Sci/tech tidbits in and around New Hampshire
A bunch of people will be on the beach Thursday to watch a semi-blocked sun rise
People will be going to the beach early Thursday morning – very early Thursday morning – and not just to beat the heat. When the sun rises at 5:06 a.m. that day, it will be partly blocked by the moon, creating an annular eclipse. For the next hour, if the weather...
Tackling an aquatic pest produces possible insight into where our brains came from
A little over 700 million years ago, our ancestors were presented with a choice: Do you want to be immortal or do you want to be able to see, smell and hear stuff? The simple creatures that eventually evolved into us wanted to enjoy sensory input rather than never...
UNH records a deer traveling 180 miles in three weeks
A UNH researcher has discovered the longest travel distance ever recorded by an adult male white-tailed deer — 300 kilometers, or about 200 miles, in just three weeks. The study, led by assistant professor of wildlife ecology Remington Moll and published in the...
How long is our coastline, really? And is there really a “really”?
With everybody flocking to the beach on this hot and humid day, it's appopriate to revisit my 2016 I wrote a column looking at why some sources say New Hampshire’s ocean coastline is 18 miles long but some say it’s 13 miles and some say it’s 235 miles, and why people...
Even for the rich, the good old days included intestinal parasites
Archaeologists love trash pits and outhouse sites because what we discard, either physical or biological, tells a lot about life. The Valley News has a good story about a dig in a former "privy" (love that word) in Hanover that reminded us how much unpleasant...
Two ‘science cafes’ in N.H. are better than one
Science Café New Hampshire in Nashua and Concord and the SEE Science Center's Science on Tap in Manchester are teaming up to celebrate 10 years of bringing people and panelists together for informal science conversations. On June 15th these two programs are joining...
Getting eelgrass back in Great Bay will take a lot of work
Warming waters in Great Bay may be contributing to die-off of eelgrass, a cornerstone species in New Hampshire's huge tidal basin. New Hampshire Bulletin, a new statewide news organization, has a story about pilot projects to try replanting eelgrass to get the...
N.H. patents through June 6
By Targeted News Service The following patents were assigned in New Hampshire from May 30 to June 6. *** Parallel Wireless Assigned Patent for Inter-PGW Handover Architecture Parallel Wireless, Nashua, New Hampshire, has been assigned a patent (No. 11,026,276,...
Without good information, clean energy is hard to turn on
New Hampshire Bulletin, a new statewide online news organization staffed by some experienced former newspaper reporters and editors, has a good story about the esoteric topic of how a statewide energy data hub could make creating a 21st-century power system easier....
‘Structural round timber’ sounds much better than ‘logs’
Regular readers will know I'm a big fan of manufactured lumber, a.k.a cross-laminated timber (CLT) or engineered wood. It's basically a way to glue together smaller pieces of timber to create wooden beams which can replace a lot of steel and even concrete in mid-rise...
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