19 FEB 2015 by ideonexus

 Growing a Forest Rapidly

1. First, you start with soil. We identify what nutrition the soil lacks. 2. Then we identify what species we should be growing in this soil, depending on climate. 3. We then identify locally abundant biomass available in that region to give the soil whatever nourishment it needs. This is typically an agricultural or industrial byproduct?—?like chicken manure or press mud, a byproduct of sugar production?—?but it can be almost anything. We’ve made a rule that it must come from within 50 kil...
Folksonomies: forestry gardening
Folksonomies: forestry gardening
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07 NOV 2014 by ideonexus

 Computronium

In programmable matter, the same cubic meter of machinery can become a wind tunnel at one moment, a polymer soup at the next; it can model a sea of fermions [elementary particles], a genetic pool, or an epidemiology experiment at the flick of a console key. Ten times as large a simulation will simply require ten cubic meters of machinery, instead of one. Flexibility, instant reconfigurability, variable resolution, total accessibility, and handling safety make such programmable matter worth a ...
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13 APR 2012 by ideonexus

 Cosmic Dust Raining on the Earth

Morris is fond of citing figures that indicate that about five million metric tonnes of cosmic dust falls on the earth each year. He calculates that over five billion years, we should have accumulated a layer of dust 55 m (182 feet) thick! But if you do the calculation correctly (which Morris does not), it amounts to only a shoebox full of dust over an entire square kilometer. This is so minuscule it can barely be detected even in the best sedimentary records from deep-sea cores, which are un...
Folksonomies: geology layers cosmic dust
Folksonomies: geology layers cosmic dust
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How much and to what effect?