I didn't write a Sunday Stroll yesterday, because I spent it doing spring cleaning. (Wheee! Giving away baby toys to a preschool yard sale!) I may write something late, because I heard a hummingbird on Saturday.
So: making tag clouds for papers must be a meme now, because Brian, Lab Lemming, Maria, and ReBecca have all done it. So here's Hannula et al, 2000:
al along andalusite around biotite chlorite complex conditions contact deformation dominant east et fault fig foliation formation garnet generally grade growth however intrusion lineation metamorphic migmatite mineral monroe mountain movement muscovite northeastern occurred parallel peak pluton porphyroblasts pressure pseudomorphs rocks s2 s3 samples sillimanite staurolite suggest vermont victory west zone
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It passes the suck-up test, because none of my committee members ever worked in this area (or even in this mountain range), and all my co-authors were undergrads. It fails the waffle words test, though: "generally" and "suggest" are both in there. (I'll let "dominant" slide, because I was talking about rocks with multiple foliations, so it's a legitimate term in this case.
Here's Hannula (um... 2002? 2003?), from the Journal of Geoscience Ed:
32nd asked baker based bridge concepts course different distance enjoyed expect explicitly groundwater however hypotheses hypothesis involved labs lane learned least list making maps method models observations projects pumping question research results revised river rock scientific semester smelter students test think tombstones top topographic trimble types understanding used water weathering
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This one included text from a number of labs, so it's a bit strange. (32nd is a street number used for reference in a topo maps lab.)
3 comments:
first label cloud appears to be high T, low P with some retrograde metamorphism.
Gotta love Al2SiO5.
I wish I had an electronic copy of the papers that came out of my dissertation, just so I could demonstrate that I've done high-pressure stuff, too.
The hummingbirds have returned to my elevation, too (~7000 ft, to be 7800 ft in August, but lower latitude). I gladly hung the feeders since I have no space for gardening now and I like my 4-year old to see the hummers and the orioles. Fun!
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