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Category Archives: Biography
History of a Science Historian
It’s the birth date of the first American to receive a Ph.D. in science history. I’m surprised how recently he lived. I figured science historians have been around almost as long as science and history – but I. B. Cohen, … Continue reading
Posted in Biography, Book Review, Culture, History, Philosophy
Tagged Ben Franklin, Bernard Cohen, I. B. Cohen, Newton, Principia, scientific revolution
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Heresy without Redemption
Today’s date, February 17, coincides with the day they killed Giordano Bruno. For years, he had been imprisoned for blasphemy, for practising magic, and for heresy. Execution was recommended, though he could have had a less tortuous death had he … Continue reading
Posted in Biography, Culture, Non-drift Theories, Philosophy, Religion, The Book
Tagged Art of Memory, Bruno, contraction, Galileo, Giordano Bruno, history, mountain mystery book, Roman Inquisition
6 Comments
Geology President’s Day
Americans get a day off today. It’s an occasion to remember the American presidents, especially Abraham Lincoln and George Washington, two of the February-birthday presidents. (The other two were William Harrison and Ronald Reagan.) On this day, Washington, Lincoln, and … Continue reading
Posted in Biography, Culture, Geology, History
Tagged extinction, fossils, history, Jefferson, woolly mammoth
3 Comments
Charles Darwin, the Geologist
It’s his birthday. It seems Charles Darwin’s legacy is experiencing a renaissance. Sure, some 60% of Americans vilify the man and hope he is roasting in hell. Or undergoing reincarnation as a toad, or is still awaiting release from purgatory. … Continue reading
Posted in Biography, Culture, History, Philosophy, Religion, The Book
Tagged coral reefs, Darwin, evolution, geology, history, James Dana, Lord Kelvin, mountain mystery book
7 Comments
Riding the Moho
Today is the anniversary of the birth (January 23, 1857) of a brilliant geophysicist with an unpronounceable name (unless you are Croatian) – Andrija Mohorovičić. (You may say On-Dree-Ya Mow-Hoe-Row-Vitch-Itch. Or, like many a grad student, you could simply … Continue reading
Ben Franklin: Geophysicist
It’s a stretch to claim Benjamin Franklin as a fellow geophysicist. But I think we have more claim to him than the optometrists who consider Franklin a fellow glasses-maker. (Franklin invented bifocals.) Franklin, whose birthday is today, studied lightning and … Continue reading
Posted in Biography, Culture, History, Plate Tectonics
Tagged Ben Franklin, geophysics, Gulf Stream, kite experiment, plate tectonics
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How the Earth’s Mystery Mineral Got Its Name
We seldom get to see a sample of the Earth’s most common mineral. It resides within the mantle at extreme heat and pressure not found on the surface. We think that the mineral resides within the mantle – we are … Continue reading
Posted in Biography, Geology, People, Philosophy
Tagged Bridgman, bridgmanite, geology, heat physics, history, inner Earth, International Mineralogical Association, mantle, mineralogy, nuclear bombs, peace
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Tuzo
“Tuzo’s dead.” That was the first time I’d ever heard of Tuzo. It was April 1993 and I wondered who – or what – Tuzo was. Now he was dead. I had already completed my University of Saskatchewan geophysics degree … Continue reading
Posted in Biography, History, How Geophysics Works, Plate Tectonics, Science Education
Tagged Canada, geophysics, history, plate tectonics, plumes, Tuzo Wilson
4 Comments
The Theory of Everything
The marriage of Stephen Hawking and Jane Wilde – as told through the ex-wife’s memoir – has become the stuff of a Hollywood tragic-romance. I have not read her memoir but have read excerpts and reviews of it. The Jane … Continue reading
Posted in Biography, Culture, History, People, Religion
Tagged ALS, history, Lou Gehrig's, motor neuron disease, Stephen Hawking, Theory of Everything
5 Comments
Popular, but Wrong
We don’t usually celebrate a man’s death, and we are not doing that here. But William Matthew (1871-1930) died on this date in 1930, and his appearance on my geo-calendar was a reminder to me to think about this popular … Continue reading
Posted in Biography, History, Non-drift Theories, Science Education
Tagged Darwin, drift, fossils, history, William Matthew
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