The List
- Bad Science - Ben Goldacre keeps an eye on the relentless ignorance of the British media. Poor man.
- Bunsen Burner. Some excellent general science writing (it’s not been active for a couple of months though).
- Connaissances. A geologically-inclined poet currently living in France.
- Darren Naish: Tetrapod Zoology. A paleontologist who actually gets to study dinosaurs.
- Dr Petra Boynton - an evidence-based approach to sex and relationship issues.
- dotdotdot - contrary to the tagline, she apparently does now have a PhD.
- El Gentraso - Science writer focussing on evolution, ecology and conservation.
- Gooseania - surviving a Maths PhD in Manchester.
- homunculus - Philip Ball gets people to pay him to write about science. Bastard.
- inkyCircus - Still one third British, which is enough to qualify them for our football team (they'd probably be an improvement too).
- Leaves on the Line - Andrew Jaffe, an astrophysicist at Imperial College, London.
- The Neurophilosopher’s weblog - cognitive science and other things biological.
- Postblogger - biochemist/botanist riffing on the traumas of being a post-doc (except on Thursdays).
- Post Doc Ergo Propter Doc - chemistry postdoc, and not afraid to complain about it.
- Ramblings of a Scientist - of Dr. Jim, to be precise.
- Sane Scientist - not so sure of that myself...
- The Scientific Activist - an American biologist in Oxford.
- A Somewhat Old, But Capacious Handbag - Miss Prism opines on cakes and biology.
- Stoat - climate science commentary.
- Transient Reporter - survived British bording school, so academia holds no fears for him.
- The Unbearable Lightness of Being a Postdoc - Iknownotwhattodo, another biologist stuck in post-doc limbo.
Keep them coming - then who knows? We can coordinate on any more MP nagging, follow up on Postblogger’s suggestion for our very own carnival, and, more importantly, think about getting together in a pub somewhere…
I did my O and A levels at a sadistic little boarding school in Surrey. Does that count?
ReplyDeleteTransient Reporter
If that means you know the rules of cricket, you might qualify as an ex-pat...
ReplyDeleteWell... I always thought Ian Botham was a bit of fat little toady. I was much more a Dusty Hare man myself.
ReplyDeleteTransient Reporter
I'm up for pubbing, carnivalling or npolitician-bothering. Especially pubbing.
ReplyDeleteIf you're collecting (partially) British science blogs, how about www.inkycircus.com
ReplyDeletecricket is so last week...
Lemming, do I detect some hints of fair-weather fandom? ;-)
ReplyDeleteOK Wildtype - your knowledge of a far superior sport is qualification enough for me. Though you'd have a long way to come to get to the pub...
True, but I'm sure you'll bring me a can of Boddington's, the next time you're visiting L.A.
ReplyDeleteWell I know nothing of cricket. Picking up a little Ice Hockey though! I too would have a long way to come to the pub. Missing British Pubs...
ReplyDeleteTwo more Brit sciencebloggers:
ReplyDeletehttp://scienceblogs.com/scientificactivist/
http://www.drpetra.co.uk/blog/
Hey, the Jinx worked, didn't it?
ReplyDelete