In an excellent article, Justin Gillis highlights a new paper that shows the West Antarctic Ice sheet to be one of the fastest warming places on Earth.
Note to math students: The scientists use linear regression to get the rate of temperature increase.
The record reveals a linear increase in annual temperature between 1958 and 2010 by 2.4±1.2 °C, establishing central West Antarctica as one of the fastest-warming regions globally.
Interesting research shows that brass and other copper metal alloy surfaces kill bacteria and degrade their DNA much better than stainless steel or plastic.
Plastic and stainless steel surfaces, which are now widely used in hospitals and public settings, allow bacteria to survive and spread when people touch them.
Even if the bacteria die, DNA that gives them resistance to antibiotics can survive and be passed on to other bacteria on these surfaces. Copper and brass, however, can kill the bacteria and also destroy this DNA.
The first has to do with the spark-the-imagination excitement that comes from being able to work with a live, real, scientific record (updated every month) that is so easy to grab (from Scrippts), and is extremely relavant given all the issues we’re dealing with regarding global climate change.
The second is that the data is very clearly the sum of two different types of functions. The exponential growth of CO2 concentration in the atmosphere over the last 60 years dominates, but does not swamp, the annual sinusoidal variability as local plants respond to the seasons.
Add an exponential curve trendline in a spreadsheet program or manual regression. If using the regression (which I’ve found gives the best match) your equation should have the form:
while the built-in exponential trendline will usually give something simpler like:
2. Subtract the exponential function.
Put the exponential function (model) into your spreadsheet program and subtract it from data set. The result should be just the annual sinusoidal function.
If you look carefully you might also see what looks like a longer wavelength periodicity overlain on top of the annual cycle. You can attempt to extract if you wish.
3. Decipher the annual sinusoidal function
Try to match the stripped dataset with a sinusoidal function of the form:
A good place to start at finding the best-fit coefficients is by recognizing that:
a = amplitude;
b = frequency (which is the inverse of the wavelength;
c = phase (to shift the curve left or right); and
d = vertical offset (this sets the baseline of the curve.
Wrap up
Now you have a model for carbon dioxide concentration, so you should be able to predict, for example, what the concentration will be for each month in the years 2020, 2050 and 2100 if the trends continue as they have for the last 60 years. This is the first step in predicting annual temperatures based on increasing CO2 concentrations.
My middle school class tried DNA extractions from dried split peas and cheek cells for a lab this week, and the experiments went rather well.
Split Pea DNA
For the split peas, we followed the Learn.Genetics lab. I blended the peas in some salty water at the front of the class (“Don’t you need a lid for that blender?”), and filtered it. This gave about 120 ml of filtrate. Then I added in 3 tablespoons of dish soap to the filtrate. The soap to breaks down the cell membranes and nuclear membranes because they are made of lipids (fats).
I shared out the resulting green liquid to the four groups. Each student was able to get a fair amount into a test tube so they could complete the lab as individuals.
Disintegrating the cell and nuclear membranes with soap exposed the DNA, but the long DNA molecules tend to be coiled up around proteins. Each student added a pinch (highly quantified I know) of meat tenderizer to their test tube to break down the protein and allow the DNA to uncoil. Enzymes are biological catalysts, large complex molecules that accelerate chemical reactions, the breakdown of proteins in this case, without breaking down themselves, so only a little is needed.
Finally, each student carefully poured rubbing alcohol into the test tube. I had to demonstrate how to tilt the test tube while alcohol was being poured into it so that the alcohol would not mix in with the pea soup but, instead, form a layer at the top, since the alcohol is less dense than the suspension of split peas in salty water.
If it was done carefully enough, the DNA would precipitate at the boundary between the two liquids. If not, the DNA would still precipitate, but it would be mixed in together with the green soup and be harder to distinguish.
Either way, however, students could see the long strands of DNA, and fish them out with glass rods.
Human DNA
The human DNA extraction procedure is well demonstrated by the NOVA video. One student who missed the split pea lab did this experiment instead because it’s faster. It does not require blending to crush the cells, nor does it need the meat tenderizer enzyme.
Although this procedure produces a lot less DNA — after all, you’re only getting a few loose cells from the insides of your cheeks — the strands are still visible. And it’s YOUR DNA.
Since I instructed the class on how to use the microscopes last month, one student wanted to see what his DNA looked like under the microscope. An individual DNA molecule is too small to see, but the strands we have are bunches molecules that are visible. They just don’t look like very much.
Last summer’s drought, and more weather extremes probably due to large-scale global climate change, is having dire effects on shipping on the Mississippi River. Suzanne Goldenberg has an excellent article in the Guardian.
Shipping companies say the economic consequences of a shutdown on the Mississippi would be devastating. About $7bn (£4.3bn) in vital commodities – typically grain, coal, heating oil, and cement – moves on the river at this time of year. Cutting off the transport route would have an impact across the mid-west and beyond.
…
Farmers in the area lost up to three-quarters of their corn and soya bean crops to this year’s drought. … Now, however, [they] are facing the prospect of not being able to sell their grain at all because they can’t get it to market. The farmers may also struggle to find other bulk items, such as fertiliser, that are typically shipped by barge.
The proposed solution is to release more water from the Missouri, however there would be a steep price to pay.
The shipping industry in St Louis wants the White House to order the release of more water from the Missouri river, which flows into the Mississippi, to keep waters high enough for the long barges to float down the river to New Orleans.
…
Sending out more water from the Missouri would doom states upstream, such as Montana, Nebraska, and South Dakota, which depend on water from the Missouri and are also caught in the drought.
“There are farmers and ranchers up there with livestock that don’t have water to stay alive. They don’t have enough fodder. They don’t have enough irrigation water,” said Robert Criss, a hydrologist at Washington University in St Louis, who has spent his career studying the Mississippi. “What a dumb way to use water during a drought.”
With a larger class, and quite a bit of space in the gym, I had more flexibility working on the toilet paper timeline compared to the last time.
I built in a friendly race to see which group could find a set of events first, and allowed me to highlight nine different, important, series of events along the timeline.
I broke the class up into 4 groups of 4, and each group created their own timeline based on a handout.
Then, I gave each group a slip of paper with four events on it (one event per student), and they had to race to see which group would be first to get one person to each event on the list. Once each group got themselves sorted out, I took a few minutes to talk about why the events were important and how they were related.
Table 1: The series of events.
1) We’ll be talking about plate tectonics soon, so it’s good for them to start thinking about the timing of the formation and breakup of the supercontinents.
Event 1
Event 2
Event 3
Event 4
Formation of Rodinia (supercontinent)
Breakup of Rodina
Formation of Pangea
Breakup of Pangea
2) This sequence emphasizes the fact that most free oxygen in the atmosphere comes from ocean plants (plankton especially), and that a lot of free atmospheric oxygen was needed to to form the ozone layer which protected the Earth’s surface from uv radiation, which made the land much more amenable to life. Also, trees came way after first plants and oxygen in the atmosphere.
Event 1
Event 2
Event 3
Event 4
First life (stromatolites)
Oxygen buildup in atmosphere
First land plants
First Trees
3) Pointing out that flowering plants came after trees.
Event 1
Event 2
Event 3
Event 4
First life
First land plants
First trees
First flowering plants
4) The Cambrian explosion, where multicellular life really took off, happened pretty late in timeline. Longer after the first life and first single-celled animals.
6) More tectonic events we’ll be talking about later.
Event 1
Event 2
Event 3
Event 4
Opening of the Atlantic Ocean
Linking of North and South America
India collides with Asia
Opening of the Red Sea
7) Pointing out that life on land probably needed the magnetic field to protect from the solar wind (in addition to the ozone layer).
Event 1
Event 2
Event 3
Event 4
Formation of the Earth
First life
Formation of the Magnetic Field
First land plants
8) Fish came before insect. This one seemed to stick in students’ minds.
Event 1
Event 2
Event 3
Event 4
First Fish
First Insects
First Dinosaurs
First Mammals
9) Mammals came before the dinosaurs went extinct. This allowed a discussion of theories of why the dinosaurs went extinct (disease, asteroid, mammals eating the eggs, volcanic eruption in Deccan) and how paleontologists might test the theories.
Event 1
Event 2
Event 3
Event 4
First Dinosaurs
First Mammals
Dinosaur Extinction
First Primates
The whole exercise took a few hours but I think it worked out very well. The following day I gave the quiz, posted in the excel file, where they had to figure out which of two events came first, and the students did a decent job at that as well.