Open Laboratory 2008 - submissions so far

We are busy preparing for The Open Laboratory 2008. The submissions have been trickling in all year, and a little bit more frequently recently, but it is time now to dig through your Archives for your best posts since December 20th 2007 and submit them. Submit one, or two, or several - no problem. Or ask your readers to submit for you.

Then take a look at your favourite bloggers and pick some of their best posts - don't worry, we can deal with duplicate entries. Do not forget new and up-coming blogs - they may not know about the anthology - and submit their stuff as well.

As we did last year, we encourage you to also send in original poems and cartoons.

Keep in mind that the posts will be printed in a book! A post that relies heavily on links, long quotes, copyrighted pictures, movies, etc., will not translate well into print.

The deadline is December 1st, 2008.

One suggestion - check the blog carnivals. This is, after all, a place where people send in their best posts. Many carnival participants are relatively new bloggers and may not know about the anthology, or feel they are too new to be worthy, or feel shy to submit their own work, so you do it for them! Here are some science-related carnival - check their archives and look for book-worthy gems in this year's editions:

Tangled Bank
Scientiae
Praxis
The Giant's Shoulders
Grand Rounds
Skeptics' Circle
Carnival of the Blue
Carnival of the Green
Cabinet of Curiosities
Linnaeus' Legacy
Circus of the Spineless
I And The Bird
Berry Go Round
Festival of the Trees
Encephalon
Molecular and Cell Biology Carnival
Oekologie
Change of Shift
Bio::Blogs
Philosophia Naturalis
Four Stone Hearth
The Accretionary Wedge
Boneyard
Mendel's Garden
Gene Genie
Cancer research blog carnival
Carnival of Space
Carnival of Mathematics
Hourglass
Medicine 2.0 Blog Carnival
Friday Ark

Below are submissions so far. Check them out and get inspired. If you see that one of your posts is at an old URL and you have since moved, re-submit with the new URL (perhaps re-post it at the new place if necessary):

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49 percent: Textbooks and reproduction-- why they gotta embellish?
49 percent: *groan*
A Blog Around The Clock: Science vs. Britney Spears
A Blog Around The Clock: Domestication - it's a matter of time (always is for me, that's my 'hammer' for all nails)
A Blog Around The Clock: Scientists are Excellent Communicators ('Sizzle' follow-up)
A Blog Around The Clock: Why do earthworms come up to the surface after the rain?
A Blog Around The Clock: Clock Classics: It all started with the plants
A Blog Around The Clock: The Future is Here and it is Bright: Interview with Anne-Marie Hodge
Aardvarchaeology: The Strange Fate of the First Christian Burials on Gotland
Aardvarchaeology: Investigating the Field of Saint Olaf
Adventures in Ethics and Science: Girls, boys, and Math
Aetiology: What's it like to work an Ebola outbreak?
Aetiology: Where did syphilis come from?
Antimatter: The Big Bang and the Mind of God
Antimatter: Do anti-depressants work?
Antimatter: The Standard Model
Antimatter: Supersymmetry
Antimatter: Cambridge conference review
Antimatter: Hubble puzzle
Antimatter: Hubble solution
Antimatter: The Denial of Global Warming
Backreaction: We have only ourselves to judge on each other
Backreaction: Blaise Pascal, Florin Perier, and the Puy de Dome experiment
Backreaction: The Equivalence Principle
Biocurious: We need to stop pigeon-holing science
Blogfish: Saving the ocean with guilt or desire?
BrainBlogger: The Human Injury of Lost Objectivity
Building confidence: Big data: an informaticians best friend
Charles Darwin's blog: If only I'd had a magic results machine in 1836...
Deep Thoughts and Silliness: The Hierarchical Structure of Bad Writing
Deep Thoughts and Silliness: The Deeper Meaning of a Residual Plot
Digital Cuttlefish: Danger! Warning!
Digital Cuttlefish: The singularity can't come soon enough
Digital Cuttlefish: The Evolutionary Biology Valentine's Day Poem
Digital Cuttlefish: Apology 130 to William Shakespeare
Digital Cuttlefish: I Am The Very Model Of A Devious Creationist
Digital Cuttlefish: How Chromosome Numbers Change
Digital Cuttlefish: Oh Ye Of Little Faith
Dreams and hopes of a (post doc) scientist: Why I (shouldn't) don't tell too many people what I (really) do
Dreams and hopes of a (post doc) scientist: TLR, PPR, cytokines and signaling
DrugMonkey (PhysioProf): Academic Science: Not A Care Bears Fucking Tea Party
Evolving Thoughts: Darwin, God and chance
Evolving Thoughts: Fallacies on Fallacies
Evolving Thoughts: Aristotle on the mayfly
Evolving Thoughts: On Ontology and Metaphysics: Substance Abuse
Expression Patterns: What will you be?
Extreme Biology: Humorless Homework
FairerScience: Sid the Science Kid: A Review
Female Science Professor: Journal Matchmaking
FemaleScienceProfessor: The Best Woman
Giovanna Di Sauro's blog: Who's afraid of Bisphenol A? (part 1)
Giovanna Di Sauro's blog: Who's afraid of Bisphenol A? (part 2)
Guadalupe Storm-Petrel: To Equine Things There is a Season (guest post by Barn Owl)
GumbyTheCat: The Texas Two-Step
Hope for Pandora: Dear Reviewer
Humans in Science: National Science Policies - Upheaval in France
Isis the Scientist: Isis's Super Family Fun Day
It's a Micro World after all: Primum non nocere - Part I
It's a Micro World after all: Celebrity Death Match - Biodiesel vs. Bioethanol (Part I)
I was lost but now I live here: Departmental retreats: academia with a twist of karaoke
I was lost but now I live here: Envisioning the scientific community as One Big Lab
I was lost but now I live here: The future of science, gradical change, and tools for the people
Juniorprof: Why I support open access
Juniorprof: Postdoc to PI transition
Living the Scientific Life (Scientist, Interrupted): Science Blogging for Scientists: Planting the Seed
Living the Scientific Life: Audubon's Aviary: Portraits of Endangered Species
Mario's Entangled Bank: The Year of Evolution in the age of Open Access
Marmorkrebs: How Marmorkrebs can make the world a better place
Michael Nielsen: The Future of Science
Mind the Gap: In which two dreams and an episode of CSI change the course of history
Mindshavings: Further Recursion Excursion
My Favourite Places: Pepijn's Livingroom Urban Research Program (PLURP)
NeuroDojo: Making mimetics scientific
Neurophilosophy: Wilder Penfield: Neural Cartographer
Neurotic Physiology: Uber Coca, by Sigmund Freud
Neurotic Physiology: Passage of an Iron Rod through the Head
NOVA Geoblog: Perspectives on coastal tectonics
O'Really?: Famous for fifteen people
O'Really?: If Science was an Olympic Sport...
Panthera studentessa: What ecology is NOT
Partially Attended: Why the LHC is not really that impressive
Plus magazine - news from the world of maths: United Kingdom - Nil Points
Podblack Blog: The Specialness Of Species
Podblack Blog: Looking Good - Scientifically
Podblack Blog: Smart Bitches, Not Meerly Sex
Podblack Blog: She's Already Got Science - Women, Skepticism And The Need For More Research
Podblack Blog: Political Punditry on McCain's Magical Thinking
Podblack Blog: The Sarah Silverman Of Skepticism
Podblack Blog: Classic Science Paper: Belief in Fortune Telling Amongst College Students
Pondering Pikaia: How do bats in a cave know if it is dark outside yet? Guest post by Anne Marie Hodge.
Prairie Mary: Religion for Scientists
Principles of Neurobiotaxis: The evolution and evolvability of modularity in the brain
Rants of a Feminist Engineer: Stories of an academic panel discussion
Reciprocal Space: I hate blogs, bloggers and blogging
rENNISance woman: Nobody expects...
rENNISance woman: My first Nature paper
Rubor Dolor Calor Tumor: Calor?
Science After Sunclipse: The Necessity of Mathematics
Science in the open: Avoid the pain and embarassment - make all the raw data available
Sciphu: The Swedish Chlamydia Mystery
Skulls in the Stars: The gallery of failed atomic models, 1903-1913
Skulls in the Stars: The discovery, rediscovery, and re-rediscovery of computed tomography
Stripped Science: Last question (comic strip)
Terra Sigilatta: Liveblogging the Vasectomy Chronicles
Tetrapod Zoology: Sleep behaviour and sleep postures
The Beagle Project Blog: Genomics and plant evolution: blogging on my own peer reviewed research
The Beagle Project Blog: Detecting natural selection: a pika's tale
The Beagle Project Blog: Saving Darwin's muse
The Beagle Project Blog: A guest post by Wallace's Rottweiler on the 150th anniversary of natural selection.
The Beagle Project Blog: Would that which we call a rose, by a DNA barcode, smell as sweet?
The Daily Transcript: From Metabolism to Oncogenes and Back - Part I
The Daily Transcript: From Metabolism to Oncogenes and Back - Part II
The Daily Transcript: From Metabolism to Oncogenes and Back - Part III
The End of the Pier Show: Ashtrays and Authority
The Flying Trilobite: Haldane's Precambrian Puzzle
The Loom: Dawn of the Picasso fish
The Natural Patriot: Biodiversity and the limits to growth
The Other 95%: Right Whale Lice
The Oyster's Garter: Urochordata, Urochordata, Rah, Rah, Rah!
The Oyster's Garter: Perverted cannibalistic hermaphrodites haunt the Pacific Northwest!
The Scientific Activist: Why Are Veins Blue?
The Scientific Activist: Do You Want to Be Able to Crap Gold?
The Scientific Activist: Water on Mars, Part 1
The Scientist: On depression--a personal perspective
The Scientist: On the Nature of Networking
The Sciphu Weblog: Now this is why we need genetic counselors
The Sciphu Weblog: How everything is a mess and still ok
The Sciphu Weblog: Was it all in vain ? The scientific method tale
The Skeptical Alchemist: From chance to function: the story of one gene (part 1)
The Skeptical Alchemist: From chance to function: the story of one gene (part 2)
The Skeptical Alchemist: From chance to function: the story of one gene (part 3)
The Tree of Life: The Fake Science News (or, Spitzer on OA): Eisen Resigns in Disgrace Over Scandal
The Tree of Life: What is so bad about brain doping? Apparently, NIH thinks something is.
The Tree of Life: Freeing My Father's Scientific Publications
The Tree of Life: Tracing the evolutionary history of Sarah Palin: links to a parasitic nematode and the pathogenic fungus Botryotinia fuckeliana
Thinking is Dangerous: Bluffer's Guide to Consumer-Related Science Papers
Tomorrow's Table: The Whirlpool of Scientific Thought
Tomorrow's Table: 10 Things about GE crops to Scratch From Your Worry List
What is interesting me today?: Science - the new cool?
What is Life?: Work and Life Balance & Importance of Sleep!
What is Life?: Who am I?
Working the Bench: Publications & Grants Don't Matter - Just Pedigree
XKCD: Unscientific
XKCD: Height
Zimblog: The gender gap in math has disappeared

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We are busy preparing for The Open Laboratory 2008. The submissions have been trickling in all year, and a little bit more frequently recently, but it is time now to dig through your Archives for your best posts since December 20th 2007 and submit them. Submit one, or two, or several - no problem…
The Open Laboratory 2008 is in the works. The submissions have been trickling in all year, but it is time now to dig through your Archives for your best posts since December 20th 2007 and submit them. Submit one, or two, or several - no problem. Or ask your readers to submit for you. Then take a…
We are busy preparing for The Open Laboratory 2008. The submissions have been trickling in all year, and a little bit more frequently recently, but it is time now to dig through your Archives for your best posts since December 20th 2007 and submit them. Submit one, or two, or several - no problem…
We are busy preparing for The Open Laboratory 2008. The submissions have been trickling in all year, and a little bit more frequently recently, but it is time now to dig through your Archives for your best posts since December 20th 2007 and submit them. Submit one, or two, or several - no problem…

Sorry PalMD, I am new to this and while I have heard of some of these blogs, most are completely new. I was having a hard time coming up with a great post out of the few(compared to this list) science-related blogs I DO read. I feel your hurt.

Most submissions are done by authors. Nobody knows your archives as well as you do. So, don't be shy - submit your own best stuff.

For a post to be considered, it must be submitted through the form - just click on one of the buttons at the bottom of this post.