I thought I’d cross post this from The Great Beyond, which is a blog we recently started at Nature to complement our own news coverage. The blog rounds up the science stories that, for one reason or another, we’re not covering this week, but which are still worth your attention. Let me know whether First Drafts and its readers would welcome this as a weekly service
Friday August 31, 2007
Storms to get stronger / Lucy fossil controversy / Scientists sue over background checks
Thursday August 30, 2007
Global warming: belief but no understanding / ‘Drunk’ astronauts were sober, probably / Supersonic space rain / Plants can hear
Wednesday August 29, 2007
Spiderman suit in ten years / Greenhouse gases and ozone holes / Science blogger sued update
Tuesday August 28, 2007
Star Wars prop in space / Stem cells fix rat hearts / China legislates for failure / Fantasy journal league
Other Nature blog posts you may have missed
Spoonful of Medicine: Apoorva Mandavilli on (Bio)piracy in Brazil and elsewhere
The Sceptical Chymist: ‘Materials Girl’ on Physics, summer school, and math
Ones that got away
You think brain drain is a problem? Read ‘How T-Force abducted Germany’s best brains for Britain’ in The Guardian
‘Diabetes as Darwinism’ - Greg Critser in the LA Times says we’re all short-beaked finches
Extinction fears over ‘Irwin’s bum-breathing turtle’ from News.com.au
A giant space-junk gun in The Columbus Dispatch (via KSJ Tracker)
A blatantly self-serving cross post from Heliophage, where I’m blogging rather poorly and sporadically to promote and facilitate any eventual discussion of Eating the Sun (synopsis|Amazon). If this is in fact too self serving I rely on the wisdom of Prospecters for deletion, warnings never to darken their doors again, etc
I’ll be participating in two events at the Edinburgh International Book Festival over the bank-holiday weekend.
On Sunday evening, 19:30, I will be discussing the future of nature (concept, not magazine) with Martyn Amos, author of Genesis Machines. This is not about Phil Collins’ posthetics, but instead about DNA computing and synthetic biology, on which subjects his “lucid and punchy prose conveys a genuine excitement of the frontier” (Guardian review by Steve Poole). Apparently in this discussion I will be examining the role that plants might play in the future, though I fancy I may stray a bit beyond that brief.
Then on Monday afternoon at 14:30 I will be talking about the secret life of plants with Nicholas Harberd, author of Seed to Seed, in which
he explains how he and his colleagues at the world-renowned John Innes Centre in Norfolk are helping to work out how plants control their growth and reproduction in the face of life’s vicissitudes. He tells it like it is: not as a logical, inexorable progression from ignorance to omniscience but as a sequence of leaps and lurches from becalmment to epiphany achieved by - who knows? In Harberd’s case by cycling through the wind and hail of the Norfolk countryside, watching plants grow in a local churchyard and hoping for inspiration. Coleridge would have understood the approach perfectly. Success so far has been excellent - but still, it’s all to do. (Guardian review by Colin Tudge, and yes it is a small world…)
I’m enjoying Seed to Seed and wonder whether it should have been one of the Indy’s nature-book picks, but I don’t know what I’d oust to make room for it. Anyway, I look forward to meeting Nick and hearing what he has to say immensely.
Recent Comments