• rENNISance woman by Cath Ennis

    Matt Brown said: "You can blog about whatever you wish, as long as it is related to science and research". His wish is my command! Here are some snippets from my life as a cancer research grant wrangler in Vancouver. Mostly the silly bits.

    • Right, I suppose I'd better do a Darwin post

      Thursday, 12 Feb 2009 - 21:34 UTC

      I am was an evolutionary biologist, after all.

      Many happy returns, Chuckie D!
      I wish that you only could see
      The advances we’ve made
      With genomics and spade,
      And the state of our family tree.

      Darwin’s original phylogenetic tree:

      The current state of affairs:

      (Both images are available in t-shirt form.)

      Seriously though – how cool would it be to take Darwin through all the research that’s been done since his death?

      Last updated: Thursday, 12 Feb 2009 - 21:34 UTC

      • Comments

        • Date:
          Thursday, 12 Feb 2009 - 23:40 UTC
          Kyrsten Jensen said:

          Did I mention that I jumped up and down on Charles Darwin’s grave in Westminster Abbey when I was there? Yes. I am horrid, but I thought, if nothing else:
          1) The image of anyone jumping on someone’s grave in as solemn a place as Westminster Abbey would be amusing until I’m old and gray
          2) Whose grave would be better? I’d like to think Charles Darwin would think it was funny and rebellious.

          Either way, I was pretty awestruck that I was that close to Darwin. We’d better not tell Alfred Russel Wallace that I didn’t get a chance to visit his grave. I would have happily jumped on it too.

        • Date:
          Thursday, 12 Feb 2009 - 23:49 UTC
          Cath Ennis said:

          Um, no, you actually didn’t mention that. Mind you we haven’t have much time to talk about your trip, being more preoccupied with cancer stem cells and other matters…

        • Date:
          Friday, 13 Feb 2009 - 05:12 UTC
          Richard Wintle said:

          how cool would it be to take Darwin through all the research that’s been done since his death?

          Agreed… although I suggest the reverse too – how cool would it be if Darwin were trained up on modern phylogenetic tools and let loose on the world of science today?

          Oh, I said that already. Sorry.

          [standard disclaimers about shameless plugging of self-blog-posty-thing are in full force]

        • Date:
          Friday, 13 Feb 2009 - 06:33 UTC
          Bob O'Hara said:

          Another reason to have a ScienceBlogging09 meeting! We can all join Kyrsten in a trip to the beach in Dorset, and watch her jump up and down on the graves of famous scientists.

          Just think of the fun we could have if M@ were to organize a tour of burial places of famous London scientists.

        • Date:
          Friday, 13 Feb 2009 - 14:33 UTC
          Cath Ennis said:

          Richard, I’m not sure how well Darwin would have navigated the modern grants system. Most funding bodies are not all that keen on five year fishing expeditions hypothesis-generating research.

          Bob, that is a quite hilarious image. I’ll make sure I accompany Kyrsten on her next trip to the UK.

        • Date:
          Friday, 13 Feb 2009 - 15:04 UTC
          Cristian Bodo said:

          Most funding bodies are not all that keen on five year hypothesis-generating research.

          Not to mention 23-years spans between the end of the experimental phase and the actual publication of the results (and that, only when there is imminent danger of being scooped)

        • Date:
          Friday, 13 Feb 2009 - 15:06 UTC
          Cath Ennis said:

          Very true. Although he would have had lots to write about under “impact” and “future directions”.

        • Date:
          Friday, 13 Feb 2009 - 15:21 UTC
          Richard Wintle said:

          Oh, I don’t know – some funding agencies are very fond of reports running to hundreds of pages in length. Darwin was a pro at those. And all his publications were single-authored, too!

        • Date:
          Friday, 13 Feb 2009 - 15:27 UTC
          Cristian Bodo said:

          Plus, he could end it with something like “The present results would lead to a radical re-evaluation of our view of life on Earth and provide a theoretical framework for research in the biological sciences during the next few centuries” , and STILL get away easily with it.

        • Date:
          Friday, 13 Feb 2009 - 15:29 UTC
          Eva Amsen said:

          But not peer-reviewed. Well, not in the currently conventional way, at least. I guess the Wilberforce/Huxley debate was a kind of peer review.

        • Date:
          Friday, 13 Feb 2009 - 16:18 UTC
          Cath Ennis said:

          I always wanted to use the words “paradigm shift” in reference to my own research (not bloody likely, obviously). It’s a rare publication that would get away with that achievement, which I think trumps peer review any day of the week.

        • Date:
          Friday, 13 Feb 2009 - 16:24 UTC
          Kyrsten Jensen said:

          ooooh! I could YouTube myself jumping on graves of famous scientists like that guy who visited all those countries doing his “special dance” – so “special” it appeared on the news.

          As much as I would have loved to jump on Wallace’s grave, it appears there is a fossilized TREE on it which unfortunately looks rather like it could hurt me…

        • Date:
          Friday, 13 Feb 2009 - 17:48 UTC
          Cath Ennis said:

          My camera does video. Are there scientists’ graves in Vancouver to get us started?

          You could do a modified pole dance when we get to Wallace.

          BTW is YouTube officially a verb now? ;)


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