An interesting tidbit about Edsger Dijkstra's Workweek in Cal Newport’s blog. #GTD #Academia https://calnewport.com/edsger-dijkstras-one-day-workweek/
The features in Coldwater Cave are just stunning. It's like a cave geology textbook down there.
The cave itself is flooded, with cold water actively flowing through it (Coldwater Cave, amirite?). Even in summer it was pretty cold.
On the ceiling, you could see really neat joint patterns and how fluids exploited those joints, flowed through, and then deposited calcite as they hit the cave and CO2 was released, changing equilibrium and causing chemical precipitation.
Very proud of our #NSF-funded #REU students at the Dept of Geosciences, University of Arizona — our program called “Clouds 2 Core” (C2C) is only for students enrolled in 2-Yr Community and Tribal Colleges and the current cohort of 11 students are from colleges and towns all over #Arizona (and #NM and #TX). Today is their final presentations after 8 weeks of research work, here in #Tucson. Some photos below!
#UAC2C23 #UAGeoscience #UAZGeoscience #UniversityOfArizona #Geoscience #UGResearch
Here’s a couple of #macro #photograph of some type of (presumably #cobweb?) #spider in our backyard making a #snack out of a #darklingbeetle #beetle!
Timery 1.5.6 is available and should fix a possible issue with projects in saved timers on the iOS 17 and macOS Sonoma betas.
https://apps.apple.com/us/app/id1425368544
Stay tuned for lots of new goodies coming later this year!
Happy time tracking!
@kau I’ve never experienced worse editorial handling than at Nature brand journals - we had a paper at Nat Comms (which did eventually come out there) where the editor rejected it after multiple rounds of review because one of the reviewers (who we’d already flagged as problematic) sent in a review for a completely different manuscript and the editor didn’t realise and rejected it. They then proceeded to ignore all of our emails until we got their senior editor involved. Crazy
I spent SO MANY HOURS in grad school manually adjusting peak baselines and deciding what should or shouldn't count as a peak and then going back and doing it all again because I called it a peak in one sample but not the other. I'm SO happy that progress is being made on this problem and very excited to read this preprint!
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.07.28.551024v1
#GCMS #LCMS #XCMS #AnalyticalChemistry #Chromatography
#Metabolomics
Ok @kau, when are you going to launch a diamond open access climate journal? Have seen quite a few cooking in geo side, like Seismica, Tektonika, Sedimentologika, Volcanica, Geomorphica... We even just launched one on disaster risk, @JournalCRR.
But no climate, somehow... I smell a project ;)
Following the hottest June on record and a series of extreme weather events, ERA5 data from the @CopernicusECMWF show that the first three weeks of July have already broken several records.
#ClimateCrisis #ClimateAction #opensource #OpenScience #WMO #ECMWF
@kau Proliferating journals under the same corporate umbrella always struck me as having your cake and eating it too. “No, we don’t want your paper in your journal of choice, but we don’t want publishing fees or prestige to go to a competitor so here’s another less-relevant/crappier/catch-all journal for your consideration.”
This article starts off with “One clear benefit of the increasing number of Nature-titled journals is that there is a destination for many more excellent papers than used to be possible, with the ability to transfer a manuscript to another title if the author’s first choice doesn’t work out.” — at what price have you we bought into this “clear benefit” 🫠
#Geoscience #Nature #Science #Academia #AcademicChatter #EarthScience #NatureGeoscience
Around ~10-12 years ago, Nature tried to “disrupt” the publication market & flooded it with journals without providing resources to ensure long-term success nor thinking about the impact it would have… this has led to sustained mediocrity, dwindling integrity, & disingenuous “high impact” publications that they profit off of — another Great disservice to the already awful publication landscape that scientists face today. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41561-023-01236-w
New species of #foraminifera (Globigerinoides rublobatus) erected from #Pleistocene sediments in the tropical #Indian Ocean — from the Journal of #Micropaleontology by Latas & colleagues: https://jm.copernicus.org/articles/42/57/2023/
17 years after being dropped from endangered list, tiny pygmy owl gains new protections https://www.tucsonsentinel.com/local/report/071923_pygmy_owl_protected/17-years-after-being-dropped-from-endangered-list-tiny-pygmy-owl-gains-new-protections/
Once at the center of fights over land use around Pima County, the rare, diminutive and publicly prominent cactus ferruginous pygmy owl will again be protected under federal law.
#Tucson #Arizona
Earth/climate scientist at the #UniversityOfArizona (#Tucson).
📝 #GTD
🦜 #birds
🎹 #synths
🎸 #bassguitar
☀️ #mindfulness
📸 #photography
🌡️ #climate & #paleoclimate
🌊 #oceans & #paleoceanography
⚗️ #geochemistry & #biogeochemistry