Saturday, November 10, 2012

An ancient civilization's wet ascent, dry demise

Newly documented climate shifts helped shape Classic Maya destiny

By Bruce Bower

Web edition: November 8, 2012

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DATA DRIP

Researchers analyzed a stalagmite from this cave in Belize to reconstruct patterns of rainfall during Classic Maya civilization. Evidence suggests climate shifts accompanied the ancient society?s rise and fall.

Credit: D. Kennett/Penn State

Classic Maya civilization rose and fell with the rains.

This once-majestic society, known for massive pyramids and hieroglyphic writing, expanded during an unusually rainy time and declined as the sky?s spigots dried up and periodic droughts arrived, a new study suggests.

A 2,000-year climate record, gleaned from a stalagmite inside a Belize cave, highlights a central role for climate shifts in the ancient civilization?s fortunes, say anthropologist Douglas Kennett of Penn State University and his colleagues.

A bounty of rain nurtured Maya agriculture and city building from the years 440 to 660, Kennett?s team reports in the Nov. 9 Science. A drying trend and occasional droughts after 660 were accompanied by declining crop yields, increasing warfare among Maya city-states and a shift of political centers northward into the Yucatan Peninsula, the researchers say. After the collapse of Maya political systems between 800 and 1000, a severe drought hit southern Belize from 1020 to 1100 and apparently motivated remaining Maya to leave the area.

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MAYA CLIMATE

Stretches of wet and dry weather influenced the growth and abandonment of ancient Maya political centers, such as Caracol in Belize, a new study suggests.

Credit: D. Kennett/Penn State

?It looks like the Maya got lulled by a uniquely rainy period in the early Classic period into thinking that water would always be there,? Kennett says.

His team analyzed a stalagmite that grew in Yok Balum Cave from 40 B.C. to 2006 A.D. Rainfall estimates for each year of rock formation were derived from measurements of oxygen that accumulated in the stalagmite as runoff from rains entered the cave.

Yok Balum lies near a half-dozen major Classic Maya sites. The scientists compared the climate data with historical records, carved on stone monuments at these sites, of Maya warfare and political events.

Researchers have argued for decades about whether the Classic Maya collapse stemmed more from droughts or from warfare and weakened political systems. Kennett says the new evidence is consistent with climate changes interacting with social forces to pull Classic Maya civilization in different directions. Maya city-building before the Classic era (SN: 5/22/04, p. 334) may have enabled rapid social advances when early Classic rains pelted down.

Intermittent droughts after 660 probably increased political pressure on already weakened Maya rulers as well as undermined the power of strong kings, Kennett says. Both situations would have upped the chances of wars breaking out.

Kennett?s team has produced a ?groundbreaking? rainfall history for southern Belize, says anthropologist Diane Chase of the University of Central Florida in Orlando. With her husband, UCF anthropologist Arlen Chase, she co-directs excavations at Caracol, a Classic Maya site not far from Yok Balum.

Further work needs to establish whether the new climate record applies to Classic Maya sites in Guatemala and the Yucatan, says anthropologist Vernon Scarborough of the University of Cincinnati. Droughts could have affected some parts of Classic Maya territory more than others, he says. Reservoirs and canals may have allowed some Maya cities to weather waterless periods better.

The ancient Maya adapted to many environmental challenges, suggesting that droughts alone didn?t cause the society to collapse, says Arlen Chase. Still, Scarborough says, ?there can be little doubt that droughts played a significant role in the rise and fall of Maya civilization.?

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/346350/title/An_ancient_civilizations_wet_ascent,_dry_demise

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What sets newly found super Earth apart? It's simple as night and day.

Scientists say they have found a planet seven times more massive than Earth orbiting in a star's habitable zone 42 million light-years away. It could have seas, and perhaps just as important, it could have an Earth-like climate because it has a day-night cycle.

By Pete Spotts,?Staff writer / November 8, 2012

This undated artist rendering shows Kepler-22b, a planet known to comfortably circle in the habitable zone of a sun-like star. So far, astronomers have detected more than 840 planets orbiting other stars, a handful of those are super Earths that fall within their stars' habitable zones.

Courtesy of JPL-Caltech/Ames/NASA/AP

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Astronomers have uncovered evidence for a super Earth-size planet in the habitable zone of a star 42 light-years away in the southern-hemisphere constellation Pictor.

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If the data truly signal a planet, the object could host liquid water on its surface, the team estimates. Liquid water is seen as a key ingredient for organic life.

So far, astronomers have detected more than 840 planets orbiting other stars. A handful of those are super Earths that fall within their stars' habitable zones. But only two ? including this newly announced planet candidate ? are far enough away from their stars to allow for a day-night cycle. The others orbit so close to their stars that they've become tidally locked, presenting the same face to their stars as they swing about their orbits.

A day-night cycle on the new planet "improves its chances of hosting an Earth-like climate," the team wrote in the formal report of their discovery, which has been accepted for publication in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics.

The host star, tagged as HD 40307, has about 77 percent of the sun's mass and is a sun-like 4.5 billion years old. Researchers previously had detected three super Earths orbiting the star. The potentially habitable planet is one of three additional planet-candidates the team is reporting around HD 40307.

It's a uniquely crafted system. Five of the six planets orbit within a scant 23 million miles of the star. HD 40307g, the outermost of the six, orbits another 33 million miles out. That brings all six orbits well within the radius of Mercury's orbit around the sun. Mercury is the innermost planet in our solar system, orbiting the sun at an average distance of 58 million miles ? close enough to broil the sun-facing hemisphere of this slowly turning planet to a toasty 801 degrees Fahrenheit.

But HD 40307g's host star is faint enough that the planet, with a year some 200 days long, falls well within the star's habitable zone.

The six planets exhibit minimum masses ranging from 3.5 Earth masses to 9.5 times the Earth's mass. The potentially habitable super Earth comes in at about seven Earth masses.

Based on calculations involving a similar, habitable-zone super Earth discovered by NASA's Kepler mission, Kepler 22b (which is also the other super Earth with a day-night cycle), the team posits that the planet could be a mini-Neptune, with a rocky core and thick atmosphere.

Other astronomers have been trying to confirm the existence of the initial three planets by hunting for the slight dimming a planet imparts to its star's light as it swings in front of the star during its orbit ? and event known as a "transit." But no one has spotted anything yet.

Given that it is easier to spot transits for close-in planets than for more-distant planets, the chances of catching a transit for HD 40307g as well would seem remote. Astronomers are interested in such detections because a transit would not only provide confirmation of the planet's existence, but also allow astronomers to infer a great deal about the planet, including its density.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/9PY3PCswi9E/What-sets-newly-found-super-Earth-apart-It-s-simple-as-night-and-day

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Friday, November 9, 2012

Computational neuroscience: Memory-making is all about the connection

ScienceDaily (Nov. 8, 2012) ? A model that shows how connections in the brain must change to form memories could help to develop artificial cognitive computers

Exactly how memories are stored and accessed in the brain is unclear. Neuroscientists, however, do know that a primitive structure buried in the center of the brain, called the hippocampus, is a pivotal region of memory formation. Here, changes in the strengths of connections between neurons, which are called synapses, are the basis for memory formation. Networks of neurons linking up in the hippocampus are likely to encode specific memories.

Since direct tests cannot be performed in the brain, experimental evidence for this process of memory formation is difficult to obtain but mathematical and computational models can provide insight. To this end, Eng Yeow Cheu and co-workers at the A*STAR Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore, have developed a model that sheds light on the exact synaptic conditions required in memory formation.

Their work builds on a previously proposed model of auto-associative memory, a process whereby a memory is retrieved or completed after partial activation of its constituent neural network. The earlier model proposed that neural networks encoding short-term memories are activated at specific points during oscillations of brain activity. Changes in the strengths of synapses, and therefore the abilities of neurons in the network to activate each other, lead to an auto-associative long-term memory.

Cheu and his team then adapted a mathematical model that describes the activity of a single neuron to incorporate specific characteristics of cells in the hippocampus, including their inhibitory activity. This allowed them to model neural networks in the hippocampus that encode short-term memories. They showed that for successful formation of auto-associative memories, the strength of synapses needs to be within a certain range: if synapses become too strong, the associated neurons are activated at the wrong time and networks become muddled, destroying the memories. If they are not strong enough, however, activation of some neurons in the network is not enough to activate the rest, and memory retrieval fails.

As well as providing insight into how memories may be stored and retrieved in the brain, Cheu thinks this work also has practical applications. "This study has significant implications in the construction of artificial cognitive computers in the future," he says. "It helps with developing artificial cognitive memory, in which memory sequences can be retrieved by the presentation of a partial query." According to Cheu, one can compare it to a single image being used to retrieve a sequence of images from a video clip.

The A*STAR-affiliated researchers contributing to this research are from the Institute for Infocomm Research.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by The Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR).

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Eng Yeow Cheu, Jiali Yu, Chin Hiong Tan, Huajin Tang. Synaptic conditions for auto-associative memory storage and pattern completion in Jensen et al.?s model of hippocampal area CA3. Journal of Computational Neuroscience, 2012; 33 (3): 435 DOI: 10.1007/s10827-012-0394-8

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/strange_science/~3/6Eo184kvYko/121108140847.htm

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Saturday, November 3, 2012

Reference Reviews | November 1, 2012

poetry Reference Reviews | November 1, 2012OrangeReviewStar Reference Reviews | November 1, 2012The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics. 4th ed. Princeton Univ. 2012. 1639p. ed. by Roland Greene & others. bibliog. index. ISBN 9780691154916. pap. $49.50. REF

Ever since the first edition of this work, in 1965, The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics has been a comprehensive and authoritative reference work valued by students, teachers, and poets. Its intention has been to be worldwide in scope, concerning the ?history, theory, technique and criticism of poetry from the earliest times to the present.? Entries have included terms and concepts; genres and forms; periods, schools, and movements; the poetry of nations, regions, and languages; and poetry in relation to other cultural forms, disciplines, and social practices such as linguistics, religion, and science. This new edition edited by Greene (English & comparative literature, Stanford Univ.) and others includes 1100 entries that range from brief overviews to in-depth essays of 15,000 words, including 250 new entries and many revised and ?reconceived? ones. Among the new entries are discussions of the Black Mountain school; ?criture; fractal verse; gay, lesbian, and Nuyorican poetry; poi?sis; poetry slams; Bosnian poetry; popular and modern poetry of China; and much more. The bibliographies included with each essay are also fully updated. Contributors come from major colleges and universities worldwide. ?VERDICT This edition will be welcomed by all readers of poetry. It provides so many new essays and updates, and, finally, has an index, which is useful as the Encyclopedia does not include entries on individual poets, but rather discusses them in the context of the larger topics to which they are related. Also beneficial is the new page layout that is easier to read and more conducive to browsing, Highly recommended.?Marcia Welsh, Dartmouth Coll., Hanover, NH

nfl Reference Reviews | November 1, 2012Maxymuk, John. NFL Head Coaches: A Biographical Dictionary, 1920?2011. McFarland. 2012. 436p. bibliog. index. ISBN 9780786465576. pap. $49.95. REF

Football and statistics lovers will light up with pleasure when reading this book. While trawling the Internet will bring up much of the same information, as will studying the approximately 150 articles, books, and websites that Maxymuk (reference librarian, Paul Robeson Lib., Rutgers Univ.; Quarterback Abstract) consulted during his research, this text gathers all the information in one place under the heading of each coach?s name. The resource covers an exclusive club: 466 men who served as the head coach for a team in the National Football League or the two leagues that merged into it. Maxymuk answers three questions about each coach: Who was he? What was his approach to coaching and his style in terms of leadership and tactics? How successful was he? Each entry begins with biographical information followed by each coach?s yearly regular season and postseason coaching record. Maxymuk then uses specially created statistical formulas to evaluate each coach?s tendencies in scoring, defense, and play calling. In addition to providing names, dates, and statistics, the author is not adverse to adding a little football color. As a Chicago Bears fan, this reviewer was delighted to read former Bears coach Mike Ditka?s comment that former team owner George Halas ?[threw] around nickels like manhole covers? (i.e., that he was cheap). For each year Ditka coached, the reader sees a chart with the name of the team or teams coached, number of games, wins and losses, percentages, etc. The book contains an appendix ranking the coaches (using Maxymuk?s custom-made analysis) who coached more than 55 games, and another for those who coached fewer than that. Many an argument will be easily settled with this ?material. VERDICT Recommended for anyone who loves football or needs to settle bets over the family dinner table, as well as for libraries of any type.?Susan L. Peters, Univ. of Texas, Galveston

iraq Reference Reviews | November 1, 2012Mockaitis, Thomas R. The Iraq War: A Documentary and Reference Guide. Greenwood. (Documentary and Reference Guides). 2012. 345p. bibliog. index. ISBN 9780313343872. $100. Online: ABC-CLIO eBook Collection REF

Mockaitis (history, DePaul Univ., Chicago; Iraq and the Challenge of Counterinsurgency) provides context and analysis for documents that trace the history of the most recent Iraq War. The 97 documents are organized in chapters such as ?The Case for War,? ?Shock and Awe,? ?Reconstruction,? ?From Conventional to Unconventional War,? and ?The Rough Road to Democracy.? The material is largely from U.S. government sources, but media outlets and other nations? documents are also represented. Each chapter begins with a one- to three-paragraph introduction and includes scattered insets with background information on relevant people or organizations; each document is given an equally short introduction and is identified by number, title, date, location, and significance. Following every piece is a citation and a one- or two-paragraph analysis. The author presents critical readings of the documents, making connections and assertions that are sometimes controversial, giving readers a greater understanding of the relationship among the events and the records discussed. Along with the volume?s opening discussion on the nature of historical inquiry, these analyses can introduce students to the processes used to understand historical events. A list of resources includes websites, blogs, official publications, books, and articles. VERDICT Mockaitis?s excellent source of information on this long conflict is highly recommended for high school, public, and academic libraries supporting history or political science programs.?Rosanne M. Cordell, Northern Illinois Univ. DeKalb

BookVerdict logo black 300px Reference Reviews | November 1, 2012
For all the latest reviews in this subject area and more, check out our new Book Verdict site! Book Verdict is fully accessible to all users, though certain content and functionality are only available to subscribers.To log in to your account, click here. To view the new subscription options, Get Started With Book Verdict Pro Today.

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The following titles are reviewed in the November 1 print issue. Visit Book Verdict for the full reviews.

atlases

National Geographic Concise Atlas of the World. 3d ed. National Geographic Bks. 2012. 160p. illus. maps. bibliog. index. ISBN 9781426209512. pap. $26.95. Ref

education

Zheng, Robert Z. & others. Engaging Older Adults with Modern Technology: Internet Use and Information Access Needs. IGI-Global. 2012. 420p. bibliog. index. ISBN 9781466619661. $175. Online: InfoSci-onDemand REF

history

Guid?re, Mathieu. Historical Dictionary of Islamic Fundamentalism. Scarecrow. 2012. 504p. maps. bibliog. index. ISBN 9780810878211. $95. Online: eBooks on EBSCOhost, Overdrive, MyiLibrary, EBL, & Questia. REF

Burrows, Terry & others. The History of the Modern World: From 1900 to the Present Day. Carlton, dist. by Sterling. Nov. 2012. 640p. index. ISBN 9781780971834. $45. REF

political science

The Oxford Companion to American Politics. 2 vols. Oxford Univ. 2012. 1152p. ed. by David Coates. bibliog. index. ISBN 9780199764310. $395. Online: Oxford Reference Library at oxfordreference.com. REF

social sciences

Warner, Judith A. Women and Crime: A Reference Handbook. ABC-CLIO. (Contemporary World Issues). 2012. 339p. bibliog. index. ISBN 9781598844238. $68. Online: ABC-CLIO eBook Collection. REF

Source: http://reviews.libraryjournal.com/2012/11/reference/reference-reviews-november-1-2012/

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How Do I Answer When I?m Stumped by an Important Question?

Dear Lifehacker,
I have an important presentation coming up, and although I feel very prepared, I?m afraid during the Q&A someone will ask me a question I won?t be able to answer. What?s the best way to respond when I get caught stumped?

HBT: Rangers are interested in David Ortiz

Yesterday I said I?d be utterly shocked if David Ortiz wasn?t back with the Red Sox in 2013. ?I still will be, but Ken Rosenthal reports that there is at least some competition for Big Papi?s services:

The?Boston Red Sox?are not alone in their pursuit of designated hitter?David Ortiz. The?Texas Rangers?also have expressed serious interest in Ortiz, major-league sources say, envisioning him as a left-handed hitting replacement for their own free agent,?Josh Hamilton.

I find that more interesting for what it means for the Rangers ? that they are possibly looking to add a big bat ? than what it means for Ortiz and the Red Sox.

And I?m sure some people would be more concerned about what it means for Michael Young?s playing time. Not reasonable people, of course. Reasonable people would be quite happy about that.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/11/02/the-rangers-are-interested-in-david-ortiz/related/

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