No, I haven’t seen the new big-budget Stallone movie, Judge Dredd. But when my youngest son was living abroad he acquired a voluminous collection of the British comic 2000 A.D., in which the film’s eponymous hero held violent sway.
The wonderful world of ditches
Some weeks ago I attended a gathering of nature writers on Martha’s Vineyard. On the first morning, we took time to introduce ourselves and say a bit about how we came to be interested in the natural world.
A Big Bertha of an observatory
Ireland — with its rag-wet skies, its one clear night in 10 — is no place to build an astronomical observatory.
An astonishing consensus in science
Clambering over sea cliffs in the west of Ireland looking for fossils. This cove at the end of the Dingle Peninsula has in the past proved to be a fine place for trilobites, creatures that scuttled the ocean floor hundreds of millions of years ago.
The moth that makes an elephant cry
A photograph in the book review section of the journal Nature shows three moths drinking from a trickle of liquid that flows from a huge glistening eye.
The two faces of knowledge
It was the defining event of the 20th century, an exclamation point at the middle of the sentence.
Mr. Computer explains it all to you
Dear Mr. Computer,
All of my friends are urging me to buy a “screen saver” for my computer.
Those strange-looking birds in the church window
In the parish church of the village of Selborne, England, is a three-paneled stained-glass window depicting “St. Francis Preaching to the Birds.”
A progressive’s progress down the road of evolution
There are people who prefer things to remain the same; there are people who prefer change. We call them respectively conservatives and liberals, Tories and Whigs, reactionaries and progressives.
Nature’s perfect imperfections
On my desk is a blueberry gall, given to me by a student who wanted to know what it was.