Saturday, October 26, 2024

Darwin's House Plants, Water Diviners, Geology Podcast

 A couple of good articles and a geology podcast.

1) “Spontaneous Revolutions” Darwin’s Diagrams of Plant Movement: Darwin's unbounded curiosity for nature led him down many unexpected research pathways. Towards the end of his long career, his restless mind noticed the growth patterns of his house plants. Determined to understand more about their motion and the stimuli, he spent hours tracking tendrils grow and came up with innovative ways to record their movements on paper. Natalie Lawrence has written a lovely essay on this lesser known chapter of Darwin's life and work. 

2) Trust, cost go greater depths to sustain unscientific water divining practice: Large swaths of Indian agriculture is desperately dependent on access to groundwater. Simrin Sirur explores the reliance on water diviners in south India. Diviners use sticks, coppers tongs, coconuts, magnetic compass, and chains with keys as their instruments for sensing groundwater. Despite all this unscientific baggage, many diviners are not all that ignorant. They have a knowledge of the local landscape and groundwater availability. Their prediction relies more on their past experience and a dollop of common sense. 

I must tell you about my experience with a diviner. My neighbor requested that I accompany her to a plot of land outside Pune. She had hired a diviner to help her locate groundwater. We picked him up en route. He was the late Pandit Bhimsen Joshi's son! On reaching my friend's property he got to work with copper tongs. After a few minutes of walking  up and down the site the copper tongs started shaking. He indicated the spot to drill and suggested going down to a depth of 150 feet. On the way back he cheerfully told us that he knew that the adjacent plot owner had struck water at 150 feet. Past experience and common sense go a long way! 

3) Geology Bites Podcast:  Conversations with Geologists: Oliver Strimpel has had quite an unusual career beginning with a doctoral degree in astrophysics. He later became the director of the Computer Museum in Boston and then a patent attorney. But geology beckoned him. He has worked alongside geology researchers trying to date rocks and unravel the timing of movement of the Karkoram fault in Ladakh. Geology Bites grew out of his passion for the subject. You will find a wide range of geology topics discussed on this site. 

I have so far listened to experts talk about radioactive waste disposal, continental crust composition, the inherent bias in the global sedimentary record, and on the evolution of minerals through geologic time. All have been excellent. The talks are about half hour, so they don't tax your patience too much. 

If you have free time coming up this Diwali, I recommend you dive into this collection of geology talks.

2 comments:

  1. Hello Suvrat, an unrelated comment here. I know you're interested in evolution of life. Have you read "Meet the Eukaryote, the First Cell to Get Organized", recently in Quanta magazine?—very interesting discussion of our earliest origins, and quite clear I think, though with careful reading on my part. Best wishes. https://www.quantamagazine.org/meet-the-eukaryote-the-first-cell-to-get-organized-20241028/?mc_cid=b13a97fd8e&mc_eid=72e5272dd5

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  2. Hi Hollis- I had not noticed that article! Looks very interesting. Will read through. Thanks for the link :)

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