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Not Exactly Rocket Science
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Science writing I’d pay to read – August 2011

It’s time for August’s Science Writer Tip-Jar picks. For those new to this, here’s the low-down:

Throughout the blogosphere, people produce fantastic writing for free. That’s great, but I believe that good writers should get paid for good work. To set an example, I choose ten pieces every month that were written for free and I donate £3 to the author. There are no formal criteria other than I found them unusually interesting, enjoyable and/or important.

I also encourage readers to support these writers through two buttons on the sidebar. Any donations via “Support Science Writers” are evenly distributed to chosen ten at the end of the month. Donations via the “Support NERS” button go to me; I match a third of the total figure and send that to the chosen writers too.

So without further ado, and in no particular order, here are the picks:

  • Jennifer Ouellette for her joyous paean to yodelling, featuring the Sound of Music, Tibetan monks, the Pavarotti robot, and the “yodellumpet”.
  • John Wilkins for his response to the species-counting study that made the headlines: “It’s hardly an objective fact about the world. We may as well be cataloguing toys.”
  • Rachel Nuwer for two great posts: one on the threat to rhinos including Irish horn gangs and “shaving alive technology”, and another on the pandemics waiting to happen among Asia’s wildlife markets.
  • Erika Check Hayden for her scathing analysis of the IOM’s report on vaccine safety and why we have “lost yet another battle in the war over vaccines.”
  • The Neuroskeptic for two great posts on whether sleep give us a chance to defragment out brains, and how random chance acts as our third parent.
  • Ann Finkbeiner for a beautiful post on resonance.
  • Vaughan Bell for his look at riot psychology in the wake of the UK riots, and why crowd behaviour is a complex area that’s surprisingly poorly researched.
  • Jerry Coyne for thoroughly fisking the idea that epigenetics is a big scientific revolution. Says he: “I know scientific revolutions; scientific revolutions are friends of mine… epigenetics is no scientific revolution.”
  • Phil Plait for a lovely post on why there have been so many quakes of late, with gems such as “Having a restless planet is a consequence of having a habitable one.”
  • Brian Switek for his take on a one of a kind fossil – a fish within an amphibian within a shark, or “the Permian, freshwater lake equivalent of a turducken”
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September 1st, 2011 by Ed Yong in Tip jar | 3 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

3 Responses to “Science writing I’d pay to read – August 2011”

  1. 1.   Brian Switek Says:
    September 1st, 2011 at 9:44 pm

    Another great round of picks. Thanks for including my post, Ed, and for continuing to run this feature on your blog.

  2. 2.   Jean Gogolin Says:
    September 1st, 2011 at 10:07 pm

    I have a feeling Brian Switek’s comparison of the fossil to the turducken would make Julia Child very happy.

  3. 3.   Tisiwoota Says:
    September 1st, 2011 at 11:12 pm

    Kudos for setting an example with the tip jar. Have you heard of Kachingle? It lets you tip whatever website you want (e.g. will distribute a set monthly total among various sites you visit based on your clicks). I’m not affiliated with them– it just seems like a great concept. http://kachingle.com/home.php

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