Field of Science
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How dumb is too dumb? We still don't know!12 hours ago in The Phytophactor
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The Even Earlier Discovery of Antibiotic Resistance19 hours ago in Memoirs of a Defective Brain
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Religion is halfway between a fact and an opinion - according to kids and adults2 days ago in Epiphenom
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Bioengineers go retro to build a calculator from living cells2 days ago in The Allotrope
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A New Non-mammaliaform Eucynodont from the Ischigualasto Formation of Argentina1 week ago in Chinleana
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Chemistry, fluid dynamics and an awful radioactive mess1 week ago in The Curious Wavefunction
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Exploding expertise2 weeks ago in The Culture of Chemistry
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UPDATED: 10 things we need to find out about the #NCoV1 month ago in Rule of 6ix
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The Lure of the Obscure? Guest Post by Frank Stahl11 months ago in Sex, Genes & Evolution
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Finding a new translation factor, and verifying it with help from my experimental friends1 year ago in Protein Evolution and Other Musings
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Free ImageJ Macro -- for citing images1 year ago in Skeptic Wonder
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The Large Picture Blog Has Moved1 year ago in The Large Picture Blog
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Lab Rat Moving House1 year ago in Life of a Lab Rat
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Goodbye FoS, thanks for all the laughs1 year ago in Disease Prone
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Branson getting into microbial diversity in the deep sea2 years ago in The Greenhouse
Flying is Unsustainable
Today I am crossing Australia, the Pacific, and then the West Coast by airplane and I feel guilty. You see everything that I do in my daily life to be environmentally friendly is nullified by my airplane travel. Even if I was completely carbon neutral in my daily life the excessive amount of airplane travel that I partake in each year would place me me in the same ranks as the worst polluters in America. According to a green manifesto (also see this description of 'low-energy astrophysics') by astrophysicist P.J. Marshall and others the average energy consumption per day of a person in the U.S. is 250 kWh/day/person. An astrophysicist uses an extra 133kWh/day/astronomer, yet the vast majority of that additional energy usage, 113 kWh/day/astronomer, is contributed by flying. The key message of the manifesto is that while astronomers are not actually a significant energy consumer in the U.S. (they use 0.001% of the national total energy production) we are high profile scientists who must set an example. Astronomers believe global warming is real, and thus must act.
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