Saturn gets edgy | Bad Astronomy

Observing Saturn through even a small telescope is amazing. The rings are so obvious and clear that sometimes, when I would show people the planet through my own ‘scope, they thought I was faking the view! But it really is that easy to see them. Well, usually. Saturn, like the Earth, is tilted. That is, [...]


Eye Versus Camera | The Loom

Metaphors are essential to writing about science. Even scientists themselves use metaphors all the time, drawing from their familiar experiences to describe the unfamiliar. Building proteins is known as translation, for example, because the sequences of DNA and proteins are akin to words written in different languages. The cell has to translate one language into [...]


Michele Bachmann needles Perry on vaccinations | Bad Astronomy

The antiscience stance of the Republican candidates for President is getting so chaotic I swear I need a scorecard to keep it all straight. The latest: Michele Bachmann goes antivax. No, seriously. Generally associated with the far left, antivaccination rhetoric reared its head at the latest Republican candidate debate. In 2007, Governor Rick Perry of [...]


Shades of 2050 | Gene Expression

I have long had a problem with projections of the racial makeup of the USA which implicitly neglect the complexities inherent in the identity of someone of mixed origin. A new study analyzing Census data on interracial marriages between 1980 and 2008 highlights some of the subtleties: The study also examined trends in biracial and [...]

Not the great stagnation | Gene Expression

Dan MacArthur points me to this story on the sequencing of the West family. You can read the full paper in PLoS Genetics. When the price point for a full genome comes down to $1,000 or so I plan on getting the code for everyone in my immediate family, just like I got everyone genotyped [...]

Amber trapped dinosaur feathers at different stages in their evolution | Not Exactly Rocket Science

[This slideshow may not appear in Google Reader or on mobiles] Reference: McKellar, Chattertton, Wolfe & Currie. 2011. A Diverse Assemblage of Late Cretaceous Dinosaur and Bird Feathers from Canadian Amber. Science http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1203344 Images courtesy of Science/AAAS More on feathered dinosaurs: Earliest bird was not a bird? New fossil muddles the Archaeopteryx story Dramatic restructuring [...]

“Years, Not Decades” to Growing New, Improved Tissue From Your Own Stem Cells | 80beats

Biologist George Church, examining a molecular model. George Church, the geneticist behind the Personal Genome Project, is envisioning a package deal: get your genome sequenced, and he and his collaborators will develop a line of induced pluripotent stem cells (IPS) from your tissue, so in the future, you’ll be able upgrade your system with organs [...]


The Intersection Has Officially Moved to Science Progress | The Intersection

New blog URL is here.

I’ve written an introductory post, telling readers what to expect, here.

And I’ve done a first real post over there, entitled “Could Personality Differences Help Explain the Reality Gap on Climate Change?” I have never seen anyone take a crack at it from this angle before, so response should be interesting.

Those of you who have bookmarked will want to redirect to http://www.scienceprogress.org/intersection

Commenting over there is by Facebook, btw, so that will also be something to get used to.

See you!