The Guild of Scientific Troubadours

The Guild of Scientific Troubadours

ex scientia, sono

  • Home
  • Join the Guild
  • The Scientific Troubadour Pledge
  • The SONGS

Science

There’s an all-electric big rig out on the road today….

10 July 2015 grant 0

Manufacturing.net explains how BMW put a pollution-free semi to work on the autobahn:

The BMW Group began using an all-electric semi-truck to transport vehicle components from the SCHERM

… Read the rest “There’s an all-electric big rig out on the road today….”

Genetically modified mosquitoes swarm Brazilian city.

8 July 2015 grant 0

And, New Scientist points out, they’re here to help… because they breed fast and their young die too quickly to spread dengue fever:

Millions of genetically modified mosquitoes

… Read the rest “Genetically modified mosquitoes swarm Brazilian city.”

The Larkin Effect exposed: How parents pass anxiety on to their kids.

7 July 2015 grant 0

Science Daily peers deep into our brains to reveal how exactly our parents messed us all up:

The study is being published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

… Read the rest “The Larkin Effect exposed: How parents pass anxiety on to their kids.”

Sorry, arachnophobes. Spiders can go *everywhere*.

6 July 2015 grant 0

Nature reveals how spiders can use webbing to sail through the air… and then land on water and keep on sailing:

Morito Hayashi, a spider researcher at the Natural History Museum in

… Read the rest “Sorry, arachnophobes. Spiders can go *everywhere*.”

Science Art: Scheutz mechanical calculator (Zeichnung der Difference Engine No.1 aus dem Jahr 1853), 1867.

6 July 2015 grant 0

Scheutz_mechanical_calculator
Click to embiggen

Now, after that brief, regrettable interruption in service, a tribute to the computer.

This illustration is from The Elements of Natural Philosophy; Or, An Introduction… Read the rest “Science Art: Scheutz mechanical calculator (Zeichnung der Difference Engine No.1 aus dem Jahr 1853), 1867.”

Science Art: Fig. XLIII. Hydromylos, sive aquaria mola, 1662.

28 June 2015 grant 0

Style: "1752367"

This is a waterwheel, from a book written by architect and engineer Georg Andreas Boeckler, under the title Theatrum machinarum novum : exhibens opera molaria et aquatica constructum … Read the rest “Science Art: Fig. XLIII. Hydromylos, sive aquaria mola, 1662.”

Land planarians are invading the U.S.!

26 June 2015 grant 0

PeerJ has a study revealing how one the planet’s most invasive species has wormed its way into – of course – Florida:

The land planarian Platydemus manokwari de Beauchamp,

… Read the rest “Land planarians are invading the U.S.!”

Memories are physical: they last as long as the nerve-cell connections that store them.

25 June 2015 grant 0

So say Stanford University neurologists, who have actually seen memories under a microscope – and watched them vanish:

Now Mark Schnitzer, an associate professor of biology and

… Read the rest “Memories are physical: they last as long as the nerve-cell connections that store them.”

Laser “tricorder” diagnoses malaria through the skin.

23 June 2015 grant 0

I couldn’t really improve on New Scientist‘s headline there. This device shines a laser through an earlobe or wrist and detects malaria parasites through light absorption… Read the rest “Laser “tricorder” diagnoses malaria through the skin.”

The sports car that reads your mind.

22 June 2015 grant 0

Auto Guide (and a few other places) have been looking at… well, is the step before a driverless car or the step beyond? Anyway, it’s a thing where Jaguar/Land Rover is using NASA… Read the rest “The sports car that reads your mind.”

Science Art: Paper Wings, by Nicole Frost.

21 June 2015 grant 0

PaperWingsNicoleFrost
Click to embiggen

These are paper sculptures of birds’ wings – four specific categories of birds’ wings. As explained by their creator:

This is my paper sculpture of

… Read the rest “Science Art: Paper Wings, by Nicole Frost.”

We don’t have to protect the Eastern Cougar any more. There aren’t any left.

18 June 2015 grant 0

The Guardian has more on the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s official extinction verdict:

The agency said on Tuesday the four-year review, which included information from 21 states

… Read the rest “We don’t have to protect the Eastern Cougar any more. There aren’t any left.”

Zombies of the ancient world

17 June 2015 grant 0

Popular Archaeology thrills us with really, really old scares… digging up (literally!) evidence of Classical Greek zombie stories:

As one case in point, [University of Pittsburgh

… Read the rest “Zombies of the ancient world”

The Vulnerable Ape theory of human origins.

16 June 2015 grant 0

PhysOrg turns the “brutal caveman” stereotype on its head, with a new look at our earliest ancestors as sensitive folks who got a leg up on the competition because we were vulnerable… Read the rest “The Vulnerable Ape theory of human origins.”

Good morning, Philae. How’s that comet looking 200 days later?

15 June 2015 grant 0

The ESA has spent an eventful weekend now that the Rosetta probe has woken up after a long sleep on a comet:

Hidden by shadows, Philae shut down on 15 November 2014 at 00:36 GMT after completing

… Read the rest “Good morning, Philae. How’s that comet looking 200 days later?”

Posts pagination

« 1 … 133 134 135 … 284 »

Follow on Bandcamp

Something to Believe In

GRANT: something to believe in

You could write a review of this album here on iTunes.

That would be generous.

Fellow Travelers

  • 314.Action
  • Bioephemera
  • Breakfast in the Ruins
  • Carabus
  • Discover
  • Fluxblog
  • Giant-Killer
  • grant (archive)
  • grant (bandcamp)
  • Hello, Poindexter!
  • ideonexus
  • junior kitchen
  • Keep Your Pebbles
  • LiveScience
  • Mindless Ones
  • Nature
  • New Scientist
  • NIMBioS: Science Songwriters-in-Residence
  • Peculiar Velocity
  • PhysOrg
  • Science Daily
  • Science Magazine
  • Science News
  • Science Writers Daily
  • Scientific American
  • Singing Science Records
  • Songfight!
  • Space.com
  • Stereo Sanctity
  • The Great Beyond
  • The Other Adam Ford
  • The Periodic Table of Poetry
  • Voyages Extraordinaires

Tags

acoustics aeronautics agronomy anatomy anthropology archaeology astronomy biochemistry biology botany chemistry climatology computer science ecology economics electrical engineering electronics engineering entomology epidemiology evolution genetics geology linguistics marine biology mathematics medicine meteorology microbiology microscopy nanotechnology neurology oceanography optics paleontology pharmacology physics psychology quantum physics research robotics sociology space exploration theremin zoology
RSS Help Wanted: ScienceCareers
  • Baylor College of Medicine: Postdoctoral Associate - Neuroscience
  • Ellison Institute of Technology: (Senior) Group Leader, Advanced Genome Technologies - Plant Biology Institute
  • University of Minnesota: Dean, College of Food, Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences and Director, MAES
  • NIAID, NIH: Staff Scientist
  • University of California, San Francisco: Faculty Positions - Institute for Human Genetics
  • Boston University - Biology: Lecturer in Cell & Molecular Genetics
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
  • Squid Pro Crow
  • Grant Bandcamp
  • Grant Soundcloud
  • Penitential Originals Playlist
https://guildofscientifictroubadours.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/01-gravity-song.mp3

 
"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

grant balfour made this website.

Member institution: Duct Tape Aesthetic Laboratories
Tools
  • Subscribe via Email
     
  • View as PDF (via FiveFingers)
     
  • Is Facebook Electric?
     
  •   Yes, yes, we RSS!

     
Fields of Inquiry
  • Cold Storage
  • Featured
  • Guild Affairs
  • Music
    • Songs
      • Penitential Covers
  • Science
    • Science Art

Copyright © 2026 | WordPress Theme by MH Themes

Social Media Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com