I had intended to write about ferns and their shady lives, but realized that I should first review the fundamentals of reproduction. The diagram shows the basic concepts, under the assumption that each parent provided one chromosome to form a diploid cell with a pair of chromosomes. (Further simplification is my equating cells with nuclei.) […]
Don Garlick
Don Garlick is a geology professor retired from Humboldt State University. He invites any questions relating to North Coast science, and if he cannot answer it he will find an expert who can. E-mail dorsgarlick@yahoo.com.
A Counting Problem
This Holiday season deserves a fun project: Count the seeds in one cattail. I estimated the number to be half a million, but every scientific claim should be verified before acceptance. I suggest you share the fun and check my result. A source of cattails is just east of Bigfoot Gas in McKinleyville. The cluster […]
What Is Geologic Time?
Geologic time was involved in my previous articles on earthquakes, marine terraces, photosynthesis and changing climates. I contend that grasping the immensity of geologic time is a prerequisite to a real understanding of our planet and its life. Twenty thousand years ago, Canada was buried under three kilometers of ice and sea level was 140 […]
Is Mycology Mushrooming?
Yes, interest in fungi is expanding. However, few of us are aware of their strange life cycles and the valuable contributions they make to the health of our forests and fields. Begin with one spore produced by a typical mushroom. It is haploid, meaning it has only one set of chromosomes (like a sperm). The […]
How did our marine terraces form?
An example of a marine terrace is the surface on which McKinleyville is built. At some time in the past, roughly 85,000 years ago, this terrace was barely below sea level, and that is why it is flat. Land above sea level was eroded down by rain and surf, while submerged land was built up […]
Will Global Warming Harm Our North Coast?
Fossil fuel combustion has already increased the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by 36 percent over pre-industrial levels, from 280 ppm to 380 ppm. This contributes to global warming because CO2, despite its low concentration, effectively absorbs outgoing thermal infrared radiation. (Other greenhouse gases are water vapor, methane and ozone). The correlation between […]
Do Forests Protect Our Oxygen?
Our comfortable levels of atmospheric oxygen (O2) and carbon dioxide (CO2 ) are attributable to photosynthesis: H2O + CO2 = CH2O + O2. It is thus reasonable to assume that forests are needed to preserve the oxygen we breathe. But that is a common misconception. A mature redwood or Amazon forest busily recycles its products, […]
What’s so amazing about anemones?
Among all the fantastic products of three billion years of evolution, such as intricately constructed ears, eyes and skeletons, the most amazing exists within primitive anemones, corals and jellyfish. The stickiness you feel when touching anemones in local tide-pools is a consequence of thousands of microscopic harpoons launched into your skin. Each launching mechanism is […]
Can We Extract Energy from Waves?
PG&E is seeking permits to investigate the feasibility of producing energy from waves off Humboldt Bay. The potential is high off our coast because of our winter storms and summer winds. Waves approaching shallow water begin to break and lose energy, so most schemes target waves in water deeper than the “wave base” (about half […]
Why Does the Setting Sun Flash Green?
If you watch the red sun just before it disappears below the sea’s horizon you may see a flash of green. Gene Callahan, a local builder of fine homes, tells me that a red road flare will turn green if stared at long enough. These phenomena are actually quite different. Gene’s green is a result […]
Why do some rocks resemble Swiss Cheese?
Many rocks along our coast exhibit strange holes. You may be surprised to learn that these holes are bored by marine “Pholad” clams, chiefly for protection from predators. Holes enlarge with depth because each is excavated by a single growing clam during its lifetime of several years. The clams possess specialized muscles with which to […]
Why do we experience summer fogs?
Sprinkle flour upon a lazy Susan and turn it steadily in a counter-clockwise direction to simulate the rotation of the Northern Hemisphere. Roll a marble straight across the rotating surface in any direction. You will find that the path recorded in the flour curves to the right. This apparent curvature of trajectories is known as […]
