Saturday, 12 January 2008

Look to the Stars

Lifehacker Australia recently published a cool little piece on getting into amateur astronomy. Locally, the Canberra Astronomical Society hosts introductory meetings once a month, as well as regular Deep Sky nights. There's also the Canberra Space Dome & Observatory, which has four telescopes and runs public viewing sessions five nights a week.

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Friday, 11 January 2008

Did insect bites hasten demise of dinosaurs?

Did insect bites hasten demise of dinosaurs?
James Randerson, London
January 8, 2008

THEY were the most imposing and terrifying creatures to walk the earth, but according to a new theory the dinosaurs might have been pushed towards extinction 65 million years ago by insects.

During the later part of the dinosaurs' dominion over the land, insects underwent an explosion in diversity, dealing a double whammy to the lumbering giants — they spread disease and contributed to a change of vegetation to which the plant-eating reptiles failed to adapt.

The hypothesis is made in a new book by entomologists George and Roberta Poinar. The former is a professor of zoology at Oregon State University.

"We can't say for certain that insects are the smoking gun, but we believe they were an extremely significant force in the dinosaurs' decline," Ms Poinar says. "Our research with amber shows that there were evolving, disease-carrying vectors in the cretaceous (period) and that at least some of the pathogens they carried infected reptiles. This clearly fills in some gaps regarding dinosaur extinctions."

In the gut of one biting insect preserved in amber — fossilised tree sap — from that era, the team has found the pathogen that causes the parasitic disease leishmaniasis and in another a type of malaria parasite that infects birds and lizards. By inspecting fossilised dinosaur faeces, the team also found parasitic microbes carried by insects.

Apart from spreading disease, the insects were busy pollinating flowering plants. These gradually supplanted seed ferns, cycads and gingkoes. If herbivorous dinosaurs could not adapt to this new diet they would have starved.

Ms Poinar believes the most popular theory for the dinosaurs' demise — that a meteorite impact changed the global climate — falls short because the extinction took too long.

"Other geologic and catastrophic events certainly played a role. But, by themselves, such events do not explain a process that in reality took a very, very long time, perhaps millions of years. Insects and diseases do provide that explanation."


This could be a fun story to discuss. I'm just wondering though:

1. "at least some of the pathogens affected reptiles" - yep, and maybe others affected the proto-mammals, who survived. As did smaller reptiles (yet the tiny dinosauria didn't?) and birds. I'm no extinction expert, but this seems a bit simplistic. Mind you, the insects changing the environment bit makes some more sense - might have been a bit too much for the bigger guys to bear (shades of megafaunal extinction in Australia? There's an argument in Quaternary circles suggesting that the big mammals which became extinct around the same time as humans first arriving on the continent might have been "encouraged" towards extinction by alteration of habitat through human use of fire - among other things such as hunting and climatic change...).

2. "Other geologic and catastrophic events certainly played a role. But, by themselves, such events do not explain a process that in reality took a very, very long time, perhaps millions of years..." - um, as far as I know (and I'm speaking as a geochronologist here - this is my job!), we don't have the chronological resolution to know whether the extinction took millions or thousands of years, or even days - we're talking about something that happened 65 MILLION years ago and the best we can do is date that to plus or minus 10%. So we can't pin it down. Palaeontologists may have more to say about dinosaur diversity towards the end of the Cretaceous - perhaps we should check up to see whether it was in decline, but that's not something I recall from my first year geology. I still reckon a monstrous meteorite wholloping the Earth is going to cause some severe climate and habitat change, regardless of what the bugs had been doing for tens of millions of years prior to that.

Happy presenting!
Kat F



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Tuesday, 1 January 2008

Fuzzy Logic in 2008 aka Fuzzy 1.5 (Not Quite 2.0)

In 2008 there's going to be a slight format shift on Fuzzy Logic. In the past, it was radio show first, web second. That's so old-man-from-yesterday-town.

We want to make Fuzzy Logic a whole lot more interactive this year, so we're posting our opinions on science stories here as we find them, and encouraging you to get in on the discussions too by leaving comments. Our regular shows on Sundays will shift to a panel show with discussion of the stories we've found during the week, rather than a straight read of news.

What do you think?

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Sunday, 23 December 2007

Fuzzy Logic - 23 Dec 07

Presenter: Eamon

Newsy Bits:
NT helping E Timor establish first Marine Park, Russian railways seek help from dancing robots and researcher seeks toad sightings on state borders.

Feature Articles:
Dark energy a furphy, says new paper, tyre warns of looming flat, Neanderthals sewed too little, too late.

Guest Interviews:
Patrick Lambe on knowledge management (with Intro by Simon Kravis), Mike Watson from ATSB on air crash investigations and Tim Baynes on drinking and mining.

'Sláinte!'
'Nollaig faoi shéan is faoi shonas duit.'
(A prosperous and happy Christmas to you).

Eamon

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Sunday, 2 December 2007

Fuzzy Logic - 02 Dec 07

Presenters: Dean, Kat E & Kat F

Faraway Fuzzy

Fuzzy Forum

Funny or Fuzzy?




Fairly Obvious Fuzzy

Fuzzy Finale

Tunes







Podcast

Coming soon

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Sunday, 30 September 2007

Supersized Fuzzy Logic - 30 Sep 07 - 75% More Fuzzy!

Mike, Claire, Milly, and David bring you an extended science news and discussion radio show.

News:
  • Dr Karl running for Senate.
  • Chicken navigation.
  • Drinking and memory.
  • Deep voices attract the ladies.
  • Airlines to try biofuels.
  • Biligual babies.
  • Siblings and aggression linked.
  • Killer viagra sold through UK chemists.

Features:

More News:
  • Women and anxiety.
  • Antisocial men should flirt.
  • Tangled hair.
  • Decoding the genome of Giardia.
  • Lunar X-Prize.
  • History of X as the unknown.

Music:
  • Portishead - Cowboys
  • Architecture in Helsinki - Heart It Races
  • Nine Inch Nails - Hand That Feeds
  • Mental As Anything - Live It Up
  • Gorillaz - Dirty Harry
  • Men at Work - Down Under
  • The Easybeats - Friday On My Mind

Listen:
  • Download parts 1 and 2 or listen here:

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