Tidal waves; prisoners of celestial forces
We are told that a tide waits for no one, the impatient cousin of time. In its early 13th century idiom […]
We are told that a tide waits for no one, the impatient cousin of time. In its early 13th century idiom […]
The Celts must have known a thing or two about rocks. They certainly recognized the bare hillslopes of western County
PreambleI first heard about the Moine Thrust (northwest Scotland) during my undergraduate studies at Auckland University. Our department structural geology
Preamble A collection of late 19th century lantern slides made by Arthur Whinfield, a native of Worcester, England, has recently
Some things in science are just too difficult to comprehend: the temperature at the center of the sun (15,000,000oC), the
A chance encounter of a different kind. The 9th century Book of Kells is exhibited in the Trinity College library
Organic compounds (i.e. molecules that contain carbon bonded to hydrogen) are not the prerogative of earth. They have been identified
[I had the opportunity to browse some of Ussher’s notes and scribblings during a visit to Trinity College, Dublin –
A slashing blow by some mythical behemoth, knifing effortlessly through earth’s rocky foundations; a (seemingly) bottomless chasm, a canyon, with
Version 1:“What’s that Pa?”Point it out, the “What’s that”.Ah yes, I see what you’re at.That is that, and this