April 4 - First Paleontological Lecture!

Posted on April 4, 2017

Even during ancient times, humans saw signs of much-more-ancient creatures that had once lived, but no longer existed.


Just as we do, ancient peoples once in a while found old fossilized bones or other fossils that would made them wonder about creatures who lived long, long ago. Finding a skull that looked like no living creature must have been fascinating to the ancients. We think that myths of cyclops and dragons, among other creatures, were influenced by these rare finds.

It wasn't until Georges Cuvier started to compare the bones and body structures of living creatures to those of fossils that the scientific study of ancient lifeforms began.

This branch of science is called paleontology, because paleo- means "old" or "ancient." (You probably already know that the -logy part of the word basically means "study of.")

Of course, we now call Cuvier the "Father of Paleontology."

(By the way, fossils don't include JUST bones. Any trace of a long-ago creature/organism can be a fossil - tracks or footprints, leaf impressions, seashells, petrified wood, fossilized nests, insects preserved in amber, fossilized teeth and eggs and bones and claws - even fossilized poop! - all are considered fossils.)



The comparison of organisms' body parts is called comparative anatomy, and before Cuvier comparative anatomy only dealt with modern creatures. Based on these comparisons, animals (and plants and other organisms) had, in the early 1700s, been grouped into different species, families, classes, and phyla. This classification system is called Linnaean taxonomy (because the basic structure and many of the classifications were created by a scientist named Carl Linnaeus). 

Starting in the late 1700s, Cuvier expanded Linnaean taxonomy to include extinct creatures that had left behind fossils. 

And on this date in 1796, Cuvier delivered the first lecture on his new science!





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Sonia Kovalevsky Mathematics High School Day (held on different dates by different institutions)




















Anniversary of the knighthood of Francis Drake







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April 3 – First Flight Over Mount Everest

Posted on April 3, 2017

Do you know what the highest mountain in the world is?

Now, picture flying over it in the early 1900s. In one of these:



The Scottish nobleman named Douglas Douglas-Hamilton (who eventually became the 14th Duke of Hamilton, the Keeper of Holyroodhouse, and the 11th Duke of Brandon) led the kind of life in which you get the best schooling, you earn "a Blue" in boxing as well as the Scottish Amateur Middleweight title, you get to be a Member of Parliament without having to get elected, and you are appointed honorary colonel of a battalion of your nation's army.

And you have a lot of names! Not only did this particular nobleman have two "Douglas"s in his name, and not only did he become "Duke of" two different titles and "Keeper of" one, before he became the Duke, he was called Marquess of Douglas and Clydesdale, and he was called Lord Clydesdale.

But Hamilton didn't just sit down and enjoy a cushy life. He went to work athis family's mine, for a while, joining a Trades Union and calling himself "Mr. Hamilton," so he would be able to experience the sort of life his family's employees experience.  Also, he learned to fly airplanes when they were still pretty new-fangled, and he joined the world's first Air Force -  the United Kingdom's Royal Air Force in the 1920s. (Remember, the Wright Brothers famously flew the first controlled, powered flights in late 1903; the RAF was founded in 1918, and Hamilton got his first RAF commission in 1927.

This isn't Hamilton, or his family's
 mines. But it is a Scottish miner
 from around that time.
When Hamilton was just 28 years old, he became the youngest squadron leader of his day.

So perhaps it is not too surprising that Hamilton was bold enough to participate in the Houston-Mount Everest Flight Expedition. (It's called the Houston Expedition because it was sponsored by Lucy, Lady Houston. In other words, she paid the bills.)

This 1933 expedition required flying higher than any before. Hamilton (Lord Clydesdale) was chief pilot in the first flight over Mount Everest, the highest mountain in the world, and a fellow named D. F. McIntyre was the co-pilot. It was so extremely difficult to fly in such heights - with such little oxygen in the atmosphere - that people realized that they needed to invent pressurized cabins for airplanes.

Hamilton was decorated with the Air Force Cross for this feat. He was considered a genuine hero.

Here are some of the scenes that Hamilton must have seen during his flight:






April 2 – Happy Birthday, Francisco Balagtas!

Posted on April 2, 2017



One of the Philippine's greatest poets and authors was born on this date in 1788.

He was named Francisco Balagtas y de la Cruz - because his dad's family name was Balagtas, and his mom's family name was de la Cruz.

However, in 1849, the Spanish general who served as Governor-General of the Philippine colony mandated that all Filipino people change their "native" family names and adopt one of the standard Spanish surnames. So Balagtas officially changed his name to Baltazar.

At that time, authors and writers - even Filipino ones - wrote in Spanish rather than in Tagalog (aka the Filipino language). But Balagtas wrote in Tagalog. That is why he is sometimes known as "Father of Tagalog Literature."

He has also been called the "Filipino Shakespeare."

Balagtas wrote poetry, plays, and short stories.

A school, a plaza, a park, a theater, and the town where he was born are all named after him - using his original name of Balagtas. Streets are named after some of the characters in his poems. Even the word for "debate in extemporaneous verse" is named after him!

Consider how important it is to a people to have educated, talented people writing and speaking in their own native language, rather than in whatever language the most powerful folks are...



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April 1 – Reading Is Funny Day

Posted on April 1, 2017

In honor of April Fool's Day (see "Also on this date," below), today's the day to delve into funny books!

There are funny poetry books...




...funny joke and riddle books...




...funny chapter books...




...funny picture books...




...and even funny non-fiction books!





Also on this date: 


Greek Cypriot Day in Cyprus