7/17/2006

Classy

Chomping down on a buttered roll Bush avoids choking and gives his plan for peace in the middle east.

Hot and Breezy

It's crazy how hot it feels even with this strong wind. The wind is like an autumn wind. It howls and shakes the trees but nonetheless the air is what you get when you open the door to the oven. Leslie called from O'Hare a little while ago. The air conditioning in the airport has been down for a week.

Off to the airport in one hour. It's so easy to get to the airport in Ottawa. Down Laurier and straight up Bronson and voila!

Leslie Will Be Here Soon

These are long days. I get up at 5:30, start work at 7:30 and get home at 5:00. However tonight Leslie will be here. Unfortunately it's one of the hottest days of the year. It's been as high as 45C in Boulder so she should be able to handle it.

I can't wait for September not only because of you know what , but also because this god awful dog killing heat will be gone. I am not a warm weather person by any means. I like a nip in the air and an evening chill. So does my honey.

7/11/2006

Dead Insects I Have Known





Delayed Growth



I've fallen behind in the herb documentation. The Basil is far larger than what you see. I'll try to catch up next week when Leslie is here!!! Maybe we will make pesto of it.

7/10/2006

Satisfaction

On the one hand it's really strange to go from just getting by to being comfortably middle class overnight. On the other I worked very hard to develop the skills I have and have accumulated alot of experience over the last few years. In that regard things are going as planned. It's very satisfying to have made the shift. This really has been the year where everything has come together. I get paid fulltime to do what I love, with full benefits. It's sweet as the kids say.

And to boot, Leslie will be here this time next Monday. Of course the two things are related. It's great to have money.

7/04/2006

Changes

Big changes in Shamus world. I have a new fulltime permanent position as web designer/graphic designer for a well established local company. It's going to be a nice change from the freelance world. Other big news forthcoming this fall.

6/30/2006

Today's New Species

There are so many species being discovered each month that I wouldn't blame you if you thought that I was making them up. Todays new species is a snake from Borneo. It's venomous and changes colour just to make it more interesting. "A reptile expert says he put the one-and-a-half foot long reddish-brown snake into a dark bucket. When he went to get it a few minutes later, he says it was almost entirely white."

I probably should also mention that 160 new species were discovered in the Rubehos Mountains of Tanzania recently during a survey undertaken by the World Wildlife Federation. Among the newly catalogued species are the Mountain dwarf galago (a type of bush baby), the red duiker (an antelope), a new species of frog, two kinds of chameleon, the checkered elephant shrewand an assortment of birds.

6/28/2006

This Weeks Species

I might as well just change this to the New Species Blog. Yesterday 10 new species of sea spider were discovered and the day before 3 new species of Lemur from Madagascar were established based on a few years of genetic analysis.

6/18/2006

Magic Castle

This is a really interesting optical illusion using a javascript mouseover.>>

Following the instructions a black and white image of a castle appears in colour so long as you don't move your eyes. The second you move your eyes the colour vanishes form the image.

6/15/2006

I'd Vote if I Could

I don't know how I ended up on the Democratic Parties mailing list, but every now and then I get e-mails from Howard Dean and Tom Mahon. This is why I don't trust background checks to be accurate. In any case this one came today

MEMORANDUM

TO: James MacDougall
FROM: Tom McMahon, Executive Director, DNC
RE: 50-State Strategy Results

Per Governor Dean's request, I have put together a few facts and figures for you on the successes of the 50-state strategy. I have made one last-minute addition to this memo -- at the end you will find excerpts from a USA Today profile of our 50-state strategy in action in my home state of Nebraska. It ran on Wednesday as we were preparing this message for you.


I wonder who else has my name?

6/14/2006

Krakatoa

This evening I saw an interesting program about the explosion of Krakatoa in 1883 of the coasts of Java and Sumatra. Here are some of the incredible facts associated with the event as related in the program Krakatoa: Volcano of Destruction

- the explosion produced a tsunami with waves up to 40 metres in height
-it was so loud that people 30km away were deafened temporarily
-it produced a sound so loud it was heard on the West coast of Africa and in the Australian outback.
- it affected the tides as far away as Europe
- it expelled so much ash into the atmosphere that it cooled the climate for years afterwards
- it exploded with a force equal 200 megatons of TNT
- the volcanic column spewed ash up to 35 miles in the sky
- sound waves travelled around the globe 7 times
- 12 square km of island disappeared in the explosion
- over 36,000 people died from its effects

The volcano exploded again in 1927 and is once again growing at a rate of about 15 feet per year.

New Species Update

As if it weren't enough that we are discovering new species of animals with great frequency, a new species of butterfly has been bred in the lab. Normally cross species hybrids are not able to reproduce such as is the case when a mule is born from horse/donkey crossbredding. In the case of the butterflies Heliconius melpomene was crossbred with Heliconius cydno to produce Heliconius heurippa a distinct species from either of the other two butterfly species.

As the BBC article points out, this is significant for understanding evolution in that instead of one species branching into diverse species, in this process two distinct species diverge into a third.


Other recent finds include
8 new species discovered in a cave in Israel >>

Six new frog species discovered in Guyana>>

Four new fish species discovered off Australian coast >>


New species of sea slug discovered off of Florida >>

Herbs Keep Growing

Week 05: June 05 2006


6/13/2006

Bad Thoughts

This year edge asks prominent thinkers in a variety of fields to respond to the question: WHAT IS YOUR DANGEROUS IDEA?
The history of science is replete with discoveries that were considered socially, morally, or emotionally dangerous in their time; the Copernican and Darwinian revolutions are the most obvious. What is your dangerous idea? An idea you think about (not necessarily one you originated) that is dangerous not because it is assumed to be false, but because it might be true?
You will find ideas here that are obviously controversial, at times absurd and often as intriguing as they are infuriating. Non of the participants here can said to be light weights in the thinking department.
some of the ideas put forth:

- The purpose of life is to disperse energy
- More anonymity is good
- The human brain and its products are incapable of understanding the truths about the universe
- Brains cannot become minds without bodies
- Science Must Destroy Religion
- Science encourages religion
- Bacteria are us

New Species of Hammerhead Shark Discovered

Maybe I just wasn't paying attention before but it seems like every other day a new animal species is identified. Today it's a new species of hammerhead shark off the coast of South Carolina. In my opinion the bounty of new species being identified is related to our ability to penetrate into new areas but also in the way we identify species now using DNA analysis as a determinant. At one time a species was primarily categorized by observable physical characteristics. Now that we are looking at the genetic level differences that were not apparent are being noticed. Such is the case with the identification of the new hammerhead species.

6/12/2006

New Species in Northern Scotland

The BBC reports that over 1,000 new species have been discovered in the Cairngorm Mountains of Scotland.These include fungi, insects and plants.The Scottish Natural Heritage who undertook the survey said that "the incredible diversity was partly a result of the ancient Caledonian forest, which provides a refuge for many species not found elsewhere."