User:Daniel Mietchen/Notebook/Open Science/2010/06/18
I'm a Scientist and the Beryllium Fraud | Main project page Previous entry Next entry |
<html> Starting this week, I have been part of "<a href="http://imascientist.org.uk/">I'm a Scientist — Get me out of here</a>", a very interesting science communication experiment, in which 8000 school kids and 100 scientists meet online (in 20 different places) to discuss what science means for them, and what is important about that (I try to keep track of it <a href="http://friendfeed.com/imascientist">here</a>). <br /> <br />
Where to start? One of the things that I noticed so far is that the ten "themed" zones (e.g. <a href="http://imagingj10.imascientist.org.uk/">Imaging</a>, <a href="http://brainj10.imascientist.org.uk/">Brain</a>, <a href="http://evolutionj10.imascientist.org.uk/">Evolution</a> or <a href="http://genesj10.imascientist.org.uk/">Genes</a>) get a lot of themed questions, whereas my zone (<a href="http://berylliumj10.imascientist.org.uk/">Beryllium</a>) has had none about Beryllium so far (and most of the scientists therein, including me, probably wouldn't have much to say about it anyway), so I was looking for some figures related to Beryllium. The result is embedded below. What is the original? <br /> <br /> I encourage taking notes collaboratively via <a href="http://science-2-0.piratenpad.de/The-Beryllium-Fraud-IAS2010">this document</a> (in which anyone can type or paste anything they want), and the first one to put the link to the original figure in there shall receive ten percent of the prize money I get (which comes down to either £50 or £0, with four other contestants in the Beryllium zone). <br /> <br />
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