Image of the sealed Kola borehole

The sealed and abandoned Kola Superdeep Borehole in 2012 • Photo by Rakot13 (CC BY SA 3.0)

Image of R136

R136 in the Tarantula Nebula • By NASA, ESA, F. Paresce, R. O'Connell (Public Domain)

Image of gall on oak leaf

Gall on oak leaf • Photo by Berthold Werner (CC BY SA 3.0)

Woodcut of God creating the universe

Woodcut by Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld (Public Domain)

Photo of magpie

Eurasian Magpie • Photo by Airwolfhound (CC BY SA 2.0)

Wildlife sparse in Ireland

For sev­er­al years now, cor­re­spon­dents to the let­ters columns of the Irish Times have heat­ed­ly debat­ed the mer­its — or lack of them — of mag­pies. The mag­pie is a large black-and-white bird that first appeared in Ire­land in the 17th Cen­tu­ry and is now pro­lif­er­at­ing in every part of the country.

Photo of European Starling

Photo by Mathias Appel (Public Domain)

Photo of Irish coast

Photo by Dave Herring on Unsplash

Image of glacial striations

Glacial scratches • Photo by Amezcackle (Public Domain)

Ice works the land

Set a geol­o­gist down any­where in New Eng­land and some­where near­by he will show you the work of ice. Eigh­teen thou­sand years ago all of New Eng­land lay beneath a half-mile-thick sheet of ice, part of a con­ti­nent-span­ning glac­i­er that reached from the deeply indent­ed coast of the Pacif­ic North­west to the gen­tly slop­ing con­ti­nen­tal shelf of New England.

Image of White Lady's-slipper

White lady's-slipper • Photo by Dr. Thomas G. Barnes / USFWS (Public Domain)

Delicate balance makes our universe

The nat­u­ral­ist John Muir said the two great­est expe­ri­ences of his life were camp­ing with Ralph Wal­do Emer­son at Yosemite and find­ing the rare orchid calyp­so bloom­ing alone in a Cana­di­an swamp. Last spring I found a wild orchid as excep­tion­al as a night with Emer­son: a white lady-slip­per, soli­tary, snow-pure, alone in a pine woods with 10,000 of its pink cousins. My Peter­son wild­flower guide admits the white vari­ant of the lady-slip­per and calls it rare and local. Rare and local, indeed! In my part of New Eng­land I have nev­er seen another.

Photo of an Annular eclipse

An annular eclipse • Photo by Kevin Baird (CC BY SA 3.0)