"you need to look at the price list"
"can I see the price list?"
"sure, what are your login details?"
"you need to look at the price list"
"can I see the price list?"
"sure, what are your login details?"
That lad's feet and socks are camouflaged so for a second there I thought we had a new Banksy.
hwfg lads
The Tories (bad) have totally collapsed and been replaced by Reform (fascist). The Labour party (usually fine) have been drifting rightwards courting the racist vote. This has left room for a newly-populist left-wing Green party (awesome) to hoover up all the centre-left votes.
A screengrab from the video showing the silhouette of, I presume, Heathcliff and older Cathy.
An outline map of the state of Michigan.
Why are you advertising a story set in Yorkshire with a map of Michigan? And why is it the wrong way round?
Are you thinking of Sticky: The Secret Science of Surfaces by Laurie Winkless? I really enjoyed that one.
Yes! Do it! Bore through the Great Glen Fault! It would be geologically fascinating!
And geomechanically inadvisable.
going back up the the counter saying "sorry can I get another straw? this one has a fourth hole in it."
segments, like a pizza
This one is correct, we're only seeing 'half' of the fossil not a full transect like your first example.
All conferences should have a whole room and several sessions dedicated to scientific posters.
Really disappointed that the BGS identified this as a crinoid, and didn't tell the press "Oh yeah, that's a Biter. They increase in numbers during times of great peril."
This is sort of horrifying, but in the way that I know I will never ever end up in that situation because I have a fairly well-calibrated self-preservation instinct.
ooh fun, I got 44.1 β don't know if everyone gets the same colours but I was only miles off on the inky blue.
You share that contented ignorance of the plot with the makers of "Wuthering Heights" (2026).
Congrats! You'll be great.
summer olympics: GB only win sitting-down sports
winter olympics: how can we win at lying motionless?
In which I spread the good word of peralkaline igneous petrology to the New World, and finally get an American news corporation to print fun facts about aenigmatite. π₯
In English chi sounds are more usually pronounced as c or soft ch. Like Christ ΟΟΞΉΟΟΟΟ. So it would be krok-ido-lite or kro-chido-lite (ch as in loch).
Saw her on Cleo Abram's video on curling yesterday!
My blog post on Ailsa Craig, curling stones, and the weird minerals that make this rock unique. π₯
The 'is a hotdog a sandwich' equivalent on GeoSky is whether or not ice is a mineral.
It's the same mineral, someone ran some probe analyses and determined it was a 'riebeckitic arfvedsonite' rather than a strict riebeckite.
Google's AI overview calling it a volcanic plug.
People, but not robots, apparently.
My professional legacy will be finally getting people to stop calling Ailsa Craig an extinct volcano.
Really cool video on curling and curling stones that I provided some info for. π₯
I was lucky enough to visit the island with Derek when he was here. Where I picked up that hand specimen and the rock that became that thin section.
Microscope image of Ailsa Craig Common Green microgranite thin section. Mostly quartz and cloudy feldspar with patches and clots of very dark green and brown minerals infilling gaps.
A tiny replica curling stone sitting on top of a sample of the same green spotty rock. They are sitting on a desk under a computer monitor next to other minerals.
Olympic curling has to be the sporting highlight of the Scottish geological calendar. π₯ All the stones come from Ailsa Craig in the Firth of Clyde. The distinctive black spots are (mostly) the very weird and rare amphibole arfvedsonite. #ThinSectionThursday
Clickbait YouTuber Reaction Thumbnail starter pack.
Old bloke holding two chunks of beige-coloured stuff. One is weathered black except for a recently broken surface; the other is beige all over. The bloke looks far too cheerful for the weather, which is clearly shite.
One for my geology [ex-]colleagues. Left hand: shortbread made by a retired industrial chemist. Right hand: Millstone grit, probably from the Grassington grit or Upper Howgate Edge grit formation. The photographer (another geologist) was entertained by the similar appearance.