14 APR 2015 by ideonexus

 A Sunset Bloom

Then we sat on the sand for some time and observed How the oceans that cover the world were perturbed By the tides from the orbiting moon overhead "How relaxing the sound of the waves is," you said. I began to expound upon tidal effects When you asked me to stop, looking somewhat perplexed So I did not explain why the sunset turns red And we watched the occurrence in silence instead.
Folksonomies: poetry
Folksonomies: poetry
  1  notes

Lieutenant Commander Data (2338 – 2379)

18 JAN 2014 by ideonexus

 Vulcan Scientific Fields

FIELDS OF STUDY Vunailar t'Orenaya In nearly all cases, it is easy to determine the Golic Vulcan name for a discipline or field of study in most of the scientific, technical and medical disciplines. In contemporary usage, all of these terms are formed from a descriptive root with "-tal" (meaning "study" or "-ology") suffixed. Here is a selection of examples: Acoustics -- Ralash-tal ("sound-study") Aerology -- Sov-tal ("air-study") Aerodynamics -- Sov-dvun-tal ("air-motion-study") Aeronautic...
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The translations aren't as interesting as the long list of fields of study in science.

01 JAN 2010 by ideonexus

 The Tides of Ancient Times Were Awesome Events

In the days when the earth was young, the coming in of the tide must have been a stupendous event. If the moon was, as we have supposed in an earlier chapter, formed in the tearing away of a part of the outer crust of the earth, it must have remained for a time very close to its parent. Its present position is the consequence of being pushed farther and farther away from the earth for some 2 billion years. When it was half its present distance from the earth, its power over the ocean tides wa...
Folksonomies: nature
Folksonomies: nature
  1  notes
They were so strong that they prevented life from existing on the shoreline.
01 JAN 2010 by ideonexus

 Does Oil Really Calm Waves?

The divers of ancient times who carried oil in their mouths to release beneath the surface when rough water made their work difficult were applying what every seaman today knows--that oil appears to have a calming effect on the free waves of the open ocean. Instructions for the use of oil in emergencies at sea are carried by most official sailing directions of maritime nations. Oil has little effect on surf, however, once the dissolution of the wave form has begun.
Folksonomies: nature
Folksonomies: nature
  1  notes
This seems odd to me, the idea that oil on the surface of water reduces waves.