Sciency Wiency

Month

August 2012

104 posts

angryintellectual:

textpostsrus:

The human body recreates itself every six months, nearly every cell and bone dies and is replaced.

You are not who you were last September.

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Internets, y u always exaggerate?!

Here’s some proof that this isn’t true. Some cells NEVER regenerate. Don’t believe me? This person agrees too.

I know, I know, I wanted to be the Doctor, too…

Aug 31, 201246,635 notes
#urban legends #myths #internet #exaggeration #cells #regeneration

Read More →

Aug 31, 20121 note
#personal #off topic #seriously don't read
Aug 31, 20122,702 notes
Aug 30, 2012103 notes
Play
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Aug 30, 20128,027 notes
Aug 30, 20124 notes
Aug 30, 20122,583 notes
Breaking: Obama Approves Arctic Drilling  → biologicaldiversity.org

foreverliberal:

I am absolutely shaking with rage.

— Brittany

Aug 30, 2012313 notes
“Human beings took our animal need for palatable food … and turned it into chocolate souffles with salted caramel cream. We took our ability to co-operate as a social species … and turned it into craft circles and bowling leagues and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. We took our capacity to make and use tools … and turned it into the Apollo moon landing. We took our uniquely precise ability to communicate through language … and turned it into King Lear.

None of these things are necessary for survival and reproduction. That is exactly what makes them so splendid. When we take our basic evolutionary wiring and transform it into something far beyond any prosaic matters of survival and reproduction … that’s when humanity is at its best. That’s when we show ourselves to be capable of creating meaning and joy, for ourselves and for one another. That’s when we’re most uniquely human.

And the same is true for sex. Human beings have a deep, hard-wired urge to replicate our DNA, instilled in us by millions of years of evolution. And we’ve turned it into an intense and delightful form of communication, intimacy, creativity, community, personal expression, transcendence, joy, pleasure, and love. Regardless of whether any DNA gets replicated in the process.

Why should we see this as sinful? What makes this any different from chocolate souffles and King Lear?”
—Greta Christina (via histrionicintrovert, sexisnottheenemy) (via harlowsmonkeys) (via thehistorydetective) (via buttergin) (via dederants) (via ladybonerforvangogh) (via up-seventeen-steps) (via skyoflight) (via madlori) (via phoenixsleeps) (via emmagrant01) (via holzmantweed)
Aug 30, 20125,255 notes

insufferablebastard replied to your photo: insufferablebastard: sciencywiency: …

Ah well… No doubt thoughts very close to this passed through his, and many other scientists’ minds…!

I agree. Unfortunately, I think the community of intellectuals, scientists, skeptics, et al have agreed that it’s their/our responsibility to take the high road and not commit such mud-slinging antics. It was a little liberating to imagine for a few minutes that one of them/us broke the rules, though!

Aug 30, 20121 note
Aug 30, 201242,208 notes
Aug 30, 2012145,753 notes
Aug 29, 20122 notes
Aug 29, 2012571 notes
Aug 29, 2012
#im-surprised-someone

College “officially” starts for me tomorrow, for the first time in 5 years.

I am so fucking terrified that I won’t be enough for all of my ambitions and lofty goals.

Aug 29, 20122 notes
#personal #college #physics #anthropology #life
Aug 29, 20128 notes
Aug 28, 20124,794 notes
Aug 28, 20121,178 notes
It's Okay To Be Smart: Feet → itsokaytobesmart.com

jtotheizzoe:

Let Me See Your Body Talk

Body language is just plain fascinating. As much as we like to believe that we are in conscious control of the finer points of human communication, we are really slaves to the silent expanses of our brain. So much information is communicated via our bodies, and you’d be…

Aug 28, 2012240 notes
Aug 27, 2012150 notes
Paleo-politics: The really long view → maddowblog.msnbc.com

From The Maddow Blog:

Doing some research recently on African-American voting patterns, I came upon this map of American ancestry from the U.S. Census (pdf):

image

And it reminded me of a mindblower of a political explanation that I meant to share here.

This is long, so meet me after the jump…

Looking at the map above, you notice the swath of African-Americans (purple) running through the southeast. Something I hadn’t heard of but is apparently relatively common knowledge is that that pattern in the population is referred to as the Black Belt.

That may seem a little coarse, but it actually refers to the color and richness of the soil.

I looked for maps of soil color, but if such a thing exists, I wasn’t able to find it. The clearest picture of soil distribution matching that pattern was this map of “soil orders“ suggesting ultisols and/or vertisols having something to do with that color:

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This National Science Foundation lesson on soil orders offers a more detailed version and settles the question.

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Vertisols are definitely black. (pdf) (Ultisols, not so much (pdf).)

Our friend, the google, shows how that pattern manifests today in the form of farms making use of that rich soil that comprise that lighter colored swirl.

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View Larger Map

Farms are actually the point, because while Black Belt may have been a reference to black soil, that’s not to say the Black Belt doesn’t also have racial meaning. Pretty much every source one checks cites this explanation from Booker T. Washington’s 1901 autobiography Up From Slavery:

…The term was first used to designate a part of the country which was distinguished by the color of the soil. The part of the country possessing this thick, dark, and naturally rich soil was, of course, the part of the South where the slaves were most profitable, and consequently they were taken there in the largest numbers. Later and especially since the war, the term seems to be used wholly in a political sense—that is, to designate the counties where the black people outnumber the white.

That “political sense” Washington refers to includes an electoral sense as well. Slave-descendant voters in Black Belt counties leave a blue Democratic voting stripe through otherwise red states, seen especially vividly in this New York Times county map of the 2008 election results:

image

I also ran into this voting pattern described as “the cotton vote.” As data became available from the 2008 election, aligning a map of the blue strip of Obama-voting Black Belt counties with a map of cottom production from 1860 (!) revealed a remarkable correlation:

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I already think that’s mindblowing, but that’s not even the mindblowing part. The mindblowing thing is that what’s really responsible for this phenomenon of modern politics is the still-forming North American coastline of 100 million years ago.

From Deep Sea News earlier this summer:

“During the Cretaceous, 139-65 million years ago, shallow seas covered much of the southern United States. These tropical waters were productive–giving rise to tiny marine plankton with carbonate skeletons which overtime accumulated into massive chalk formations. The chalk, both alkaline and porous, lead to fertile and well-drained soils in a band, mirroring that ancient coastline and stretching across the now much drier South. This arc of rich and dark soils in Alabama has long been known as the Black Belt.”

Behold! Your late Cretaceous coastline and future Democratic strongholds:

image

Oh, what? You’ve still got some unblown mind left? I have a little more.

The map above represents 75 million years ago. Dr. Ron Blakey of Northern Arizona University actually offers us several maps in the late Cretaceous range. But why would that time period be particularly relevant? I find two explanations. One is that the Cretaceous was a boom time for the sort of plankton that would eventually become the Black Belt. 

The other explanation is that the Cretaceous ended when, 65 million years ago, an asteroid (or asteroids) slammed into the earth, right across the future-Gulf of Mexico at the tip of the Yucatan Peninsula. Not only did the impact and resulting fallout from that asteroid kill the dinosaurs, it also wiped out huge quantities of marine life, including many of the “tiny marine plankton with carbonate skeletons” (I’m guessing some version of Coccolithophore? Anyone?) that would become the rich soil that slaves would farm on land their ancestors would inhabit in voting districts that would favor Democratic candidates around the turn of the second millennium of the Common Era.

Below is a map of the Chicxulub Crater, the crater left by the asteroid 65 million years ago, showing its location at the end of the Yucatan Peninsula. It looks like a topographical map, but actually it’s a Bouguer gravity anomaly map. The best explanation I could find for gravity anomaly maps is from this Earth Observatory page from NASA.

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I think the idea is that the impact created ridges of higher density, which show up as gravity anomalies. As ever, any insights and expertise you can offer on anything in this post is greatly appreciated.

Also, the more I researched this, the more I ran into people who’d already done portions or variations of it. I tried to include as many links as I could to previous work. Credit also to Allen Gathman for the cotton vote connection.

Article By Will Femia

Don’t TL;DR. This is actually pretty interesting.

Aug 27, 201243 notes
Aug 27, 2012509 notes
It's not the vaccines → whyfiles.org

Speculations on the cause of autism, complimented by the truth about the study that claimed vaccines may be the cause. 

[Read on…]

Aug 27, 2012
#autism #vaccines #science
Distinct features of autistic brain revealed in novel analysis of MRI scans → sciencedaily.com

“The new findings give a uniquely comprehensive view of brain organization in children with autism and uncover a relationship between the severity of brain-structure differences and the severity of autism symptoms,” said Vinod Menon, PhD, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and of neurology and neurological sciences, who led the research.

[Read on…]

Aug 27, 2012
#autism #neuroscience
Aug 27, 20121 note
#tumblrcloud
“Politics is for the moment. An equation is for eternity.” —

Albert Einstein

Something to keep in mind while weighing the importance of the “fruits” of political convention season.

(via jtotheizzoe)

Aug 26, 2012294 notes
#you should really be following this guy.
Aug 26, 2012552 notes
Fun fact of the day

the-conqueror-worm:

I am the exact same height as Nikola Tesla was. (6”6’) 

Holy shit like I knew he was tall but I didn’t realize he was taller than my husband (who stands at 6’4”). 

That’s freaking awesome. As usual, Tesla. 

Aug 25, 20123 notes
With Love, Yours Truly: Thinking about the future and what not…..But there’s one question... → sunshineeeeloveee.tumblr.com

sunshineeeeloveee:

Thinking about the future and what not…..

But there’s one question that perhaps looms biggest on your mind, and maybe on the minds of your friends and family, too: What are you going to do with that degree?

Let’s consider the obvious answer first. Many people who study anthropology as…

For those who have the same issues as me!

Aug 25, 20123 notes

yellow-eyes-started-this:

tetheredtay:

I can never look at my biology textbook without laughing because of this fuckin praying mantis

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he’s like SUP BITCHES LET’S DO SOME SCIENCE

I REPRESENT SCIENCE AND IM HERE TO FUCK SHIT UP. 

Aug 25, 201259,990 notes
Aug 25, 2012117 notes
Fair warning.

Chances are, I’m going to be reblogging something you’ve posted in the past. I started a secondary personal blog, and as you know, the reblog will show up under my URL, not my secondary account’s. Basically, I’m going to be going through and reblogging all the things I can’t blog under this account (because I’d be off topic.)

If you want a glimpse into my mind and not into my field of study, feel free to add me at this location.

Aug 24, 2012
Aug 24, 20125 notes
“If we assume 100 billion stars per galaxy, the total number of stars in the observable universe is 100 billion x 100 billion or 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000. How big is this number? Visit a beach. Run your hands through the fine-grained sand. Imagine counting each tiny grain as it slips through your fingers. Then imagine counting every grain of sand on the beach and continuing on to count every grain of sand on every beach on Earth. If you could actually complete this task, you would find that.” —my motherfucking astronomy book  (via brothersports)
Aug 24, 20122 notes
That awkward moment

when you realize both of the majors you want to pursue (anthropology and astrophysics) are largely viewed by the populace as a waste of resources and time, and that this fact might render any higher education I receive as worthless when it comes time to enter the job field. 

Fuck. 

image

Aug 24, 20122 notes
#astronomy #physics #anthropology #college #science
Aug 24, 2012284 notes
Aug 24, 2012567 notes
Aug 23, 201268,031 notes
Aug 23, 2012197 notes
“Statistically, the probability of any one of us being here is so small that you’d think the mere fact of existing would keep us all in a contented dazzlement of surprise.” —Lewis Thomas, “On Probability and Possibility” (via ikenbot)
Aug 23, 20121,086 notes
#my philosophy #in one quote
Aug 23, 2012457 notes
#back to school #college
Aug 23, 2012459 notes
#fauxtography #astronomy
Aug 23, 20124,694 notes
Aug 23, 2012960 notes
Why do I love DW?

Having been a science fiction fan for most of my life, it surprises me that I didn’t know about Doctor Who sooner. My mother had been a fan of it in her childhood, relatives tell me, but she died before being able to pass the obsession on. My story begins instead with my toddler breaking my nose. He didn’t do it halfway—one headbutt broke it in three places. Surgery was the only option. 

So there I was, half conscious, laying on the couch the day after surgery. Naturally, I was miserable, and sorely in need of some company. I’d seen posts about the Doctor on several social media sites, and there it was, staring me in the face on Netflix. In the mood to take a chance, I started the first episode. I had absolutely no idea what I was getting myself into. After I began, it didn’t take but a week to barrel through the first season. It made recovery easier, because my son loves the Daleks (and singing to the theme song), and I had the Doctor to keep me from falling into obsessive worries, as I often do.

Probably more important than this, though, is the interest inspired in me by the science of Doctor Who. I’ve always been scientifically inclined, but many episodes inspired me to think critically and research things I’d not been specifically interested in before. (Physics, especially.) Ultimately, this culminated to mean my return to higher learning after five years out of school. I had no hope, direction, or future; I’m now on my way to an AS degree, that I plan to receive in three semesters instead of four, with a 4.0. 

Thanks for everything, Doctor. Nobody who knows me can argue that you didn’t make a difference. 

Aug 22, 2012
#newtoWHO #doctor who #Fuck yeah science!
“The most astounding fact is the knowledge that the atoms that comprise life on Earth the atoms that make up the human body are traceable to the crucibles that cooked light elements into heavy elements in their core under extreme temperatures and pressures. These stars, the high mass ones among them went unstable in their later years they collapsed and then exploded scattering their enriched guts across the galaxy guts made of carbon, nitrogen, oxygen and all the fundamental ingredients of life itself. These ingredients become part of gas cloud that condense, collapse, form the next generation of solar systems stars with orbiting planets, and those planets now have the ingredients for life itself. So that when I look up at the night sky and I know that yes, we are part of this universe, we are in this universe, but perhaps more important than both of those facts is that the Universe is in us. When I reflect on that fact, I look up – many people feel small because they’re small and the Universe is big – but I feel big, because my atoms came from those stars. There’s a level of connectivity. That’s really what you want in life, you want to feel connected, you want to feel relevant you want to feel like a participant in the goings on of activities and events around you That’s precisely what we are, just by being alive…” —Neil DeGrasse Tyson - The Most Astounding Fact (via crookedindifference)
Aug 22, 2012304 notes
Aug 22, 2012782 notes
Aug 21, 201214 notes
Aug 21, 2012427 notes
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