Saturday, July 28, 2018


I’m starting this blog with a picture I have posted on FB already. It “speaks to me” and it is so positive I could not resist.


Scientifically it looks like this….in my mind.


Which may have something to do with this.


And works through you like this….teaching.

And if you are lucky, mentoring two equally old souls. I have been so blessed by The Great Mystery.

My daughter Kersti and my son Zack

As you have become acutely aware over the years, I am a big fan of Astronomy (the first “science”). I even purchased a NASA cap to wear down here to show my support for science in general. Here’s some recent developments and discoveries I would like to share with you.

This is currently the known planets and moons of our solar system. It has grown dramatically since I was a child and is obviously more diverse and colorful than imagined even 10 years ago.

Check out all those moons; each one different and full of surprises to come. As in the case of Jupiter.

The gas giant Jupiter, which was named in honor of the king of the gods in the Roman pantheon, has always lived up to its name. In addition to being the largest planet in the Solar System – with two and a half times the mass of all the other planets combined – it also has an incredibly powerful magnetic field and the most intense storms of any planet in the Solar System.

What’s more, it is home to some of the largest moons in the Solar System (known as the Galilean Moons), and has more known moons than any other planet. And thanks to a recent survey led by Scott S. Sheppard of the Carnegie Institution of Science, twelve more moons have been discovered. This brings the total number of known moons around Jupiter to 79, and could provide new insight into the history of the Solar System.

tps://www.universetoday.com/139641/twelve-new-moons-discovered-around-jupiter-and-one-of-them-is-pretty-odd/

Our sun in comparison to other suns (stars) in our galaxy.


Small but as the ancients knew, and the great Akhenaten wrote a most beautiful poem about, it is our creator. It is what gives life to this “third rock from the sun”. Scientifically: no sun = no photosynthesis = no plants = no oxygen = no animals – that’s you and me folks.
Now we know there is plenty of water out there in our solar system. Two moons are particularly interesting and with the energy from that sun, add some water and a few key elements and life is almost inevitable.

Since the 1970s, when the Voyager probes captured images of Europa’s icy surface, scientists have suspected that life could exist in interior oceans of moons in the outer Solar System. Since then, other evidence has emerged that has bolstered this theory, ranging from icy plumes on Europa and Enceladus, interior models of hydrothermal activity, and even the groundbreaking discovery of complex organic molecules in Enceladus’ plumes.


The Cassini orbiter revealed many fascinating things about the Saturn system before its mission ended in September of 2017. In addition to revealing much about Saturn’s rings and the surface and atmosphere of Titan (Saturn’s largest moon), it was also responsible for the discovery of water plumes coming from Enceladus‘ southern polar region. 


The discovery of these plumes triggered a widespread debate about the possible existence of life in the moon’s interior.

Of all the moons in the solar system, Iapetus has to be among the weirdest. Named after a spear-wielding Titan, the strange Saturnian satellite is less than half the size of Earth’s moon. But it’s a cluster of enigmas: Squished at its poles, the moon is walnut-shaped, has a face as black as coal and a bright white backside, and wears a big, spiky mountain range as a belt.


Even its orbit is weird: Iapetus is roughly three times farther from Saturn than its closest neighbor, Titan. And the path it takes around the planet is tilted, meaning it swings up and down as it orbits, rather than staying in the plane of Saturn’s rings like the rest of the “normal” satellites.
In other words, it’s kind of like the rebel of the Saturnian system, a moon who’d prefer to hang out behind the dumpster and cut class rather than play ball with the other kids.

phenomena.nationalgeographic.com/files/2014/05/Iapetus_equatorial_ridge.jpg

This photo, taken by NASA's Cassini spacecraft, shows Earth and the Moon as points of light between the icy Rings of Saturn. Cassini was 870 million miles (1.4 billion kilometers) away from Earth when the image was taken.  You have to enlarge to see our moon but it's there.


In 1997, the NASA/ESA Cassini-Huygens mission launched from Earth and began its long journey towards the Saturn system. In 2004, the Cassini orbiter arrived around Saturn and would spend the next thirteen years studying the gas giant, its rings, and its system of Moons. On September 15th, 2017, the mission ended when the probe entered Saturn’s upper atmosphere and burned up.

This was known as Cassini’s “Grand Finale“, which began with the probe plunging into the unexplored region that lies between Saturn’s atmosphere and its rings and culminated with live coverage of it entering the atmosphere. In honor of the mission and NASA’s outstanding coverage of its final months, NASA was recently nominated for an Emmy Award by The Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.



And our galaxy, “the Milky Way”, well: same story but equally lovable. Yeah, we’re kind of small and there are about 200 billion out there in our universe.


But fear not, we may visit other galaxies one day.

 Wormholes do exist and we will find a way to travel within them - count on it! 

In the meantime we have some incredible stuff here small as we are.

We have whimsy.

We have fantasy.

This is an actual free diver swimming underwater for a photo shoot

We have royalty.

Irrelevant as it may seem, aren’t they the picture of royalty? I believe they will be part of the resistance, small but significant.

We have comedy all around us.


We have friends and beautiful children.

My dear friend Alfonzo. I cannot begin to tell you all that he means to me.
Ishmael's daughter Rosa. Ishmael makes me Lomboy tea and delivers it to me every 2-3 weeks to combat my cancer.

 Some general just cool stuff

Tony Wu of Tony Wu Underwater Photography slipped into the ocean to swim with sperm whales, yes. But he sure didn't expect THIS: 

And here’s something very rare. A humpback whale whose fluke markings are on the top surface. I’ve ID’d over 280 individual humpbacks and never seen anything like this.

 After a 400-Year Absence, A Rare Ibis Returns to European Skies

The northern bald ibis is critically endangered, with fewer than 1,000 existing in the wild. But a German group is reintroducing these birds in Europe, where they once thrived, and is using ultralight aircraft to lead them on migrations south toward the Mediterranean.
https://e360.yale.edu/features/after-a-400-year-absence-waldrapp-rare-ibis-returns-to-european-skies

In a display that rivals even the most dazzling of firework shows, millions of firefly squid gather off the coast of Japan each spring to perform a sparkling spawning ritual. 

See the spectacle that photographer Solvin Zankl was able to capture during the brief season when the squids’ orbit intersects with our own: http://bit.ly/2KxpLIc

One more animal pic

Cuthulu, is that you? Nope, just a glass octopus with its THREE hearts. Meet more "aliens of the deep" here: bit.ly/2mC3yNi (Photo by Solvin Zankl) #CephalopodWeek


And then there’s us

If you're drawing your genealogical chart, be prepared to buy a lot more paper because the human race is much older than we thought. According to a team led by Jean-Jacques Hublin of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology and Abdelouahed Ben-Ncer of the National Institute for Archaeology and Heritage in Morocco, fossils and stone tools found in a cave 100 km (62 mi) west of Marrakesh show that Homo Sapiens has been around for at least 300,000 years.


A scientific consortium has found that human ancestors were scattered across Africa, and largely kept apart by a combination of diverse habitats and shifting environmental boundaries, such as forests and deserts. Millennia of separation gave rise to a staggering diversity of human forms, whose mixing ultimately shaped our species. 


Also new findings from “The Iceman”

In 1991, German tourists discovered a human body that was later determined to be the oldest naturally preserved ice mummy, known as Otzi or the Iceman. 

Now, researchers who have conducted the first in-depth analysis of the Iceman's stomach contents offer a rare glimpse of our ancestor's ancient dietary habits. Among other things, their findings show that the Iceman's last meal was heavy on the fat. 

And more discoveries:
Ancient tools and bones discovered in China by archaeologists suggest early humans left Africa and arrived in Asia earlier than previously thought.

The artifacts show that our earliest human ancestors colonized East Asia over two million years ago. They were found by a Chinese team that was led by Professor Zhaoyu Zhu of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and included Professor Robin Dennell of Exeter University. The tools were discovered at a locality called Shangchen in the southern Chinese Loess Plateau. The oldest are ca. 2.12 million years old, and are c. 270,000 years older than the 1.85 million year old skeletal remains and stone tools from Dmanisi, Georgia, which were previously the earliest evidence of humanity outside Africa.


Last thoughts


Intellectual freedom, science not myth.