The Guild of Scientific Troubadours

The Guild of Scientific Troubadours

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Month: February 2021

Slavs first wrote with runes.

27 February 2021 grant 0

Archaeology magazine looks at a cow bone engraved with runic letters around 600 CE in the southern Czech Republic – a discovery that indicates that Slavic people first wrote using… Read the rest “Slavs first wrote with runes.”

SONG: Small

23 February 2021 grant 0

SONG: “Small”

ARTIST: grant.

SOURCE: Based on Science News, 4 Feb 2021, “A new chameleon species may be the world’s tiniest reptile”, as used in the post “Just… Read the rest “SONG: Small”

America is cloning ferrets.

22 February 2021 grant 0

AP News is reporting that America has caught up with Scotland in the clone wars. They cloned Dolly the Sheep, and now we’ve cloned an endangered black-footed ferret using DNA from … Read the rest “America is cloning ferrets.”

Scientific illustration of the Leavitt bulldog, a healthier breed of English bulldog

Science Art: Leavitt Bulldog body diagram, 2013

21 February 2021 grant 0

Scientific illustration of the Leavitt bulldog, a healthier breed of English bulldog

As most folks know, today’s English bulldog is an animal that has been, as they say, “overbred.” They have beautiful temperaments as a rule, and can barely breathe, … Read the rest “Science Art: Leavitt Bulldog body diagram, 2013”

Was it beer, or was it bread? Made for the living or made for the dead?

20 February 2021 grant 0

Discover pulls back the curtain on an archaeological debate over some pits in the ground in Israel – holes that show traces of 13,000-year-old fermentation that was brewed up next… Read the rest “Was it beer, or was it bread? Made for the living or made for the dead?”

A piece of human brain survived 2,600 years.

19 February 2021 grant 0

Science magazine reveals the secret to cellular survival for a chunk of human brain that didn’t rot for more than two and half millennia after its owner was beheaded:

Using several

… Read the rest “A piece of human brain survived 2,600 years.”

Farfarout is as far, far out as you can get (and still be in the Solar System).

18 February 2021 grant 0

NSF’s NOIRLab looks at a body that the Gemini Observatory spotted in 2018 and that astronomers working at Hawaii’s Subaru telescope nicknamed Farfarout. Now, they’ve… Read the rest “Farfarout is as far, far out as you can get (and still be in the Solar System).”

Scientific illustration of the Mars Ingenuity helicopter, by NASA/JPL-Caltech

Science Art: Ingenuity Mars helicopter, by NASA/JPL-Caltech

14 February 2021 grant 0

Scientific illustration of the Mars Ingenuity helicopter, by NASA/JPL-Caltech

Next week, on February 18, this little chopper will touch down on Mars with the Perseverance rover. Then, a little while later, it’ll take off for a few seconds. Then a few more. Then… Read the rest “Science Art: Ingenuity Mars helicopter, by NASA/JPL-Caltech”

Alpha Centauri’s possible planet: a warm Neptune, a very large Earth.

13 February 2021 grant 0

Scientific American wonders whether we’ve just spotted a new planet orbiting Alpha Centauri, our sun’s nearest neighbor. If it’s there, that potential planet is … Read the rest “Alpha Centauri’s possible planet: a warm Neptune, a very large Earth.”

Just discovered: world’s tiniest reptile.

12 February 2021 grant 0

Science News shows off a critter from Madagascar that is very small, yet enormously cute. You have to see this. Click the link to meet Brookesia nana, a newly discovered chameleon that might… Read the rest “Just discovered: world’s tiniest reptile.”

China’s Mars probe is sending back pictures.

11 February 2021 grant 0

Popular Science shares a postcard of Mars taken up-close and personal by China’s Tianwen-1 probe as it enters orbit around the Red Planet:

The five-ton craft carries an orbiter,

… Read the rest “China’s Mars probe is sending back pictures.”
Scientific illustration of pulleys in block and tackle arrangements, increasing mechanical efficiency.

Science Art: Tackles, 1905.

7 February 2021 grant 0

Scientific illustration of pulleys in block and tackle arrangements, increasing mechanical efficiency. Click to embiggen

Pulleys and rope, arranged to make lifting heavy weights easier. I’ve been messing around with boats lately, lowering a 30-foot mast with a lot of help. Pulleys … Read the rest “Science Art: Tackles, 1905.”

Voyager 1 has kept in touch for 40 years.

6 February 2021 grant 0

Discover reports on a dedicated little space probe that’s still writing home to NASA (using 11 vital instruments) after four decades of hurtling away from home:

6. Low-Energy Charged

… Read the rest “Voyager 1 has kept in touch for 40 years.”

“Just grow a table.”

5 February 2021 grant 0

MIT News looks at the new science of tissue engineering, taking lab-grown cells and training them to grow objects to order:

It takes a lot to make a wooden table. Grow a tree, cut it down, transport

… Read the rest ““Just grow a table.””

There’s a new whale in the Gulf of Mexico. A whole new species, in fact.

4 February 2021 grant 0

NPR introduces us to a 42-foot-long stranger, the Rice’s whale. The mysterious species is large in size, but small in number, hanging out in off the Redneck Riviera and not bothering… Read the rest “There’s a new whale in the Gulf of Mexico. A whole new species, in fact.”

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Honorary Troubadours
  • Jonathan Coulton, Contributing Troubadour for Popular Science.
  • Laura Veirs, who knows her way around a polysyllable.
  • Thomas Dolby, godfather of scientific pop.
  • Squeaky, fact-based rock about fusion containment & rocket science.
  • Cosmos II, a.k.a. Boston University astronomer Alan Marscher.
  • Dr. Fiorella Terenzi, astrophysicist who makes music from cosmic radio sources.
  • Dr. Jim Webb, astronomy professor and acoustic guitarist.
  • Artichoke, the band behind 26 Scientists, Vols. I and II.
  • They Might Be Giants, unrelenting proponents of scientific popular song.
  • Symphonies of Science, the people who make Carl Sagan and others sing.
  • Giant Squid, doom metal about the sublime horrors of marine biology.
  • Gethan Dick,6 scientists, 6 musicians, 1 great album
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