Who ARE These People?

Look down the left side of this blog and you’ll see my Blogroll. Like every other blogger, I can’t resist posting links to places that I like to visit so that you can visit them, too. I thought I’d introduce you to a few of them today, and I’ll work my way through the list over the next few weeks.

Friends of the Observatory logo
Friends of the Observatory logo

Friends of the Observatory is a non-profit group that supports Griffith Observatory. I’ve been under contract to them to work on the Griffith exhibits, and they are a fine group of people to get to know. Membership (at various levels) in the group gets you various goodies, including the chance to spend as much time as you can spare in one of the world’s most beautiful public observatories. You don’t have to live in LA to be a member; the membership hails from far and wide, and each month you get a copy of the world-famous “Griffith Observer” magazine.

Vote for BadAstro
Vote for BadAstro

BadAstronomy is the page of Phil Plait, the infamous Bad Astronomer. He got started writing his site back in grad school, debunking the silliness of pseudo-science and science poseurs (like the folks who believe in gods on Mars and Planet X and all that other stuff that makes for fascinating reading on Usenet). He also makes legitimate sport of all the bad science we see in movies and on TV. You know the kind: spaceships making sounds in space, Arnold Schwarzenegger breathing CO2 on Mars, that sort of thing. Phil’s in the running for a Weblog Award, so go vote for him here. He’s a great guy, and his head probably won’t swell too much with all this praise I’m heaping on him. Besides, he has a link to me, so that counts for something. And, he’s offering a bribe, er… incentive. If you vote for him, write about it on your blog, and send him the link, he’ll let you post the cool image below on your site.

Great art work!
Great art work!

The third one I’ll write about today is Olduvai George. George is the Indiana Jones-esque pen name for illustrator Carl Buell, whose page I first ran across from a link on another site (isn’t that how we find our best ones?). This guy does the most fantastic natural history illustrations you’ve ever seen. If you (or someone you love) is into ancient animals and enjoys delving back into time to see how animals have evolved throughout history, this blog is the place for you. I’ve learned things there I never learned in geology class (probably because geology focused on rocks and not on animal evolution). This guy is amazing.

Shopping and Astronomy

I was browsing through a document the other day that describes a new shopping mall in Boulder, Colorado called “Twenty Ninth Street.” It’s a new concept for a mall, a sort of “retail district” that features many of the same stores you’d see at upscale shopping malls (and some unique ones), but set in a village-like setting with streets and (gasp) on-street parking. It’s very nice and we DID do some shopping while there.
But, that’s not why I was reading about it. I wanted to know more about another part of the mall that really caught my imagination: the science exhibits. Now that I’ve done a few science exhibits (she said dryly), I tend to notice these things.

This set of outdoor exhibits is scattered throughout the grounds of the mall in a series of science pavilions. Each pavilion has exhibits and artefacts from some of the science research labs located in Boulder. The labs include the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (my old stomping grounds), the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), The National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics (JILA, another of my old stomping grounds), the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), and the Space Science Institute (with whom we worked to create a planetarium show about Mars a few years ago).

The whole “Wonder of Science” exhibition is a permanent, on-site installation that gives the people of Boulder a feel for the science being done in their home town. I found it kind of interesting that in one of the mall’s press releases, the senior property manager, Lain Adams explained that the idea behind the exhibition is that most shopping centers have visitor traffic levels that exceed most museums. That idea led to the development of museum-quality exhibits interspersed throughout the shops.

I guess that makes sense in a cool kind of way. Many science museums now feature gift shops, so it’s great that a shopping mall can feature a science museum. I wonder how many other malls will do the same thing?

Speaking of shopping, about this time of year I get requests from family and friends (and more than a few readers) to recommend cool astronomy-related holiday gifts to give. I’ve built The Spacewriter’s Gift Shop to help point you to some good gift ideas. It’s on Amazon.com and if you buy anything from the site, Amazon sends a little money my way, which I use to help maintain my website and pay for hosting. If you know of any other products I should be recommending (and I DO try them out before I recommend them), drop me a line.