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Top Posts in January

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By emjohnson on February 4, 2010.

Deconstructing Social Darwinism, Part I
Deconstructing Social Darwinism, Part II
Deconstructing Social Darwinism, Part III
How Can Haiti Be Sustainable?
Uniting Primates and Cetaceans Through Personhood
Bonobos and the Emergence of Culture
Civility, Science Communication, and the White Patriarchy
Robert Sapolsky on the Uniqueness of Humans
Deconstructing Social Darwinism, Part IV
The Huffington Post Publishes the Craziest Things

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Anything But Social Darwinism

More on the Generation Rescue poll

Yesterday, I did a deconstruction of Generation Rescue's dubious "study" (in reality an automated telephone poll) that claims to show that vaccines increase

Artomatic 2009: Forrest McCluer

Forrest McCluer

Upcycling, Deconstructing, and Reimagining the Book!

Thank you. I like you articles.

By Ollitapio P. (not verified) on 04 Feb 2010 #permalink
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The Primate Diaries Has Moved to Scientific American
July 5, 2011
After nearly a year on the road I'm pleased to announce that The Primate Diaries now has a permanent home at the new Scientific American blog network. I would like to thank everyone who supported my work here and during my "exile." I look forward to the continuing conversation at my new home.…
The Primate Diaries in Exile
July 25, 2010
Thanks to support from readers and fellow bloggers I'm pleased to say that The Primate Diaries has taken the show on tour. You can update your RSS feed here or follow the #PDEx hashtag on Twitter.
Good-bye ScienceBlogs, and Thank You
July 11, 2010
Three years ago I didn't even know what science blogging was. Frustrated as a freelance writer, I typed "science blog" into my search engine and was thrilled when this network showed up first on the list. Here was a community of researchers and writers whose love of learning and the sharing of…
Pepsi Has Been Defeated
July 8, 2010
In what was probably the worst idea since Crystal Pepsi, the corporate sponsored advertiblog has met an early and decisive end. The announcement was made this morning: We have removed Food Frontiers from SB. We apologize for what some of you viewed as a violation of your immense trust in…
Hiatus
July 7, 2010
I'll be taking a break from blogging for the time being because I said I would. Follow me on twitter or facebook to keep tabs on what I'm up to. For more on this see here, here, and related issues here. But I'm sure everything is different now.

More reads

Tetrapod Zoology Book One is here at last
Earlier this year (July) my children's book on Mesozoic reptiles - Dinosaurs Life Size - appeared in the shops. People seem to like it (yikes, even if some of the 'life sized' animals are scaled wrong). July also saw the publication of Dorling Kindersley's Know It All (Baines 2010): I didn't write the whole book, just the section on prehistoric animals. Today I'm pleased to announce that my…
Comments of the Week #26: From Astrology to Stars to Dark vs. Normal Matter
"There is no dark side in the moon, really. Matter of fact, it's all dark." -Pink Floyd / Gerry O'Driscoll It's been another fantastic week here at Starts With A Bang, where we've taken on a huge diversity of topics and run two fantastic posts from our contributing writers: Brian Koberlein and James Bullock. If you missed any of them (or if you want to catch them again), here's…
Using protein blast and searching for Elvis, part I.
In which we search for Elvis, using blastp, and find out how old we would have to be to see Elvis in a Las Vegas club. Introduction Once you're acquainted with proteins, amino acids, and the kinds of bonds that hold proteins together, we can talk about using this information to evaluate the similarity between protein sequences. We can easily imagine that if two protein sequences are identical…

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