Dear Mr. Raymo, I am the editor of GeeWhiz magazine and a reader of your Globe column. Could you write an article for our magazine on the following questions:
Articles with 1991
The odd critters of Seuss’s are matched by the zoos’s
Dr. Seuss in the science pages? You bet.
Nuclear sites: A lethal legacy across the land
At 5:29 a.m. Mountain War Time on July 16, 1945, the world’s first nuclear explosion occurred on the Alamogordo bombing range in the desert near White Sands, New Mexico.
The incredible shrinking technology
Welcome to the nanodecade. Nano, as in nanotechnology, nanocomputers, nanorobots. Nano, as in nanometer, or billionth of a meter. Small. Very, very, very small.
A world dreamed up, yet real
“If man had not encountered dragons and hippogriffs in dreams, he might never have conceived of the atom,” wrote the American social philosopher Lewis Mumford, who died [in 1990] at age 94.
A last, unhurried paradise lost — to technology
Twelve years ago at the end of a spell of fine summer weather we could look out from our house in the rural west of Ireland and count a thousand haystacks. Field after field of haystacks, as far as the eye could see.
Jellyfish just go with the flow
It was the summer of the jellyfish. On almost every retreating tide the beach was jam-packed with jellies. A walk at water’s edge required constant attention to what was underfoot; few experiences are more unpleasant than stepping barefoot into a quivering cushion of jellyfish jelly.
15,000 years or so in the life of Scratch Flat
On this day exactly 200 years ago Gilbert White, the vicar of Selborne village in England, wrote this in his naturalist’s journal: “Made black currant-jelly. Finished cutting the tall hedges. Gathered some lavender.”
Cameras don’t lie but a photograph might
Photographs don’t lie. Or do they?
New England’s long rocky road
One recent weekend I dug post holes for a patio fence. Five holes, each one foot in diameter and two feet deep. How many cubic feet of dirt were removed? Zero.