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Modern-day oyster populations in the Chesapeake are dwindling, but a multi-millennia archaeological survey shows that wasn't always the case. Native Americans harvested the shellfish sustainably.
Fab News: More Comic-Con Goodness and Disney Adventures MiceChat (blog) The incredible panelists included Jeff Russo (Fargo, The Night Of, Power, Legion), Mac Quayle (Mr. Robot, American Horror Story, Scream Queens, The People v. O.J. Simpson), Tyler Bates (Guardians of the Galaxy, Salem, Kingdom), Mike Suby (The ... |
Hidden Remote | 'Mr. Robot' Season 2, Episode 4 Recap: Game of Chess Hidden Remote Things are getting interesting as Elliot Alderson continues to wrestle with his Mr. Robot persona. It's gotten to a point where he takes up a game of chess on the suggestion of his new friend Ray. However Ray doesn't exactly know what's at stake for ... and more » |
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Listeria monocytogenes is the species of pathogenic bacteria that causes the infection listeriosis. It is a facultative anaerobic bacterium, capable of surviving in the presence or absence of oxygen. It can grow and reproduce inside the host's cells and is one of the most virulent foodborne pathogens, with 20 to 30% of food borne listeriosis infections in high-risk individuals may be fatal. Responsible for an estimated 1,600 illnesses and 260 deaths in the United States annually, listeriosis is the third-leading cause of death among foodborne bacterial pathogens, with fatality rates exceeding even Salmonella and Clostridium botulinum.
Image credit: ©Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research

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A recent research report about one of the largest lithium brine and salt deposits in the world in Chile's Atacama Desert by geoscientists from the University of Massachusetts Amherst is the first to show that water and solutes flowing into the basin originate from a much larger than expected portion of the Andean Plateau.
Image credit: UMASS Amherst
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A volume phase holographic grism, a combination of a diffraction grating and a prism. This grism combines a grating from Kaiser Optical Systems Inc. with prism wedges from Janos Technology Inc. and was assembled at the National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO) by Al Camacho and Heidi Yarborough. It is used in the new Multi-Aperture Red Spectrometer (MARS, which is CryoCam resurrected).
Image credit: NOAO/AURA/NSF

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A freshwater spider (Dolomedes) runs along the water's surface, leaving vortices behind its four pairs of stroking legs. In this National Science Foundation-supported project, dye studies were performed in order to determine what the propulsion mechanism is of the water strider (Gerris remigis), a common water-walking insect, approximately 1 centimeter long that resides on the surface of ponds, rivers and the open ocean.
Image credit: Courtesy John Bush, MIT
Headlander, the newest game from Double Fine and Adult Swim Games, is a charming mix of '70s sci-fi themes, Metroid-style gameplay, and the kind of weirdness that has always characterized games from both companies. It also has a character named Earl who completely kills any suspension of disbelief in the very first seconds of the game, which you can watch above. Here's his dialogue:
And I'm through. Y'all should be hearing my on your helmet radio now. I know y'all got a lot of questions, but there ain't no point in trying to talk, because you ain't got no lungs. Y'all just come out of stasis, so you don't likely remember much. This is gonna be a hard pill to swallow, but—hells bells! Shepherds again! Y'all gonna need yourself a body. Welcome to the future! Ain't much sure why, but Methuselah wants a hold of you. We gotta get y'all off this ship.
For a large proportion of Headlander's audience—and Double Fine's entire staff, apparently—there's nothing about that dialogue that sounds wrong. But for anyone who's spent any time in the South, it's nails on a blackboard. In five out of ten sentences, Earl uses “y'all” to address a single person. Not even a person, actually, but a severed head, making it even less likely Earl is somehow referring to the main character and her family or some other implied collective group: she's literally just a head. This is more wrong than waking up as a lungless head in a space helmet, more terrifying than rogue artificial intelligences or killer robots or any futuristic horrors Double Fine could ever dream up. Maybe it's part of the game—maybe Earl is a bad simulation of a Southerner. Or maybe the simplest rule in southern dialect has somehow been botched once again. I'll never know, because I couldn't get past the beginning out of fear of how Earl might mangle the language next.
In fairness to video game writers, it's not always a hard-and-fast rule. Arika Okrent took a look at the issue for Slate back in 2014, and concluded that the singular “y'all” was occasionally used, in a few special situations: particularly when Southerners exaggerated their speech to get better customer service from Northerners. (I've never heard that, but I've heard the possessive use, as in her example of “How're y'all's grits?”) But even in those rare cases, no one uses “y'all” exclusively instead of “you,” the way Earl does, even in the far distant future. And the one thing everyone agrees on is that Southerners, who actually use the word, are the ones who are most likely to insist it's plural only. So if your character's from the South, odds are he or she is not going to use it as a singular. (If your character's a Northerner who is misusing the word out of ignorance or spite, you're probably doing something too complicated for a video game.) So a good rule of thumb for non-Southerners: just use it as the plural. They still teach Latin at Andover or wherever, right? Or Spanish, at least? Would you use vosotros or ustedes or voi or whatever second person plural you're familiar with? Use “y'all.” Otherwise, just play it safe and stick to “you.” If foreign languages make you uneasy, memorize this handy mnemonic:
If you're speaking to one person,
Using “y'all” will make things worsen.
But if “all of you” would work,
Then it's time for “y'all,” you jerk!
Don't get fancy and don't showboat. You're probably already naming a character “Earl” or something, so you're on thin ice to begin with. So let me address all of you, as in more than one of you, as in plural: Y'all have made sure that anyone who's ever had the slightest hint of a southern accent is an expert in what it's like to have people think you're dumb because of the way you talk, so trust us on this one: Y'all have gotta stop screwing this up, 'cause it's making y'all sound stupid.
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