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You're not missing much Chris Rowan is a geologist specialising in the dark arts of paleomagnetism, and getting people to pay him to travel to exotic destinations for fieldwork. Having drilled up New Zealand during his PhD, and South Africa in his first post-doc, he now works at the University of Edinburgh.

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A girl, a pack, a forest, a river Anne Jefferson has a love of all things water-related and blends hydrology, geomorphology, geology, and climate change in her work. She has a Ph.D. from Oregon State University and is now an assistant professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.

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« What is education for, anyway? | Main | Volcano monitoring good: Republican antiscientism getting tedious »

Scientists Singing Science

Category: bloggerygeneral sciencepublic science
Posted on: February 24, 2009 5:30 PM, by Chris Rowan

Via NPR, I've been introduced to the musical stylings of glaciologist Richard Alley, who seems to have a particular fondness for murderimproving Johnny Cash songs with the addition of geological information. Of course, 'Ring of Fire' almost demands a subduction-related cover version.


If you don't want to plumb the depths of YouTube, you can watch and listen to his other efforts here (it seems he's also prone to dancing). In the NPR interview, he muses that it's a way of making his general geology classes a bit more memorable and personalised, and that possibly even some of the knowledge imparted this way might stick a little better. I'd take that with a pinch of salt, myself - but then, I don't think I quite have the temprament, or the muscial talent, to pull off something like this without it feeling contrived. If you can, maybe it can be effective.

This isn't my first exposure to guitar-wielding academics: one of the lecturers in my first year Cell Biology course at Cambridge, Ron Laskey, also liked to add a bit of musical entertainment to his lectures. At least one of his songs has made in to YouTube:

This performance comes to you from the Babbage Lecture Theatre, hence 'cabbage in the Babbage'. You can actually get CDs of his 'Songs for Cynical Scientists', which reinforces the impression you might have formed that he tends more towards the entertainment end of the spectrum than the educational, although 'Next Slide Please' does rather effectively sum up years of seminar and conference talk misery.

Of course, Tom Lehrer puts both of these wannabes firmly in their place -

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Comments

1

Those are great, Chris. Thanks! I've got to make sure my dad sees that last one.

Posted by: Silver Fox | February 24, 2009 10:07 PM

2

I wish I could sing and perform, just so I could do The Elements as a sing-along at a chemists' party - "Join in, you all know the words".

Posted by: Bob O'H | February 25, 2009 1:46 AM

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