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.