As a few people have noticed, the Quick Links section here on BLDGBLOG disappeared a few days ago; there are a variety of reasons for this, including an overall streamlining of the site design (moving to two columns from three, for instance). More importantly, over the past few years those Quick Links never actually showed up as part of BLDGBLOG's RSS feed, meaning that people who don't stop by the site itself, but prefer instead to read it through things like Google Reader, never even saw those links. This further meant that, during busy periods when whole days slip by between posts, BLDGBLOG would appear totally silent to those readers—when, in fact, new links were still appearing here at a reliable pace.
In any case, to make a long story short, I will now be publishing frequent Quick Links posts—the first of which appears here. This will make those links easier to find and archive; these posts will now show up in my RSS feed; and this allows readers to comment on the articles I've linked to (something that the previous Quick Links system never allowed).
If you have any suggestions for improvement, please let me know; I hope the much cleaner site design seems appealing, and that these Quick Links will continue to point you in stimulating directions... And happy new year! I hope this is a good one for you.
—Olivia Judson looks at "memories in nature," where immune systems and plant forms display mnemonic traces. The biochemical archive.
—Perhaps a machine-assisted, agricultural equivalent of this: keeping rare strains of livestock, including "huge dreadlocked Cotswold sheep," alive using the subzero techniques of cryopreservation. Distant shades of Pleistocene Park, perhaps.
—Speaking of the Pleistocene, consider joining the Friends of the Pleistocene, "dedicated to exploring the conjuncture between landscape and contemporary human activity at sites shaped by the geologic epoch of the Pleistocene (2.588 million to 10000 years BP, Before Present)."
—Perhaps we met yet artificially preserve the world's glaciers by wrapping them in huge blankets.
—"Have researchers found dark matter at the bottom of a mine in Minnesota?"
[Image: Ahmadinejad emerges from a highway tunnel; photo by Henghameh Fahimi for the Agence France-Presse, via the New York Times].
—Like a minor character from Reza Negarestani's extraordinary book Cyclonopedia, Iran's president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad—busy burying his nation's nuclear program inside a "maze of tunnels"—is actually the founder of the Iranian Tunneling Association. Quoting at length:
- Heavily mountainous Iran has a long history of tunneling toward civilian as well as military ends, and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has played a recurring role—first as a transportation engineer and founder of the Iranian Tunneling Association and now as the nation’s president.
There are hundreds, perhaps thousands, of big tunnels in Iran, according to American government and private experts, and the lines separating their uses can be fuzzy. Companies owned by the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps of Iran, for example, build civilian as well as military tunnels.
No one in the West knows how much, or exactly what part, of Iran’s nuclear program lies hidden. Still, evidence of the downward atomic push is clear to the inquisitive.
Google Earth, for instance, shows that the original hub of the nuclear complex at Isfahan consists of scores of easily observed—and easy to attack—buildings. But government analysts say that in recent years Iran has honeycombed the nearby mountains with tunnels. Satellite photos show six entrances.
[Images: A civilization beneath the trees; images via New Scientist].
—National Geographic visits the "geometric earthworks" previously hidden by tree cover in the Amazon but recently discovered via satellite photography. "Hundreds of circles, squares, and other geometric shapes once hidden by forest hint at a previously unknown ancient society that flourished in the Amazon," we read.
—Lebbeus Woods kicks off the new year with a look at Cuba's "malecón," the coastal road skirting Havana's massive sea wall (see the image that starts this post).
[Image: Piles of road salt outside Toronto. Photo by Flickr-user katalogue; via InfraNet Lab].
—InfraNet Lab looked into the dispersed geological presence of road salt, used to melt ice and snow, last winter—building into a three-part series about "sea dust." Part 1. Part 2. Part 3.
—Finally, for now, L.A. Times architecture critic Christopher Hawthorne takes a long look at the building formerly known as the Burj Dubai and its growing role in cultural predictions of apocalypse.
(Some links via @masoncwhite, @eatingbark, and the consistently wonderful Archaeology News).
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