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Understanding The Voynich Manuscript #4

Understanding The Voynich Manuscript #4 If not Latin, then what? Please see the links at...

Understanding the Voynich Manuscript #3

Understanding the Voynich Manuscript #3 Plants and the moon. For thousands of years, people...

Understanding the Voynich Manuscript #2

Understanding the Voynich Manuscript #2 An i for an i ? Not nymphs: women! There are...

Understanding The Voynich Manuscript #1

Understanding the Voynich Manuscript #1 Tom, Dick and Harry explain a statistical method. ...

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Patrick LockerbyRSS Feed of this column.

Retired engineer, 73 years young. Computer builder and programmer. Linguist specialising in language acquisition and computational linguistics. Interested in every human endeavour except the scrooge... Read More »

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Interpreting Arctic Satellite Images And Data #2 - Animations

Now that NASA's MODIS rapid response system is back online I am able to present some animations which I hope you will find interesting.

This article is a continuation of Interpreting Arctic Satellite Images And Data.

Interpreting Arctic Satellite Images And Data


Science writers and media reporters owe a duty of care to their readers: a duty to present facts undistorted by personal opinion or agenda.
That duty of care extends not just to what is written, but to what is portrayed in graphs and images.

A graphic produced for a specific science-oriented context can be as misleading if taken out of context as any cherry-picked data or quoted words.
Sermeq Kujalleq - Jakobshavn Isbrae Retreat

The Jakobshavn Isbrae, or Jakobshavn glacier, now becoming known by its local name - Sermeq Kujalleq - has been observed retreating since about 1851.


Near the small town of Ilulissat, formerly Jakobshavn, Sermeq Kujalleq is the Northern hemisphere's largest glacier with an outlet to the sea.  It drains about 6.5% of Greenland's ice sheet. The ice stream's contribution to sea level rise is about 0.06 millimeters - about 0.002 inches - per year, roughly 4% of the 20th century rate of sea level increase.
Mountains And Climate


When air masses move across mountains they lose moisture.  On the other side of the mountain range you tend to find desert.

I thought I'd share this MODIS image which shows the difference in climate zones either side of a mountain range.

I'm not naming the range.  Have a guess, and then go to the NASA site for higher resolution images and the location.


MODIS/Terra 2010/112 04/22/10 05:15 UTC
4km pixel size.
image courtesy of NASA Rapidfire
http://rapidfire.sci.gsfc.nasa.gov/realtime/single.php?2010112/crefl1_14...

Arctic Tipping Points - #5: Where Warm Water Meets Ice


The flows of meltwater and ocean currents in the Arctic make Niagara Falls look like a kitchen tap.

A Science Spin On Health And Safety

I've sat through a few health and safety talks, often including such
gems as, "don't reach objects on high shelves by standing on a swivel
chair while wearing rollerskates", ...

The Lay Scientist:
http://www.layscience.net/node/1012