When you work as a freelance writer, time often takes on a fluid quality. Today is today, as you work on articles that will appear in a few hours, but it's also tomorrow, next week, next month and six months from now, as you work on stories that will see print in the near and far-flung future. It's also yesterday, as you continue to promote articles published within the past 24 hours, as well as last year, as the articles you wrote months ago continue to influence the things you write today.
But now it's Monday, and you're about to find the links to the articles I published this past week (unless you're reading this six months from now), so I guess time is fluid for readers, too.
Anyway, here are last week's article links, starting with my "Extinction Countdown" pieces for Scientific American:
The Long, Strange Saga of the Endangered Hawaiian Hawk
Sea Lion Whisker Patterns Could Be Key to Conservation
And here are a variety of science news stories for Mother Nature Network:
Wild bumblebees are catching diseases from domesticated honeybees, says study
Ants form rafts using babies as flotation devices
John Kerry: Climate change is a 'fearsome weapon of mass destruction'
Science and God: Compatible or antagonists?
That's it for this time around. Make sure to follow me on Twitter for the latest links as they happen...in the future.
An archive of current and older (but still enjoyable!) articles, reviews, essays and more.
Monday, February 24, 2014
Monday, February 17, 2014
From the cute to the horrifying
It's another Monday, which means it's time for another list of links to my articles from last week. It was an "Extinction Countdown" heavy week, with four new articles at Scientific American:
Slaughtered for Ivory: 65 Percent of Forest Elephants Killed Since 2002
Lion Tamarins versus Climate Change
Manumea Found: Strange Bird Seen Breeding for the First Time in a Decade
Sunday Species Snapshot: Blue-Crowned Laughingthrush
This week also brought my latest monthly career article for IEEE-USA's Today's Engineer:
Get the Most Out of Professional Development Opportunities
And finally, here are a few tech/green articles for Mother Nature Network:
Fish face: Reconstruction of ancient fossil reveals the origins of the face
DARPA wants to build a better search engine and fight crime
Amazing new laser could diagnose disease and detect greenhouse gases
I'm still working on a ton of stuff for publication in the coming weeks and months. Stay tuned for links as they go live!
Slaughtered for Ivory: 65 Percent of Forest Elephants Killed Since 2002
Lion Tamarins versus Climate Change
Manumea Found: Strange Bird Seen Breeding for the First Time in a Decade
Sunday Species Snapshot: Blue-Crowned Laughingthrush
This week also brought my latest monthly career article for IEEE-USA's Today's Engineer:
Get the Most Out of Professional Development Opportunities
And finally, here are a few tech/green articles for Mother Nature Network:
Fish face: Reconstruction of ancient fossil reveals the origins of the face
DARPA wants to build a better search engine and fight crime
Amazing new laser could diagnose disease and detect greenhouse gases
I'm still working on a ton of stuff for publication in the coming weeks and months. Stay tuned for links as they go live!
Monday, February 10, 2014
New species and a warming world
Good Monday! It's time for this week's list of last week's article links. I'm a little surprised that this list is so short this week, given the massive number of articles that I actually worked on. Of course, several things that that I have on my desk right now won't seen print for months, so you have a lot to look forward to.
Anyway, this week only saw five new articles see print, including these two about endangered species for Scientific American:
New Crocodile Species Discovered in West Africa
Sunday Species Snapshot: Coquerel’s Sifaka
The other three for this week were for Mother Nature Network, which all covered climate change to one degree or another (no pun intended):
President Obama unveils 'climate hubs' to help farmers and rural communities
Google Earth adds 160 years of global temperature data
Snowmaking at 70 degrees? It's possible (with a $2 million device)
There's lots more coming this week, so come on back next Monday for another big batch of links. And as always, thanks for reading!
Anyway, this week only saw five new articles see print, including these two about endangered species for Scientific American:
New Crocodile Species Discovered in West Africa
Sunday Species Snapshot: Coquerel’s Sifaka
The other three for this week were for Mother Nature Network, which all covered climate change to one degree or another (no pun intended):
President Obama unveils 'climate hubs' to help farmers and rural communities
Google Earth adds 160 years of global temperature data
Snowmaking at 70 degrees? It's possible (with a $2 million device)
There's lots more coming this week, so come on back next Monday for another big batch of links. And as always, thanks for reading!
Monday, February 3, 2014
Weird wildlife, Extinction sadness and Science awesomeness
Even the flu can't keep me down for long. I cam back like gangbusters after last week's ugh-induced lowered productivity, with eight new published articles and a bunch of others working their way through the editorial cycle.
I'll start this list, as I usually do, with my "Extinction Countdown" articles for Scientific American, which covered both sadness and wonder:
Only 4 Northern White Rhinos Remain in Africa: Inside the Last Attempts to Breed and Save Them
First Wild Beaver in 800 Years Confirmed in England? [Video]
Did the Axolotl Just Go Extinct?
I also wrote a wide variety of stories for Mother Nature Network, including one that may be the funniest thing I have written in months:
Behold, the freaky leech that can stay alive at 321 degrees below zero
For stem cells in 30 minutes, just add acid
These e-whiskers could lend cat-like sensitivity to robots
Stephen Hawking says black holes don't exist (well, not in the way we thought)
Drug trafficking leads to massive deforestation in Central America
This coming week should see more for SA and MNN, and maybe some additional articles that are working their way toward publication. Follow me on Twitter for the links as they happen, or come on back here next Monday for another list of links. Have a great week!
I'll start this list, as I usually do, with my "Extinction Countdown" articles for Scientific American, which covered both sadness and wonder:
Only 4 Northern White Rhinos Remain in Africa: Inside the Last Attempts to Breed and Save Them
First Wild Beaver in 800 Years Confirmed in England? [Video]
Did the Axolotl Just Go Extinct?
I also wrote a wide variety of stories for Mother Nature Network, including one that may be the funniest thing I have written in months:
Behold, the freaky leech that can stay alive at 321 degrees below zero
For stem cells in 30 minutes, just add acid
These e-whiskers could lend cat-like sensitivity to robots
Stephen Hawking says black holes don't exist (well, not in the way we thought)
Drug trafficking leads to massive deforestation in Central America
This coming week should see more for SA and MNN, and maybe some additional articles that are working their way toward publication. Follow me on Twitter for the links as they happen, or come on back here next Monday for another list of links. Have a great week!
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