4.8 • 677 Ratings
🗓️ 10 December 2017
⏱️ 98 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
00:00:00 - Ryan and Charlie quickly introduce the premise of the episode: interviews Ryan did at the GSA annual meeting in Seattle, WA. The first interview is with Ph.D. candidate Khai Button about his work examining beaks in dinosaurs and birds (which are also dinosaurs), as well outreach work he does 3D scanning fossils with high school students. You can read about Khai's fieldwork at Expedition Live! and follow his outreach project on Twitter @fossilphiles.
00:31:57 - Drinks normally go one way, this time they go another way; embrace the difference. Ryan and Charlie are both drinking Americanos, which is espresso and hot water made to simulate a normal cup of coffee. Ryan, new to this, has many questions for Charlie, which he answers with gusto. Here's some Abe-approved coffee, a Charlie-approved espresso machine, and a thing that'll boil water real good.
00:45:32 - Next up, Ryan chats to Allison Jones about Jurassic petrofabrics in California with Dr. Kurt Burmeister’s research group at the University of the Pacific. It sounds complicated, but as Allison explains they're really just out in the mountains tracing rocks onto plastic sheets and then doing science to them. You can follow Allison on Twitter @allison_jones1.
01:02:30 - PaleoPOWs are a lot like in-person interviews, they're better with friends. Doing things in sort of reverse order, we begin with Charlie reading an e-mail from Kris H. wondering about claims made by various shades of climate change skeptics and/or deniers. There's a lot to be said, but the take-home message is that all of Kris' links are pointing towards cranks of various stripes, so we won't link them again here. You can read more about the claims these folks are making and how to counteract them here: Skeptical Science Climate Myths, and check out the book The Two-Mile Time Machine if you want to learn more about how we actually take some of the measurement to build our climate models as discussed by Ryan and Charlie. Ending things on a happier note, we thank Patron Billy Nitro by conferring upon him a thesis title. Tying into the show's themes we present: Unraveling the Pop Culture Fabric: Tools to Convince the Public that Dinosaurs had Feathers and Beaks with Applications Towards Climate Skepticism Outreach. Thanks, Billy!
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Music from this week's show:
Birds - M83
Grindstone - Jackie Greene
Black Rock - O.A.R.
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | and such forth and improvising all sorts of fun things to say and going on and continue to talk |
0:08.4 | about what I've been up to and my various exploits and yes and yes the key to any good improv is to |
0:18.6 | keep things going and never shut anybody down and work off of what they did and build on it and go somewhere with it and ramble. |
0:28.1 | Yes, but we're here to talk about science. |
0:29.9 | Precisely. |
0:30.5 | And we are recording now. |
0:31.2 | Oh, we are. |
0:31.7 | Yeah, because I got the levels where I want to do. |
0:33.4 | Okay, cool. |
0:34.1 | Cool. |
0:34.4 | Yeah. |
0:34.7 | Well, I love talking about science. From science sort of.com, you're listening to Science Sort of. |
0:53.2 | Hello and welcome. You're listening to Science Sort of. This is episode 273. And our theme this week is plainly put GSA 2017 part one. I'm your host, Ryan Haupt, and joining me to discuss things that are science, things that are sort of science and things that wish they were science, but mostly just helping me do the intro, outro bits for the interviews, is Dr. Professor Charlie Barnhart. |
1:11.6 | Happy to help out and hope to be on the show longer soon. |
1:16.2 | Yeah, you didn't deign to come down to GSA this year, even though it was in your neck of the woods. |
1:21.2 | Because I guess you're not really a geologist anymore. |
1:24.1 | And I have these other responsibilities, like 150 students and two offspring to keep alive. |
1:31.7 | So all good reasons. And I'm, yeah, I'm not really a geologist anymore either, but I miss it. |
1:36.2 | Even when you were a geologist, I'm guessing AGI was more your meeting. Yes, that's certainly true. |
1:41.0 | So let's explain. GSA is the Geological Society of America. They're a scientific |
1:46.2 | society based out of Boulder, Colorado, I think, and one of the larger ones, and they're an organization |
1:51.8 | I've been a member of for a while. It was actually the GSA Portland meeting was where I presented |
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