Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Behavior, Sustainability, Nature, Wildlife, Biodiversity
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Sunday, July 31, 2022
Studying A Slow Critter
Saturday, July 30, 2022
Atlantic Puffins
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Biodiversity, Nature, Wildlife, Art & Environment.
Ed Hessler
The Wildlife Trust of South and West Wales is one of 46 Wildlife Trusts across the UK. The area covers 9,787 km² (~3778 sq. mi) in South and West Wales - including around half of Wales’ coastline. The Trusts owns and manages 110 nature reserves covering 2,007 hectares (~4959 acres), 50 of which are designated Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs), 10 are National Nature Reserves and 4 are islands, including Skomer and Skokholm islands.
It is the island Skomer that provides the setting for some lovely photographs of Atlantic puffins which may be seen in Nicola Bryan's BBC article, Wildlife photography:Magic of Skomer's puffins captured." About the puffins she tells us that "more than 38,000 Atlantic puffins begin to arrive...in late March and will leave towards the end of July."
About their short residency, landscape & wildlife photographer Drew Buckley said "'If it was the same every day then it wouldn't be as special - it's this sort of fleeting glimpse and then you look forward to the next season."' I've seen puffins once in my life and was first struck by how impeccably dressed they were, seemingly in formal wear but as Buckley notes they appear comical because they are clumsy on their feet "funny characters to watch really." The island has no predators and the birds are fearlessly nosy, walking "up to your feet...climb over your camera bag,pull your shoe laces."'
Bryan includes more information about Buckley, puffin nesting, mating/parenting behavior, nesting cycle and their future. They are listed "at risk of extinction."
Included, as usual, are links with more on this story.
Friday, July 29, 2022
Friday Poem
Environment & Science Education, Poetry, Art & Environment
Ed Hessler
Deciduous by Linda Gregerson was published in Canopy (Ecco Press, 2022).
The original e-mail post from Poetry Daily included this comment from Ms. Gregerson on the poem. It "was written in tribute and gratitude to the extraordinary Greta Thunberg and to all the passionate young activists who are fighting to preserve the beautiful, fragile, terribly endangered planet that is our only home."
The epigraph to the book is Dulce lignum which is translated as "Sweet the wood," from a Gregorian chant with quite a different intent.
Thursday, July 28, 2022
The Guardian Takes on Biological Evolution
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Evolutionary Biology, Nature of Science, History of Science
Wednesday, July 27, 2022
On Retracting A Paper
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Nature of Science, History of Science
Ed Hessler
In "Sociobiology: So You Want To Be a Biology Professor," a blog about academic life and research, Washington University's (St. Louis), Joan E. Strassmann recounts the experience of retracting a published paper.
She wrote it to explain what happened, how she and her lab dealt with it and to "help normalize honest retractions which should probably be more common." She describes the experiment, where it went awry and then focuses "on the human side." It includes "some reflections from the very honest and brave graduate student who discovered the problem and shared it with us."
The moral to the story, according to Professor Strassmann is "Do your best. Think hard about all the ways you can verify that your experiment does what you think it does. When problems are discovered after publication, retract the paper and do the experiment over if it is a good one. Treasure and support students that show their honesty and conviction when they point out their own mistakes. There should be no shame in an honest retraction, though there will always be regret."
This is a illuminating, powerful example of what it is like to be a scientist with a commitment to the enterprise of doing the best science possible. It is also tough and tender in all the right places.
Dr. Strassmann's web site linked above includes a picture of her lab group, including a lovely dog and the nature of the lab's research (cooperation and "what this means at the extremes of sociality," the research organism and the techniques which include "behavioral, genetic, genomic, microbiological, cell biology, and field techniques," thus emphasizing the use of multiple lines of evidence.
Tuesday, July 26, 2022
Mendel At 200
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, History of Science, Nature of Science
--Today we know "that genes are not destiny, four words that bear repeating loudly and frequently" (my bold).
--"It is worth pausing for just a moment to celebrate his absolute commitment to careful observation, rigour in analysis and humility in interpreting the results."
If you are interested in a thorough technical review, the science and the history, of Mendel's work, I refer you to "How Did Mendel Arrive At His Discoveries?" It includes all the scientific and historical details to present.
* The editorial footnote reports on a scholarly debate on Mendel's date of birth, July 22 or July 20. The latter is the date of the official anniversary but his family celebrated it on July 22, the date the editors of Nature editors also chose to mark the occasion.
Monday, July 25, 2022
Long-Term Covid
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Health, Medicine
Ed Hessler
CBS Sunday Morning's Dr. Jonahan LaPook "talks with doctors looking at ways to diagnose and treat patients with long COVID, and with patients who are striving to get back to their pre-COVID health.
The introduction calls attention to some striking numbers: "more than two years into the pandemic, researchers still have few answers about why as many as 1-5 adults infected with COVID have experienced a symptom suggestive of long-term effects.."
For starters this is a reminder that COVID is a potentially serious disease, not to be taken lightly.
Here is the WIKI entry on Dr. LaPook.
Sunday, July 24, 2022
Mercury
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Solar System, Earth & Space Science
Ed Hessler
The BepiColombo spacecraft will orbit the planet Mercury in 2025. It is already beginning to prepare for this event.
In opening the brief, typically informative and well-referenced Astronomy Picture of the Day (APOD) asks, "Which part of the moon is this? No part -- because this is the planet Mercury." It would be easy to assume that one is looking at our Moon.
The striking, stark, well-defined image was taken as BepiColombo passes Mercury.
I learned a lot and am glad for this APOD selection.
Saturday, July 23, 2022
Rangers Wanted
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Biodiversity, Nature, Wildlfe, Sustainability, Global Change, Invasive Species
Ed Hessler
Citizen scientists are wanted by the Jumping Worms Project, UMN.
Interesting to think that Minnesota ever had earthworms before European settlement. This means that after the glaciers, Minnesota ecosystems developed without them. All of the terrestrial earthworms are non-native, invasive species.
If you are interested in helping document the presence/absence of the latest invasive which represent a profound threat to managed and wild landscapes you can learn more here. And here is a FOX9 news report with a link to the Minnesota DNR's website dedicated to jumping worms which also tells you can help by checking bait and gardening compost. Since plants are frequently given by neighbors after managing their own gardens, check the soil they are in, too.
Friday, July 22, 2022
Friday Poem
Environmental & Science Education, Poetry, Art and Environment
Ed Hessler
A poem by Stephen Kampa.
His home page at Flagler College includes several of his poems if you'd like to read and sample more of his work.
Thursday, July 21, 2022
Bear Fight
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Nature, Wildlife, Behavior
Ed Hessler
Earlier this summer the Brooks Falls Low Cam recorded a fight between two brown bears - Bear 856 & Bear 39.
Mike Fitz discusses this fight in a Live Brooks Chat and answered viewers questions. Fitz, a former National Park Service Ranger, spent a good part of his career at Katmai National Park. He is now the resident naturalist for explore.org. The discussion is 1h 09m 45s) so the event received the discussion it deserved. The slider allows you to advance if you want a quick overview or watch segments over again.
I always looked forward to his weekly discussions and interpretations of events on the bears of the Brooks River which were announced ahead of the event. I was not a regular viewer, so missed some, but there are "regulars" who are quite knowledgeable about the bears and their comments were interesting to read.. Fitz still provides commentary, sometimes at Katmai and sometimes on video taken their. He is not at Katmai this bear and salmon season..
Fitz's website, Wandering at Large: explorations and thoughts about the natural world includes a description of his book The Bears of Brooks Falls, based on his many years interpreting brown bear behavior on the Brooks River and vicinity.
Wednesday, July 20, 2022
Carbon Dioxide Costs of Transporting Food
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Sustainability, Global Change. Climate Change, Agriculture, Earth & Space Science. Earth Systems
Ed Hessler
That we are an enormous expense to planet Earth is not news. We have much to learn about those expenses, including their size, meaning and implications. I suspect that we also don't know all of them.. Have you ever considered the costs of travel in transporting foods and production emissions?
Fortunately, Mengyu Li, a sustainability researcher at the University of Sydney (Australia) and her colleagues have. The research is reported on by Freda Kreier in the Nature News section for July 1, 2022 and is based on a research paper in Nature Food (linked behind a paywall) but you can learn about the team members as well as read the abstract).
"Transporting ingredients and food products accounts for nearly one-fifth of all carbon emissions in the food system," a larger amount than previously thought. And Kreier continues by noting that " Clearing land for farming, raising livestock and moving food to and from shops adds a large amount of greenhouse gas to the atmosphere. The United Nations estimates that growing, processing and packaging food accounts for one-third of all greenhouse-gas emissions."
Kreier reports that "the complexity of the food system has made it challenging to measure" the greenhouse gas emissions at the system level. "Previously," she observes, "most studies underestimated emissions because they focused on only those generated by moving a single product - such as a chocolate bar - to and from the shop" and researcher Li told Kreier that this misses "the multitude of other trucks, ships and aeroplanes involved in gathering all the ingredients."
The report includes a nifty bar graph for a variety of food and industrial products, both for the domestic and international sides. It will come as no surprise that wealthy nations generate "nearly half of international food-transport emissions, despite accounting or only 12% of the global populations." There are reasons for this which are discussed.
Kreier interviewed Nina Domingo, a sustainability researcher at Yale University (New Haven) who told her that "the results don’t mean that people should try to limit the amount of plants in their diet." Continuing, Kreier writs that "many studies have shown that plant-based diets are better for the environment than consuming large amounts of red meat, because livestock need a lot of land and burp out greenhouse gases. Reducing the consumption of red meat and eating food produced locally could help wealthy countries to lower their climate impacts, researchers say."
Tuesday, July 19, 2022
Letters To Trees
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Nature, Biodiversity
Ed Hessler
My neighborhood has what I refer to as a "hotline" where people talk,sometimes rant, about neighborhood issues, let others know of free stuff that has been set on curbs, announce events, ask for help, crime news, exchange special tools when needed once or for a short time, advice, recommendations for services, and often those that start with ISO--in search of. It is an incredibly valuable community service and busy with daily traffic.
This is a re-post of a note I published on it July 7, 2022. It has been slightly modified from the original.
Mary Hrovat writes for 3 Quarks Daily. Her column on July 4 was gem-like, deliciously thoughtful, leaving me appropriately misty-eyed. I thought especially about the trees that were in one way or another important to me when I was a K-12 school and following including a very particular neighborhood redbud.
She begins her essay "Love Letters to Trees" with an observation on the prompt for the essay. "When the city of Melbourne (Australia) set up email addresses for trees so that people could report problems, the trees received affectionate fan mail as well as messages about dangling limbs or other hazards. Here are some letters I’d write to trees, if I could."
Hrovat links to an article in The Guardian about the City of Central Melbourne's trees which features an interactive map on each of its 70,000 trees. (my emphasis) Be sure to take a look for it is a very impressive undertaking.
Here are the headers for the letters Hrovat wrote:.
--To the aspens in Hannagan Meadows
--To the hedge apple tree in a yard long ago
--To the two big gingko trees on the IU Bloomington campus
--To the red maples along the path I used to take to work
--To the hollow beech tree in Winslow Woods
I've never done this but these are five trees to which I'd send a letter. A Scotch pine in our backyard, maples in the fall on the highway leading into town, Sycamore on the flood plain of a creek, Redbuds on the Cornell Campus, Apple trees in abandoned orchards on the hill above my house. I think of them often.
Hrovat's essay Includes photographs by Julian Hook.
Monday, July 18, 2022
Understanding the Forces That Create Volcanic Eruptions
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Earth & Space Science, Geology, Earth Systems, Nature of Science, History of Science
Ed Hessler
Kayla Iacovino is an experimental petrologist at Jacobs-NASA Johnson Space Center whose interest is understanding "the geochemical forces that lead to" the destructive forces when volcanoes erupt. She "collects rock samples from around the world to better understand the forces that create them.
This Breakthrough video (10m 25s) shows us how she does this research and is part "of a series from Science Friday and Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) that follows women working at the forefront of their fields."
There are links to a Science Friday interview with Dr. Iacovino and to her website.
Sunday, July 17, 2022
Hair Ice
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Earth & Space Science, Earth Systems, Nature
Ed Hessler
Hair ice. Ice wool. Frost beard. I've never seen it and received a lovely introduction to it by Tamas Varga (Earthly Mission).
It was interesting to learn that its formation is due to a fungus (Exidioposa effusa), a discovery made in 2015. This link, a Wiki entry, has the complete citation for the full scientific paper and access to a PDF. The mechanism that allows the formation as well as stabilizes it, once formed, is not certain. The ice hairs can be long lived and "can maintain their shaped for hours and sometimes even days."
This particular ice formation is not common and based on observations, it appears to be a denizen of broadleaf forests "mostly at latitudes between 45 and 55 degrees N." I learned from Varga's reporting that the"ice forms on moist, rotting wood from broadleaf trees when temperatures are slightly under 0 °C (32 °F) and the air is humid. The smooth, silky hairs have a diameter of about 0.02 mm (0.0008 in) and a length of up to 20 cm (8 in). Although individual hairs are brittle, they usually take the shape of curls and waves."
Another characteristic of their formation which is not yet fully understood is that they "appear to root at the mouth of wood rays (never on the bark), and their thickness is similar to the diameter of the wood ray channels."
Varga includes many take-your-breath away photographs.
At one point, Varga refers to this kind of ice as "white wig." I liked it and I think it is also a great alternative to be included in a list of common names.
Saturday, July 16, 2022
Milky Way Motion In 3D
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Astronomy, Cosmology, Earth & Space Science, Nature of Science
Ed Hessler
I'd not only never seen the Milky Way like this; I hadn't even conceived it might look like this image from Astronomy Picture of the Day (APOD). It is "alive" APOD writes, "with the streams of stars."
The image is from the Gaia Mission, " an ambitious mission to chart a three-dimensional map of our Galaxy, the Milky Way, in the process revealing the composition, formation and evolution of the Galaxy. Gaia will provide unprecedented positional and radial velocity measurements with the accuracies need to produce stereoscopic and kinematic census of about one billion stars in our Galaxy and throughout the Local Group. This amounts to about 1 per cent of the Galactic stellar population." The number the remaining 99% bowl me over.(My underline).
It is another image that adds to my delighted wonder - now a little more informed - about the structure of the Milky Way as well as in the engineers, scientists, technicians who made it possible. Thanks, too, to the policy makers who made the decisions to fund such an ambitious project.
I was reminded of the symbol for Yin and Yang--in the horizontal.
Friday, July 15, 2022
Friday Poem
Environmental & Science Education, Poetry, Art and Environment
Ed Hessler
Today's poem, "Interdependence Day" is by John Amen.
And in the news, poet Ada Limon has been named the new U. S. poet laureate. She is the 24th and will assume this position in September. This is the press release from the Library of Congress which includes a description and of the laureateship.
In reporting on NPR by Meghan Collins Sullivan (Senior Editor, Arts & Culture desk), Limon told her, "I think that it's really important to remember that even in this particularly hard moment, divided moment, poetry can really help us reclaim our humanity. I think we need to remember that we possess the full spectrum of human emotions. And I think moving through that grief and trauma, anger, rage — through poetry I think we can actually remember that on the other side of that is also contentment, joy, a little peace now and again, and that those are all a part of the same spectrum. And that without one, we don't have the other."
Here is a sample. And two more.
Thursday, July 14, 2022
Try Creating A Planetary System
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Astronomy, Earth & Space Science, Cosmology, Astrophysics, Nature of Science
Ed Hessler
Can you create a planetary system that lasts for 1000 years?
This question is posed by Astronomy Picture of the Day (APOD). And a game, Super Planet Crash, offers you the opportunity to be a planetary system maker--one with up to 10 planets.
Bodies you can add, each increasing in mass, include Earth, Ice Giant, Giant Planet, Brown Dwarf, Dwarf Star. The planets are constrained within a defined circle.
There is information about the game makers, links to what each of the bodies mentioned above are, etc.
The game has an end: 1000 years or when a planet is expelled, a not unusual event as planets are made.
This game makes the universe, the cosmos, even grander, due to physics.
Wednesday, July 13, 2022
A Researcher Dad's Summer Reading Club
Environmental & Science Education, STEMEarly Childhood, Children, Literacy
Ed Hessler
If you would like some help with young children who are learning to read and/or struggling with reading, this phonics-based program is worth taking a look at. It is designed for parents and early childhood caregivers.
Read Not Guess is described by the author who writes: "Get your child on the path to reading fluently with our free, 30-day reading challenge (July 18 to August 19). Daily emails with short lessons for parents will start July 18th. No time? No problem. Lessons should take 5-10 minutes. See FAQs for more details."
That reading is important in STEM education goes almost without saying but we do need to say it. And learning to read well. establishing positive reading habits from the beginning could not be more important. Of course, following this, the hope is that children will want to read for pleasure as well as for their continued learning. Reading difficulties should not get in the way.
It was developed by Chad Aldeman, a professor at Georgetown University where he is an education researcher. His primary motivation for developing the program resulted from "watching my son (8 yo) struggle with his reading."
Tuesday, July 12, 2022
Reading the Tea Leaves
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Biodiversity, , Nature, Nature of Science, Biological Evolution, Climate Change, Global Change
Ed Hessler
This report from TheScientist on biomonitoring demonstrates its value, especially tracing environmental DNA (eDNA) left by animals in various environments. It is a technique of value in noting both evolutionary and ecological responses of biological communities to global environmental change.
The original research is published in Biology Letters (linked in the reporting) which is fully available but technical, not that this should dissuade you from reading it.
Shawna Williams of The Scientist interviewed study coauthor Henrick Krehenwinkel (HK), an ecological geneticist at Germany's Trier University.
What was analyzed was tea and that it is a useful tool for biomonitoring may be a surprise. It was to me.
And the story has a feature I like for it gets inside the lab. Included here are the use of research collections: questioning, considerations of experimental design,deciding on what to investigate--include/exclude, use of a test experiment then expanding it, and findings, especially population change over time, as well as the inevitable surprises..
Of course, HK had to be asked - the story would be incomplete otherwise - whether he is a tea drinker. His answer includes a bonus about the differences between tea and coffee as an eDNA research material material.
"'I drink coffee actually. . . . And I fear coffee probably is not well suited for it because coffee is roasted. And what DNA really doesn’t like is being heated up to a very high temperature for a long time . . . . We have not tried it yet, but I fear coffee is probably not the best choice for this kind of experiment.""
Monday, July 11, 2022
Mastodon Home Range
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Global Change, Wildlife, Biodiversity, Biological Evolution
Sunday, July 10, 2022
Octopus, Jellyfish, Sea Horse
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Biodiversity, Wildlife, Nature, Biological Evolutioin
Ed Hessler
Life below the ocean tops is hidden to most of us although many of us have seen the three featured below from an NPR Picture Show. The story is by Vanessa Castillo.
National Geographic photographer David Liittschwager "spent 12 years photographing octopuses, seahorses and jelly fish at more than 28 locations" worldwide. His new book "captures more than 135,000 exposures--with essays by three science writers: Elizabeth Kolbert, Jennifer Holland and Olivia Judson. Judson is also an evolutionary biologist by training and educaton.The link allows a look inside Octopus, Seahorse, Jellyfish.
The NPR story provides a preview of these remarkable photographs and creatures. Moments of wonder and great beauty. A full palette of colors that surprise. Endless forms. Details to marvel at. All products of the mechanisms, the constant tinkering, of biological evolution.
Who knew how lovely and diverse they are? A few photographers, scuba divers, and research scientists. Fortunately for us, David Liittschwager has done the heavy lifting (two kinds), made a little less heavy physically by the physics of the ocean during long periods spent below it's surfaces.
Saturday, July 9, 2022
A Garden of Poisons
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Biodiversity, Nature,
Ed Hessler
We know that some plants are toxic or narcotic or poisonous but often not know much about them, including their sometimes life-saving properties. This video (6m 25s) from the BBC's REEL takes us to Alnwick Garden, Northumberland, England, which is described in the written introduction.
The Poison Garden at the Alnwick Garden in Northumberland, England is one of the deadliest gardens in the world. It features around 100 toxic, intoxicating, and narcotic plants. Visitors require a safety briefing before entering and gardeners must wear full-body protective clothing.
It may seem alarming, but many of the plants can be found in ordinary gardens, with people completely unaware of their poisonous potential. However, in many cases these deadly plants can also have life-saving qualities too, so truly understanding their potential to both harm and to cure is vitally important.
Friday, July 8, 2022
Friday Poem
Environmental & Science Education, Poetry, Art & Environment
Ed Hessler
Answer July by Emily Dickinson.
Thursday, July 7, 2022
Prairie Coloring Book: Ages 12 and Up
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Children, Biodiversity, Nature, Wildlife
If you would like a coloring book or know someone who might which features prairies here is a link on how to download the book.
It is titled Build Your Park Coloring Book for ages 12 and up. It is a project of the American Prairie Reserve from American Prairie.
As much as I love the daydreamy quality of these lines from Emily Dickinson on how to make a prairie it takes a lot more which is one reason for the conservation and preservation of large areas of our native prairies.
“To make a prairie it takes a clover and one bee,
One clover, and a bee,
And revery.
The revery alone will do,
If bees are few.”
Wednesday, July 6, 2022
Human Waste to A Nitrogen Fertilizer Use
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Pollution, Sustainability, Global Change, Climate Change
Ed Hessler
Below is the introduction to a great video (8m 35s) on waste water and how it, to get specific, urine, can become a recyclable resource, one that is extraordinarily valuable to all of us, worldwide. Liquid gold indeed!
"Each year, farmers must produce a staggering amount of food to meet the demand of a rising global population. Ammonia is a critical ingredient in the fertilizers that enable farmers to grow the enormous amount of food that’s needed to feed the world’s 8 billion people. But the factories that manufacture the ammonia used in fertilizers are a major source of planet-warming carbon dioxide. Will Tarpeh, a chemical engineer at Stanford University, is developing a groundbreaking technology to tap into an unlikely new source of nitrogen for fertilizer: ammonia contained in human waste."
The film focuses on the link between waste water and sanitation, especially in Africa. Looking ahead I can imagine research by scientists and engineers into ammonia recovery here and elsewhere on complex wastewater systems. I especially appreciated Dr. Tarpeh's remarks on growing up curious about how nature works and where it has led. The video also provides another take on scientific and engineering careers.
Tuesday, July 5, 2022
What Annoys You About Science Reporting?
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Nature of Science
Ed Hessler
Does anything annoy you about the reporting of science news? The click-bait headlines annoy me as well as the lack of discussion of the evidence, how good it is, absence of what it means, some history to put it in context, etc.
In a recent BackReaction column, theoretical physicist Sabine Hossenfelder over which she cleverly and acidly places a red bar in which the word BREAKING is found. The column is titled Science News Sucks. There she discusses her big or top ten bothers. And wonders whether it is only her who is annoyed by science news.
I link as you certainly must know by know to her blog post which has the narrative and the video but if you are not interested in having the transcript handy there is a link to her YouTube video. There the narrative is behind a subscription pay wall.
Hossenfelder makes some some useful comments on what science is and how it works which are always of interest to me. How are we to become literate at the citizen or general interest level if we have no idea of the hallmarks of science?
I just learned that Dr. Hossenfelder has a new book coming out for which see here There you can learn more about the book, read some reviews, learn about the author, her motivation for writing the book, and the content.
Monday, July 4, 2022
Images: Virgo Cluster of Galaxies and Cumulonimbus Montage
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Earth & Space Science, Cosmology, Earth Systems, Astronomy
Ed Hessler
This entry offers two images of "up there,"out in the deep universe and of a massive storm clouds here on Earth.
The first image is from Astronomy Picture of the Day (APOD) is of the Virgo Cluster of Galaxies, the closest cluster of galaxies to our own Milky Way Galaxy, a neighbor so-to-speak. It is beautiful and scientifically interesting and includes an explanation.
The second image is from Earth Science Picture of the Day (EPOD) and shows the sequential development of a massive anvil cloud thunderhead over Taiwan. The six images were taken about 10 minutes apart. One of them is illuminated by the setting sun in a golden glow. The entry includes a video of anvil cloud development.
Sunday, July 3, 2022
The Hautman Brothers
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Nature, Wildlife, Biodiversity
CBS Sunday Morning had a segment on three U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) duck stamp artists. They are siblings, and duck hunters and certainly many Minnesotan's will recognized their names. They grew up in Minneapolis. Each year one artist is chosen based on their submissions to the annual duck stamp contest. Here they are.
Jim Hautman--a record six times and the 2022 winner
Joe Hautman--five times
Robert Hautman--three time
They are sometimes referred to as the "Duck Dynasty". And they also paint more than ducks.
Correspondent Conor Knighton reports (5m 19s). The Wiki entry on the federal duck stamp includes a list of all Federal Duck Stamp artists. The program began in 1934.
Saturday, July 2, 2022
Energy Sources and Land Use
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Sustainability, Global Change, Pollution, Climate Change, Nature of Science, Maths,
Ed Hessler
The environmental impacts of different energy sources include land, water, natural resources for fuel and manufacturing, etc. Energy sources are different and so are the variety of environmental impacts.
Our World In Data has a chart and a short accompanying article on how much land various sources use. They are based on life-cycle assessments.
About such assessments, Hannah Rithie writes,"These cover the land use of the plant itself while in operation; the land used to mine the materials for its construction; mining for energy fuels, either used directly (i.e. the coal, oil, gas, or uranium used in supply chains) or indirectly (the energy inputs used to produce the materials); connections to the electricity grid; and land use to manage any waste that is produced."
Context and the type of material also are influential, sometimes mattering a lot, e.g., whether cadmium-based or silicon-based panels.
Rithie calls attention to an issue in presenting data about wind. It she says "must be considered differently" because some of it is offshore and "land between turbines," can be "used for other activities."
Rithie closes with a discussion of the potential effects of location and "what the alternative uses of that land are."
Charts are sometimes daunting, easily skipped over, but one value is that they condense a wealth of data in one place. As such they become valuable aids to understanding and thinking, the promotion of discussion and the generation of questions.
The article includes the sources for the chart, also very important information, too.
Friday, July 1, 2022
An APOD Birthday Calendar
Environmental & Science Education, STEM, Earth & Space Science, Solar System, Cosmos
Ed Hessler
I'm back, both systems are up and working: Internet and me. So on a Friday a Thursday post.
Astronomy Picture of the Day (APOD) has a calendar on which you can find the APOT picture of the day for your birthday, from June 1995 - present.
The years in the chart are entered in vivid DayGlo-like colors, perfect to acknowledge a birthday. And October is a pumpkin Halloween orange.
Another treat for you, on your birthday. Happy Birthday.