Monday, December 18, 2017

Microgeographies of my summer

I grew cherry tomatoes and three large tomato varieties, okra (grew like a weed), tomatillos (pests set in, I won't try these next year), banana peppers, zucchini (I'll plant more next year but be choosier about the variety), green beans (attack of the Mexican bean beetle), parsley, basil. My blackberries were in the their first year of growth so they did not produce berries. My garden is hemmed in by mint, various Aster species, and some ornamental flowering plants planted by someone who lived in the house before me.


What I read for fun in 2017


Thursday, November 2, 2017

Songs from the last calendar year

But this doesn't mean they were necessarily songs released in the last year. In no particular order, this is some of the stuff I bumped into:

The Rulers, I Want My Ramones Records Back
The Whiffs, Forget Your Name from Take a Whiff.
Dany Laj and the Looks, Woody/Dreamers from Word on the Street.
Grim Deeds and the song Underground
The Rocket Jocks, Next Stop Moon: Crazy for You and What Can I Do
The Barreracudas, Can Do Easy, and the song Promises
Death By Unga Bunda, from Fight! and the song I Wanted Everything
J.D. McPherson's songs Style (Is a Losing Game) and Under the Spell of City Lights
Milk 'N' Cookies
I finally was able to stop compulsively playing Reaction and Can't Erase that Feeling by Warm Soda sometime in early 2017.

Data structure and resilience properties

In my 2017 article in Geomorphology, I describe more of the theoretical basis for linking the multivariate data structure of state space to its resilience properties. It could be considered a followup to my 2005 paper in Geomorphology. I wasn't in a rush, but back then the availability of lidar data and the software tools to manipulate these data weren't quite as on hand as they are today. I had thought about making topographic state space back in 2005, and added a preliminary figure in my Ecological Complexity paper.


Monday, January 30, 2017

Albert Borgmann, Holding on to Reality

Back in the early 2000's I had an interest in the digital representations of animals online, and how animals cams create an imaginary biogeography. I read this 1999 book below, "Holding On To Reality" by Albert Borgmann. It has a lot to say then about the importance of the context of information, and how the internet separates us from that context and creates a slippery slope of ambiguity. I am struck now by its prescience and how it anticipated the rise of fake news and alternate facts.

Sunday, January 15, 2017

Taoist Tai Chi Society


These are photos from a Taoist Tai Chi intensive we had in Lexington last year. We now have classes at a couple of locations in town three days a week.

Tuesday, January 10, 2017

My bedtime reading in 2016 Part 2

I also read the Fudge series, aka Farley Drexel Hatcher, by Judy Blume to my twins, Kate and Sara. Here are a list of the characters.  I enjoyed it - very observant, not Tom Wolfe social novels but plenty of fun and kid realism to propel it along. No wizards, magic or fantastical beasts in sight. Leave it to the dogs in Call of the Wild to convey those kinds of forces in the world.

Thursday, January 5, 2017

My bedtime reading in 2016

I didn't get as much bedtime reading in this year as last. And there is also my monthly Harper's habit to contend with. I read Thomas Frank's non-fiction book Listen, Liberal well before the election, a prophetic book in some ways, but then its been building since the early days of the The BafflerHeroes of the Frontier and The Harder they Come  look deeply at fictional lives of people enmeshed in this election's America. The essays in The Utopia of Rules shows how complicity with the acknowledgement that rules and criteria over value matter in a meritocracy is the first step in recognizing that they really don't and that power resides in the maintenance of this illusion. Lastly, The Invention of Nature, is a biography of Alexander Von Humbolt and an exposition of how his ideas influenced Darwin, Thoreau, Simon Bolivar, Jefferson, Goethe, and many others. Many ecological and environmental ideas we take as a given now or simply attribute to others were from Humbolt.

Monday, January 2, 2017

Graduate students from the Archaeology program at UK


Over the course of 2016, I worked with three students in the Anthropology Department here at UK. From top to bottom are Victoria Dekle, Vanessa Hanvey, and Tyler Stumpf. Our objectives were to learn how to apply ordination and clustering techniques to archaeological observations and to conduct analyses of pilot data as well as formal dissertation data sets. Victoria's PhD dissertation assesses the extent the mouth of the Savannah River in Georgia forms a boundary in the characteristics of pottery shards. For Vanessa's project we looked at how shards excavated across a small watershed in the coastal plain of southeastern Georgia differed according to position relative to the river network. Tyler's work examines how the characteristics of building structures from across the southeastern and south-central U.S. differ based on whether they date to the period before European colonization or after the extensive establishment of Spanish missions.  As committee member and through independent studies, we explored how to organize their datasets and delineate groups for comparing observations.  The techniques we made use of were non-metric multidimensional scaling, principle coordinates analysis, flexible beta clustering, and classification trees using DTREG software.

https://anthropology.as.uky.edu/users/vnha222

BioScience

In this BioScience article, we describe barrier island dune topographic state space. Presently, my PhD student Li-Chih Hsu and I are characterizing dune topographies along barrier islands in Virginia and Maryland. We want to examine where these islands will plot in the larger state space outlined in this BioScience article, as originally developed in Monge and Stallins (2016) in Physical Geography.
https://www.uky.edu/~jast239/reprints/BioScience%20et%20al%202016.pdf





Space and place are the new DNA

Genomics, postgenomics? Omes, omics, proteome, transcriptome, exposome?  Here is a primer on some of these biological concepts.  In our recent article in GeoJournal, we describe how this new biology relates to geographical concepts about the productivity of space, spatial fixes, and the fallacies of spatial inference.

https://www.uky.edu/~jast239/reprints/GeoJournal%202017.pdf