In trying to navigate the new ethical territory of blogging, I’ve decided to delete part of one of my posts. The full explanation is below.

Last week the story about the Turkish “quadruped” family was in circulation. I pointed to an article in which a Turkish scientist made an accusation of unethical payments against English scientists and a television company. When one of the English scientists, Nicholas Humphrey, complained in the comments that I was spreading “empty gossip,” I updated the post with a partial retraction, apologizing for not following up on the accusation.

Continue reading “A Retraction and a Deletion”

I take a look at two new books on global warming in Sunday’s New York Times Book Review. The International Herald Tribune has already posted it on their site (which has no subscription wall to boot). (Update: NYTBR link.) The books are The Weather Makers by Tim Flannery and Field Notes From a Catastrophe by Elizabeth Kolbert. Both are very good (though not perfect) books, and I suspect that they may have a noticeable effect on the discourse about global warming. I will be curious (in a kind of staring-at-a-car-wreck way) to watch the reaction of the global warming denial crowd.

Continue reading “Taking the Temperature on Global Warming Books”

Mike Lemonick, Time’s excellent senior writer on science, has started a blog. I can’t think off the top of my head of another staff science writer at a big magazine or newspaper who has a blog (as opposed to us itinerant science scribes). So welcome to Mike.

One quibble: why no comments? A journalist who doesn’t let blog readers comment is…well, I won’t use bad language here (but I will here).

Perhaps that’s the downside of life on staff–lots of lawyers hovering about. 

Continue reading “Lemonick Blogs”

The New York Times, March 10, 2006

Link

It would be hard to imagine a better time for these two important books to appear. The science of global warming has been making dramatic headlines.

NASA scientists recently reported that 2005 was the hottest year on record. Researchers studying the oldest core of Greenland ice yet extracted have also reported that there is more heat-trapping carbon dioxide in the atmosphere now than at any other point in the past 650,000 years. The vast majority of climate scientists agree that if we continue pumping greenhouse gases into the atmosphere the world’s temperature will climb significantly, and new computer models project a grim scenario of droughts and rising sea levels.

Continue reading “2 books parse the puzzle of global warming”