Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts

Monday, June 16, 2008

CASE-IPY wake-up poll

As you can see from the state of health information for the CASE-IPY stations, the last station to fall asleep for the winter was CASE03 on April 18th. Our group at the lab has opened a pseudo-spread-bet on its wake-up date (pseudo, as in no money changes hands).

You too can participate in the betting using this online poll. The poll is open starting today and will run until July 30th (so you have six weeks to vote). I shall publish the poll results sometime in August, and as soon as the stations actually wake up, we shall have our winners.

Best of luck to all those who decide to play!




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Keep up to date with the latest developments at http://sismordia.blogspot.com

Monday, June 9, 2008

One year of blogging

Sismordia is one year old today. I shall mark the anniversary with a look back at my original hopes for the blog and how things have evolved over the past year.

In my very first post Starting out I wrote:

The Concordia Seismic Experiment - as we have lovingly named it - has gone from residing somewhere in my brain, to being present also in my gut. It's a daunting thing, especially for me, as this will be both my first complete seismic experiment, and my visit to Antarctica.

I've set up this blog partly in order to relieve some of the tension that's building up as we prepare to make this experiment a reality, but also to share the experience with as many people as possible. I hope to convince some of my colleagues working with me on the experiment to participate in writing the blog, and I hope to entice you all to read it and send in your comments.
So my stated goals were
  1. to share the experience of working in Antarctica;
  2. to elicit the participation of my colleagues;
  3. to entice you all to read my blog and send in comments.
Of these three goals, the first was for me the most important one, and I believe I have reached it. Blogging from the field in Antarctica was a great experience, and led to me compiling a Blog book about the campaign. I consider this document my greatest single blogging achievement.

In the second goal, I failed most miserably: Sismordia is still essentially a one-woman blog. My colleague JJL provided much needed copy-editing of the posts I emailed in from Concordia, but declined to write for Sismordia himself. As for those colleagues that have participated in the Antarctic seismology project (and continue to participate, for the project will live a few years yet), my greatest thanks go to JY.

My third goal was to be read. I was skeptical at first about the interest that a blog such as Sismordia could elicit in the blogging world. The subject matter is somewhat arcane, I tend not to deal in political controversy, and have not spent much effort in publicizing the blog.

Looking back over the statistics of the past year from Google Analytics, my 170 blog posts have received just over 5000 visits from about 3700 unique visitors who viewed a total of over 8600 pages. The graph below shows the number of visits per week over the past year. The peak in December-January corresponds to my Concordia field trip, which seems to have been the most successful time for Sismordia.



A few months after I started the blog, I linked my RSS feed through Feedburner. The number of subscriptions to my feed has risen gradually over the past year, and is now oscillating around 40.



So what can be said to sum all this up? Well for starters, I am still blogging, so the experience cannot have been too traumatic! As for the numbers, they are not Earth shattering, but are respectable all the same. I think I shall give my self a pat on the back as I settle into my second year of blogging.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Blogging hiatus is over

Apologies to my regular readers for the prolonged blogging hiatus. I have been somewhat absent from the whole blogging world for the past couple of months. It proved to be too difficult to blog from my last field-trip, and I have been working hard on a paper since getting back last month (the paper was submitted a few days ago, details soon).

In the meantime, a lot has been going on regarding CASE-IPY and other seismology at Concordia:

  • The stations we installed during the last Antarctic field trip (CASE01, CASE02, CASE03) have now all gone to sleep for the duration of the Antarctic winter. The updated state of health plot for the stations shows that the longest running station CASE03 went into hibernation on April 18th. Bets are open as to when the first station will awaken in the spring.
  • The permanent station CCD is running nicely, with both the heated and the unheated seismometers performing well. You can look up the state of health for the station, as well as journal plots for the data and snapshots of events (including the recent M7.9 Sichuan earthquake) on the Concordia Seismology website.
  • We are planning both the 2008-2009 and the 2009-2010 summer campaigns at Concordia. The first campaign will be dedicated to recovering the full data from the CASE prototype stations, re-installing these prototypes for a second year of measurement, and upgrading the permanent station (CCD). We hope to stay longer than two weeks at Concordia this time, which should give us enough time to complete the essentials of the campaign and run a number of extra tests. The 2009-2010 campaign will be dedicated to installing 7 new autonomous seismic stations between Concordia and Vostok. Given the logistical constraints on the transport of all the material required for this deployment, we are building the stations this year. They will be shipped to Antarctica in the fall, will over-winter at Dumont d'Urville station, and will travel up to Concordia on the first land transport of the 2009-2010 season.
All in all, plenty to keep me busy and out of mischief! Now that my work load has simmered down to manageable proportions again (!), you can expect to see more of me in the blogging arena, and specifically many more Sismordia posts.


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Keep up to date with the latest developments at http://sismordia.blogspot.com

Thursday, March 27, 2008

I've been blogged...

It seems I have been found out...

I received an email today from one of the editors at Blogged.com, an outfit that rates and categorizes blogs. They had found my blog and rated it, giving me an 8 out of 10... for whatever that's worth.

Here is some blurb from their "About us" page:

Blogged.com is all about blog discovery. It's a place for readers to discover interesting blogs and for authors to discover who their readers are. [...]
Our blogs are reviewed, rated, and categorized by our editors, so you won't have to experience the frustration of filtering through blogs that are either spam, outdated, or irrelevant. You'll be able to find quality blogs that you would have unlikely found through a traditional blog search.
And here is the pretty widget they gave me to put on my blog: Sismordia -  Seismology at Concordia at Blogged

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

7 things you didn't know about me

Oh dear, I just got tagged! There is a meme going round the Geo-Blogosphere, and I just got hit with it. What is a meme, you ask?

In the context of web logs / 'blogs / blogging and other kinds of personal web sites it's some kind of list of questions that you saw somewhere else and you decided to answer the questions. [The Daily Meme]
Chris over at Highly Allochthonous answered the current meme (which is to list seven things about one's self), and then tagged me to do the same. I've never played these kinds of games before, and I will probably not be able to play while I'm away, so here goes:

(1) Despite loving sailboats and sailing, I get quite seasick, especially when I'm stuck below deck. This does not bode well for the sea crossing to Antarctica.

(2) I decided to do a PhD in Earth Sciences after tagging onto a field trip to Greece. Before then, I was set on a career in Radio Astronomy. From the Heavens to the solid Earth in some sense.

(3) I hate the cold!

(4) As an undergraduate, I learned to fly gliders, though I would probably be incapable of doing so now.

(5) On my reading list for Antarctica: Simon Winchester (in Italian), Garcia Marquez (in French) and Jared Diamond (in English). I'm not doing too well on the reading in original language score (one out of three).

(6) One winter, instead of building a snowman, some friends and I built a snow Loch Ness monster. After that, I could never go back to snowmen, too boring!

(7) Sismordia isn't my first attempt at blogging, but it's the best yet.


OK, I'm done! (I won't be tagging anyone else with this meme - viral blogging can only go so far before it runs out of steam).

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Keep up to date with the latest developments at http://sismordia.blogspot.com