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A blog that explores the unknown, technology, space, science and strange things with a skeptical and analytical eye.

Greg Fish
141 posts

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  • December 13, 2011
  • 04:05 PM
  • 3,476 views

eliminating dark matter with an intuitive culprit

by Greg Fish in weird things

Few things are as reviled on popular science and physics comment sections as dark matter and dark energy because aside from indirect observations, we’ve never actually detected either. We can see that something is pushing galaxies apart from each other while another invisible force holds these galaxies together, but there have been many attempts to do away with both in a theoretical sense. [...]... Read more »

  • December 14, 2011
  • 06:00 PM
  • 3,383 views

the dark monsters who will inherit our universe

by Greg Fish in weird things

Bizarre things are lurking out there in our universe. Titanic beasts born as space and time shatter under more than enough energy to be felt across thousands of light years, beasts with the power to devour stars whole as they whip the very fabric of reality around their gaping maws like their plaything and dictate [...]... Read more »

McConnell, N., Ma, C., Gebhardt, K., Wright, S., Murphy, J., Lauer, T., Graham, J., & Richstone, D. (2011) Two ten-billion-solar-mass black holes at the centres of giant elliptical galaxies. Nature, 480(7376), 215-218. DOI: 10.1038/nature10636  

  • March 8, 2009
  • 05:56 PM
  • 2,907 views

what makes a planet habitable?

by Greg Fish in weird things

Lately, it seems like almost every popular science show about astronomy absolutely has to talk about the habitable zone concept and marvel at how lucky we are to be in just the right orbit around our parent star. Supposedly, the distance from the Sun is just enough to keep our water liquid and give life [...]... Read more »

David S. Spiegel, Kristen Menou, & Caleb A. Scharf. (2008) Habitable Climates. The Astrophysical Journal, 681(2), 1609-1623. DOI: 10.1086/588089  

  • April 24, 2009
  • 03:03 PM
  • 2,856 views

how to find an alien forest

by Greg Fish in weird things

Chirality seems to be a hot topic in astrobiology this month. Just a few weeks ago, astrobiologists at NASA announced that they found a possible explanation as to why the amino acids present in all life forms we know today wind to the left. Now, another team of scientists is taking what we know about [...]... Read more »

Sparks, W., Hough, J., Kolokolova, L., Germer, T., Chen, F., DasSarma, S., DasSarma, P., Robb, F., Manset, N., & Reid, I. (2009) Circular polarization in scattered light as a possible biomarker. Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer. DOI: 10.1016/j.jqsrt.2009.02.028  

  • March 19, 2009
  • 03:13 AM
  • 2,621 views

the pope needs a fact check

by Greg Fish in weird things

Sometimes you hear a person who was given immense authority and is regarded as a very deep and profound thinker say something so shockingly backwards, you start to wonder in what world he’s living. Case in point, Pope Benedict XVI who says that using condoms to stem the tide of HIV and AIDS infections in [...]... Read more »

  • May 15, 2009
  • 01:57 AM
  • 2,516 views

what does it take to get a warp drive?

by Greg Fish in weird things

If you want to explore space firsthand, a warp drive isn’t just a good idea that could save you a lot of time and resources. It’s an absolute must. Without it, exploring even 1% of the galaxy would take eons. Luckily for future interstellar explorers, physicists are on the case and have so far been [...]... Read more »

  • April 2, 2009
  • 12:12 AM
  • 2,510 views

spank me baby, it’ll bring us closer

by Greg Fish in weird things

So a chemist, a film and television expert and a psychologist walk into an S&M club to watch couples play a little rough… No, that’s not the beginning of a joke but an actual, honest to goodness study about the relationships of couples which practice a variety of sadomasochistic activities. And as it turns out, [...]... Read more »

Sagarin, B., Cutler, B., Cutler, N., Lawler-Sagarin, K., & Matuszewich, L. (2008) Hormonal Changes and Couple Bonding in Consensual Sadomasochistic Activity. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 38(2), 186-200. DOI: 10.1007/s10508-008-9374-5  

  • May 2, 2009
  • 04:27 PM
  • 2,474 views

what history lost, genetics tries to recover

by Greg Fish in weird things

We’ve long assumed that Africa is home to the widest genetic diversity in humans. After all, it’s our ancestral home and it only makes sense that as we spread throughout the world, the genetic variation for each culture and society eventually narrowed. This is why the recent headline about a 10 year study by a team of[...]...... Read more »

Tishkoff, S., Reed, F., Friedlaender, F., Ehret, C., Ranciaro, A., Froment, A., Hirbo, J., Awomoyi, A., Bodo, J., Doumbo, O.... (2009) The Genetic Structure and History of Africans and African Americans. Science. DOI: 10.1126/science.1172257  

  • May 7, 2009
  • 06:37 PM
  • 2,423 views

why alternative medicine spreads like a virus

by Greg Fish in weird things

If there was an award for most counterintuitive results from a study, a recent project that tried to determine why quack medicine is still used by between 60% and 80% of the world, would win hands down. Despite growing volumes of clinical studies linking virtually all gain from traditional and alternative medicine to what’s known [...]... Read more »

  • April 28, 2009
  • 06:40 PM
  • 2,416 views

why we’re not ready for a pandemic

by Greg Fish in weird things

And so the world ends not with a bang, not with a whimper but with an oink. Or at least that’s what it looks like if you’ve been following the news. Extensive coverage of the swine flu outbreak is triggering fears that the long awaited influenza pandemic is finally here and sending conspiracy theorists into [...]... Read more »

Osterholm, Michael T. (2005) Preparing for the next pandemic. The New England Journal of Medicine. DOI: http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/352/18/1839  

  • March 4, 2009
  • 03:36 AM
  • 2,356 views

united states of pornography

by Greg Fish in weird things

An old axiom says that the people who appear the most prudish are much more likely to have a secret porn stash in their closet. Yeah, so what, we hear a lot of axioms and they’re not necessarily true. How do you prove it? An online marketing expert curious about porn purchases in the United [...]... Read more »

  • July 8, 2009
  • 11:09 PM
  • 2,301 views

where the sasquatches roam…

by Greg Fish in weird things

When a scientist sends you commentary involving the crypto-zoological sasquatch, you have to make a post about it. By itself, his paper is actually a commentary on electronic modeling of ecological species, a warning to make sure that you’re putting in complete and high quality data to get a reliable model. However, it shows a [...]... Read more »

  • May 25, 2009
  • 03:48 PM
  • 2,300 views

aging: genes vs. the environment

by Greg Fish in weird things

As far as we know, every living on our planet has something in common besides the same nucleotides and amino acids. Aging. When scientists started deciphering genomes and what specific genes did, the idea was that aging came from a preprogrammed set of genetic instructions and death was triggered by some sort of kill switch. [...]... Read more »

BUDOVSKAYA, Y., WU, K., SOUTHWORTH, L., JIANG, M., TEDESCO, P., JOHNSON, T., & KIM, S. (2008) An elt-3/elt-5/elt-6 GATA Transcription Circuit Guides Aging in C. elegans. Cell, 134(2), 291-303. DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2008.05.044  

  • June 20, 2009
  • 12:26 AM
  • 2,282 views

who wants to be immortal anyway?

by Greg Fish in weird things

If you’ve ever read more than a few entries from The Daily Galaxy, you’ll notice a strange skew towards a sort of scientific sensationalism. Stories based on very limited and specific research are expanded into linchpins for brand new disciplines on the verge of getting us halfway across the galaxy in no time at all [...]... Read more »

  • January 28, 2010
  • 04:11 PM
  • 2,267 views

looking for exotic aliens in our solar system

by Greg Fish in weird things

Titan, it’s the farthest place humans have ever landed a robotic probe and one of the most intriguing moons in the solar system, resembling a cryogenic version of our own planet when it was still young. Because it has an active cycle of organic compounds, a thick atmosphere, lakes of liquid natural gas and geologic [...]... Read more »

  • May 9, 2009
  • 02:06 AM
  • 2,257 views

anti-vaxers: yelling fire in a crowded theater…

by Greg Fish in weird things

We’re all concerned about our children and their health. It’s in our nature. Long childhoods and parental care are key strategies to ensuring the survival of not just humans, but all mammals in general and it’s one of a number of reasons why we’ve been able to take over the Earth after the dinosaurs vanished. [...]... Read more »

  • July 13, 2009
  • 07:18 PM
  • 2,248 views

it only looks irrational…

by Greg Fish in weird things

Humans have a very strange ability to understand how irrational we are and yet build complex systems which demand that everyone involved is perfectly rational. In his appearance on the Daily Show, writer Justin Fox hit that nail on the head when talking about the current ideas underlying the modern stock market. Rather than try [...]... Read more »

Yamagishi, T., Horita, Y., Takagishi, H., Shinada, M., Tanida, S., & Cook, K. (2009) The private rejection of unfair offers and emotional commitment. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0900636106  

  • November 6, 2009
  • 02:57 PM
  • 2,220 views

charles darwin and otto hahn’s alien fossils

by Greg Fish in weird things


Just because Darwin wouldn’t discuss the origin of life in his work, doesn’t mean he didn’t have an opinion on the matter. And that opinion is actually pretty close to modern scientific thinking, that living things are products of chemistry rather than something requiring divine intervention. A recent paper cataloguing Darwin’s notes on the subject [...]... Read more »

Peretó, J., Bada, J., & Lazcano, A. (2009) Charles Darwin and the Origin of Life. Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres, 39(5), 395-406. DOI: 10.1007/s11084-009-9172-7  

  • November 10, 2009
  • 03:29 AM
  • 2,210 views

it’s a comet! it’s a meteor! no, it’s a piece of rna!

by Greg Fish in weird things

What do you get when you take pyrimidine molecules, freeze them in a vacuum to -340°F, then expose them to ultraviolet radiation you’d find in space? Think about it for a second. If you took a few extra credits in a college biology class, you may remember that your DNA contains purines and their chemical [...]... Read more »

  • March 13, 2009
  • 05:52 AM
  • 2,181 views

does high IQ equal longer life?

by Greg Fish in weird things

A study of 1.1 million people conducted by a team of health experts found out that a person with a high IQ has a lower chance of dying at any given time than those with a lower IQ score. Because the researchers were interested whether there was some sort of correlation between IQ and unintentional [...]... Read more »

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