Start traveling, everyone. The Morris Cafe Scientifique will be held at 6pm, Tuesday, 1 April (that's tonight) at the Common Cup Coffeehouse on Atlantic Avenue. So come on out and learn about local climate change!
Climate Change in Lake Wobegon: predicting the impact of a warmer world on the forests of West Central Minnesota
Pete Wyckoff, Biology
What will West Central Minnesota look like at the end of the century?
This talk will explore what science tells us about the past response of vegetation in Minnesota to changing climates, and how knowledge of the past may (or may not) provide a useful guide to the future.
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It's another traveling day for me! I'm off to Minneapolis for a few meetings, and also this important event tonight:
Café Scientifique
Antibiotics in Agriculture
with Timna Wyckoff
Tuesday, May 9, 6-8 p.m.
Varsity Theater, Dinkytown
Free. Must be 18 or older to attend.
The Union of Concerned…
Tuesdays are not relaxing days for me; this is the day of the week when I sink into long class sessions for hours at a time. Somehow, I also decided that the last Tuesday of every month was also going to be the day for Cafe Scientifique, which I host here in town, and which I'm also giving today.…
At the Bell Museum of Natural History
Cafe Scientifique: Looking at Lichens
Tuesday, January 8, 2008; 6 p.m.
Kitty Cat Klub, Dinkytown
We've all seen lichens growing on rocks, trees, or buildings. Yet their unusual and complex structure often goes unnoticed. Though they appear to be a single…
Since we're arguing over global warming this week, I thought I'd post a commentary piece that was published in the Morris newspaper this week, by my colleague Pete Wyckoff. Pete is our local tree and climate expert, who works in both the biology and environmental studies discipline, and is very…
So about this time of year everyone in Minnesota is pro-global warming, right? :)
is this where you explain the evolution of the penis?
You could title the lecture: "Squid & Their Dangly Bits"
ohh jeesss,
Rumor has it SETI found the little green men that Richard believes sent the first bacteria to earth long, long ago, from a galaxy far away.
Problem is, the little green men believe in God!
(.)(.)
I know a lot of folks that support global warming right now. I'm not one of them mind you, I just want the next ice age already.
I like the French title, guaranteed to infuriate wingnuts.
Speaking of nothing except Minnesota events, I learned that Frans B.M. deWaal, Research Professor, Yerkes Primate Research Center of Emory University is giving a lecture on Tuesday, April 8, at 7:00 pm. at the Great Clips IMAX Theater at the Minnesota Zoo on "Our Inner Ape: Human Nature as Seen by a Primatologist." My inner fish, my inner ape--Jebus, no wonder my head is so noisy. Tickets are free and you can get them on the mnzoo.com website. Just thought my fellow snow-loathing 'Sotans might like to know.
I'm tired of people saying that creos don't do any research.
What about that banana study that Ray Comfort did?
While vegetation is interesting, changes in insect populations can have more immediate health impacts. As our winters in Masachusetts warm, we are seeing some insect-borne diseases move northward, including Eastern Equine Encephalitis and West Nile virus (both mosquito borne illnesses) and Lyme disease (deer ticks).
Then again, you may also be able to get away with growing roses without having to "tip" them in the winter.
Eleven hundred miles is too far to go for conversation and cold weather. Here I have nice weather devoid of conversational activity. Lots of praying though.
Study: Octopuses kinky creatures of sea
425 miles for me, but slightly short notice.