Granted, I'm really tired. Two weeks ago a major project started for which we invited participation from the public and other agencies US-wide. The response has been enthusiastic and the data has been rolling in at a much higher than normal level. And there's just little ol' me peddling as hard as I can to try to stay ahead of it. Or at least not completely drown under it. Long days without much in the way of breaks. And an inability to disconnect my mind at the end of the day - the brain is still skipping around, thinking about what needs to be done, things I need to look at, stats I need to provide. So I turn out the light and BING! I'm staring at the closet door and wishing Perry didn't feel that he has to plant his fat furry self in the exact spot I want to lay.
Last night was the same thing, splat into bed and then a racing mind. I had turned out the light and I was thinking about some information I wanted to winnow out from some files I created during day when suddenly, as clear and sharp as a bell, I heard "Mommy!". Huh!? Sounded like it came from right inside the house, on the front side. I sat up and listened. No repeat. I checked the front and the yard. Nothing. The back. Nothing. And of course now I was full of adrenaline and a lot of tossing, turning, and further listening followed.
Most likely explanation is that I had actually gone to sleep and it was part of a dream. But jeepers that was freaky.
Friday, March 28, 2014
Thursday, March 27, 2014
Who's Next?
Since the Crimean situation reminded me of Hitler's grab of the Sudetenland, I did a little research and put together a map. Red, of course, is Russia. Yellow is surrounding countries with a population that includes more than 10% ethnic Russians.
Like Ukraine, Moldova has problems - ethnic Russian Transnistria has been trying to completely separate itself from the more Romanian-influenced Moldova for decades.
Putin now knows that zip will happen if he stomps through an independent country. And I'm sure he sees Transnistria as a bit of Mother Russia whose people are crying out to return. Wonder how long until the small Russian force based in Transnistria expands and it is formally annexed to Russia? And the need for a direct connection to Transnistria gives Putin a reason to snap up a swath, if not all, of Ukraine?
And then there's that little bit of Russia separated off over to the west on Baltic Sea - the Kaliningrad Oblast. Two countries with high ethnic Russian populations plus Lithuania stand between the rest of Russia and Kaliningrad. Wonder how long before Russia decides that they need more direct access to their property and create a new connection involving pieces of those countries?
Like Ukraine, Moldova has problems - ethnic Russian Transnistria has been trying to completely separate itself from the more Romanian-influenced Moldova for decades.
Putin now knows that zip will happen if he stomps through an independent country. And I'm sure he sees Transnistria as a bit of Mother Russia whose people are crying out to return. Wonder how long until the small Russian force based in Transnistria expands and it is formally annexed to Russia? And the need for a direct connection to Transnistria gives Putin a reason to snap up a swath, if not all, of Ukraine?
And then there's that little bit of Russia separated off over to the west on Baltic Sea - the Kaliningrad Oblast. Two countries with high ethnic Russian populations plus Lithuania stand between the rest of Russia and Kaliningrad. Wonder how long before Russia decides that they need more direct access to their property and create a new connection involving pieces of those countries?
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
Fun, In A Chilly Sort Of Way
Somebody over at accuweather.com put together a map that shows the differences from norms for a few major cities and then plots them where their 2013 - 2014 temps put them.
I find it interesting that D.C. moved south, but into a more mountainous area.
I find it interesting that D.C. moved south, but into a more mountainous area.
Monday, March 24, 2014
Thursday, March 20, 2014
Tuesday, March 18, 2014
Gooey Ducks
I've been to Los Angeles only a couple of times, once for a conference and then just passing through. Let's just say I wasn't impressed and have no particular desire to return. Well, actually, I a swallowed the cost of a pre-paid hotel night in order to get out of there. But I did get to visit two interesting places during my longer stay: Will Roger's home in Santa Monica and the La Brea Tar Pits.
Will Roger's home is simple and pleasant and one has to smile at the fact that his stables were way larger than their house. The flowers in front were full of hummingbirds, and the air smelled faintly of eucalyptus. La Brea was fascinating - most of us don't have to put cones out to warn that tar is seeping up through our front yard in spots - but I'd be disinclined to live in the area if only because the air reeks of tar.(And it's in Los Angeles, which in turn is in California, which I wouldn't live in if you paid me.)
The tar pits have popped back up in the news again due to their proximity to a recent pretty cool discovery. During test excavations for a new subway station across the street a treasure trove of fossils from different eras than that of the neighboring tar pits was discovered. The tar pit fossils range from about 10,000 to 45,000 years old: this new deposit is ranging from about 50,000 to 300,000 years old, with an intriguing 2,000,000 year old sea lion fossil in a rock mixed in just to make things even more interesting. The finds include starfish, snails, small clams, and the not-so-small geoduck ("gooey duck"), which I think I first heard of courtesy of a "Dirty Jobs" episode. Personally, I prefer steaming littlenecks, but there you go....
Why is this interesting to anybody but us fossil geeks? Well, I wonder if people will process a bit of information this presents.
A quick trip to Google Earth and some rough measurements with the appropriate app:
That yellow line that I ran from the tar pits to the coast is nearly 9 miles long. So let's step through this: there's a large deposit of sea creature remains across the street from the pits. Which means that the sea level was once high enough to cover that area and it did so long enough to create a thriving, life-filled environment. Gasp! But but but..."This was the moment the rise of the oceans began to slow and the earth began to heal" ... but but but ... these fossils show that the sea level dropped considerably in this area thousands of years before Obama was born in Kenya (oops, sorry) ... that sea level change is normal ... and that the Chicken Littles need to stop babbling about sea level change. Because, like the climate, the sea level has been changing for upwards of 4 billion years and will continue to do so.
Some more info about the find here and here. One of the scientists interviewed mentions that the sea once extended well into Arizona. I wonder if anyone will put 2 and 2 together and get 4 or whether Common Core math will prevail.
And I notice that yesterday's little 4.4. shaker in L.A. has got people wondering about fracking. Because Los Angeles normally doesn't get earthquakes...
Will Roger's home is simple and pleasant and one has to smile at the fact that his stables were way larger than their house. The flowers in front were full of hummingbirds, and the air smelled faintly of eucalyptus. La Brea was fascinating - most of us don't have to put cones out to warn that tar is seeping up through our front yard in spots - but I'd be disinclined to live in the area if only because the air reeks of tar.(And it's in Los Angeles, which in turn is in California, which I wouldn't live in if you paid me.)
The tar pits have popped back up in the news again due to their proximity to a recent pretty cool discovery. During test excavations for a new subway station across the street a treasure trove of fossils from different eras than that of the neighboring tar pits was discovered. The tar pit fossils range from about 10,000 to 45,000 years old: this new deposit is ranging from about 50,000 to 300,000 years old, with an intriguing 2,000,000 year old sea lion fossil in a rock mixed in just to make things even more interesting. The finds include starfish, snails, small clams, and the not-so-small geoduck ("gooey duck"), which I think I first heard of courtesy of a "Dirty Jobs" episode. Personally, I prefer steaming littlenecks, but there you go....
Why is this interesting to anybody but us fossil geeks? Well, I wonder if people will process a bit of information this presents.
A quick trip to Google Earth and some rough measurements with the appropriate app:
That yellow line that I ran from the tar pits to the coast is nearly 9 miles long. So let's step through this: there's a large deposit of sea creature remains across the street from the pits. Which means that the sea level was once high enough to cover that area and it did so long enough to create a thriving, life-filled environment. Gasp! But but but..."This was the moment the rise of the oceans began to slow and the earth began to heal" ... but but but ... these fossils show that the sea level dropped considerably in this area thousands of years before Obama was born in Kenya (oops, sorry) ... that sea level change is normal ... and that the Chicken Littles need to stop babbling about sea level change. Because, like the climate, the sea level has been changing for upwards of 4 billion years and will continue to do so.
Some more info about the find here and here. One of the scientists interviewed mentions that the sea once extended well into Arizona. I wonder if anyone will put 2 and 2 together and get 4 or whether Common Core math will prevail.
And I notice that yesterday's little 4.4. shaker in L.A. has got people wondering about fracking. Because Los Angeles normally doesn't get earthquakes...
Monday, March 17, 2014
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