January 5th, 2005 · Comments Off on Nobel trip redux: Digging LKAB in Kiruna (Dec. 17)
I’ve been getting email from readers frustrated by the many Nobel stories I started to tell but never found time to finish. One person called it “blogus interruptus.”
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For example, I started several times to blog about Kiruna but never got much past telling you that it has as many space scientists as reindeer herders (about 500 of each).
On December 17, Frank and I spent the morning with Sverker Fredriksson and Ingrid Sandahl visiting the huge LKAB iron mine, which employs another 2,000 of Kiruna’s 24,000 non-space-scientists and non-reindeer-herders. |
Here are a few LKAB facts I jotted down:
- You could build 12 new Eiffel towers every day with the iron ore dug up at LKAB.
- Every night around 2 a.m., the mine does its blasting–which makes the town of Kiruna vibrate slightly.
- Iron ore is easier to ship and grade if you process it into uniform pellets.
- LKAB backs up its goals (quality and safety) by paying company-wide bonuses based on how well the goals are met.
- People who work in LKAB mine agree that theirs are the best jobs in the best company in the best town in the world.
That last item, however, seemed pretty widespread among people in Kiruna. I just hope space scientists and reindeer herders don’t ever get into fights with the people of LKAB about who does, in fact, have the best job ever.
Tags: Nobel
January 4th, 2005 · Comments Off on On being polka-dottedly hard-of-hearing
Mother Nature sent me a free sample of old-age hearing loss back when I
was a mere young sprout. I went for a long noisy car ride and, when I
got out, a whole bunch of neurons inside my left ear had decided to quit.
There are some good sides to this problem (and there are some good
reasons my children occasionally tease my by singing Monty Python’s “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life.”)
For example:
- I can sleep in a noisy bedroom just by pointing my right
ear into the pillow.
- Sometimes I “hear” some truly remarkable
things–like a radio ad for a restaurant with “ballet parking.”
- And I
get lots of practice on filling in the blanks.
At Harvard Square’s Boston Chowda* the other day, I kept
overhearing the cellphone talk of a 6-foot-tall blonde goddess at the
next table.
“No, it’s because he is in love with making horror movies. So he
claimed we were totally invited to this Hollywood party, but when I
walked in and saw __________ [name] I realized that he just been
totally lying. No way we were invited. And then all of a sudden, you
won’t believe this but ___________ [name] walked up to me and said,
‘You’re lookin’ good’ … “
And so on — I’m giving the Mad Lib
version, of course, because my polka-dot hearing kept cutting out every
time she lowered her voice. So I got to fill in the blanks with my own
idea of what would be a fun story–for example, that the
wrong-party-clincher was Julie Christie and Johnny Depp told the
goddess she looked good.
In real life, it was probably much less glamorous–but who cares? Certainly not my optimistic imagination.
A Hollywood party like the one I pictured–hey, it probably even has ballet parking!
Tags: Sister Age
January 4th, 2005 · Comments Off on Bert and I
Tags: Metablogging
January 3rd, 2005 · Comments Off on Peculiar, particular, specific top ten
Amazing 2004–never before has any year been described by so many different top ten lists!
Now, as for the top ten events in cryptozoology–that would probably be among the top ten things I know nothing about. Still, I can’t help wanting to jump in the game, if only by picking out my ten favorite blogposts from 2004. In chronological order, that would be:
- Return of the King: The absolute best moment (January 11)
- Re-thinking the virtues of fire-engine red (April 3)
- The fog of Robert McNamara (April 6)
- Look–up in the sky–it’s a bird! It’s a plane! It’s a … journalist? (April 25)
- Bullied by bullet points (May 2)
- Garlic salt and bacon grease (May 27)
- The broken internal clock of Gerald Jay Sussman (June 3)
- Travel broadens the…something (June 15)
- Dramatic theory with mosquito continuo (July 23 — this is my favorite of all, being mostly Frank)
- Angst of a modern Hamlet (November 11)
After whittling down all my posts to a favorite ten, I suddenly realized–I’d forgotten to check the entire Nobel category. Drat, and now it’s after midnight. Well, here are my five favorite Nobel-related posts.
Am I egotistical, picking out ten favorite blogposts? Go thou and do likewise, if you haven’t already…
Tags: Life, the universe, and everything · Metablogging
January 2nd, 2005 · Comments Off on Tidings of joy and a squishy dodecahedron
The five platonic solids, left to right: octahedron, icosahedron, cube, tetrahedron, and the squishy one is a dodecahedron.
In other words, our lost suitcase was found–almost exactly a week after disappearing. (Thank you, Scandinavian Air, for finding it, and thanks to Continental for delivering it to our house at 1:30 a.m.)
Now, I was extremely pleased–though the next morning was soon enough to check on it–that my winter hat, two pairs of shoes, et cetera, were once again part of my life. Frank, however, was much more excited about his magnetic “stix and balls”* from the Nobel Museum, which he has now turned into five platonic solids.
“The Platonic solids were known to the ancient Greeks,” according to Steve Wolfram. Furthermore, “Plato equated the tetrahedron with the “element” fire, the cube with earth, the icosahedron with water, the octahedron with air, and the dodecahedron with the stuff of which the constellations and heavens were made (Cromwell 1997).”
Of course, if the heavens were made of magnets and balls, they’d also squish out of shape from their own weight. But I know Frank has some tricky un-squishing planned for the immediate future…
* Magnetic stix and balls are made in the UK, and various people sell them online, if you want some. Frank has 3 kits–they cost about $10 each.
Tags: Nobel
January 1st, 2005 · Comments Off on Now that’s a really nice New Year’s surprise!
Wow, thanks to the brilliant and sweet-natured Kevin Lawver for nominating this blog for a “Best Writing” Bloggie!
In January of 2004 I spent time trying to get Blogger blogs to yield RSS. That is, Scott Johnson did the actual geekery while I wrote some toy blogs with Rube-Goldberg templates–often with 4 or 5 posts in the space of an hour.
One of my favorites was blogged in the persona of Terry Pratchett’s giant world-supporting space-turtle A’Tuin:
A’Tuin tries to figure out what to put in his brand new weblog. A few millennia pass as he reasons it out, distracted briefly by drips from the Discworld above as an Ice Age ends. Finally the words come to him. Hesitantly, he pecks them out:
“Helllllo werld.”
So I hope you will all be more inclined to join Kevin Lawver in voting for my blog’s good writing when you compare it to much weirder blogs from my past such as “Giant Martian kittens make good friends” and “boat drinks r us.” (Hey, if anyone wants to vote for my boat drinks’ tagline–“The blog of tall blue libations with tiny umbrellas”–that would make my New Year even more fun and surprising…)
Anyway, thanks, Kevin!
Tags: Metablogging
December 31st, 2004 · Comments Off on Imaginary champagne, virtual confetti, and real tsunami donations
…late night, and I’m wishing it all for all of you–a New Year that’s
full of people you love, worthwhile metaphorical mountains to climb,
just plain funny stuff that makes you happy.
Meanwhile, this UNICEF tsunami donation page will help us all give the New Year an excellent start.
Tags: Life, the universe, and everything
December 31st, 2004 · Comments Off on New Year’s Eve parties turn into fundraisers…
On December 10, the beautiful country of Sweden threw a wonderful party to celebrate, once again, the annual award of Nobel Prizes. Now Sweden is engulfed by national mourning.
As many as 3,500 Swedes may have died in the December 26 tsunami. For reference, Sweden is a nation of only 9 million people–about 1/32 of the US population–while the number of Swedes dead or missing is larger than the number killed in the US on September 11, 2001.
I know that the international aid effort is being targeted to the Asian countries hit–some of the poorest nations in the world. The point of my blogpost is just to say, once again, that the tsunami’s harmful effects extended far beyond the Indian Ocean and in particular, into a country that will always have a special place in my heart.
Other tsunami links of major interest:
Tags: Pilgrimages
December 30th, 2004 · Comments Off on Cure for post-Christmas blues…
We just finished our post-Christmas Christmas celebration, I’m headed off for a nap but here are a few reasons post-Christmas Christmas rocks, followed by my promised cure for the blues:
- This morning, I walked to the store to buy more eggs for our Christmas pancakes–you can’t pick up forgotten items like that on a Christmas-Day Christmas.
- While we were opening gifts, a DHL truck pulled up and delivered a big Red Envelope box with a big white bow as an extra surprise for Frank–that won’t happen when you open gifts Christmas morning.
- I got (and gave) some really great things this year including a visible clock, a compilation CD of funny songs, and Christopher Moore’s new book The Stupidest Angel.
Last but by no means least, I fell in the fish pond while trying to knock some ice off its waterfall. (A big heaped up snowfall makes ice look just like the stepping stones–and ice that can hold up a blizzard cannot hold up Betsy.) Boy, that really wakes you up! My feet are freezing!
I do recommend a quick dip in our tiny fish pond as something that makes all the rest of your day look great.
Tags: Life, the universe, and everything
December 29th, 2004 · Comments Off on Thailand, Sri Lanka, Indonesia…and Sweden
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On Thailand’s Phuket Island, seven-year-old Karl Nilsson survived the tsunami with a broken collarbone and some cuts and bruises–but noone knows what has become of his parents and little brothers.
Many Scandinavians escape their dark winter by taking a family Christamas break in Thailand — and many have lost their lives in the recent tsunami. Some 2,000 Swedes may be among the missing–an enormous number for one tiny country to lose.
Swedish Prime Minister Göran Persson is calling it “the worst catastrophe of our time.”
An international airlift is underway, bringing in food and medicine — and bringing out survivors from areas now marked by food shortages and widespread looting.
By the way, since my December 26 post about this disaster, Amazon.com has created a special Red Cross pay-page to made it easier than ever to help the international aid effort.
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Tags: Pilgrimages