tags: Red-Crowned Amazon Parrot, Amazona viridigenalis, birds, nature, Image of the Day Red-crowned Amazon parrot, Amazona viridigenalis, at Elizabeth Street Parrotry, Brownsville, Texas. Image: Joseph Kennedy, 7 April 2008 [larger view]. Nikon D200, Kowa 883 telescope TSN-PZ camera eyepiece 1/750s f/8.0 at 1000.0mm iso400.
Here's a few blog carnivals to enjoy; I and the Bird, issue 82. This blog carnival focuses on wild birds and birdwatching. Finance Fiesta, 12 edition. This blog carnival focuses on (what else?) finance! Carnival of Improving Life, issue 22. This carnival tries to coach people on how to improve the quality of their lives.
Buckingham Palace Gate with coat of arms, London, May 2005. Image: Dickbauch (Wikipedia). I am a panelist at a one day conference being held in London, England. This conference focuses on the value of blogs to the public, to science and to scientists, and is being held at the Royal Institution of Great Britain on 30 August 2008. My fellow panelists are Jennifer Rohn, editor at LabLit.com and Anna Kushnir, who works for Nature Network Boston and writes the blog, Lab Life. The panel moderator is my friend and ScienceBlogs colleague who lives in London, Mo. I need your help as I work on my…
Adult plumage Ring-billed Gull, Larus delawarensis, stands on a lamp on Roosevelt Island, overlooking the East River. Manhattan Island is in the background. Image: GrrlScientist, 21 August 2008 [larger view]. I went on a little day trip to Roosevelt Island to look at birds and to learn a little about a company known as Verdant Power. Roosevelt Island (formerly Welfare Island, and before that, Blackwell's Island) is a small island that is roughly two miles long located in the middle of the East River, a tidal estuary that flows between Manhattan Island and the Borough of Queens. Verdant…
tags: West 66th street/Lincoln Center Subway Art, Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers, subway art, NYC through my eye, photography, NYC Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers. Artist: Nancy Spero, 1999. Installed 2004. West 66th Street/Lincoln Center Subway tile mosaic art #42 as seen at NYC's Lincoln Center stop at Broadway for the uptown (northbound) 1 train. Image: GrrlScientist 2008 [larger view]. Glass mosaic murals depicting scenes of theater, dance, and orchestra-related subjects are scattered throughout this station. I have photographed tile artworks from several NYC subway…
tags: Red-Crowned Amazon Parrot, Amazona viridigenalis, birds, nature, Image of the Day Red-crowned Amazon parrot, Amazona viridigenalis, at Elizabeth Street Parrotry, Brownsville, Texas. Image: Joseph Kennedy, 7 April 2008 [larger view]. Nikon D200, Kowa 883 telescope TSN-PZ camera eyepiece 1/750s f/8.0 at 1000.0mm iso400.
Horse Guards Parade building in London, April 2006. Image: Gryffindor (Wikipedia). I am a panelist at a one day conference being held in London, England. This conference focuses on the value of blogs to the public, to science and to scientists, and is being held at the Royal Institution of Great Britain on 30 August 2008. My fellow panelists are Jennifer Rohn, editor at LabLit.com and Anna Kushnir, who works for Nature Network Boston and writes the blog, Lab Life. The panel moderator is my friend and ScienceBlogs colleague who lives in London, Mo. I need your help as I work on my…
tags: West 66th street/Lincoln Center Subway Art, Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers, subway art, NYC through my eye, photography, NYC Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers. Artist: Nancy Spero, 1999. Installed 2004. West 66th Street/Lincoln Center Subway tile mosaic art #41 as seen at NYC's Lincoln Center stop at Broadway for the uptown (northbound) 1 train. Image: GrrlScientist 2008 [larger view]. Glass mosaic murals depicting scenes of theater, dance, and orchestra-related subjects are scattered throughout this station. I have photographed tile artworks from several NYC subway…
tags: Northern Fulmar, Fulmarus glacialis, birds, nature, Image of the Day These Northern fulmar chicks, Fulmarus glacialis, are from the northern end of the Isle of Lewis (aka the Butt of Lewis) in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland. Image: Dave Rintoul, August 2008 [larger view].
Here's more blog carnivalia for you to read; Making money and Business advice carnival for 19 August 2008. Who would have ever thought that an unemployed research scientist had anything of value to tell the business community?
St Paul's Cathedral London, December 20, 2004. Image: Peter Morgan from Beijing, China (Wikipedia). I am a panelist at a one day conference being held in London, England. This conference focuses on the value of blogs to the public, to science and to scientists, and is being held at the Royal Institution of Great Britain on 30 August 2008. My fellow panelists are Jennifer Rohn, editor at LabLit.com and Anna Kushnir, who works for Nature Network Boston and writes the blog, Lab Life. The panel moderator is my friend and ScienceBlogs colleague who lives in London, Mo. I need your help as I…
tags: West 66th street/Lincoln Center Subway Art, Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers, subway art, NYC through my eye, photography, NYC Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers. Artist: Nancy Spero, 1999. Installed 2004. West 66th Street/Lincoln Center Subway tile mosaic art #40 as seen at NYC's Lincoln Center stop at Broadway for the uptown (northbound) 1 train. Image: GrrlScientist 2008 [larger view]. Glass mosaic murals depicting scenes of theater, dance, and orchestra-related subjects are scattered throughout this station. I have photographed tile artworks from several NYC subway…
tags: cognition, behavior, self-recognition, self awareness, tool use, memory, brain architecture, birds, European magpie, Pica pica, researchblogging.org Figure 1. European magpie, Pica pica, with yellow mark [larger view]. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0060202. Birds have been disparaged publicly as "bird brains" for so long that most people have lost the ability to view them as intelligent and sentient beings. However, a group of researchers in Germany have conducted a series of studies with several captive European magpies, Pica pica, that challenge the average person's view of birds and…
tags: Who Blogs, blog writing and personality, Big Five personality inventory, social psychology, technology, computers, internet, researchblogging.org You all read blogs, and many of you write them, too. But what sort of person writes a blog? Are there particular personality traits that make certain people more likely to write a blog? If so, what are those personality traits? Do you have them, too? A team of scientists, led by psychologist Rosanna Guadagno from the University of Alabama, wondered what personality traits made some people more likely than others to write blogs. To answer…
tags: Northern Fulmar, Fulmarus glacialis, birds, nature, Image of the Day The Northern Fulmar, Fulmarus glacialis, in flight is from the ferry that took the photographer and his wife to the Orkneys, Scotland. Image: Dave Rintoul, August 2008 [larger view].
Another blog carnival for you to enjoy; Gene Genie, issue #34, summertime and the blogging is easy. This blog carnival focuses mainly on the human genome and the genetics of human disease.
The National Gallery in Trafalgar Square, London, 21 December 2006. Image: Genvessel (Wikipedia). I am a panelist at a one day conference being held in London, England. This conference focuses on the value of blogs to the public, to science and to scientists, and is being held at the Royal Institution of Great Britain on 30 August 2008. My fellow panelists are two amazing women whom I've admired for several years; Jennifer Rohn, editor at LabLit.com and Anna Kushnir, who works for Nature Network Boston and writes the blog, Lab Life, and the panel moderator is my friend and ScienceBlogs…
tags: West 66th street/Lincoln Center Subway Art, Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers, subway art, NYC through my eye, photography, NYC Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers. Artist: Nancy Spero, 1999. Installed 2004. West 66th Street/Lincoln Center Subway tile mosaic art #39 as seen at NYC's Lincoln Center stop at Broadway for the uptown (northbound) 1 train. Image: GrrlScientist 2008 [larger view]. Glass mosaic murals depicting scenes of theater, dance, and orchestra-related subjects are scattered throughout this station. I have photographed tile artworks from several NYC subway…
tags: racehorses, Genuine Risk, Kentucky Derby, horse racing, streaming video Genuine Risk, pictured at age 30, was the oldest living Kentucky Derby winner. She was living at the Newstead Farm in Upperville, Va. when she died. Image: Carol T. Powers for The New York Times. The bright chestnut filly named Genuine Risk thrilled me when she won the Kentucky Derby in 1980 with commanding style. Not only did she win, but she ran the last quarter mile of the race faster than any other horse ever had, except the amazing Secretariat, who went on to win the Triple Crown of American horseracing in…
tags: Eurasian blue tit, Cyanistes caeruleus, birds, nature, Image of the Day This Eurasian Blue Tit, Cyanistes caeruleus, is from the photographer's ancestral village of Rintoul, near Kinross, which is north of the Firth of Forth, about 20 miles from Edinburgh, Scotland. Image: Dave Rintoul, August 2008.