Monthly Archives: January 2009

Linnaeus’ Legacy No. 15: Sorting it all out

This is my favorite web carnival, and this is the best version of it yet, owing to the outstanding submission we have this month!

i-bc0d46e81351a3a74cabd227fd2d5fa5-darwintree2.gifWelcome to the 15th Monthly edition of the blog carnival Linnaeus’ Legacy. I thought about being cute and fancy for this edition of the carnival, but instead, I decided to be very systematic.

(de – dum – dum)

So we will work our way from foundations to theory to taxonomy, and within the taxonomic sphere we will sort out all the organisms by type and deal with them as such appropriately. And then, we will have one little item related to extinction. The place where diversification ends.

On with the show:
Continue reading Linnaeus’ Legacy No. 15: Sorting it all out

Adolph Hitler: So cute you just want to pinch his fat little cheeks….

i-850fb45e48b92f9cdb4f5976adfb825f-child_named_adolph_hitler_by_WS_parents.jpgHeath and Deborah Campbell had three children. They named them:

  • JoyceLynn Aryan Nation Campbell
  • Honszlynn Hinler Jeannie Campbell
  • Adolf Hitler Campbell

That, right there, would be child abuse. Do you not agree?

The story is making the rounds (h/t: McDuff) because it is little Adolph’s third birthday and the local shop-rite (supermarket) refuses to provide the family with a cake enscribed “Happy Birthday Adolph Hitler.”

The story can be found here and here.

The Senator Larry Craig Gay Sex Bathroom Stall Is NOT For Sale!

This important story was broken by the Minnesota Independent.

The agency that runs the airport refused an apparently serious offer to buy the men’s room stall made famous by Craig’s 2007 conviction for disorderly conduct in a sex-solicitation sting operation by the airport police. The Metropolitan Airport Commission (MAC) spurned the $5,000 offer, which arrived by certified mail, according to MAC spokesperson Patrick Hogan.

Details are here.

And here is some related video content. Includes explicit demonstration of gay sex solicitation toe tapping.

The Minnesota Recount is Over

As many of you have already heard, the recount process in Minnesota to determine the outcome of the Senatorial race is over, and Al Franken has been certified as winner.

There is now a review period of seven days during which any voter in the state of Minnesota. Including me, Al Franken, whomever, can sue for an Election Challenge. Although both Secretary of State Ritchie and I have expressed the opinion that Norm Coleman, who lost the race, is unlikely to issue such a challenge, the press and even Coleman’s lawyers have suggested that a challenge will in fact be filed by three o’clock tomorrow (Tuesday) afternoon.

However, you know the following is true: The best chance Coleman has to turn what he calls Franken’s “Artificial Lead” around is from a set of 650 as yet uncounted rejected absentee ballots. There are two things working against Coleman in regards to these ballots. First, the process is over and they were not counted. Asking for them to be counted is not a matter of bringing in something new. They have already been not-counted by a process determined by the same court to which Coleman would issue the challenge, and some members of that court were also on the canvassing board that certified the election this afternoon. So the chances of a challenge being accepted by this court is easily estimated at zero point zero zero zero. Or less.

Second, in order for Al Franken’s official 225 vote lead to be erased by counting these absentee ballots, there would have to be a very strong bias in these 650 ballots that Coleman wants counted. I calculate that there is about a two to three percent probability that counting these votes would change the outcome in Coleman’s favor. That may seem like a lot, but the chances of having the votes being counted to begin with is about zero.

Coleman really has two choices: Proceed with the challenge and end his political career or don’t proceed and have a chance of continuing in Minnesota politics.

Which, I would guess, would involve his run for governor in two years. As a democrat, of course.

A Cultural Climate Measure from Iron Age Africa

i-41ee9e6a4ec31bd042e17ed4cfdd7282-cattle_africa.jpgSouth of the Zambezi River, along the eastern side of Africa, things get dryer and dryer as you go south, until you finally reach the southernmost end of the continent where things become a little bit moister again.

A couple of thousand years ago cattle keeping people speaking Bantu languages and possessing mainly Banutu cultural traits … the ancestors of the present day Shona, Venda Tswana, Zulu, etc. …. were living in this area, keeping their cattle, and doing all sorts of interesting stuff.

As climate fluctuated year to year and decade to decade, there moved north and south a kind of line … an uneven line following topography and affected by numerous other forces, a line as hard to define or keep track of as the shadow of a train running down the track, cast on the nearby forest … that determined where, if you were a Bantu cattle keeping group, you could live vs. not live. This was essentially the line that divided areas wet enough for enough of the year to reliably grow sufficient grass for the cattle to graze (to the north, more or less) vs. areas where the rainfall was insufficient, or insufficiently regular, for this to happen (to the south, more or less).

ResearchBlogging.orgIt stands to reason that cultures that lived near this line would experience significant fluctuations in all sorts of areas of life. Cattle meant food, but cattle also meant wealth. This line could be though of as a sort of depression/recession vs. good economy line. Imagine such a line wafting back and forth across Europe. One day you are on the correct side of the line and everything is fine, then a couple of years later the line moves and the country you live in is destine to experience two or three decades in which the money is always worth a tenth of what it otherwise might be worth.

So what’s a culture to do? Invent religion, of course! Or, more realistically, adapt the religious modality to at least attempt to address variability in rainfall.

Well, the modern cultures of the region have ritual practices that many believe can be seen in the archaeological record, and some of those practices involve rain (or the lack thereof). And this has led to a very interesting research outcome about to be published in the Journal of Archaeological Science.

Continue reading A Cultural Climate Measure from Iron Age Africa

Helen Suzman

Helen Suzman was for many years a lone voice among white South Africans in power, actively opposing Apartheid. She died on New Years day at the ripe old age ofr 91.

She was buried today.

The mourners included President Kgalema Motlanther and the last leader of apartheid regime, F W de Klerk.

Mr de Klerk described Mrs Suzman as “one of South Africa’s great icons”.

“Suzman was my mentor, she was opposed to the abuse of power by the old apartheid regime,” South Africa’s opposition leader Helen Zille – who also attended the funeral – said.

“She was also opposed to the current abuses of power by the current ANC [African National Congress] government,” Ms Zille added.

bbc

The Game…

UPDATE: We suck. They’re pretty good. We do not deserve to win. If by some chance we do manage to win, we should not accept it. We suck.

… is going pretty well. We are losing by only a small amount.

Mike wanted me to live blog this game, but I assure you that you don’t want me doing that. I don’t know enough about football and would only embarrass myself.

I will tell you one small football story, though, to keep you amused during half time.

Several years ago, I think the last time the Vike’s were in the playoffs, we were up against the Falcons. Now, at the time I lived in Falcon Heights. Maybe this wasn’t the playoffs, maybe it was later in the process, like the world series or something … but the point is, there was this key game against the Falcons, and who won would go to the Superbowl.

So the night before the game a secret highly organized and rather expensive operation was undertaken in the city of Falcon Heights. All the signs that said “Welcome to Falcon Heights” were changed to say “Welcome to Vikings Heights.” All of them.

And, of course, the Vikings were JINXED and lost that game. Badly, as I recall.

OK, back to the game…

Carnivalia!!!

i-129cfc3f463b2e464b7e2bbd0b5d56c7-car19.jpgI would like to begin by reminding you that the next edition of the Linnaeus’ Legacy blog carnival will be hosted HERE In theory, it will come out tomorrow, but I have the sense that a few more submissions (your?) are still to come in, so I may delay posting until Tuesday morning. So you have time (any time today, Sunday, or tomorrow, Monday) to send in your submissions on the diversity of life, it’s classification and analysis, and stuff!

Now, on to a listing of some of the current carnivals:

Will VP35 be Ebola’s weak link?

ResearchBlogging.orgEbola is a viral disease that only occasionally infects humans, but when it does, he fatality rate is very high. In some population, where culturally determined methods of treating the dead involve a lot of contact with bodily fluids and where people are unaware of techniques to avoid spread of infection and are otherwise at risk, a large percentage of a rural village population can become infected, and the survival rate once infected can be as low as 10%. With increased awareness of how to avoid infection and even the most basic improvements in patient care, these numbers can be much improved, but fatality rates have never been lower than about 25% and are usually closer to 50%.

(Part of the large variation in survival rate data comes form the fact that ebola outbreaks always involve relatively small numbers of people and are rare. Useful rate data are best obtained from much larger samples.)

The protein VP35 is one of a small number of molecules that make up the center of the virus. VP35 serves several functions. Together with nearby proteins, VP35 is involved in ‘reproduction,’ such as it is for viruses. But VP35 also inhibits interferon, an immune system product, in the infected (host) individual. It turns out that mutations that affect this protein also mess up the virus’s ability to avoid the interferon.

A paper just coming out in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences explores the physical structure of VP35 at several levels, allowing for a characterization of the protein, with the hope of leading to the development of an effective anti-viral treatment.

i-95af03e80486fe70192b0c8f9d7f31c4-pnas_ebola.jpg

From the paper:

Our results suggest a structure-based model for dsRNA-mediated innate immune antagonism by Ebola VP35 and other similarly constructed viral antagonists.

D. W. Leung, N. D. Ginder, D. B. Fulton, J. Nix, C. F. Basler, R. B. Honzatko, G. K. Amarasinghe (2009). Structure of the Ebola VP35 interferon inhibitory domain Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0807854106

Someone on the internet agrees with me

… regarding the likely response by Coleman following the certification of the Minnesota Senatorial Race tomorrow (Monday) by the Canvassing Board.

No matter who wins, either party can lodge a legal challenge, potentially pushing the election results out quite a period of time from now. In 1969, Minnesota was unable to certify their Senator until well in to March.

But this isn’t the 1960s, and Norm Coleman surely knows that.

Just because he challenges the election, which is something he’s well poised himself to do, it doesn’t mean the outcome will change. If he fights tooth and nail to the death, and he loses, it will surely spell the end of his political career…

Read the rest by Brian White at Glossy News. Oh, google it. The site is showing signs of not being well behaved so I’m not linking to it.

Nature’s Evolutionary Gems

The following announcement is from Nature.

About a year ago, an Editorial in these pages urged scientists and their institutions to ‘spread the word’ and highlight reasons why scientists can treat evolution by natural selection as, in effect, an established fact (see Nature 451, 108; 2008).

This week we are following our own prescription. Readers will find at http://www.nature.com/evolutiongems a freely accessible resource for biologists and others who wish to explain to students, friends or loved ones just what is the evidence for evolution by natural selection. Entitled ’15 evolutionary gems’, the document summarizes 15 lines of evidence from papers published in Nature over the past 10 years. The evidence is drawn from the fossil record, from studies of natural and artificial habitats, and from research on molecular biological processes.

In a year in which Darwin is being celebrated amid uncertainty and hostility about his ideas among citizens, being aware of the cumulatively incontrovertible evidence for those ideas is all the more important. We trust that this document will help.