Search Skulls in the Stars:
-
The author of Skulls in the Stars is a professor of physics, specializing in optical science, at UNC Charlotte. The blog covers topics in physics and optics, the history of science, classic pulp fantasy and horror fiction, and the surprising intersections between these areas.
Archives
Twitter Updates
- Oh, damn, @TheOnion twitter.com/TheOnion/statu… 4 minutes ago
- You’re *white*, Stephen. Of course they were gracious to you. #ThisIsntHardToUnderstandYouDumbassNazi https://t.co/cvyNXaCfjm 28 minutes ago
- RT @RepDonBeyer: Today I was to preside over consideration of 13 of these noncontroversial bills with bipartisan support, but then the bill… 31 minutes ago
- Been noticing that American right-wingers are in love with the British monarchy, Russia, and nazism. All told, it s… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 56 minutes ago
Categories
Blogroll
- Anthropology in Practice
- Carin Bondar.com
- cgranade::streams
- Clastic detritus
- Cocktail Party Physics
- Cosmic Variance
- Culturing Science
- Deep Sea News
- DIEHL Research Grant Services
- En Tequila Es Verdad
- From the Hands of Quacks
- Gambler's House
- Highly Allochthonous
- Laelaps
- Magma Cum Laude
- Musings on the Art of Cable
- Neurotic Physiology
- Physics Buzz
- PLoS Blogs
- Scienceblogging.org
- Scientopia
- Swans on Tea
- Swords & Dorkery
- The Dispersal of Darwin
- The Gam
- The Greenbelt
- The Inverse Square Blog
- The Language of Bad Physics
- The Primate Diaries
- The Renaissance Mathematicus
- The Thoughtful Animal
- Uncertain Principles
- White Coat Underground
Meta
Author Archives: cairochemist
You-tube Generation
I like to watch you-tube videos at work, am I alone? There are so many great and not so great videos out there. I often show clips I find on-line in my classes to initiate class discussions. I had the … Continue reading
Posted in General science
Leave a comment
The Civic Scientist
I think I love a challenge but in truth I hate failing, and will usually not undertake a task unless I think I have a good shot at excelling at it. That may be the reason why when my friend … Continue reading
Posted in General science
2 Comments