricks is bad idea?
“How should we make hard decisions?” asks Jonah Lehrer. I DON’T KNOW, JONAH. WHAT ARE MY OPTIONS?
Stubbornness Increases the More People Tell You You’re Wrong. And thus was the internet explained HT
How do you sequence bacteria that you cannot grow, without relying on Macgyver?
Why does the antlion make a larger deathtrap during the full moon? (Spoiler: We don’t know)
Synchronized Swimming: Patrolling for Pollution with Robotic Fish. We’ve come a long way since Billy Bigmouth
5 antique versions of modern social media – from Edison’s YouTube to Voltaire’s Facebook
Doodle app turns your Kindle into An Etch-a-Sketch
Deborah Blum’s post on Dr Oz is great for this line: “the higher the valence bond number, the grabbier the compound”
41% of primatologists have been bitten by a non-human primate; 10% injured by needles containing bodily fluids/tissue
Global map of the world’s submarine cables
Researchers Find Out How Pigeons Make the “Milk” They Barf Into the Mouths of Their Young. This is all sounding a little “molecular”. I wonder if pigeon milk could make pigeon cheese? Or if pigeon cheese would go with pigeon?
How quirks of language can reveal subtle ‘Daily Mail’ racism. I say “subtle”. It’s all relative.
How do you counter a honeybee’s waggle dance? With a waggle song, of course
On Oct 31, the 7 billionth human being will be born. Where, who?
Bottom of Form
There are nine US medical insurance codes for being attacked by a killer whale. Here are some other good ones.
The brain as a slum – nice metaphor via David Dobbs.
Genomics research by twitter: we need people who’ve had severe altitude sickness.
The Psychology Of Yogurt, or what probiotics can teach us about the mind-body problem
New ways to fund research, including crowdfunding and SciFund.
Heh/wow/huh
A phylogeny of bread clips
Things I like: misrepresenting airline safety cards. “In emergency, throttle your baby. Then grieve”
We really have to start doing this (XKCD on neutrinos)
A swimming feather-star. Utterly mesmeric
Around World In 60 secs on International Space Station. Love the yellow line of the ionosphere
New Yorker cartoon made me laugh.
Beauty in mundanity. A Year of Mornings – how photographers do long-distance friendships
AskReddit’s “Hotel Workers, What’s The Weirdest Thing You’ve Ever Caught Guests Doing?”
Heh. “Scientists assume pupils are listening”
Journalism/internet/society
A journalist’s guide to Google+
A sad but fascinating tale about the human punching bag – a boxer who wasn’t very good but simply couldn’t be knocked out
Jay Rosen versus “he said, she said” journalism at NPR The Guardian live-blogs reading a book. I should live-blog reading their live-blog. No. No I shouldn’t.
“Facebook is killing taste… it’s somehow eluded Zuckerberg that sharing is fundamentally about choosing”
Amazon lets you borrow Kindle books from your local public library
Is Branded Journalism Still Journalism? No. Why not just call it PR?
Is Amazon Running a Sweatshop in Pennsylvania?
A woman next to me on a plane excitedly raved at her husband about this Daily Express headline: NEW ARTHRITIS JAB GIVES HOPE TO MILLIONS. She didn’t read paragraph 18, where you learn that it’s based on mouse experiments, or paragraph 21, which mentions an increased risk of bone cancer.
Nearly 40% of people online look for health info, but 90% think what we find is accurate!
What does getting “off the beaten path” really mean? Great travel blogging.
Astonishingly bad coverage from misogynistic media. Somehow, this study turns into bollocks about bossy women.
Go Further
Animals
- These 'trash fish' are among Earth's most primitive animalsThese 'trash fish' are among Earth's most primitive animals
- These photos are works of art—and the artists are bugsThese photos are works of art—and the artists are bugs
- The epic migration of a 6-foot long, 200-pound catfishThe epic migration of a 6-foot long, 200-pound catfish
- Frans de Waal, biologist who studied animal emotion, dies at 75Frans de Waal, biologist who studied animal emotion, dies at 75
Environment
- Are synthetic diamonds really better for the planet? The answer isn't clear-cut.Are synthetic diamonds really better for the planet? The answer isn't clear-cut.
- This year's cherry blossom peak bloom was a warning signThis year's cherry blossom peak bloom was a warning sign
- The U.S. just announced an asbestos ban. What took so long?The U.S. just announced an asbestos ban. What took so long?
- The most dangerous job? Inside the world of underwater weldersThe most dangerous job? Inside the world of underwater welders
- The harrowing flight that wild whooping cranes make to surviveThe harrowing flight that wild whooping cranes make to survive
History & Culture
- Meet the powerful yokai that inspired the demon king in ‘Demon Slayer’Meet the powerful yokai that inspired the demon king in ‘Demon Slayer’
- A surprising must-wear for European monarchs? Weasels.A surprising must-wear for European monarchs? Weasels.
- Meet the woman who made Polaroid into a cultural iconMeet the woman who made Polaroid into a cultural icon
- Inside the observatory that birthed modern astrophysicsInside the observatory that birthed modern astrophysics
Science
- LED light treatments for skin are trendy—but do they actually work?LED light treatments for skin are trendy—but do they actually work?
- NASA smashed an asteroid. The debris could hit Mars.NASA smashed an asteroid. The debris could hit Mars.
- Humans really can have superpowers—scientists are studying themHumans really can have superpowers—scientists are studying them
- Why engineers are concerned about aging infrastructureWhy engineers are concerned about aging infrastructure
Travel
- Why you should try beach-hopping by boat around Paxos, GreeceWhy you should try beach-hopping by boat around Paxos, Greece
- Mansion museums show visitors the gritty side of the Gilded AgeMansion museums show visitors the gritty side of the Gilded Age
- 2024 will be huge for astrotourism—here’s how to plan your trip2024 will be huge for astrotourism—here’s how to plan your trip