The Guild of Scientific Troubadours

The Guild of Scientific Troubadours

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Articles by grant

Bigger houses aren’t making people happier.

18 June 2019 grant 0

They’re just taking up more space. That’s the conclusion, published in The Atlantic, of researchers looking at how satisfied people are with their homes – compared… Read the rest “Bigger houses aren’t making people happier.”

Scientific Illustration of an Early Modern or Late Renaissance class for exploration; how sailors got where they were going.

Science Art: favorite image Petrus Plancius Instructing Students in the Science of Navigation, early 17th century

16 June 2019 grant 0

Scientific Illustration of an Early Modern or Late Renaissance class for exploration; how sailors got where they were going. Click to embiggen

The Age of Exploration included at least a little bit of schoolwork. Here are navigation students learning the ways of current and coastline. Their teacher, Petrus Plancius… Read the rest “Science Art: favorite image Petrus Plancius Instructing Students in the Science of Navigation, early 17th century”

How the zebra got its stripes. (An 85-year-old researcher’s first published study!)

14 June 2019 grant 0

Popular Science thinks they know – and the answer is literally cool:

Now the 85-year-old amateur scientist [Allison Cobb] has published her first scientific study [in the Journal

… Read the rest “How the zebra got its stripes. (An 85-year-old researcher’s first published study!)”

Ancient stoners used wooden bowls. (Not the kind on pipes, either.)

14 June 2019 grant 0

Science News traces the history of highs to a Chinese site where 2,500-year-old tombside remains indicate that smoldering cannabis was stacked in wooden bowls for ritual inhalation –… Read the rest “Ancient stoners used wooden bowls. (Not the kind on pipes, either.)”

Why do bats live so long? And how can we live longer too?

11 June 2019 grant 0

Ars Technica tries to discover what it is about bats that could help us humans live longer, healthier lives:

For the most part, as the size of the mammal goes up, its metabolism slows down and

… Read the rest “Why do bats live so long? And how can we live longer too?”
Scientific Illustration of a star map; the constellations of the summer months

Science Art: Map IX: The Constellations of June and July by William Peck.

10 June 2019 grant 0

Scientific Illustration of a star map; the constellations of the summer monthsClick to embiggen
An image of the summer sky (in the Northern Hemisphere) by William Peck, F.R.A.S., from his book, The constellations and how to find them; 13 maps, showing the position … Read the rest “Science Art: Map IX: The Constellations of June and July by William Peck.”

We’re all mutants. Or largely mutant.

7 June 2019 grant 0

Science News has the results of a new study that shows healthy “normal” humans have a “large patches” of mutated cells in lots of different kinds of healthy tissues… Read the rest “We’re all mutants. Or largely mutant.”

Venus is luring Earth explorers again.

7 June 2019 grant 0

Nature has a quite long piece (and quite sensational headline) on the way Earth’s “evil twin,” Venus, is inspiring a new generation of interplanetary explorers to … Read the rest “Venus is luring Earth explorers again.”

Human beings swallow 50,000 microparticles of plastic per year. More, if you like bottled water.

5 June 2019 grant 0

And, The Guardian adds, we also inhale about that much plastic into our lungs as well. The study, published in Environmental Science and Technology, is the first hard look at how much microplastic… Read the rest “Human beings swallow 50,000 microparticles of plastic per year. More, if you like bottled water.”

The CRISPR-edited babies might have shortened lifespans.

3 June 2019 grant 0

Why? Well, as Nature explains, we’ve just found out that the same gene combination that gives HIV resistance to those kids He Jianku worked on also makes them 21% likelier to die before… Read the rest “The CRISPR-edited babies might have shortened lifespans.”

scientific illustration of Mariner 10 for a 10c stamp

Science Art: Mariner 10 issue of 1975, by Roy Gjerston

2 June 2019 grant 0

scientific illustration of Mariner 10 for a 10c stampClick to embiggen

Roy Gjerston was an artist who designed stamps for the US Postal Service and spaceship concept art for General Dynamics. So this stamp, commemorating the Mariner 10 probe… Read the rest “Science Art: Mariner 10 issue of 1975, by Roy Gjerston”

A genetically weaponized fungus is getting used against malaria.

31 May 2019 grant 0

PhysOrg has a report on a genetically modified fungus that is capable, if released into the wild, of using spider venom to eliminate the mosquitoes that carry one of the nastiest diseases… Read the rest “A genetically weaponized fungus is getting used against malaria.”

The Search for Martian Fettuccine

30 May 2019 grant 1

Science Daily has word from University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign researchers, who instruct us to look for life on Mars by searching out rock formations that look like fettuccine … Read the rest “The Search for Martian Fettuccine”

scientific illustration of an echocardiogram.

Science Art: Heart normal parasternal long axis echocardiography view by Patrick J. Lynch

26 May 2019 grant 0

scientific illustration of an echocardiogram.Click to embiggen
This is an image of an image of the heart – or at least an image of heart imaging. An echocardiogram done upward or downward from between the ribs beside the sternum.… Read the rest “Science Art: Heart normal parasternal long axis echocardiography view by Patrick J. Lynch”

SONG: Bodiless

24 May 2019 grant 0

SONG: “Bodiless”.

ARTIST: grant.

SOURCE: Vox, 17 April 2019, “Scientists: We kept pig brains alive 10 hours after death. Bioethicists: ‘Holy shit.’… Read the rest “SONG: Bodiless”

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GRANT: something to believe in

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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
Related Projects
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"Is it a fact—or have I dreamt it—that, by means of electricity, the world of matter has become a great nerve, vibrating thousands of miles in a breathless point of time?"
— Nathaniel Hawthorne, The House of the Seven Gables, 1851

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