Friday, December 08, 2006

Last day of TA work for Fall Semester

Today was the last day of TA responsibilities for the Genetics Lab for me. The whole thing's been a really interesting experience. The last lab session with students was yesterday, and today I went in to sort through the genetic samples that were left over, ran the DNA off the last of the gels, and just cleaned the lab in general. The Professor says that there might be a shortage of lab classes next semester, but hopefully I will be able to get another TA position for the Spring.
The lab itself was a lot of work for the students. In addition to the three long term experiments that the professor had designed for them, they also had to design their own fourth experiment. And in addition to the regular assignments of maintaining a lab notebook, and writing lab reports, they also had to prepare a poster presentation of their group designed experimental results, and then each of the two lab sections had a Poster Session. The first lab section only had three groups, so they just presented one at a time to the class. The second lab section had eleven groups. They ended up doing the session in the hallway, and each group ended up presenting to the professor, and then rotated to at least two different selections of other groups. Some of the other professors and workers in the department also attended this micro-Poster Session. I'd say that these students had their work cut out for them, but that now, after all of that, they're really much more prepared than the average biology student at other Universities.

Saturday, December 02, 2006

Wascally Wabbit


After the debacle with GMAC, I've been fortunate enough to get a car that I like, the VW Rabbit. The Rabbit is a model that first got started in the '70s, I beleive. After a while VW changed the name to "Golf", and I think that there was a version of the Golf called the "GTI". Now they've dropped the "Golf" moniquer and have gone back to calling it the Rabbit. I love it. It get good gas mileage and has lots of luggage space inside, since its a hatchback. On Black Friday after Thanksgiving, we went out and picked up a new TV at 5 in the morning, to take advantage of the wildly reduced prices. It fit into the Rabbit with no problems at all, plenty of room to spare. Its an automatic transmission, I have no idea how to drive a manual transmission. In addition to regular automatic, it has two other modes. A "Sport" mode, where the gears kick in at higher RPMs, and a "Triptronic" mode. Triptronic is a type of transmission, developed by Porsche, that allows you to Upshift and Downshift through the gears of the transmission, no clutch action required. If you try to shift down into a gear that would over-rev the engine, the computer won't permit it. In some descriptions of Triptronic, its claimed that when the RPM are lower, the computer will remember that your command and then down shift. However I've played around with it, and it doesn't seem like the VW Triptronic at least will do that. It will also downshift on its own if the engine's RPM fall very low.
The car has a bouncier ride than I am used to. I've noticed that most companies are claiming that this is a 'sportier' ride. That the American public is moving away from the old feels of some cars, where the smooth ride was important, and are becoming more accepting of the more European style 'sporty' rides. I had an old Mercury Grand Marquis, and driving it was like cruising along on a boat. Now, apparently, everyone wants to feel every bump and joint in the road. Takes a bit of getting used to, at first I thought something was wrong with the suspension!

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Malibu gone

So today my '03 Malibu had to be returned. I had thought that I was working with GMAC, I had thought that they were going to let me decide today even (though I was late returning my car after its smartbuy was up) whether to refinance the balloon payment OR get into a new lease. But apparently I thought wrong. They told me today, when I called them to say that I wasn't going to get a new vehicle and, rather, I would sign the contract that they had sent me to refinance the ballon payment, that they didn't want to do that, and that they're requiring me to turn it in to one of their dealers.
So now I have no car. This is wonderful. I had thought all those things because....thats what we'd do when I worked at GMAC, we'd work with people who were overdue on turning in their car, either have them sign an extension while they were trying to make a final decision, or try to get them to sign a new contract. And when I had spoken to the people at GMAC's Midland Center, I made it clear to them that I was trying to decide between the two options, but needed to wait for a certain ticket from my former GMAC co-workers that'd give me a discount on any new vehicle I got into. Later I got a phone call from someone from the Hartford branch, I explained the situation to him, and said I'd be able to get back to him by today either way. I thought everything was fine. Yesterday I get the ticket, contact a couple of dealers, and decided that it wasn't worth getting the new car. I call the guy from Hartford to let him know that I'm going to sign the contract for the refinance, and he tells me no. To turn the car in, now, or else its going to be re-possesed.
I argued with this idiot for a while. In the end, I had no choice but to turn it in, and now I don't have a car of my own. I suppose that its actualy in my favour. THe car was old at this point and had over 50K miles on it. It'd be a bad deal to have to pay around $12K for a 3-yo car with 50K miles on it. I'll have to pay an overmileage charge for part of that of course now also. But you'd think that the guy would prefer that I send in a check. The first payment for the refinancing wouldn't even be due until next month even. How much of a difference does it rationally make if I signed the contract 10 days ago or today, and then sent the first payment in next month??? Not a helluva lot.
And I offered to pay for an extension to cover the time between now and when it was due back, on top of signing the new 36 month refinancing contract. But no, apparently, that'd be against GMAC's interest. Unbeleivable.
So there's simply now way that I'm going to be getting any of the family of GM cars now. Even if other companies would do the same, they haven't done it to me, and if it ever did happen, hell, at least they wouldn't be doing it to a former co-worker. Half the people in that nitwit's office are 'refugees' from my old office too. Apparently it counts for nothing. Heck, he even went so far as to say that 'I should know better then because I worked for GMAC'. Well when I worked for GMAC getting cars that were past maturity and overdue, we'd actually do stuff that made sense. This moron couldn't do anything other than say that the car in his que has to be returned.

Monday, September 11, 2006

TA Work

I've started the TA position, and its pretty hectic. I was told at first that I'd have 3 lab periods, and then a few days before I was told I'd have 2 labs a week. But then it turns out that there are 4 labs a week,, everyday in the late afternoon except Friday. On Friday I need to come in to prepare for the labs on the following week. They're around 3 hours each, and the prep on Friday can take a few hours on its own.

The Thursday Lab actually conflicts with my Marine Geology class, which starts at 6, but the Lab Professor, who is the Head of the Biology Department, is ok with me leaving for that class. Infact, often the labs end a little bit early.

For my research, I need to still pick the samples for the Mg:Ca analysis, and then prep them at the Hofstra Lab. I should hear back from Hofstra soon as to when I can some in and do that, and picking the samples shouldn't take more than one session at the microscope.

Saturday, August 19, 2006

Procedural Corrections

After picking around 300 individuals of G. bulloides from my six sample sets, I was able to successfully clean them over at the Hofstra Lab. Dr. Farmer was very helpful during this process.
I only had the two seives that she had created, but I don't think I would've used more than that to clean them at once.
Procedure:
I brushed the samples into the seive, then marked down which seive correlated to which sample.
I placed the seives into a regular beaker that had enough methanol to fill to the half-mark of the seives.
I placed the beaker into the sonicator, and sonicated for 3 minutes.
After sonication, I removed the beaker and then the seives from the beaker quickly and placed them on a paper towel to dry. This took a few minutes.
I then carefully tapped out the seives onto fresh weighing paper.
I curled or folded the weighing paper and poured the forams into a numered jar, which was underlain by another peice of weighing paper in case of any spillage.
I then marked down which jar had which sample.
There were some problems. The first two samples I sonicated for 5 minutes, but that turned out to be too long, they became broken up. This made it difficult to remove them from the seive or get them off the weighing paper and into the jar. I had to use a brush to do this. I used a different brush for each one, but the first brush was the brush I had used to get them into the seives previous to cleaning. It seemed like some of the sample was lost because of the breakage. After those first two, I switched, upon the advice of Dr. Farmer, to a 3 minute sonication, and no more breakage occured. The samples easily fell out of the seives and poured off the weighing paper.
Breaking in itself shouldn't be a problem, the samples are going to be crushed, vapourized, and then, to further abuse them, that vapour gets scorched into soot and that soot is analyzed for the actual dating.
At one point, I neglected to record which sample was in what seive until after sonication had started. I am nearly certain that I remembered which was which, but there is a chance that, say, sample 3 is marked as "4". This should be corrected by the carbon 14 dating.

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Mawage

Today, I finally managed to propose to my girlfriend, now my fiance. Thats got a nice ring to it, literally I suppose.

It almost didn't happen today either. I had planned on going to the Stroll Garden, but she didn't think she could get there in time for it to be worth it, so we ended up going to someplace nearby. I made like I was just taking photos with my camera, I had it on a tripod and had a shutter release cable, so I could take photos of us together. After snapping shots for a while, I made like we were going to take just another photo together. She was getting tired of it and was ready to leave. Before I tripped the shutter, I pulled the ring out of my pocked and said, "So, you wanna get married?".

Not the traditional format, I suppose, but it worked!

Friday, August 11, 2006

Meeting with the Parents

On 8/11 I met with my girlfriend's parents in order to ask her father for his permission to marry her.

I was terrified in the lead up, incredibly nervous. I drove to a bookstore nearby to calm down, browsed around, bought two books, and called them, asking to stop by. I am certain that they knew why. The most nerve wracking part was that first phone call. I had been putting it off for far too long, and now that it was over, I wouldn't say I wasn't nervous at all, but I could deal with it.
I get to the door, and her mother answered, huge smile on her face. Thats a good thing! Her father was on the phone talking to one of the relatives I beleive. I think that her mother was a little excitable, she called her husband on her cell phone to get him off the phone. He say down, I explained and asked, and he happily said yes.

The expected questions followed, what I plan on doing, they asked in more detail about my own family, etc etc. I didn't expect them to say no or anything along those lines, but still, it was great that they said yes and chatted about it. After a while I left, because they had to get ready for a physical therapy session, her father had broken his arm just a short while ago and was heading back to work after the weekend. All in all, it went very nicely. One thing that might've been a faux pas, I mentioned that I had already bought the ring, I wanted to let them know that it was happening before long. But in retrospect, that seems out of place, why am I asking their permission, yet I already purchased the ring? Seems forward no, and sort of nullifies her father having any say no?

I am making a point of not telling my parents, since they've been anxious for me to go over there and talk to him. My girlfriend is expecting the proposal, but, in large part because I've delayed in speaking to her father, she has no idea when its going to happen. She should be surprised. This way my parents will be surprised too. Just having a little fun with that.

....

Later this same evening, I went back over their house to hang out with her, we were planning on watching a movie. Turns out, her parents mentioned that I stopped by. I didn't tell them to not tell her, I had just assumed that thats the normal way things go. Her parents hadn't intended anything by it, they assumed that she had known that I was stopping by that day. Shouldn't really matter all that much, she's known for a while that I would be coming by, this just means that she knows the big event will happen before long.

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Technical Difficulties



Technically, today was a disaster in the lab. For the past week I've been 'picking forams' for analysis. We are going to have the carbon-dated. I needed to pick out around 300 individuals of one species, Globigerina bulloides. That was expected to give me around the 10 miligrams of sample that were needed. Six sets, each from a different depth of the ocean drilling project core, were selected, those were the points that we wanted dates for.

So I pulled the specimins, and brought them over to the Hofstra lab, there is a professor/researcher there who has the lab materials and has similar research interests and was kindly enough to permit me to clean the samples there. This is a necessary preparation step before they are sent away to be C14 dated.

I had to put the specimins into a small seive that she had created (six seives, one for each set of 300). These were then split up into two large beakers, which were filled with methanol to about the middle of the seives, which were now partly submerged. These beakers were then put into a sonicator, a device that has a water bath and that vibrates, the vibration will travel through the water to the methanol and mix the methanol with any dirt, clay, sediment, and other carbon bearing materials that need to be eleminated. The non-foram carbon will screw the analysis.

After sonicating for about five minutes, I remove the beakers and take out the seives to let them dry. They dry quickly, because the methanol just evaporates away. I started brushing one of the samples out of its seive, but noticed that a glue used to hold the tiny cloth-like seive screen to the seive had become very soft. The forams were sticking to it.

Crap!

Thats not good! Forams bound up with glue! Thats allways bad no?

I hoped it was just because they weren't completely dry, so I put it down and gave them more time to dry. But it was no good, the glue dried, but at least half of the sample was bound up within it. I brushed out what I could. The Hofstra professor was completely shocked and I could tell that she was mortified and very concerned. She had created the seives herself, and had used them for the same purpose, and nothing like that happened. She speculated that perhaps the glue she used had aged and changed to become unstable somehow. We tried sonicating two seives again, hoping to loosen it completely and set the forams free. I set the sonicator timer for 10 minutes, and it did soften and loosen up, but the foram material was just immpossible to seperate. I though maybe it would be possible to dissolve the glue somehow, or flush it with methanol from a squeeze bottle, to get them out, and then perhaps boil it down on a steam bath, leaving just the forams and vapourizing the dissolved glue, but the glue wasn't necessarily dissolving, just softening.

Fortunately, the professor was able to find a different glue. We pulled one screen off its seive-ring, it had been loosened that much by the sonication, and used this other glue to hold it on. The rings for the seives are some type of acrylic, and the glue was methylene chloride, a glue for acrylics. We were worried that the seive screen itself wouldn't bind, but it turned out to work nicely once she assembled one under a hood. I was concerned that the methylene chloride would react badly with the methanol once we put it to use, so we threw in some sand and tested one out. It worked perfectly, the stuff held together, and the sand grains, a decent enough proxy for forams, didn't stick at all.

So I lost the samples for the most part, and basically have to pick them all again. I only say that it was 'technically' a disaster because I just wasn't too upset over it. Something allways goes wrong, something that forces you to start all over, and usually it happens a few times. Hopefully this is the only time it happens with this C-14 dating project, but who knows.

Yoga

Recently, I took some yoga classes. They were for beginers, I had no prior experience with it. It was taking. I took the course at a community college. Most of the stretches were entirely unfamiliar to me, but a few weren't. That was surprsinging. They ended up being basic stretches that we'd do for wrestling practice in high school. I suppose that isn't to be unexpected, but it was odd to see them as recognized yoga movements.
The instructor for the course seemed to be very much into yoga, and made references to having been in ashrams in the past. That indicates that they're very serious, and have been doing it for a while, I'd think. Yet the instructor was very friendly, she didn't push anyone into any positions, as I have heard they sometimes do, and insisted that everyone merely move up to the edge of being uncomfortable, but not to hurt themselves. She insisted that that would be extremely out of place in a yoga class, and seemed to be saying that other places will insist that you do this, but they are wrong.

One thing in particular I found intresting. I have heard about yoga being done to activate all sorts of whacky mystical "energies" (the term never sensibly defined). I can't say what the instructor beleived, but she did tell us to take notice of how you feel after moving into the positions. She explained that the sensations in the limbs and body were largely resulting from the movement of blood. Raise the arms above the body, and hold them there for a time, and the blood will, to a degree, drain out of it. Twist the torso, and the lymphatic fluid will be moved about. I'd assume that intersitial fluids would be worked around as you move into and out of position also.
Perhaps this is what is really meant by these activations of energies and chakras and whathaveyou. Yoga in general is considered very ancient. I'd expect that ancient man might've been curious about those senstations, and perhaps attributed some sort of meaning to them, and that that might explain part of why yoga becomes so important in many societies.
Ultimately, yoga seems as "nothing more" than the simply movement of the body, not at all dissimilar to physical exercise. Before hand, I had considered it as a different sort of activity, it seemed as something people approached as a mystic happening, heavy on the meditation. This course invovled mediation also, and clearly a short 8 session course can't tell you too much about any subject, let alone something with as long a history and varied a practice as yoga. I don't think that I understand it on any level of detail, but it was an intruiging experience and at least now it is de-mystified for me.

Thursday, June 08, 2006

Contacts and Projects

I am currently continuing to work on setting up a project that can be used as my Masters Thesis. Fortunately, one of my professors knows a few people, not terribly well but well enough to hopefully get my foot in the door. We've sent emails to one worker at the AMNH, who does research in vertebrate paleontology. I revently sent another first contact email to someone at Lamont Dorety who also does paleontological work, although he doesn't just work on fossil specimins. In fact, his research might be said to be more on the geological side of paleontology, using research on magnetostratigraphy and structural geology to unravel some important events in, most excitedly, dinosaur history. Apparently his insitution only has a Doctoral programme, but its possible that he might have a project that isn't big enough for a doctoral thesis, and thus might be something that he's not had a chance to work on but would like to. If I am extremely lucky, he will permit me to work on any such project. Both the AMNH and Lamont Dorety contacts are long-stretched gambits that might not work out at all. In all likelyhood, I won't even hear back from either researcher. That is why I am also extremely fortunate that the same professor I worked on the foram project with has another project that could serve as a Masters Thesis basis. It would be looking at the morphometrics of forams. Not dinosaur paleontology, but still firmly within paleontology and something more than climate reconstruction. Climate reconstruction has proven insteresting, I can see myself doing more work in it, but its simply not my first choice.

On that, the material prepared for the poster presentation is of suffiecient size that it might be workable as a paper. I would have to look at some other ODP core sites in nearby regions, and try to relate the data from them to my site, in order to make it into a paper. That is definitly worth doing, and it should be exciting to get a chance to publish a paper no matter what the subject.

Publishing papers is, from my outsider's impression, a bit of an arcane and complex subject or art. There are many things that can go wrong with it, and even the choice of which journal to publish in can have huge effects, positive or negative. Choose one journal, and perhaps its readership just isn't interested in the subject at the time. Hopefully I'll be able to publish this in some place where it will get attention and be of some use to other researchers in the field. Thats a rather odd thing to think about, because, even if I don't do anything else with forams and climate, I will have, technically and unspectacularly, made an 'imprint' on that field. I've already gotten an email request for information on my poster, which is pretty darned neat; someone is actually interested in the work.

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Cherry Limeades and Italian Cheesecake

After the conference I went down to North Carolina to meet up with my brother and his wife. They live in Fayetteville, but apparently Ft. Bragg, which is located within it, is bigger than Fayetteville. Didn't go onto Ft. Bragg though. The whole town is very much orientated torwards the military. Most of the restaurants had military discounts, for example. It also seemed like the town was broken up into smaller sections, groups of blocks or developments would have shopping centers that had restaurants, laundromats, bars, etc, bound up with them, like smaller little towns. Apparently, most of these centers have buffet style restaurants in them also.

There are Sonics out there, which was great, because I got to have a cherry lime-ade, the first in a long while. The Sonic one's seem to be a little bit sweeter than I've had before, and they are red, I suppose that that is from cherry syrup that is added to them.

The military life seems to be treating them well. They have a great little house with an inground pool, central air, gas fireplace, cable, even a digital video recording system. And to top it off, a dog. A little beagle that was lost and that they brought home. It seems like its a hunting dog of some sort. Apparently, a week or so before they came across the thing runnning around the street, some one at a flea market had been trying to sell a couple of beagles. They figure that this was one of them, that the person just let them loose after not being able to sell them.
He's probably going to get sent to Iraq this summer, he seems pretty ok with it. Possibly to the northern portion of the Sunni Triangle, thought it looks like other elements of his group are in Ramadi(at the south west corner) and Mosul (outside of the triangle). The northern point of the Sunni Triangle is Tikrit, which is famously where Hussein's tribe lives. Interestingly, the triangle itself is to the West of and slightly overlapping with a region inhabited by arabic speaking pagans, the Yarsan, who might be a group related to the Yezidi. I know that the Yezidi of Iraq hate the colour Blue, its a symbol of extreme bad luck or something along those lines; an ill omen. It will be interesting to see if he runs into any Yarsan people and if they dislike the colour blue also, or if they even stick out at all from the arab muslim population. I'd doubt it, if they could spend centuries hiding themselves from prostelytizing muslims, they'll sure as heck be able to remain invisible to mid-20's Americans for a tour.

Its hotter in North Carolina than in Baltimore, but it was a heckuva lot more humid in Baltimore. By the end of the conference it was hazy with humidity, and starting to rain. Luckily for NC it was great weather for the whole time we were there. Except the ride down, it didn't rain much onto us, but in the distance there was apparently a lightening storm for most of the trip down. Since it was so nice out, we were able to have a BBQ on Saturday with some of his local friends. Most of them are into this "Ultimate Fighting Championship" stuff, which I'm not too into. After spending most of the afternoon drinking beer, that kind of thing can seem pretty interesting !

After the long drive home, I walk in a bunch of my aunts and uncles are there, having dinner for the holiday, which was a surprise. Everyone ended up leaving pretty quickly, it was the end of the night for them, so at least I got to see them all for a bit. And I walked in just in time for a slice of Italian Cheesecake that someone had brought. A tasty little weekend!

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Presenting at a conference

The reserach has been turned into a poster, and the presentation of it has gone fairly well. Attendance at the meeting is lower than expected, but I've still been able to get a few people who have shown some interest in the research. Interstingly, a professor of one of my co-authors strolled by and talked with me about the research. That was intruiging. Lots of people have had some good comments and what to follow up with and the like.

At the moment I am typing out this entry from one of the free access computers at the conference, mostly everyone has left the poster session. Whats absolutely hysterical is that right now there seems to be some other meeting at the conference center. I had thought that someoen was just singing in the hallway next to me, not realizing that they could be heard. But now they've worked up to a crescendo, seems to be a preacher of some sort. Every other sentence is 'in the name of jesus'.

Monday, May 22, 2006

Downward Spiral

After much work, my (small) Nq. pachydermaproject has been completed. The data has been tabulated, many graphs and comparisons were made, and the poster was prepared. Thanks, in no small part to my Professor whom I've been working on this with, I know have a rather professional looking poster to present. The last few days of the project were, perhaps understandably, the most hectic. And nerve wracking. At one point we thought that the entire way we were looking at the data was completely wrong, that we had defined a parameter in a way that it wasn't being used in most of the literature. Fortunately, it wasn't, there was just some initial confusion over the terms.
I have to say, its been a humbling experience, which is what I had hoped for and anticipated. Even in the simple write up for the poster I had a good deal of trouble. Often I was making 'wild assed speculations', and it was difficult to determine exactly what the data was permitting one to say about it and the situation. I have noticed before though that the best scientific papers are the ones where, when you read their results and conlcusions, you almost feel like the person is an idiot for stating things that are so completely obvious from their data. Similarly I have noticed that some of the best writting in general is the sort that states things that are pretty basic and that perhaps wouldn't be noticable in day to day life. I have yet to present the poster, so I might be quite a bit more humbled after that!
I am expecting that the people it is being presented to will have lots of questions, and that I will be caught completely flat footed at times. I haven't had any experience with forams or this region before this project, and there is such a huge amount of literature on those subjects, that there is simply no way that I won't be stammering in many responses. I can only hope that I at least manage to not make a fool of myself.
At the same time, I can relax a little because there are going to be a lot of other posters presented, and a lot of other papers being presented, so I at least won't feel too much in the spotlight.
I had previously presented some very preliminary results in a research conference at my University, and the people I had to talk to at that were mostly faculty and a hefty dose of people who weren't geolgy students or paleontology professionals, so it should turn out to be quite a different experience. At the same time, I expect that there will be some similarities. I know that when I have been at other poster presentations, I try to very quickly figure out what the whole presentation is about, why its important, and how good the evidence and interpreations match one another. People at the University research conference were, similarly, not interested in long drawn out explanations of things that they aren't familiar with, and at least one person actually interupted my initial blatherings to say, in effect, 'what were your conclusions'. That was good, because for the rest of the University conference I had to really excise out all the uncritical stuff. If there was anything anyone wasn't clear on, and they were interseted, they would ask.
So I expect that that aspect will be similar when I do present as this professional research conference. I will be presenting for two days also, and for a much longer period of time than at the University research conference. That should make a difference also.

Monday, May 08, 2006

Sinister Coils

As previously noted, Nq. pachyderma is composed of chambers that are added in succession. The chambers form a 'trochospiral' coil. This coil can be sinistral or dextral, left or right coiling. The sinistral forms dominate in polar waters, and are a proxy for such water masses. Right now, I am counting the relative abundances of sinistral and dextral forms throughout the core. This is proceeding much faster than the previous work of picking out Nq. pachyderma from the slide sample.

I've also been thinking of what to do in the future, as in over the summer and for a thesis starting next semester. Fortunately, I might be able to do some paleontological research at a few places, such as at another local university or possibly at a museum within a paleo-department. That would be exciting. However I am also concerned about focusing too narrowly on paleontology; it'd be nice to actually have a job after getting the 'peice of paper' that is a graduate degree. There isn't much call for paleontologists out there in the market.

Bah, that's the market's loss!

Sunday, April 30, 2006

Blogging Spam

I just deleted a "spam comment" to the previous post. Whats intersting is that it claims you can get a PhD within 2 weeks, simply by calling 413-208-3069, wow, imagine that! A doctorate within 2 weeks! The 'trackback' to that spammers account name reveals that they don't have a blog within blogger, just an account. Previously, spammers would make their account have a blog that had their spam message, that way people would see it. But I suppose that this represented a problem, because if you have a blog, there is a 'flag' option for a viewer to check, which apparently puts it onto a list for the people that run Blogger to review, iow, the spammer would be exposing themselves. So by not having a blog, but having an account, they're apparently able to get around that and spam people's comments. I googled around for that phone number, and apparently there are numerous accounts spamming the same message, on blogger and other blog pages.

Whats really funny is that, in a sense, anyone that did call that number, hoping to get a degree on the sly (there are degree mills out there that award advanced degress for cash), deserves to have their identity stolen and credit standing destroyed. I doubt that that number connects to a degree mill scam, but rather to a simple ID fraud scam.

Anyway, the number registers to South Deerfield, MA and a carrier called "Global Naps." That apparently is a co-location service, rather than a cell phone carrier, which is intereting. It might mean that the phone number is somehow being "freaked", that the entity at the other end of the line isn't in MA, but is re-routing information to that location.
Even more interstingly, Global Naps was involved in a FCC lawsuit:

http://www.fcc.gov/ogc/documents/opinions/2001/00-1136.html

That suit does seem to imply that this Global Naps company is involved in telephone communications. Also, from their website:
"Our primary focus is high volume, high ussage business customers". They apparently have a national distribution in their "Switch Sites", but a focus on the East Coast, with a location in Quincy, MA. Their website overall is pretty primitive, lots of flash animation, little substance, and they have a photo of Frank Sinatra as their Chairman.

More interestingly, there is no actual information about anyone involved with the company. Perhaps they don't want their information out there because then people would be able to make connections to criminal enterprises that operate through them, such as this Degree Mill scam that they enable.

I sent an email to info@gnaps.com to see if they had a response or comment to make about that illegal operation. Blogger, unfortunately, doesn't bother to give people the option to report whole accounts, nor do they make it easy to report such matters to them directly. This is probably because they aren't really interested in it. It will be interesting to see if "GNAPS" is concerned about this usage.

Friday, April 28, 2006

Update

My access to this blog was down for a while. I had given up on it, but I see that I have access again. Thats nice.

The foraminiferal project has been interesting. I have prepared a small poster on it, and will be doing a prresentation on it in the near future. I will say one thing though, I noted below that they can move around a little bit within the water column, thats what most of the literature says about them.

However, I have discoved an entirely new form of foraminiferal locomotion, saltation!

Because every time I'd try to move one of the things around with the brush, *SPRING*, they'd jump all over the place!

I am also now looking into doing some more research. I have a few possibilities right now, some biogeochemical research might be possible, or some paleontological studies might also open up. I probably won't be doing any more work with forams in the near future. They're actualy really interesting little creatures, but it seems like that sort of research won't take me in the directions I am looking to go right now.

Thursday, February 02, 2006

Foraminiferal Project

I'll be starting a new project now. Investigating paleo-ocean currents around the antarctic via studying foraminifera obtained from an ocean drilling project core.

Foraminifera are intruiging. They are animals, both planktonic and benthic forms exist, that, for the most part, have a 'shell' that is formed from calcarous minerals, called a test. Thus they are fora-minifera, mineral animals. This is shortened to "forams", which unfortunately looses and obscures the meaning of the latin.

An organism can be said to be planktonic if it resides in the water column and has no ability to swim against the ocean currents. However, a plankton, such as many forams, are infact active swimmers, its just that they swim to different positions up and down the water column, while at the same time being pushed along horizontally (and of course vertically at times) by the ocean currents.

I'll be specifically looking at a planktonic species called Neogloboquadrina pachyderma. This intersting creature's tests grow as a series of increasing ovate to spherical chambers that form a sworl. They tend to inhabit the higher lattitudes. If the organism grows in relatively cold water, the chambers form a left-handed sworl, in warmer waters, they form a right-handed sworl. Thus, by counting the percentage of right and left handed forms present, one can say something about the temperature of the surface water that they inhabit.

When alive, planktonic foraminifera can have all sorts of pseudo-podia and cytoplasmic projections stemming off of them, these things help them to stay afloat. They can also have pockets of gas or globs of fat inside of them that help them stay afloat also. They live out their lives and either die naturally or are ingested by other organisms, likesay, fish. Upon death, they slowly sink to the bottom of the ocean, where they collect on the floor as a portion of the ocean sediment. This sinking is aided by 'flocculation'. When the foram is ingested by a fish, it gets mixed with other materials and is eventually excreted. This mass then settles quickly, 'flocculating' other dead sinking forams and other organisms along the way. Thus, there is a "fish poop" express shuttle that gets them to the ocean bottom.

This is the overall process that has generated the sediments that make up the drilling core that I will be getting my forams from.

Because of the basic uniformitarian principle of superpositioning, the core sections further down are older and those closer to the top of the core are younger. Thus there is a time series. By examining the proportions of left and right coiling N. pachyderma at different sections of this series, I should be able to say something about the changing surface water conditions for that region, and thus can say something about the ocean currents that used to exist there.

The section was drilled from off of the coast of southern Africa. Thus it represents a region where there is movement of water from the Indian ocean and into the Atlantic, passing between the Antarctic and the Cape of Good Hope. Ultimately, this project will be looking at the formation of what is called the Circum-Polar current, which is the movement of water in a tight and uninterupted circle around Antarctica. Because this movement is unobstructed, it can get very stormy. Indeed, the tip of South Africa is euphemistically named the Cape of "Good Hope", because its an incredibly dangerous and stormy passage that sailors hope to get through.

The core isn't from off the cape itself however, its more north-east wards and is thoroughly a part of the Atlantic Ocean. In addition to the spin off of this circum-polar current, there is an input of water from the north. This is, infact, water that has made the global journey from the Carribean /Gulf of Mexico, up along the Atlantic Coast, over to the British Isles (where it represents an influx of heat and thus makes Britian warmer than Nova Scotia, which is at the same lattitude), and then travels down along the west coast of Africa to the region in which the core was sampled from. Along this long route, the water is giving up its heat and sinking, thus by the time it gets to the study region, it is Cold Deep Water. From there is moves back across the Atlantic and into the Gulf/Carribean region, to continue cycling.

It should be an interseting project.

Neogloboquadrina pachyderma fossil, left-coiling variety. The Bar represents a length of 1 mm:

Neogloboquadrina pachyderma fossil, right-coiling variety:

Tuesday, January 31, 2006

The Cancer Genetics Lab Experiments

These experiments ended up having some serious problems. We'd get to the final stages, in which we'd try to grow colonies of the transfected bacteria, and the'd fail to grow. After several reversals, we switched the restriction enyzme used to make the inserts. One of the ones we were using has trouble cutting at the ends of dna, so we replaced it with Hind III. That ended up working. We progressed to a stage wherein we'd sequence the dna, to analyze the mutation we created, but that sequencing failed and our laboratory time was up.

Not a failure though. Problems are not failures. Problem, literally, are oppurtunities. We got to see a lot of work go 'up in smoke', and that is a good experience in and of itself. We also got to see that a lot of things can really go wrong very easily and mysteriously, and infact this is to be expected. The oppurtunity is to find out what went wrong and how to correct it.


Of course, I doubt that an explanation like that would permit one to publish, or that it'd look too good on a grant application.