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Posts by Clare Watson

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Had a blast talking at @istaresearch.bsky.social’s Think & Drink last Friday! @clarewatson.bsky.social and I shared how we went from lab bench to newsroom, and why trust, curiosity & scientist voices matter in journalism. Thanks to all who joined!

10 months ago 4 2 0 0
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Chris Judge’s “A Daily Cloud” project began in 2020, born from quiet days in the garden during lockdown. With simple lines and a touch of imagination, he turned everyday skies into playful scenes - one cloud at a time. [1/3]

Credits: adailycloud [FB]
#clouds #creative

10 months ago 9443 1306 170 105

Great recommendation, we met last week!

11 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Hi there 🧪 I've just started my journalism residency @istaresearch.bsky.social

If you're a scientist on campus or visiting Vienna, lmk! I'm the one reading magazines at lunch/on the bus + scribbling notes in talks.

👋 Please say hello & tell me about your work (or favourite hike or restaurant) 🌿

11 months ago 6 0 2 0
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Panel discussion at ISTA: Renowned science journalists discussed both the challenges and the joys of science journalism.

Thanks to our panelists: @clarewatson.bsky.social, @giorgiag-sciwriter.bsky.social, @jackiesnow.bsky.social, Monika Mondal, Klaus Taschwer & moderator Marlene Nowotny!

11 months ago 7 1 0 1
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The tussle over cigarette warning labels, and the hazy future of vaping Regulatory hurdles, industry objections and legal fights have gone on for decades over traditional tobacco. What’s in store for the next generation of smoking?

Do warning labels on tobacco products alter (would be) smokers’ behaviour?
@clarewatson.bsky.social discusses past, present and future of tobacco-related health communication with Lucy Popova: buff.ly/4dvhi1H

1 year ago 2 1 0 0

Hakai is one of my favourite places to write for. If you know of an organization that might want to help fund it, reach out! 🧪

1 year ago 4 2 0 0
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The unexpected poetry of PhD acknowledgements We read hundreds and hundreds of PhD acknowledgements. What we found was a kind of poetry in the science.

This beautiful multimedia essay, a compilation of the unexpected poetry of PhD acknowledgments, will surely make you smile.

From being lost for words to outpourings of thanks, Tabitha Carvan has captured it all; the very human side of #science 🧪

science.anu.edu.au/news-events/...

1 year ago 2 0 0 0
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These period pads solidify blood to prevent leaks They’re filled with a seaweed-derived product that forms a gel and is biodegradable. They’re filled with a seaweed-derived product that forms a gel and is biodegradable.

TIL that menstrual products are based on the same principles they have been for aeons: absorb, and hope like hell it doesn't get saturated.
So researchers are testing a molecule that gels menstrual blood into a solid so it doesn't leak or spill.

1 year ago 38 10 3 2
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These Ants Perform Life-Saving Operations on Injured Nestmates, Similar to Humans The world's tiniest surgeons?

While we have known for a few years now that ants treat each other's wounds, we're only just learning how astonishingly complex and precise ant medical care can be: some species perform life-saving amputations on each other! 🧪 #wildlife #nature #AmWriting

1 year ago 26 13 0 0
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Using Trash to Track Other Trash | Hakai Magazine An Australian organization is taking “Reduce, Reuse, Recycle” to heart with its ghost net clean-up program.

An Australian organization is taking “Reduce, Reuse, Recycle” to heart by using trash to clean up ghost gear.

By @clarewatson.bsky.social

hakaimagazine.com/news/using-t...

1 year ago 22 10 0 0
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The origin of the cockroach: how a notorious pest conquered the world Genomic analysis suggests the common kitchen vermin spread from Europe to the world. But it wasn't originally found in Europe. Genomic analysis suggests the common kitchen vermin spread from Europe to...

This was a fun little science ditty about how genomic analysis has revealed the German cockroach is not in fact German, but a canny and adaptable hitchhiker from South Asia who took advantage of human trade and wars to travel and thrive around the world.
#science #entomology #genomics #cockroach

1 year ago 2 1 0 0

We have 3 grants on offer to support SJAA members and I'd be happy to answer any Qs having received a few in the past.

With SJAA's support, my stories have ended up in @hakaimagazine.com @natureportfolio.bsky.social + taken me to Colombia for #WCSJ2023, an experience still paying dividends today.

1 year ago 4 1 0 0
SJAA Grants Program: Applications, Criteria and Everything You Need To Know – Science Journalists Association of Australia

Are you a student or early-career #ScienceJournalist based in Aus with a pitch up your sleeve?

A staff journalist with a story idea that requires travel? Or is there a professional development opportunity you'd like to snap up?

Our grant applications close next week! sjaa.org.au/opportunitie...

1 year ago 1 0 0 1

In essence, is the measured improvement meaningful for patients and their families, or just a few points difference on an abstract scale?

What if trials measured how much a drug extends "the time in the ‘good parts’ — in the milder stages of disease", as statistician Lars Rau Raket puts it?

2 years ago 0 0 0 0

Great reporting here by @elandhuis.bsky.social, providing a greater understanding of the difficulties with #ClinicalTrials of treatments for neurodegenerative diseases like #Alzheimers #ALS while presenting new ideas about how those trials could better measure a drug's effect on disease progression.

2 years ago 5 1 2 0
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Seagrass Can Stash Away Dangerous Heavy Metals | Hakai Magazine In Australia’s largest estuary, humble seagrass is the thin green line between safety and heavy-metal contamination.

In the Spencer Gulf of Australia, seagrass meadows stash truckloads of heavy metals in the coast's muddy depths. But if something were to happen to the seagrass—a marine heatwave perhaps—it could die and release the toxins back into the sea.

By Clare Watson.

hakaimagazine.com/news/seagras...

2 years ago 6 3 0 0
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Surge in endometriosis research after decades of underfunding could herald new era for women’s health - Nature Medicine Advances in organoids and the role of the microbiome and diet are leading to new diagnostics and treatments for endometriosis, motivating a precision health approach to this long-neglected disease.

After decades of neglect, it's an exciting time for endometriosis research. In the past year, a flurry of studies have been published that could radically change our understanding of the condition, and how to treat it.

Learn as much as I did writing my latest story! www.nature.com/articles/s41...

2 years ago 11 5 0 1
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I think my favorite genre of life is accidental dumb faces. #Birds like this white faced heron are experts at these. Who else has more examples? Bonus points if it's your study species! 🧪

2 years ago 24 1 2 1

If you’re a reporter who’s been laid off, and you’ve got a great climate accountability story in the tank that you’re not going to be able to get published now, shoot me a pitch: emilyatkin (at) heated (dot) world. Let’s get your work published and let’s get you paid!

2 years ago 86 56 1 2
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Evolution Keeps Making Crabs, And Nobody Knows Why This is so weird.

Crabs evolved (and disappeared) multiple times over the last 250 million years. @clarewatson.bsky.social digs into a conundrum that is taxing taxonomists: buff.ly/41FKq0O

2 years ago 6 1 1 0
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Analysis: The climate papers most featured in the media in 2023 - Carbon Brief Using Altmetric data, Carbon Brief has compiled a list of the 25 most talked-about climate-related papers that were published in 2023.

Delighted to hear my paper w/ @rahmstorf.bsky.social & @naomioreskes.bsky.social, which showed Exxon predicted global warming w/ breathtaking accuracy years before it attacked climate science & scientists, was the second most talked-about climate article of 2023! www.carbonbrief.org/analysis-the...

2 years ago 120 45 2 2

Somewhat related is this study, on atmospheric drying over Europe... www.nature.com/articles/s41...

2 years ago 0 0 0 0

So beautiful!

2 years ago 1 0 0 0
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'Is that a dinosaur?': One of Australia's rarest reptiles found in regional WA years after relocatio... A WA wildlife carer says she nearly "wet her pants" with excitement, after an endangered western swamp tortoise was found on a dirt track near her home town of Northcliffe.

Amplifying good news in conservation!

First up, endangered western swamp turtles have survived for several years after an experimental relocation to see if they can survive south of their current range.
🐢
#climateRescue
🌏🧪
www.abc.net.au/news/2024-01...

2 years ago 39 7 1 0
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That's so great to hear! Hope the recovery continues without any setbacks. I remember my first run back after a few months of illness was slow but felt so good. Enjoy!

2 years ago 1 0 1 0
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2023 is truly an abnormal year in an abnormal period for the world's climate.

"Unusual" under sells what's happening.
www.theage.com.au/environment/...

2 years ago 8 9 0 1

Hope you're enjoying your time in Australia, with all our kooky birds!

2 years ago 1 0 0 0
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If the first solar entrepreneur hadn't been kidnapped, would fossil fuels have dominated the 20th ce... The 1909 incident may have cost the industry decades of progress – and the planet huge amounts of damaging carbon emissions.

You have to read this. The incredible story of George Cove, an early 1900s solar energy pioneer who was KIDNAPPED and forced to abandon his work - potentially holding renewable energy back by decades. 🤯

theconversation.com/if-the-first... <- by Sugandha Srivastav.

2 years ago 6 6 2 1
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Spectacular finalists list for the UNSW Press Bragg Prize for Science Writing for 2023:
Jo Chandler - 'Buried treasure'
Lauren Fuge - 'Point of view'
Rebecca Giggs - 'Noiseless messengers'
Amalyah Hart - 'Model or monster'
Nicky Phillips - 'Trials of the heart'
Helen Sullivan - 'A city of islands'

2 years ago 3 2 0 1