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profile.gif David Ng is Director of the Advanced Molecular Biology Laboratory at the University of British Columbia - this is a just a fancier way of calling himself a science teacher.

profile.gifBenjamin Cohen is an Asst. Professor of Science, Tech., and Society at the University of Virginia. He studies the place of S & T in environmental history, policy, and ethics. He also writes other stuff.

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« Scientists of Comedy? Or just (non-mystery) Science Theater... | Main | CHAIR bracket: Second round a go-go in the Science Tourney »

Environmentally-Conscious Scientific Field Research

Category: Ethics Palace: Where ethical questions go to live or dieNatureLand: What They Used to Call the Environment
Posted on: March 18, 2007 8:00 AM, by Benjamin Cohen

One "newsmakers" blurb in particular from last week's issue of Science (Vol. 315, No. 5817, 09 March 2007) stood out to me. It was about how Taranjit Kaur, a pathobiologist at Virginia Tech, is working to reduce the ecological footprint of her own research.

(Consider this a nice and brief addition to the ecological footprint-related posts Dave and I have added to the site over the past months, but instead of Tom Cruise, or me, it's about ecologically conscious scientific practice, maybe more like this.)


Here's the full text of the story:

PACK 'N PLAY. While studying to diagnose disease in chimpanzees, Taranjit Kaur, a pathobiologist at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in Blacksburg, wondered whether there was a way to reduce the environmental impact of her research. With the help of architect colleague Matt Lutz, she's come up with an answer: the world's first fully collapsible, mobile laboratory.

The two-story facility can hold laboratory equipment on the bottom floor, including computers, microscopes, and a refrigerator, and four researchers on the second floor. It's made of fiberglass rods and sliding aluminum panels that lock into place. The lab will be deployed this summer in Tanzania, where Kaur's group is establishing a health-monitoring program for chimpanzees.

A Virginia Tech website provides more detail. The lab is call PLUG (Portable Laboratory on Uncommon Ground), is "is a building capable of resolving the combined situation of field-ready research laboratory with comfortable living accommodation in remote and environmentally sensitive locations." Below is the outer layer, a light-weight tent canopy:

plug_schematic_3.gif
(See how it's assembled here.)


The next image shows the interior, which offers "loft-style quarters and securable lab space":

plug_schematic_2.gif
(Here is a set of thumbnail images showing the dimensions and versatility of the space.)


Altogether, this fits into the category of reducing the ecological footprints of workspaces, but in a different sense than usually considered. Instead of individual consumer choices or more broadly conceived organizational directives, that is, this one is about the place of scientific field research itself. They're keeping the "field" visible and ecologically respected.

Comments

That's cool. Has it actually been used in the "field" yet? Or is still in concept and design stages?

Posted by: David Ng | March 19, 2007 2:11 PM

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