![Science in St. Louis](/img/default-banner.jpg)
- 38
- 22 008
Science in St. Louis
Registrace 7. 02. 2014
Science in St. Louis is a seminar series designed to connect people with scientists in their community. We offer informal science talks featuring local scientists and engineers discussing important scientific discoveries and breakthroughs taking place in our community.
The seminars are FREE and open to all (for dates, times and locations, see our website at pages.wustl.edu/scienceinstlouis) and if you missed one, you can watch it here!
Science in St. Louis is a partnership between the St. Louis County Library, the Photosynthetic Research Antenna Center (PARC), Washington University’s Gephardt Institute for Civic and Community Engagement, and The Academy of Science of St. Louis. Science in St. Louis is based upon work supported as part of the Photosynthetic Antenna Research Center (PARC), an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences under Award Number DE-SC0001035.
The seminars are FREE and open to all (for dates, times and locations, see our website at pages.wustl.edu/scienceinstlouis) and if you missed one, you can watch it here!
Science in St. Louis is a partnership between the St. Louis County Library, the Photosynthetic Research Antenna Center (PARC), Washington University’s Gephardt Institute for Civic and Community Engagement, and The Academy of Science of St. Louis. Science in St. Louis is based upon work supported as part of the Photosynthetic Antenna Research Center (PARC), an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences under Award Number DE-SC0001035.
Mosquitoes in the Anthropocene: Invasions, Climate Adaptation and Urbanization
Speaker: Katie Westby, Ph.D. MSPH.
Postdoctoral Research Associate
Tyson Research Center
Washington University in St. Louis
Postdoctoral Research Associate
Tyson Research Center
Washington University in St. Louis
zhlédnutí: 95
Video
People and Technology: How Human-Machine Interaces Benefit Society
zhlédnutí 43Před 4 lety
Speaker: Jenna Gorlewicz, Ph.D. Assistant Professor, Mechanical Engineering Parks College of Engineering Aviation & Technology Saint Louis University Learn about how advances in technology continue to improve our daily lives and the landscape will continue to change going forward.
What Do Kale, Origami, and Phil Mickelson Have in Common?
zhlédnutí 44Před 5 lety
Speaker: Carl Bassi, Ph.D. Professor and Director of Research at the UMSL College of Optometry Learn about science happening in our community!
CubeSats: Toys, Tools or Debris Cloud?
zhlédnutí 42Před 5 lety
Speaker: Michael Swartout Department Chair of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering; Associate Professor, SLU Learn about Science happening in our community!
Is Being Male a Cancer Predisposition Syndrome
zhlédnutí 47Před 5 lety
The Unintended Consequences of Evolutionary Pressures that Drive Sex Differences in Body Size Speaker Josh B. Rubin joins us to talk about how cancer risks might be encoded into the DNA of males. Josh is a Professor of Pediatrics and Neuroscience at Washington University School of Medicine.
A Brief History of Infections: From Mummies to Memes
zhlédnutí 56Před 5 lety
Science in St. Louis presents this lecture from Dr. Anupam Pande MD, MPH, Assistant Professor of Medicine at Washington University School of Medicine.
How did life originate on Earth? - Speaker Paul J. Bracher, Ph.D.
zhlédnutí 108Před 5 lety
Learn about the earliest life on this planet and how it all started with Paul J. Bracher Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Department of Chemistry at Saint Louis University.
Supernatural in Pop Culture
zhlédnutí 50Před 5 lety
Science in St. Louis presents Supernatural in Pop Culture Prof. Jennifer Nolan from UMSL walks us through the creepy and macabre stories of the supernatural and how they've influenced popular culture over centuries.
The Rock, Paper, Scissors Phenomenon
zhlédnutí 168Před 5 lety
Learn about how Rock, Paper, Scissors serves as a basis for almost all game design and the theory and science behind it. Speaker: Lisa Brunette Head Writer/CEO, Brunette Games
Music as Medicine: The Science of Music Therapy
zhlédnutí 89Před 5 lety
Science in St. Louis present Music as Medicine with our speaker Crystal Weaver, LPC, CRC, MT-BC from St. Louis University Cancer Center. Learn how music affects us and how it can help with our bodies healing processes.
Science and Technology That Enable Robotic Planetary Exploration
zhlédnutí 96Před 5 lety
Research Scientist Pablo Sobron, PhD joins us from the SETI Institute & Impossible Sensing lab to tell us about how we can use robots and rovers to explore other planets.
St. Louis Audubon's Bring Conservation Home | Mitch Leachman
zhlédnutí 116Před 6 lety
Mitch Leachman is also coordinator of St. Louis Audubon’s Bring Conservation Home program. He joined the Audubon network in 1997 and has been active with the St. Louis chapter since 2001. On staff since 2008, Mitch plans and coordinates many chapter activities, including Bring Conservation Home, community stewardship projects, fundraising, communications and outreach. Mitch Leachman, Executive ...
Fire in Space | Dr. Richard Axelbaum
zhlédnutí 119Před 6 lety
March 8, 2018 - 7:00pm Bridgeton Trails branch, St. Louis Library, 3455 McKelvey Rd., Bridgeton, MO See more at Dr. Axelbaum's website: engineering.wustl.edu/Profiles/Pages/Richard-Axelbaum.aspx Fire has always been essential to human existence, but today, fire has gone where no fire has gone before… into space. And the results will surprise you. This talk explores combustion experiments onboar...
3D Printing - Rapid Prototyping | Dr. Sridhar Condoor
zhlédnutí 61Před 6 lety
February 8, 2018 - 7:00pm Oak Bend branch, St. Louis Library, 842 S Holmes Ave., St. Louis, MO 63122 Sridhar Condoor: Rapid Prototyping - Be a Part of the Disruptive Transformation 3D Printing or Rapid Prototyping is revolutionalizing the product design and development process. Dr. Condoor will be present an overview of 3D printing technology including the new developments. Then, discuss applic...
Dr. James Fitzpatrick: Imaging Across Multiple Scales in Cell Biology
zhlédnutí 156Před 6 lety
This presentation focuses on highlighting cutting-edge microscopic imaging methods used in contemporary biomedical science to visualize the structure and dynamic behavior of biological systems.
Unmanned Aerial Systems for Food and Water Security in a Changing Climate
zhlédnutí 41Před 6 lety
Unmanned Aerial Systems for Food and Water Security in a Changing Climate
Unearthed: Amazing Accomplishments of Eastern Missouri's Prehistoric Cultures
zhlédnutí 8KPřed 6 lety
Unearthed: Amazing Accomplishments of Eastern Missouri's Prehistoric Cultures
Animals & Conservation at the Endangered Wolf Sanctuary
zhlédnutí 44Před 6 lety
Animals & Conservation at the Endangered Wolf Sanctuary
The Urban Ecology of Rats and Mice | Dr. Danielle Lee
zhlédnutí 185Před 6 lety
The Urban Ecology of Rats and Mice | Dr. Danielle Lee
Building Your Own Spaceship | Science in St. Louis
zhlédnutí 48Před 7 lety
Building Your Own Spaceship | Science in St. Louis
Finding What Fits: The Biochemistry of Drug Design | Science in St. Louis
zhlédnutí 42Před 7 lety
Finding What Fits: The Biochemistry of Drug Design | Science in St. Louis
Science in the Dark: The Study of Caves
zhlédnutí 105Před 7 lety
Science in the Dark: The Study of Caves
The Real CSI: Forensics at the St. Louis County Crime Lab
zhlédnutí 426Před 7 lety
The Real CSI: Forensics at the St. Louis County Crime Lab
Dr. Gautam Dantas - Fighting Antibiotic-Resistant Superbugs Across Diverse Habitats
zhlédnutí 245Před 7 lety
Dr. Gautam Dantas - Fighting Antibiotic-Resistant Superbugs Across Diverse Habitats
Dr. Eric Majzoub | The Chemistry and Physics of Energy Storage Materials at the Nanoscale
zhlédnutí 77Před 7 lety
Dr. Eric Majzoub | The Chemistry and Physics of Energy Storage Materials at the Nanoscale
Dr. Christine Floss | Astronomy with a Microscope
zhlédnutí 169Před 7 lety
Dr. Christine Floss | Astronomy with a Microscope
Dr. Gerald Hayes - Beelogics: Monsanto's Commitment to Honey Bee Health
zhlédnutí 165Před 7 lety
Dr. Gerald Hayes - Beelogics: Monsanto's Commitment to Honey Bee Health
Exploring the Moon from Orbit | Dr. Ryan Clegg-Watkins
zhlédnutí 225Před 8 lety
Exploring the Moon from Orbit | Dr. Ryan Clegg-Watkins
Monster in the Hollow - The Story of Missouri’s Ozark Dinosaurs by Professor Michael Fix
zhlédnutí 9KPřed 8 lety
Monster in the Hollow - The Story of Missouri’s Ozark Dinosaurs by Professor Michael Fix
Sigh…..”hunting is for bragging rights”? Maybe among the elite and people who live in gated communities, but we simple people of the earth eat what we kill.
31:52, "spear points" - Stone axes, spear points and arrowheads identical to "Clovis" type stone axes and tools recovered at various Earthly locations, can be identified in images returned by the NASA Mars Rovers, while a single well defined stone axe can be seen in a shot returned by one of the Soviet "Venera" landers, which begs the conclusion aliens seeded all three worlds with the stone weapons ..
lost me once you said BCE 😕
They were housed atop mounds burying food scraps, broken pots, expired pets /relatives, etc below. Literally millions of smaller mounds throughout the USA.
Should have shone black walnuts not English walnuts big difference
Thanks USA American Indians, from 8th Cherokee Native American John Robert Bruffett Junior of Branson Missouri America!!!!!
Oh, the BCE crap? Really? Before Common Era? Wtf? Yeah, let's change some more history to fit your atheist agenda. It's how they do it. Little by little remove the Bible, ten commandments, God and prayer in school, change greetings on holidays, and on and on til they remove Christ from as much as possible. So sad their minds and hearts are closed and hardened.
Love learning about ancient times, as well as early native American Indian civilizations. I don't like that "scientist" almost always push the evolution "theory" of theirs, vs intelligent design. I believe so much of the information and artifacts found would make better sense with the latter. Evolutionist always have those "i don't know what happened here" periods, and just fill in the blanks with guesses. Example here is the right hand and left hand napping of the arrowheads. How the heck does this guy know for certain why? It could be the chief or leader at the time said, make them rt or Lt. Or the better hunter of the tribe said one works better for arrow and spear stability vs the other. Maybe the person teaching arrowhead class taught that way. It's always their "scientific conclusion " that this is what happened. How much history has been tainted with an arrogant person deciding the facts for everyone else. IMO So for the evolution push, i give a thumbs down. Sorry, no 5 star ratings on utube to give a better score.
Lol
59:04 Bullshit the crinoid fossil made it wobble. And the chief knew! Lmfao!
Not net sinkers. Weights for a loom. Textiles! 22:08
I made a video on my channel about the mississippian site around my families land, its a big rock bluff with paintings on it and I'd love any feed back yall can give, we were told it is a shrine to the underwater panther God mishi pishu
I'm going to check your video out bro where are you located in Missouri I'm in the bootheel I love looking at that stuff
@@573semobulls3 it's in Madison County but I can't give out exact location cuz it's on private land
What else happened 1500 CE? Oh prolly smallpox.
Are you high.
My wife and I recognize the woman MC as a onetime student of St. Charles West High School, right? I didn’t see her name in the attribution.
I still use this for my Earth Science students - they always find it interesting. Thank you for recording this!
I swear it sounds like my speakers are blown when this plays.
Gotta say. Nothing is accurate. Nobody knows nothing. We can guess and study and hope. But we, as human beings need to understand that ALL our ancestors were just as smart or smarter than we are.
This is outstanding. But, one small criticism would be that if you have a young person with this kind of interest in any subject, please encourage that interest.
@35:30, those are common Louisiana fish. They both can survive in oxygen depleted water because they can come to the surface and gulp air. That’s how they survived bad times, from the time of dinos to today.
Great find!!! I dig it. Lol But yeah the find was awsome. How they went about it was very dumb. The structure was built like crap. That's why it fell.. I could put that up in 1 day. And solid.. That dino was crushed by the land slide. Look up further for the rest of it.
Outstanding
Hypsibema missouriensis
Thanks for the research,
I suppose that paleontologists do not always agree with geologists about the timeline of events. They will find the remains of land and sea animals, plants and shells in one earth layer. And also in the layer beneath and the one on top. When we look at the many horizontal strata that we find everywhere on our planet, we see clearly the effect of a repeating cataclysm. These disasters are mentioned in ancient books as the Mahabharata from India and the Popol Vuh from the Maya and others. They tell us about a cycle of seven disasters that separate world eras. Regularly recurring disasters can certainly not been caused by asteroid impacts or volcanic eruptions. The only possible cause can be another celestial body, most likely a planet, that orbits our sun in an eccentric orbit. Then it is near the sun for only a short period and after the crossing it disappears into the universe for a long time. Planet 9 exists, but seems to be invisible. These disasters cause a huge tidal wave of seawater that is pulled over the earth “above the highest mountains”. At the end it covers the earth with a layer of mud, a mix of sand, clay, lime, fossils from sea and land animals and meteors. They also create a cycle of civilizations. To learn much more about the cycle of recurring floods and its timeline, the recreation of civilizations and ancient high technology, read the eBook: "Planet 9 = Nibiru". You can read it nicely on any computer, tablet or smartphone. Search: invisible nibiru 9
Yeah, I don't think so. Let me guess, intelligent design advocate?
No, Ancient knowledge that is available in many different forms for everyone who is searching for it but that knowledge is forgotten, neglected or denied by all scientists. I found the common thread that connects many puzzle pieces of our past. Scientist don’t even know what they don’t know
@@nibiruresearch then you have knowledge that you need to publish.
@@adamgilbert9176 Thank you, I do that in my book that is mentioned above.
wHAT a lECTURE...
what a lecture?
What a lecture
What a lecture!
My gosh I cant stand people. Who would vandalize a dig site? Same people who rob cemeteries and destroy memorials.
Amezing &wonders different news.
Nice Job!!!!
I happen to know that a very large leg bone was found beneath hiway 71 in Springdale Ar. and it was suppressed by the construction company .... I know where the bone is .
Why did they suppress it? They didn't want to lose their permits?
@@BlGGESTBROTHER yes would have halted progress on major business artery
If Im not mistaken many of the rocks in the Ozarks (specifically) are largely Ordovician and Devonian, so before the dinosaurs, which if Im not mistaken should be largely aquatic, I could be wrong. There were many species that were already extinct before the dinosours and even before the so called "Cambrian Explosion" (which lasted millions and millions of years as opposed to all of a sudden)
Audio cuts out after 2:20
Thanks. We'll get that fixed.
Why are you bothering to study stuff about the landing sites when nobody bothered with that when they were supposed to have landed. Is it really cheaper to land on the moon? Without an atmosphere you don't have a terminal velocity, you just keep going faster until you stop yourself. So it could be more expensive to land on the low gravity of the moon because of the absence of atmosphere breaking.
I don't want moon rocks collected by machines, I want handpicked moon rocks only!
So what discoveries did the astronauts make? Tennis shoes? "Humans are better at doing science." You forget to mention the Apollo chaps were test pilots and not scientists. They lost all the data from telelmentry and experiments. I don't believe an astronauts could do the things the rover does on Mars. The rovers just keep going, for one thing. Astronauts are only good for a three day jolly. LRO just proves that a machine is good at doing the job. Humans are just extra, just a hindrance to science. What are they possibly able to bring to the table? No weathering process on the moon? You're kidding, what about ultraviolet? What about micrometeors? That's all weathering. So the LOR proves that Apollo's conclusions were wrong about volcanology? They were wrong about water presence. What did they actually get right? How did Apollo survive the sun's heat? All low earth orbit missions have terrible heat to deal with, but Apollo's crew said they were cold. How is that possible? For a 5 minute talk on heat in space see here: czcams.com/video/Zztbw7MLlkI/video.html
Great info. to know.
Extremely fascinating.
Where in Missouri have you found fossils? Do you ever find Dinosaur eggs? If so do you have photos? I believe I have some, Franklin Co area. Petrified wood in same area. Thanks
What you have is Pennsylvanian in age. Still pretty cool. And if it is bone you have, might be fish or amphibian.
Im in same area...but dont know...
Lots of poo and I have a 500 million yr old horseshoe crab.
I also live in Franklin County. You do not have fossilized dinosaur eggs. What you have are called chert nodules. I have. many. Of all sizes.
I cannot believe there is a lecture on this and online no less!
Fantastic presentation! Thank you for sharing.
Thanks Dr Foston. Very interesting research and hope to work with you.
Nice job!
Do you still own the property? How fortunate you had the foresight to purchase it.
yes!@@VABmo
@@VABmo yes, I still own it however the site is currently being worked by the Field Museum, Chicago Ill.
Dear Tristram, I am glad that I met you in London last month :)
Mike, a great presentation. So much more material than when we found that tooth and toe in the 1980s. Congrats to one and all.
I dont mean to be offtopic but does anybody know of a way to log back into an instagram account? I somehow lost the login password. I would appreciate any tricks you can give me!
@Kareem Cain Instablaster :)
@Curtis Omari Thanks so much for your reply. I found the site through google and im in the hacking process now. Seems to take quite some time so I will get back to you later with my results.
@Curtis Omari It did the trick and I now got access to my account again. I am so happy! Thank you so much, you saved my ass :D
@Kareem Cain You are welcome xD