Wow! I posted the call for suggestions on Friday night, it is a weekend and a holiday, the traffic is down to a half, yet I got so many suggestions already, both in the comments and via e-mail! I am also very happy to see how many people are suggesting not just their own but other people's posts. This is going to be heckuva job for me! All science bloggers are my friends and I will have to dissappoint so many of them in the end. I wish I could collect 500 posts instead of just 50.
As I stated in the original post, I am looking to showcase the diversity of science blogging. I got a lot of it already, but some things are dominating, while others are still missing. Can I get a poem? Something funny or satirical? Something about teaching science? A how-to recipe for a science experiment to do at home? Science for kids? Some history and philosophy of science? Check the original post for more ideas.
I understand that posts debunking Creationism and other types of pseudoscience are very popular. So are the posts dealing with political/religious assaults on science. A few of those will certainly make it, but there is a wealth of such stuff out there, the competition is really tough. On the other hand, if you can think of something unusual or unique, something that nobody else does, it may have a greater chance of making it into the blook than your best smack-down of Dembski.
I will try to find a way to let you help me make the choices, perhaps with some kind of a poll later on that will cut down the numbers to a little bit over 50. But in the end, the final fine-tuning of the final 50 will be up to me. While some bloggers are more popular than others, except in a case where a 2-parter can be fused into a single post, I don't want to include more than one post by the same person. I still want more suggestions - keep them coming. Dont' forget very old posts from 2, 3 or 4 years ago! Not everything needs to be from the last few months.
Below the fold are all the suggestions that have arrived so far (and I'll keep adding more over the next few days as they keep coming in). Hover the cursor over the title to reveal the name of the blog. Checking these out may give you an idea of what is missing - what areas of science, what types of posts. Some of these posts may refresh your memory and remind you of another post that is really good. Alternatively, you may want to browse the archives of Tangled Bank, Grand Rounds, Carnival of the Green, Skeptic's Circle, Mendel's Garden, Bio::Blogs, The Synapse, Encephalon, Animalcules, Circus of the Spineless, I And The Bird, Panta Rei, Philosophia Naturalis, Change Of Shift, Pediatric Grand Rounds, Radiology Grand Rounds, Four Stone Hearth and Festival of the Trees for inspiration.
[Updated and placed on top on Dec 25 at 2:52pm]
[Updated and placed on top on Dec 28 at 2:52pm]
The Write Stuff or Cause celebre or Flea Collar or In Perpetuity
Who's duping whom? or What's the point of a college education?
Why do Elephants have Big Ear Flaps?
Lab meetings are cool and geeky, and I am just geeky and Lab craziness, fused into one post.
I'm A Professional, Don't try this at Home
A Year in Texas: Monarch Migrations
The scientist as mad artist - an example using DNA for musical composition
Blind Watchmaker or Swiss Designer? (Part I) and Blind Watchmaker or Swiss Designer? (Part II) fused into a single post.
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Emergency Department
Campeador Diem or Science Friday: For Those We Love
Whitebark pine/corvid coevolution and paleoecology or Climate change and mapping of hardiness zones and ecological limiting factors or Abeka's horrible creationist biology textbook
An object lesson in Wiki research or Bring back the mammoth or Did blonde mammoths have more fun? or Local mammoth in the news or Mammoths, mastodons, and killer hippos
The Condimentary Preferences of Drosophila
False confessions: Not as rare as you might think
Floyd Landis and Testosterone Testing: All the Background You Want and Need (updated X 7)
Quantum interrogation or The Science of Coffee or Detectors 101
How Does Emergency Contraception Work?
When it comes to brains, does size really matter?
Snail shells are made of this or The master of its domain
Magnetic Bacteria and More on Magnetic Bacteria fused into a single post, or Lessons From Kennewick: Fitting it all Together
How I learned the difference between farts and boners
This was my experiment and I hope you enjoyed it or Waste not, want not or The little farter
Bipolar Disorder: A View From the Inside
Once Upon a Time or Science Fare
Hummingbirds and Torpor or Intuition
Eyes, Part One: Opening Up the Russian Doll and Eyes, Part Two: Fleas, Fish, and the Careful Art of Deconstruction fused into a single post, or Getting The Mooney Treatment
Winning Greater Influence for Science or Axon Guidance: perspectives and relation to other observations of cell migration
Beware the catfish from hell? Not really or Darwin, Marx and Bad Scholarship
Zero or Ω: my favorite strange number or An Introduction to Information Theory (updated from Blogspot)
Training the Expert Mind and Training the Expert Mind, Part II: Medical Diagnosis fused into a single post.
Sunday Sermon: Home, sweet oikos or Hurray for being eaten by a bear! or Human Achievement or Belief in things not seen
Crabzilla! Queen Of The Deep! or The 'Beauty' Industry Is Destroying Our Society With Their Lies or Chris Gets His Questions Answered or It is always about money or A Response to Anonymous or How Are Seamounts Islands? or God of the Sea (and Horses)
Part One: Introduction to Emerging Diseases and Zoonoses and Part Two: Introduction to Emerging Diseases and Zoonoses continued fused into a single post, or Public health, defense, what will *really* make us safer or Viral eradication and the evolution of smallpox or Simple evolutionary study may predict path of Ebola outbreaks or Emerging Disease and Zoonoses #18: spread of H5N1 in Nigeria
BREAKING NEWS: George Deutsch Did Not Graduate From Texas A & M University and NASA Science Censor Resigns fused into a single post, or Speak No Evil or Deutschgate in the Media or Caught in the Line of Fire: Animal Rights Activists Take Over Oxford or Oxford Scientists Bite Back at Animal Rights Activists and Oxford Scientific Activists Take Their Message to the Streets fused into a single post.
The Egyptian Chariot: Part 1 and Egyptian Chariots - Part 2 of 2 fused into a single post, or Review- Dawkins' God: Genes, Memes and the Meaning of Life
The Worst Parts of Scientific Life and The Best Parts of the Scientific Life fused into a single post, or Explorers & Crusaders
Coulter's Science: Let the Criticism Commence or A Case Study in Creationist Distortion or Answering Dean Esmay on ID in Science Classrooms
The abstract and the concrete in biology (1 of 2) and Evolving representations (2 of 2) fused into a single post, or The Demarcation Problem... again or Against units in biology or Methodology, domains and disciplines or A Darwinian history or Is nature democratic? or Popper on evolution or When is a species worth conserving? or Essentialism revisited or Peer review, stem cells and science
Art of Medicine in Ancient Egypt, part I and Art of Medicine in Ancient Egypt, part II fused into a single post, or A particularly egregious misrepresentation of a study or Medicine and evolution, part I: Introduction
It's not just the genes, it's the links between them or Thank you, Michael Behe or Niobrara or The proper reverence due those who have gone before
Everything You Always Wanted To Know About Sleep (But Were Too Afraid To Ask) or Chossat's Effect in humans and other animals or Influence of Light Cycle on Dominance Status and Aggression in Crayfish or Jumping on the 'omics' Bandwagon or Biology and the Scientific Method or The Clock Metaphor or BIO101 - Lecture 5: Introduction to Anatomy and Physiology or Blogs and the Future of Science
The global cooling myth or Short and simple arguments for why climate can be predicted
Confessions of a Science Librarian
Water, Water, Everywhere; Not A Drop..... or Periodic Table of Political Mischief
Breaking the Forma Aedificii Gatesensis
The Field-Archaeological Paradox
Opening up the scientific process
Prayer still useless or What the (Bleep) Were They Thinking? or Pretty soon...
Males prefer older females! (??)
What Good Science Looks Like or Unfalsifiable and falsified
A series: 10 assertions about evolution and 10 Assertions about Evolution and 10 Assertions About Evolution (or Whatever Happened to the Fisher-Wright controversy?)
Selection, nuclear genetic variation, and mtDNA
Denton vs Squid; the eye as suboptimal design
Science Fair, Or, 'Isn't This What Science Is All About?'
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'Big Bang' is a terrible name for a great theory
What We Talk About When We Talk About Probability or Minos observes neutrino mass
Why You Weigh So Much: Dynamical Breaking of Chiral Symmetry or Physics, Sex, and People in a Box-shaped Room or How Physicists Probe the World
Can you marry your half-sister's daughter?
Cognitive Neuroscience and Education Today or Cognitive Neuroscience and ADD/ADHD Today or Dr. Elkhonon Goldberg on Brain Fitness Programs and Cognitive Training
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A-ha! Finally, some poetry:
Of Dionisius and Despair or Neglect or Lazarus, arise! or Johns Lament
First Do No Harm or To Human Cruelty.
Ode to a tree
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The curse of the One Rabbit: Tree rings corroborate Aztec folklore
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An Old Fave: The Wisdom of Parasites
A field guide to biomedical meeting creatures, part 1: Any questions? and A field guide to biomedical meeting creatures, part 2: Poster time! fused into a single post (or separately).
Pick one from this: Top Eleven: Time to Vote!, or Physics Funding Fundamentalism or Thoughts on the LHC and ILC or Atheist Church Socials? or Local Realism, Loopholes, and the God Delusion or The Grad School Application Process or Science Is A Scary Place to Work or
Notes Toward a User's Guide to Synthetic Chemistry Talks
Where Does Health Begin and End? or Just a Nurse With a Patient
Fun with polymer chemistry at the State Fair
Did humans evolve from apes? or Homeopathy: Responses and Rebuttals
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How the mind works: the cheeky topical version
Part I: Future Shock and Selenocysteine and Part II. Future Shock and Selenocysteine: it's time again to update the databanks fused into a single post, or I hear the cottonwoods whispering above...
Coolest... Experiment... Ever or Ortega y Gasset On Science
The Cognitive Map : How Mice and Men learn when in the Mouse Trap
100 years of Alzheimer's Disease or Book review: "In Search of Memory," by Eric Kandel
Michael Denton and Molecular Clocks or E. coli O157:H7 Outbreak in Taco Bell Restaurants, or a (partial) fusion of posts from this series: Three Domain Hypothesis, Part 1, Three Domain Hypothesis, Part 2, Three Domain Hypothesis, Part 3, Three Domain Hypothesis, Part 4, Three Domain Hypothesis, Part 5 and Three Domain Hypothesis, Part 6.
















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Comments
I'm still looking through the submissions above (a great collection they are!), but you know I'd like to see more archaeology!
From my own posts, I'd offer my Egyptian Chariots two-parter:
http://hotcupofjoe.blogspot.com/2006/08/egyptian-chariots-part-2-of-2.html
http://hotcupofjoe.blogspot.com/2006/08/egyptian-chariot-part-1.html
But I also think if you want something a bit different, I've done a couple of book reviews. This one of McGrath is one I felt good about:
http://hotcupofjoe.blogspot.com/2006/04/review-dawkins-god-genes-memes-and.html
Posted by: cfeagans | December 24, 2006 03:59 AM
I'd have to say that among the best archaeology blogging is with Afarensis, Archaeoastronomy, and Abnormal Interests. But the only one of the three that I have bookmarked a particular post (other than their main page, of course) is Duane's Table of Contents for Friday Pot Blogging Posts
Of particular interest, and perhaps easy to reproduce in print, would be the last section of short posts: Special Topics. There are five posts there which I think are great examples of good archaeological blogging. I'm sure afarensis and Alun both have good stuff too.
Posted by: cfeagans | December 24, 2006 04:11 AM
I think this one is my best post: Confessions of a Science Librarian.. It's a bit different, more on the diversity of science-related career paths.
I also really remember a bunch of great posts in various places when that newspaper columnist (Richard Cohen?) wrote about how useless math is. I'll hunt around and find a good one and post here.
Posted by: John Dupuis | December 24, 2006 10:38 AM
If you want philosophy of science, I have done one post that fits the bill: Unfalsifiable and falsified. It's nothing special, but it's a start on collecting submissions in this area.
Posted by: Chris Hallquist | December 24, 2006 10:58 PM
Well, okay, since you asked... :)
Humorous satirical post:
http://twistedphysics.typepad.com/cocktail_party_physics/2006/03/cause_celebre.html
Physics/Math history posts:
http://twistedphysics.typepad.com/cocktail_party_physics/2006/03/flea_collar.html
http://twistedphysics.typepad.com/cocktail_party_physics/2006/08/in_perpetuity.html
Posted by: Jennifer Ouellette | December 25, 2006 07:08 PM
This is my personal favorite, from Janet:
What's the point of a college education?
http://scienceblogs.com/ethicsandscience/2006/10/whats_the_point_of_a_college_e.php
Posted by: JYB | December 26, 2006 02:03 AM
Most of my readers suggested the Kennewick series. I think it would be too long for inclusion so I am going with Magnetic Bacteria and More on Magnetic Bacteria.
Posted by: afarensis | December 26, 2006 09:56 AM
A bit of humor/teaching science: "This was my experiment and I hope you enjoyed it". And some stuff that is a little off-beat, if you need some variety: butterflies feeding on feces and why a Cuban bird is called "the little farter".
Posted by: Nuthatch | December 26, 2006 11:14 AM
Almost forgot: Back in August, I read the following personal essay/short story (fiction) by Karmen at Chaotic Utopia. It's one of the most original pieces of writing I've yet encountered in the science blogosphere, and I hereby nominate it for consideration...
http://scienceblogs.com/chaoticutopia/2006/08/bipolar_disorder_a_view_from_t.php
Posted by: Jennifer Ouellette | December 26, 2006 02:22 PM
A few more nominations; first from my co-bloggers:
Mark Trodden on The Science of Coffee
JoAnne Hewett on Detectors 101
and a couple more:
Rob Knop on "Big Bang" is a terrible name for a great theory
Michael Berube on Thomas Kuhn.
Posted by: Sean Carroll | December 26, 2006 03:02 PM
I would suggest the following post from EvolutionBlog about the whole Richard Cohen/learning math controversy:
http://evolutionblog.blogspot.com/2006/03/value-of-algebra.html
Posted by: John Dupuis | December 26, 2006 05:03 PM
Here's one for Bernoulli's Principle. It a puzzle with great entertainment potential!
http://drwes.blogspot.com/2006/09/weekend-fun.html
Enjoy!
Posted by: Dr. Wes | December 28, 2006 05:54 AM
You mention asking for posts on teaching science and science for kids - I have one such post from this past summer, when I helped run a science booth at the New York State Fair
Posted by: Daniel | December 28, 2006 10:08 PM
Here's two more:
Did humans evolve form apes?
http://scientianatura.blogspot.com/2006/12/did-humans-evolve-from-apes.html
Responses to homeopaths:
http://scientianatura.blogspot.com/2006/12/homeopathy-responses-and-rebuttals.html
Posted by: jim | December 29, 2006 09:13 AM