Author archive for Alun Salt

Alun Salt is the web developer for AoB Blog. If something doesn't work here it's his fault. His interest in biology is personal as, even allowing for the Extended Mind Hypothesis, a lot of him remains biological. When he's not here he's working on a UNESCO Science Heritage project.

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Entrance to the seed vault

Schrödinger’s History (TIME 100)

Posted on December 2nd, 2011 by Alun Salt

How can you say something is historically important or not unless you observe it? What happens if you set up conditions where you intentionally cannot observe a site’s historical importance? I said in the opening post that some sites might have been chosen as a deliberate trolling for comment, and I think the Svalbard Global [...]

The Galapagos Islands, iconic in the history of Evolutionary Theory, but is this the place it was discovered?

The scale of science and history (TIME 100)

Posted on November 28th, 2011 by Alun Salt

TIME has recently published 100 greatest places in the world. The book is a collection of sites that, the editors argue, have had the biggest impact on world history. It’s excellent blog material because hardly anyone has read it (including me), any list will be personal and omit something someone feels is important and, following [...]

A gift for the anti-Botanist

Posted on November 14th, 2011 by Alun Salt

With a world full of fascinating life-forms, it’s always easy to find a gift for a botanist. There’s so many plants to choose from, but what can you get for a friend without green fingers? What can you get for someone who doesn’t merely lack gardening skills, but is a hazard to plant-life. While browsing [...]

Cucumbers and melons in medieval manuscripts

The fashionably late arrival of cucumbers in Europe #bad11

Posted on October 16th, 2011 by Alun Salt

You might put together a salad from what you’ve grown in your back garden, but it’s a surprisingly cosmopolitan meal. Tomatoes came from Mesoamerica and if you have potato salad, then you have the Incas of South American to thank. Recent research by Jules Janick and Harry Paris, Medieval Herbal Iconography and Lexicography of Cucumis [...]