This is such great news. I was totally crushed when I had to stop giving blood, despite being in a monogamous relationship (one that's still going 11 years later!).
Can't wait to roll up my sleeves - a win for science.
www.smh.com.au/healthcare/b...
Posts by Angus Dalton
🙏🙏🙏
Off Lizard Island, three side-by-side corals display different responses: one's healthy, one has a sick neon glow, and one's bleached. Could (and should) the polyps surviving in hot waters help buy more time for the Great Barrier Reef?
Full story from the GBR: www.smh.com.au/national/thi...
You can get in touch at angus.dalton@smh.com.au or angusdalton@proton.me. Happy to speak anonymously if you wish. Thank you!
Hello scientists of Bluesky - I'm keen to speak with Australian researchers affected by the Trump administration's impact on science.
If you've received a questionnaire from a US agency, or your work has been affected by cuts or funding freezes to US science orgs, I'd love to hear from you.
I did my best to capture what it’s like in these communities as the flood risk returned again, alongside incredible photographers Danielle Smith, Nick Moir (who administered first aid to the soldiers in the military truck crash) and Louise Kennerley. You can read some of that reportage here:
In the towns I visited, insurance is impossible to afford. Residents demand more dams, levee wall raises, anything to stem the damage from yet another mutant weather catastrophe. Ever since the big flood, Coraki artist Sandra Taylor told me, “Every hill is holy”.
Climate change is making cyclones hit harder, further south, possibly slowing them down so they dump more rain and increase flood risk, as we saw with Alfred, according to a rapid attribution analysis.
Many of them were “frozen”, unable to move, struggling to fathom a possible repeat of the 2022 flood devastation.
“I don’t think this has been experienced much yet on this continent: the recurring big, big climate disaster. That’s the thing we’re going to have to get used to," said Lismore social worker AJ Jensen, who had just helped evacuate locals from low-lying homes.
I’m just back from five days reporting on the ground on Cyclone Alfred in the battered Northern Rivers. Here’s the quote that stood out to me:
YES WAY 🌺
www.smh.com.au/national/nsw...
New from me: Their arms, legs and throats start randomly swelling. Then scientists ‘engineered’ a precision treatment www.theage.com.au/national/vic...
I sprinted to the Botanic Gardens late last night after hearing they were preparing to pollinate Putricia.
I made it with seconds to spare - here's what it's like to witness the intimate art of corpse flower pollination 🌺
www.smh.com.au/national/nsw...
@liammannix.bsky.social and I are running a mini-series of deep dives into the pillars of health for Examine, our science column (which you can get for free in your inbox!).
Here's Liam's fab evolutionary look at why our bodies penalise us for not exercising: www.smh.com.au/national/why...
TikTok gym bros told me to eat 180 grams of protein per day. It sucked. Here's why I'm listening to Stella - a baboon - instead. 💪 www.smh.com.au/national/wha...
I talked with @angusdalton.bsky.social at the Sydney Morning Herald about Wednesday's big thunderstorm in Sydney. www.smh.com.au/national/nsw...
When you complain about paywalls, what you are really complaining about is people getting paid for their work. Subscribe (yes please!). Please don't expect work to be available for you for free. Everyone deserves to get paid for work. You. Me. Everyone. Or go to your local library. Awesome places!
I’m on the case, Jenna! Wild scenes ⚡️
New from me and Clay Lucas
Dying woman and ethical doubts spark probe into cannabis cancer ‘cure’
www.theage.com.au/national/dyi...
As always, if you know more, get in touch
“When one prowled across a benchtop, you could hear its footsteps."
Love you, Australia, but FFS
Thank you Jenna! We're embracing the creeps today 🕷️
*draws breath, screams* NEW SPECIES OF SYDNEY FUNNEL WEB DISCOVERED!!!
I am obsessed with these big, black, brawny beasts. Read all about how a non-scientist uncovered this new species - and why the world's most dangerous spider just got deadlier 🕷️
www.smh.com.au/national/nsw...
As @weatherwest.bsky.social said, the planet is warming at a linear pace, but in the last decade climate impacts seem to have accelerated. "This increase in hydroclimate whiplash, via the exponentially expanding atmospheric sponge, offers a potentially compelling explanation.”
But the sponge is "thirstier" too. It's like grabbing a sponge that's 7% bigger to mop up a spill, because it can soak up more liquid. A "bigger" atmospheric sponge saps more water from the landscape, so drought is also amplified as well as extreme rain.
The whiplash is underpinned by our "expanding atmospheric sponge"; for every degree we warm the planet by burning coal, oil and gas, the atmosphere can hold 7 per cent more water. That makes downpours more dangerous and extreme, because the sponge is wetter.