In the world of science, poop can be data, and we can tell when wine has too much water. This week, the ScienceSeeker editors pick include these and many other subjects in their favourite posts within their respective areas of interest and expertise. Here is the full round-up of the Science Seeker Editors’ Selections for the past week:
- Drawn to Geoscience: Bat Poop Is Helping Scientists Study the Past - The Plainspoken Scientist by JoAnna Wendel at The Plainspoken Scientist
- Turning Wine into Water and Other Nefarious Fraudulent Activities by Simon Nelms at Analyte Guru
- Life May Be Even Older Than We Thought! by Sanjoy Som at Sciworthy
- How scientists and supercomputers could make oceans drinkable by Rene Chun at Google
- From Longest Name to Loudest Sound, Scientists Catalog Over 100 Spider World Records by Christie Wilcox at Science Sushi
- Brilliantly colored ‘lost’ salamander rediscovered after 42 years by Shreya Dasgupta at Mongabay
- Is Cambodia’s plan to reintroduce tigers doomed to fail? by Logan Connor at Mongabay
- How unhealthy is the haze from Indonesia’s annual peat fires? by Loren Bell at Mongabay
- What Is Making All That Arctic Noise? by Martin Robards, Stephen Inslay and William Halliday at Ocean View
- The Winds of Winter at Letters from Gondwana
- Podcast of the week: Tara Smith by Cara Santa Maria at Talk Nerdy
- Catch-22, Clinical Trial Edition: Protecting Women and Children by Hilda Bastian at Absolutely Maybe
Image credit Hilda Bastian, used under CC BY-NC-ND license |
- New study suggests people with OCD are especially sensitive to the seasons by Christian Jarrett at British Psychological Society Research Digest
- Fact or Fiction: False Memories from Replicants to Rituals by James Howe at Neuwrite San Diego
- The split brain revisited - a new perspective by Deric Bownds at Deric's Mindblog
- The Surprising Scientific Reason behind Physical Attraction by Sabrina Stierwalt at Scientific American
- Direct Learning (Jacobs & Michaels, 2007) by Andrew Wilson at Notes from Two Scientific Psychologists
- Why Exploring Space And Investing In Research Is Non-Negotiable and 5 Discoveries In Fundamental Physics That Came As Total Surprises by Ethan Siegel at Starts With a Bang!
- Cosmic rays reveal unknown void in the Great Pyramid of Giza by Giorgia Guglielmi at Science
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