The noble genus Vitis
The wine harvest is nearing its end, so this seems like a good time to look at the different species of grapes that are used for wine. When I first began to tak...
Posts from my blog Science Word Geek (2013–2018)
The wine harvest is nearing its end, so this seems like a good time to look at the different species of grapes that are used for wine. When I first began to tak...
I ran across the phrase renal calculus, another name for a kidney stone, and wondered whether it was related to the calculus you learn in a math class. It turns...
The other day I was poking around online reading about rocks and dinosaurs when I should have been working, and I discovered that what I knew as the Cretaceous–...
This is one of my very favorite times of year; on sunny days, the low-angle sunlight makes the colorful leaves on the trees glow. “Season of mists and mel...
The word muscle comes from the Latin musculus, which means little mouse. But why? It’s because the rippling movement of certain muscles under the skin was...
Sometimes I worry that I’ll describe the origin of a word incorrectly because I get my Greek and Latin roots confused. At this distance, it’s easy t...
This is the third and final post in a series on some of the most glorious plant families of the summer garden and orchard. Part 1 covered cucurbits, and part 2 ...
A surprising number of chemical elements are named for places. (Well, it surprised me, anyway.) Many of the elements that have been identified since the late 18...
Welcome to part 2 in a series of posts about the late summer garden harvest. (Part 1, on the cucurbits, is here; part 3, on the drupes, is here.) Today we’...
Given that the Mars rover Curiosity is in the news (it did not find methane in the planet’s atmosphere, contrary to earlier reports), this seems like a go...