It's a collision! Two great carnivals on the same day. Check out Carnival of the Spineless #23 from sodden Great Britain, where the molluscs are thriving, and also read Tangled Bank #85, the Reductionist's Tale at Migrations.
- Log in to post comments
More like this
Four Stone Hearth #20 is up on Afarensis.
Festival of the Trees #14 is up on Via Negativa
Circus of the Spineless #23 is up on Words And Pictures.
Tangled Bank 85 - The Reductionist's Tale is up on Migrations.
Carnival of the Liberals #44 is up on The Richmond Democrat.
130th edition of The…
The very first blog carnival was conceived right here, in Chapel Hill, some four-five years ago or so. Since then, the idea took off and there are now thousands of blog carnivals, some generalist, some regional, but most are topical with topics ranging from food to sports to politics. But,…
This June 01, 2005 post from Science And Politics has been reposted (with mild edits) at several different places by me and others, including on June 01, 2005 on Idea Consultants and on June 10, 2005 on DailyKos. This post, in some way, turned me into some kind of carnival "guru"....
What is a…
I am sitting here in North Carolina in a blog session about blog carnivals, and I am dismayed to ask you what has happened to these three blog carnivals: Tangled Bank, The Boneyard, and The Circus of the Spineless?
I know that there is a small core group of us at ScienceBlogs who are talking about…
PZ -- the first link in your abstract seems to just link back here. Oddly enough, the link is then correct in your article text.
BTW.. I don't get these things. Can someone explain what they are?
...sorry.. both the abstract's first link and the article's first link seem to be wrong, and yet different. But, either way, wrong.
T@Ts: These things are carnivals, sort of blogpost anthologies that collect posts on a certain theme (here, organisms) from Across the Blogosphere for your reading pleasure.
Dr. Myers, wonder if you might weigh in on this evo-devo study that speaks of Hox genes and hydromedusae with "heads"...wtf is a cnidarian "head"?
Interesting.. thanks for the explanation, Sven!