A new podcast from Jacquelyn Gill of Warm Regards. Check out: Jax and Phoebe Make a Planet!
Hi! We're Jax (Jacquelyn Gill) and Phoebe (Phoebe Cohen), and we’re baking an apple pie. But first, we have to make a planet — and not just any planet, but the best planet: Earth! It's a project that's been 4.56 billion years in the making, and we've got all the ingredients right here: Comets! Asteroids! Volcanoes! Oxygen! Water! Carbon! Now we just need a few billion years. Better preheat those ovens … !
Jax and Phoebe Make a Planet is a limited-run podcast airing in 2024 that will explore all the major chance events in Earth history that needed to take place to get to the moment where two humans (us!) are able to hang out and bake an apple pie together. Along the way, our listeners will learn about why Earth is such an incredibly special place — and one worth protecting. Each episode will focus on an important moment that changed the trajectory of our planet, and life itself — the formation of the moon, the evolution of the oxygen-producing bacteria that created our breathable atmosphere, how plants made it onto land, the asteroid impact that ushered in the Age of Mammals, and more. Along the way, we’ll explore the origins of all the ingredients needed to make an apple pie (Sugar! Butter! Apples!). The show will include a blend of scripted essays, conversation, and interviews with the diverse scientists helping us understand how we got here, and why it matters.
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts!
For more information, visit our website at https://makeaplanetpod.earth/
For a version of this trailer with no music, visit: https://soundcloud.com/makeaplanetpod/introducing-jax-and-phoebe-make-a-planet-no-music
All content for Warm Regards is the property of Warm Regards Podcast and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
A new podcast from Jacquelyn Gill of Warm Regards. Check out: Jax and Phoebe Make a Planet!
Hi! We're Jax (Jacquelyn Gill) and Phoebe (Phoebe Cohen), and we’re baking an apple pie. But first, we have to make a planet — and not just any planet, but the best planet: Earth! It's a project that's been 4.56 billion years in the making, and we've got all the ingredients right here: Comets! Asteroids! Volcanoes! Oxygen! Water! Carbon! Now we just need a few billion years. Better preheat those ovens … !
Jax and Phoebe Make a Planet is a limited-run podcast airing in 2024 that will explore all the major chance events in Earth history that needed to take place to get to the moment where two humans (us!) are able to hang out and bake an apple pie together. Along the way, our listeners will learn about why Earth is such an incredibly special place — and one worth protecting. Each episode will focus on an important moment that changed the trajectory of our planet, and life itself — the formation of the moon, the evolution of the oxygen-producing bacteria that created our breathable atmosphere, how plants made it onto land, the asteroid impact that ushered in the Age of Mammals, and more. Along the way, we’ll explore the origins of all the ingredients needed to make an apple pie (Sugar! Butter! Apples!). The show will include a blend of scripted essays, conversation, and interviews with the diverse scientists helping us understand how we got here, and why it matters.
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts!
For more information, visit our website at https://makeaplanetpod.earth/
For a version of this trailer with no music, visit: https://soundcloud.com/makeaplanetpod/introducing-jax-and-phoebe-make-a-planet-no-music
Historical and Volunteer Climate Data, with Cary Mock and Theresa Crimmins
Warm Regards
1 hour 15 minutes 6 seconds
5 years ago
Historical and Volunteer Climate Data, with Cary Mock and Theresa Crimmins
This episode of Warm Regards continues our exploration of the often unexpected stories behind climate data. First we explore historical climatology records with Dr. Cary Mock. These are the measurements and observations of things like wind, pressure, rainfall, and more found in archives and historical societies around the world. Then, we turn to the present and talk with Dr. Theresa Crimmins, Director of the National Phenology Network, about how volunteers can contribute their own climatological and ecological observations. In doing so, they can better understand not only how climate change is affecting their immediate environment, but also assist in large-scale climate change research.
For a transcript of this episode, visit our Medium page:
https://ourwarmregards.medium.com/historical-and-volunteer-climate-data-with-cary-mock-and-theresa-crimmins-a4f7f7370f23
Show Notes
For more on the weather of The Long Winter and the work of meterologist Barbara Mayes Boustead, check out this Boing Boing article by Maggie Koerth:
https://boingboing.net/2012/12/11/the-meteorology-of-little-hous.html
You can also check out Barbara’s series of recorded presentations about the weather of the Little House books:
http://www.bousteadhill.net/lauraslongwinter/
This essay on the Little House books and the “myth of white self-sufficiency” explores the ways that the authors’ political agendas heavily influenced the series:
https://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/in-promoting-the-myth-of-white-self-sufficiency-the-little-house-books-rewrite-history/16545/?fbclid=IwAR3xRlBjiHUuqFoOxC71MqyCl-BRCmSI1z3AuA1mgf40uDrNWWh-1kYk-yM
To learn more about the Schoolhouse Blizzard and its influence on weather forecasting, check out the following:
David Laskin’s book, The Children’s Blizzard
https://bookshop.org/books/the-children-s-blizzard/9780060520762
This interactive website by the National Weather Service (complete with historical accounts):
https://noaa.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=3b68adee4e9545b7abdd7355ab7fe367
To learn more (including some neat photos of historical documents) about the ‘Year Without a Summer,’ check out this website from the Massachusetts Historical Society:
https://www.masshist.org/beehiveblog/2016/11/1815-the-year-without-a-summer/
You can learn more about Dr. Mock’s historical climatology work, including photos of the kinds of documents he works with, at his website:
http://artsandsciences.sc.edu/geog/research/climatelab/historical/historical.html
You can also follow him on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/cary_mock?lang=en
Here are some other community and citizen science projects mentioned in the episode that you can get involved in:
Zooniverse: https://www.zooniverse.org
SciStarter: https://scistarter.org
CoCoRHAS: https://www.cocorahs.org
ISeeChange: https://www.iseechange.org
Visit the National Phenology Network's website to learn more about the organization's history and current projects:
https://www.usanpn.org
Explore the data visualization tool mentioned in the episode:
https://www.usanpn.org/data/visualizations
To start contributing your own observations through Nature's Notebook, visit the project's website:
https://www.usanpn.org/natures_notebook
You can also download the app on the iOS App Store or Google Play:
https://apps.apple.com/us/app/natures-notebook/id508465801?ls=1
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.usanpn.android.naturesnotebook
Please consider becoming a patron on Patreon to help us pay our producer, Justin Schell, our transcriber, Joe Stormer, and our social media coordinator, Katherine Peinhardt, who are all working as volunteers. Your support helps us not only to stay sustainable, but also to grow.
https://www.patreon.com/warmregards
Find Warm Regards on the web and on social media:
Web: www.WarmRegardsPodcast.com
Twitter: @ourwarmregards
Facebook: www.facebook.com/WarmRegardsPodcast
Warm Regards
A new podcast from Jacquelyn Gill of Warm Regards. Check out: Jax and Phoebe Make a Planet!
Hi! We're Jax (Jacquelyn Gill) and Phoebe (Phoebe Cohen), and we’re baking an apple pie. But first, we have to make a planet — and not just any planet, but the best planet: Earth! It's a project that's been 4.56 billion years in the making, and we've got all the ingredients right here: Comets! Asteroids! Volcanoes! Oxygen! Water! Carbon! Now we just need a few billion years. Better preheat those ovens … !
Jax and Phoebe Make a Planet is a limited-run podcast airing in 2024 that will explore all the major chance events in Earth history that needed to take place to get to the moment where two humans (us!) are able to hang out and bake an apple pie together. Along the way, our listeners will learn about why Earth is such an incredibly special place — and one worth protecting. Each episode will focus on an important moment that changed the trajectory of our planet, and life itself — the formation of the moon, the evolution of the oxygen-producing bacteria that created our breathable atmosphere, how plants made it onto land, the asteroid impact that ushered in the Age of Mammals, and more. Along the way, we’ll explore the origins of all the ingredients needed to make an apple pie (Sugar! Butter! Apples!). The show will include a blend of scripted essays, conversation, and interviews with the diverse scientists helping us understand how we got here, and why it matters.
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts!
For more information, visit our website at https://makeaplanetpod.earth/
For a version of this trailer with no music, visit: https://soundcloud.com/makeaplanetpod/introducing-jax-and-phoebe-make-a-planet-no-music