Showing posts with label Science Inspires. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Science Inspires. Show all posts

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Ode to the Gastrolith

I'm falling behind on my novel writing goals, so instead of a Weekly Science Roundup, you get this!

"Ode to the Gastrolith" is a piece I did back in college for the one and only creative writing class I ever took. My instructor was an...interesting fellow. To put it nicely, he had a lot of quirks and weird rules for writing that I didn't entirely agree with. So by the end of the semester, I just submitted things that I knew would mess with him.

I wrote this based on the biggest gastrolith I'd ever found.
The prompt was to write a short poetic reflection on an object that most people would overlook. As the class's only science nerd, I decided to write about something appropriately nerdy...something my instructor wouldn't know what to do with...GASTROLITHS.

Gastroliths are rocks that dinos swallowed, likely to help mush and digest their food since they didn't really do a lot of chewing. Modern day dinosaurs do this, too. Gastroliths fit my instructor's prompt perfectly. They're often overlooked, since they really do just look like rocks (because they are).

Anyway, I got a lot of question marks on this from my instructor, so mission accomplished. Up until a couple of days ago, I had forgotten all about this, until I stumbled upon it when I was looking for a different file from my college years. When I reread it, I knew I had to put it on my blog.

This is from college and was written to taunt my instructor, so it's obviously pretty terrible. But I have no shame and I'm posting it anyway.

Ode to the Gastrolith 

Like a lumpy chicken egg, you sit in the dirt.
You are no egg, though. Inorganic and inedible, you’ve seen more than any hatchling could ever dream of seeing.

Forced underground by the planet’s sinking crust, incinerating heat and pressure from the world on top of you strained your minerals to a swirl. You only resurfaced after getting scraped upwards for millions of years, when you then broke off from your formation and were carried long distances by rushing water, freezing glaciers, and the ever present force of gravity.

And then a pause.

But not forever.

Your rest, interrupted. A Sauropod swallowed you. Down the long neck, the long gullet, smashed alongside others from across the world, shredding soggy dead plants, attacked by bile all before being shoved through the winding pathways of the intestines; it could have been years before you were ejected from this massive body.

Post defecation, polished smooth, you waited by yourself, as contrasting jagged rocks broke apart into shattered piles around your resting place. Alone and different, you waited until now, unaffected and patient.

This is your story of survival. Survival on your own.
Alone,
colored green and purple by metamorphosis, rounded and beautified by dark biotic chambers and churning acid, you were sentenced to weather the past 80 million years at the mercy of a drying environment.

Find solace in your lifelessness, Gastrolith,
and in the aged wisdom
of your dense ignorance.

Thursday, May 9, 2013

When Fiction and Reality Collide: Astronaut Abby

For the past year, I've been working on a novel that stars a young girl training to be the first astronaut to go to Mars. Little did I know, this girl already existed.

I was thrilled to stumble across this website: http://astronautabby.com/, where 15 year-old Abigail Harrison is making her dream a reality. She's teamed up with Italian astronaut Luco Parmitano to educate the world about space exploration. She's going to be his Earth-bound correspondent while he's aboard the ISS this month. She's an advocate for STEM education and runs a website reminding us all how to dream big. She is, in a word, awesome.

And everyone should go support her mission right now: Astronaut Abby's Soyez Adventure. There's only 9 days left before the campaign runs out, so donate if you can!

Abby gives me hope that there are kids out there ready to tackle the big scientific challenges of our lifetime. I've spent a year writing this 13 year-old character who has similar aspirations, and to see her brought to life this way is just incredible. To top it off, I've learned that Abby decided to be an astronaut after reading science fiction books as a kid. If that's not inspiration for me to keep writing, I don't know what is.

Abby is a fantastic role model for people of all ages, anywhere and everywhere. I can't wait to see her achieve great things. You've got my vote for first astronaut on Mars, Abby. Make it happen!


Monday, August 6, 2012

Curiosity Has Landed!!!

Late last night, I woke up at 1:20 am to watch with JPL and NASA as we waited for Curiosity to get through its seven minutes of terror and report back via Odyssey (a satellite around Mars). It was heart-pounding. The wait was excruciating. Every little announcement of Curiosity's progress brought cautious, shaky smiles. But the tough part hadn't happened yet. It hadn't touched down.

And then it did.




I literally burst into tears and shrieked so loud that my cat ran into the room to see what in the world had gotten into me.

Setting my alarm to ensure I'd get up and see this live with everyone else was the best decision I could've ever made. The video above doesn't show the several minutes prior to the landing, where everyone is sharing in panic, but it does show the explosion of joy that people in that room and around the world shared together at the same moment. It also doesn't show the repeat of the celebratory screams and shouts as the very first picture arrives of Curiosity sitting on Mars. (I burst into tears again when that came in. Not at all ashamed to admit it.) It was amazing to be a part of that emotional rollercoaster.


Who says we're past the days when space exploration can be inspiring? Who says no one really cares anymore?

I was on Twitter last night with thousands, if not millions, of people all watching this same event, all celebrating this landing.

This was the most inspiring thing I've witnessed in a long, long time.

We did it. Humans did this. We sat down and put our minds to it, and we landed a massive science laboratory on a planet millions of miles away without it breaking. This restores my faith in us as a species. We can actually use these big brains of ours to do something not only non-violent, but something that allows for greater learning.

I love science. And I love the people who devote their lives to it. There's a child-like innocence left in us, and this is where it shows up the best. Congratulations, JPL and NASA. This entire feat is beyond amazing.


EDIT: Friend found a video of ten whole minutes surrounding the landing, so if you want to get more of a feel for what was happening last night, watch here!

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Curiosity!

Today's the day. Well, sort of. In my time zone, tomorrow's the day.

Anyhow, Curiosity will be LANDING ON MARS very soon. 1:31 am, August 6th, Eastern Time. Happy birthday to me! (Really. That's my birthday. Best present ever.)


Those interested can watch, live, on NASA TV. I'll be watching. Haven't decided yet if I'll go to bed early and set an alarm to wake me up after 1am for the event, or if I'll just stay up that late. In any case, we won't know if she's landed properly for several minutes afterwards, because the signal takes a while to travel through space. We might not even find out tonight at all, depending on several factors.

I cannot stress enough how super exciting and super scary this is. We're dropping a mobile science laboratory the size of a car onto another planet. Whoa. Just let that sink into your brains for a second.

Best wishes to the MSL team, all of NASA, and of course, Curiosity herself. The world will be watching with fingers crossed.

Monday, June 25, 2012