Kate Rauner's Blog, page 45
October 25, 2018
More Stuff You Know That Isn’t So – Classical Greek/Roman Statues Were Gaudy! #history #art #worldhistory #greece
[image error]Those glorious white marble statues from ancient Greece you see in museums… they’re a fraud! Not completely, but the Greeks (and Romans who copied them) painted statues in vibrant colors. This isn’t exactly news, I’ve read about it since the mid-1980s, but here’s a good article with some fine pictures.
Many statues had flecks of color: red pigment on lips, black pigment on coils of hair, mirrorlike gilding on limbs. For centuries, archeologists and museum curators had been scrubbing away these traces of color before presenting statues and architectural reliefs to the public.
Maybe the gaudy painting didn’t match a Victorian’s ideal of Greek philosophy and artistic taste. Maybe they had too little imagination to see what the ancients truly left behind.
It always tickles me to learn that what I think I know ain’t so – like the story of David and Goliath that we modern peoples totally misconstrue. That’s my current favorite. Delightful.
October 21, 2018
Should Space Art be Absolutely Banned? Our Use of Space Turns to Insidious Orbital Clutter #poem #poetry #space #satellite #spacecraft
News follows the poem:
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Stuff orbits the Earth like a swarm of gnats
Every satellite we send
Turns into space junk in the end
Runs out of batteries and fuel,
Orbits decay, a physics rule.
It may break up,
It may crash down,
Strike other craft,
Or hit your town.
Will a loose bolt
Cause a war
When one of mine
Runs into yours?
Perhaps an artificial moon
Will light your streets
Sometime soon.
The space above us
Once seemed grand.
Limitless,
No need to plan.
Who gets to choose?
What uses should?
Profits? or spies?
What’s public good?
Kate Rauner
I’ve rhymed about space junk and apparently limitless natural resources before.
The news is longer than today’s rhyme. Maybe a Space Sanitation Force is what we need:
City officials recently announced plans to build an artificial moon, launching it to hang over Sichuan province’s capital city by 2020, Chinese news site People’s Daily Online (PDO) reported… [it] will be eight times brighter than the natural satellite.
Regarding concerns about the Chinese artificial moon interfering with astronomical observations or disrupting animals that are active at night, Kang Weimin, the director of the Institute of Optics of the Harbin Institute of Technology in China, said that the light would amount to only a “dusk-like glow,” PDO reported.
However, research has shown that many animals are highly sensitive to the light and phases of the moon. livescience.com
What belongs in space? What deserves a spot in our crowded orbit? Is your opinion different if what’s launched is called art?
There are more than 1,800 active satellites currently in orbit around Earth, carrying out a myriad of jobs: collecting weather data, helping drivers navigate roads, spying on enemy targets, the list goes on.
[Soon, SpaceX will carry a CubeSat into orbit. When the] CubeSat reaches a point about 350 miles above Earth, it will break open. Its silver, plasticlike contents will then unfurl into a 100-foot-long sculpture in the shape of a diamond. The result is called Orbital Reflector, the work of the artist Trevor Paglen… The sculpture reminds some astronomers of another satellite, launched in January: the Humanity Star, a three-foot-tall spherical object built by the U.S. spaceflight company Rocket Lab and covered in dozens of highly reflective panels. Its purpose, too, was simply to be seen from Earth. theatlantic.com
October 10, 2018
Artificial Intelligence, Renaissance Italy, and Interstellar Spacecraft – fantastic short reads #amreading #shortstory #scifi #fantasy
Everything happens at once! I’m getting ready for a big inspection at my volunteer fire department, crashing on the final edits for my new book about a cult colonizing Saturn’s moon Titan (pre-order here! or read the first chapter now!), so writing poems and posts has dropped on my to-do list.
[image error]But never fear, there’s something new from me. Check out three short reads in science ficiton and fantasy, each a thousand words or less.
Burritos and his daughter’s birthday party keep a computer developer from his Artifical Intelligence project, but he’ll never succeed without them.
A painter ensnared in his master’s Renaissance studio discovers a deadly escape.
For this micro spaceship, one of hundreds crossing interstellar space in search of life, sacrifice is part of the mission.
Stories to fit perfectly in your busy day. On Amazon, and included on Kindle Unlimited and Kindle Owners Lending Library.
Don’t miss my new book about a cult colonizing Saturn’s moon Titan, coming December 13, 2018. Pre-order here! or read the first chapter now!
October 6, 2018
Planet X in the Far-flung Outer Solar System #poem #poetry #astronomy #solarsystem #planet
This is the best I can do, since there is no image of Planet X yet
Watching perturbations.
In planets far away,
In cold realms way-past Jupiter,
Past Saturn, wobbles sway.
When Lowell discovered Pluto,
A store of luck was spent.
The famous dwarf is just too small
To tug
Neptune’s
trident.
But orbital mechanics
Cannot be denied.
Something’s out there, far away.
Perhaps a Planet Nine.
Dwarf planets with companions
Among the plutoids hide.
The more we find, the better guess
Where Planet X resides.
Kate Rauner
Thanks to space.com for their article on Goblin (2015 TG387), another Pluto-sort of object tripped over in a long-term, ongoing sky survey that may ultimately find Planet X.
Hypothesized,
And we expect
Someone will spot
This Planet X.
The more plutoids
That we find,
The more our theories
Are refined.
October 2, 2018
Cost, Health, and Flavor – they battle it out in America’s abundant, controversial, and fascinating food industry, and change your own tastes #food #cooking #sustainability #future
[image error]This is a Red Delicious apple. You’ll notice it looks nothing like the dry, mealy mahogany fruits in your grocery store. I can tell you it tastes nothing like them either. It’s wonderfully sweet, crisp, and apple-y.
This apple came from a tree over 60 years old in the Mimbres Valley of southwest New Mexico, and you’ll have to visit a local farmer’s market to buy one.
I seem to be on a food kick lately. America’s food industry gives us more, safer, and cheaper food than ever before, but at a price. Are we poised to take a step forward to a better system?
This reminded me of a book I read recently.
[image error]Dan Barber is a chef concerned with the farm-to-table journey of America’s food. He works with boutique farmers in upstate New York, including the Stone Barn Center for Food and Agriculture – a farm built in the 1930’s in a “Normandy style” by wealthy philanthropist John D. Rockefeller to “preserve a memory – the place where he sipped warm milk from the lid of the milking jug.” (No matter how nostalgic, I do not recommend drinking raw milk, more strongly the longer it’s been out of the cow.)
Barber is owner and chef at two New York restaurants, Blue Hill in Manhattan’s Greenwich Village and Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown (45 minutes from Grand Central Station). I visited his website at Blue Hill Farm.com.
Blue Hill at Stone Barns is an elegant restaurant where jackets and ties are preferred for gentlemen, though apparently fancy restaurants gave up trying to tell women what to wear.
In keeping with the ideal of serving the day’s harvest (and perhaps because of shortages of entree-sized portions), Barber serves “multi-course tastings” for about $200 per person. You’ll be happy to know you can buy Dom Perignon by the glass ($80).
Most Americans are unlikely to dine here. But rich or extravagant people serve a social function. They are early adopters for things that can become everyday benefits – air travel, electric cars, television, ocean cruises – so perhaps they can blaze the trail to better eating. Trends from expensive restaurants can affect the local grocery store so, for example, designer pizzas are now available in your frozen food section.
New York is the right place for this venture. Judging from my travels in lower upstate New York, you can’t throw a rock without hitting a farmer’s market or stand. Farm-to-table is a popular idea.
Barber presents interesting stories about growing heritage varieties of crops and rotating crops and livestock to maximize soil fertility. This is not mass market organic farming that retains America’s industrial mindset to grow monocultures and supply slabs of meat to serve with a few vegetables. It must be wonderful for a farmer to have the financial support to try these ideas and we meet many such farmers (at least one who, by the way, eats “hulking pork chops” and butters bread so thickly Barber “thought he was joking.”)
It’s not clear the average American wants the foods Barber champions. He notes that while “feeding grain [to animals] flattens flavor” and modern crops are not bred for flavor, the system produces bountiful, low cost food. “[T]he cost of one pound of meat is cheaper now than at any time in history.”
Americans prefer “soft, almost flabby meat” and “have a singular preference for blandness.” We want mild butter that tastes the same across the country and the year, rather than tastier butter that varies by region and month. But is this truly our preference or what we’re trained to expect? Maybe popular, super-spiced snacks show American’s want flavor.
Barber always comes back to flavor. His farming methods are labor intensive, generate less profit even at higher boutique prices, and produce uneven and limited supplies, but Barber says the food tastes better.
Gardeners will find the stories fascinating. Non-gardeners may find some sections too long.
What others are saying
The Third Plate remains popular four years after it was published, with 4.7 stars on Amazon from 237 reviews.
“It has taught me so much about making sustainable food choices.”
“Pretty cool take on the food industry.”
Rebecca had a pros and cons review: “This is one of the most interesting books I have read that discusses everything wrong with our food culture today. That said, it’s also one of the most obnoxious…
“managed to turn my beliefs upside down…
“[the author] works in the food equivalent of an ivory tower. His book is dripping with elitism, and most of the time I felt like he was so out of touch with reality it was laughable.”
September 29, 2018
Story Behind a Kitchen Basic #cooking #kitchen #design
Yup, that’s my old fashioned Jonas peeler on the bottom. Imagine living this many years and never knowing it had a name!
As you consider diet and cooking, here’s a piece of top-notch design that’s so successful, I never stopped to admire it.
The latest version was developed for people with arthritis, but is a better tool for everyone.
I had no clue how rich the history [of the peeler] was, including cameos from Monsanto, samurai sword makers, and retail magicians from another era… the economics of the business.
The designer figured, if he marketed his peeler for people with arthritis, it would stay in small specialty niches. But a better design would be good for everyone.
(Just watch parents navigating baby strollers on sidewalks and consider how the Americans With Disabilities Act has improved sidewalks for us all.)
The handle had to be easy to grip, even when wet. That led to Monsanto’s polymer Santoprene, which was only being used for gaskets.
Bicycle handle grips offered ridges for inspiration.
American companies of the time didn’t want to be bothered with the odd device, so Mitsubohi Cutlery, a Japanese manufacturer dating back to the 1800s when they made samurai swords, got involved.
At trade shows, they put out bowls with peelers and carrots so buyers could try it, and let the weird new handle stick out of packaging so a consumer could touch it.
But the handle isn’t actually the reason why it works. The reason the peeler works so well is because the blade is really sharp. If you put a dull blade on our peeler, it won’t peel any better than our peeler. If you put a sharp blade on a stick, it will peel was well as our peeler. [Ah ha! That’s why my swivel peeler with a cheapo metal handle works fine for me!]
At a factory, we’d just hold the blades and peel carrots. If you couldn’t hear it cut, it was sharp. The factory thought we were crazy. But that was actually the secret behind it, and is true to most of the tools.
The whole story is a fun read on fastcompany.com
You may think peelers are too mundane to think about much, but there’s a Wikipedia entry for peelers with more history.
The Jonas peeler, designed in Sweden in 1953, is a straight design with a pivoting blade attached to the end of an oblong metal loop handle… While often copied, the original is still made by Linden Sweden. [Ah ha again. I guess what I own is a Jonas knock-off.]
The user-friendly handle has gone on to grace various cooking gadgets. Check your own kitchen drawers now.
September 27, 2018
Space Elevators are a Scifi Standard – Now There’s a Real One! Promise of Technology for Cheap Space Flight #space #technology #Japan #satellite
Concept for an ocean based space elevator
A space elevator is a “planet-to-space transportation system.” Vehicles climb a cable attached to the surface and counterweighted in orbit above geostationary level. I’ve used a space elevator in my own scifi writing. Sadly, we don’t have materials to construct one yet. Well, not a full sized one.
A miniature is now in orbit. Congratulations to Japan for their September 22 launch.
Built by engineers at Shizuoka University in Japan, comprised of two 10-centimeter cubic satellites connected by a 10-meter-long tether. A small robot representing an elevator car, about 3 centimeters across and 6 centimeters tall, will move up and down the cable using a motor as the experiment floats in space.
The Japanese hope to build a real, full sized space elevator sometime around 2050 and use an ocean-based surface tether. That allows time to solve the many practical problems that have kept this idea on the drawing boards since the 1800s. Good luck!
September 22, 2018
Scandal Rocks Diet Research – Tips You Rely on Exposed #health #diet #nutrition #weightloss
[image error]European science was once so quaint. A wealthy family’s second son ensconced in a small parsonage in the country was free to classify local butterflies. Or perhaps the lord himself financed his own laboratory to study whatever he wanted. Sometimes a poorer soul might rise from employment under a Great Man (yes, mostly men!) or receive a scholarship, as Isaac Newton did at Cambridge in 1664.
Innocent days are gone. A craving for glory always created some scientific fraud, but the motivation seems to be growing. Big science is big business, requires big money, and can yield big rewards if a lab produces big results. This can be insidious, because if you receive fame and fortune for what you do, it’s easy to believe that what you do must be right. Especially in a field like nutrition, where there’s so much public interest, and lots of money to be made, sometimes, mistakes happen. Sometimes studies go “down in flames in a beefy statistics scandal.”
An internal investigation by a faculty committee found that ‘Professor Wansink committed academic misconduct in his research and scholarship, including misreporting of research data, problematic statistical techniques, failure to properly document and preserve research results, and inappropriate authorship.’
That’s a politely phrased condemnation, and may derail the careers of grad students who did the dirty work for him.
You may not recognise Wansink’s name, but if you buy 100 calorie snack packages, you’ve been fooled by his research. Ditto for using small plates to trick your brain into thinking you ate more, or hiding potato chips on the top shelf to help you lose weight. Read more truisms that have been retracted here. Maybe your favorite tip is among them.
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Here’s a good place to keep an eye on scientific findings
Fortunately for science, you, and me, reality is a powerful force, and there are always researchers willing to challenge a famous author. As a consumer of science, avoid becoming anyone’s acolyte, don’t get too emotionally invested in someone else’s position, and keep reading, even if only in the popular press. Good consumers, like good scientists, are honestly open minded.
It often happens that scientists say, ‘You know that’s a really good argument; my position is mistaken,’ and then they would actually change their minds and you never hear that old view from them again. They really do it. It doesn’t happen as often as it should, because scientists are human and change is sometimes painful. But it happens every day. I cannot recall the last time something like that happened in politics or religion. Carl Sagan
Let’s all make Carl proud.
September 16, 2018
From Bombs to Bambi – newest National Wildlife Refuge #wildlife #Colorado #nuclear
[image error]Years of work culminated this week in the opening of a new Wildlife Refuge in Colorado. This one is unusual because the site used to be a nuclear weapons plant. I know. I was a Cold War Warrior there (honestly, that’s what the USA Congress called us) and later an environmental engineer turning the plant over to wildlife.
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Yup, that’s me during the Cold War – don’t worry, picture was released for a public report (though never used)
One odd side-effect of the weapons complex has been protection of plants and animals. Rocky Flats is home to an endangered mouse, and the State of Colorado wanted to place state-endangered birds on the property. Grazing and development around the plant left Rocky Flats as the best habitat in the area.
There was always wildlife in the buffer zone around the plant’s industrial core. I remember once a white fawn was born and the guard force tracked it daily from their towers and vehicles and reported to interested employees.
Once, a railroad car overturned and the recovery efforts were brought to a standstill by an angry rattlesnake coiled under the car.
I no longer live close enough to enjoy the new trails, which is a shame. A dear friend and colleague of mine will also miss out – he died earlier this year. He would have loved it.
The Rocky Flats National Wildlife Refuge sits on more than 5,000 acres of trees, wetlands and pristine rolling prairie about 16 miles northwest of Denver. It hosts 239 migratory and resident species, from falcons and elk to the threatened Preble’s meadow jumping mouse.
The actual site of the former buildings will remain fenced off forever. It’s the land that used to serve as a buffer around Rocky Flats that’s reopening this weekend. NPR
September 15, 2018
Shabby Martian Colony Suddenly in Struggle to Survive – Meet the Author #scifi #sciencefiction #Mars #author #read
[image error]Today I welcome a fellow Martian – well, another author of scifi on Mars – Cheryl Lawson. Cheryl grew up in South Africa and lives in Canada. She’s an artist and photographer too, but today I want her to talk about Mars.
So Cheryl, tell us a bit about your book We Are Mars – What’s the main premise of the book and who are the stand-out characters?
We Are Mars starts out as a story about a Mars settlement, Rubicon, that is getting a little old, shabby and down on its luck due to the repeated funding cuts of the mission from Earth that runs it. Things get a lot more difficult and dangerous when a virus breaks out in the confines of the colony. A group of characters from conflicting backgrounds suddenly find themselves in a life-or-death situation and need to work together to overcome some threatening challenges or die trying.
There are no particular standout characters as I focus on a core group of characters that each feature in individual vignettes, moving the story forward from their own points of view.
Why would fans of Mars science fiction like We Are Mars? What can they look forward to?
[image error]If you like science fiction based on Mars, you’ll love We Are Mars. It has all the elements of a sci-fi story on Mars – cool science, a grungy and dilapidated habitat, danger, adventure, romance and suspense. There are subplots that bring in a little spiciness in the form of political intrigue as well as spy drama. The characters are an awesome ensemble of very human people just trying to survive. There’s nothing over-the-top unbelievable and it makes for an absorbing read.
Are you currently working on a writing project? If so, when can we expect it to launch?
I’m working on the follow-up to We Are Mars, book two of the Rubicon Saga. It is entitled Storm at Dawn. I expect to be able to release it next year, but I can’t offer more than that as it’s very much going to depend on how well the story continues to come together and how much editing is involved. Stay tuned!
Tell us a bit about yourself: When did you realize you wanted to be a writer? What prompted your change in career? Where do you get your inspiration to write?
[image error]I knew I wanted to be a writer when I got the idea to create a manifesto for myself that laid out my creative thoughts and process. I spent months articulating the ideas before I finally wrote them down. When I’d finished writing I knew I had a book, not just some notes. I took another swing at it and formalized the entire thing into a useful work that explained much of my process and thinking in a way that other people could understand it and benefit from reading it. After that, the ideas for creative writing came easily and I, basically, followed the same process and landed up with the bones of We Are Mars.
It was only after that that I recognized the part of me that had always been writing – the student writer for school magazines, the letter writer, the magazine writer submitting articles, the volunteer editor… It was all there, and I hadn’t even realized until We Are Mars was in front of me.
I am inspired by good stories, interesting people and the desire to tell a compelling story. My writing influences vary from Stieg Larsson (Girl with the Dragon Tattoo) to Michael Chriton (Prey, Jurassic Park). I enjoy rich settings, complex characters and solid endings. My love of science fiction and space helped me choose the genre as I feel it is comfortable and familiar.
What’s your current favorite reading material?
I have lots of favorites – I like articles, comic books, novels, poetry, short stories, flash fiction and even people’s twitter posts for various daily writing challenges. I read a lot and always have a stack of books I’m moving out of the way!
Thanks to Cheryl and to our readers. You’ll find Cheryl on several places on the internet:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/WeAreMarsBook
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rubiconsaga/
Facebook for Authentic Creativity: https://www.facebook.com/Authentic-Creativity-Cheryl-Bezuidenhout-269113643440259/?fref=pb&hc_location=profile_browser
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/9878097.Cheryl_Lawson
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cheryl_lawson_author/
PW Booklife: https://booklife.com/profile/cheryl-lawson-28178
Websites: We Are Mars: http://wearemars.com/
And look for her Authentic Creativity (creative manifesto): http://authenticcreativitybook.com/