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June 28, 2009 By Sarah Webb 2 Comments

Molecule of the Week: Carbon dioxide (part 1 of many)

This small molecule is too big for a single post, so I’ll probably revisit it at different points in this blog. It’s the most oxidized form of carbon, often thought of as waste product: both of fossil fuel burning and of the energy reactions that fuel life. But it’s also an essential component of photosynthesis…

Permalink environment Molecule of the Week policy science ACES carbon dioxide chemistry fish ocean acidification otolith
June 25, 2009 By Sarah Webb 2 Comments

Encouraging (women) scientists to opt in to academia

It’s an interesting week to talk about women in science. On Tuesday afternoon, I listened in on the end of a White House panel discussion about Title IX and its impact on women in both athletics and science and technology. Scientific American also reported on a new government study about the state of women in…

Permalink career science writing academia Billie Jean King postdoc tenure Title IX women in science
June 22, 2009 By Sarah Webb 2 Comments

The global cancer challenge

The policy side of my reporting head has also turned to health issues over the last year or so, particularly global health. From a Western perspective, it’s easy to take for granted the scope of care and treatments that are available. But the developing world is light-years away from even hoping to have access to…

Permalink health policy cancer cancer registry Denise Grady global health India reproductive health Tanzania
June 20, 2009 By Sarah Webb

Molecule of the Week: Zinc gluconate

The Molecule of the Week is the active ingredient in Zicam, the nasal gel cold remedy that the FDA warned consumers to stop using this week. What’s the problem? Some users have reported losing their sense of smell after using the gel. On Tuesday, the FDA stepped in and issued a warning letter to Matrixx…

Permalink health Molecule of the Week science cold remedy FDA lozenges nasal gel Zicam zinc gluconate
June 19, 2009 By Sarah Webb 1 Comment

Webb of Science gives fashion advice

Fashion is not normally my beat. But I’m a science writer who writes careers articles, the most recent one about dressing for job interviews. So, today anyway, I’m a writer who gives fashion advice to scientists. Even though my workday fashion choices these days often remain within the home office, I do take pride in…

Permalink career science fashion job interview What Not to Wear
June 17, 2009 By Sarah Webb

Data and writing– unpublished or unpublishable?

Scientists, writers and even science writers share a common plight: there’s always a subset of their work that lies fallow, tucked in a notebook, lingering on a hard drive. The question remains whether that work should remain on a dusty shelf, or whether it actually belongs among “the published.” When I was in graduate school,…

Permalink science writing archives clinical trials data dead ends digital age failed results publish unpublished
June 14, 2009 By Sarah Webb 1 Comment

Molecule of the Week: Hydrogen

Though hydrogen is the smallest atom and is perched at the top left of the periodic table, hydrogen in nature exists as two atoms hooked together. Hydrogen hit the news this weekend as a leak led NASA to scrub the Space Shuttle Endeavor launch: Hydrogen is as clean as chemical fuels get: burning it produces…

Permalink Molecule of the Week science Space exploration chemistry Endeavor energy fuel gasoline helium hydrogen leak NASA periodic table Space Shuttle star
June 9, 2009 By Sarah Webb

June 8th birthday shout-out

I decided that in honor of my own birthday, I’d see which scientists also blew out candles on this spot on the calendar. (Okay, so I guess it’s a day late.) My cosmic alignment is pretty distinguished. Francis Crick, co-discoverer of the DNA double helix was born on June 8, 1916. I also share a…

Permalink science birthday Cassini DNA double helix Francis Crick Jacques Cousteau Jupiter Red Spot
June 6, 2009 By Sarah Webb

Molecule of the Week: Water

It’s been a rainy week in New York City, and my office next to our front porch and my container garden has me thinking about that ubiquitous wetness. It’s been soaking my plants, and after a quick errand on Friday afternoon, its dampness lurked for hours on the hem of my jeans. It’s easy to…

Permalink environment food health Molecule of the Week science AMNH chemistry climate change density ice Nature New York City sanitation steam water
June 4, 2009 By Sarah Webb

Whales in NY Harbor: Update

In my post last week about blue whales singing in NY Harbor, I mentioned that I had an email out to the Cornell Bioacoustics Research Program to find out the current status of the NY harbor listening project. I heard back yesterday from Connie Bruce at Cornell: The current status is that we have terminated…

Permalink animals environment science blue whale Christopher Clark NY harbor whales
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    Here's a really great recording of some racketts. https://youtu.be/HGI4zG-Zddw
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