Only doing this because NOLASlate tagged me.  She’s cool and I wish I’m half as gutsy and with it when I’m her age.  (And because half the NOLA blogosphere has been in on the action and, if they jump out a window, I probably will, too.)

Here are the rules:

1. Link to the person who tagged you.
2. Post the rules on your blog.
3. Write six random things about yourself.
4. Tag six people at the end of your post and link to them.
5. Let each person know they’ve been tagged and leave a comment on their blog.
6. Let the tagger know when your entry is up.

Six “random” things about me, and they probably will be random given the reaction of many to my words is “Where did that come from?”:

1. The water faucet has to run while I’m brushing my teeth.  It’s terribly wasteful and drastic cutback measures are in place.

2. I speak Tamil fluently and read it well enough, but worry what practical use it has other than to communicate with my family in Tinglish and decipher the occasional hymn or recipe.  Seriously, have you ever heard of an Olympic Tamil interpreter or UN Tamil translator?

3. Monkeys and goats make me laugh.  In fact, the mere mention of the word “goat” cracks me up.   I’ve replaced this blog’s banner with one that includes a Goat Crossing sign.  Come to think of it, “From Kuwait To Katrina And Beyond” should just read “Goat Rodeo” because if my life can be summed up in two words, them’s it.

4. When in high school and college, I knew Mozart’s discography down to the Kochel number.  Grad school fried my brain.

5. D wants me to start playing piano again.  It’s a great idea and, while at it, I should take accordion lessons.  Accordionists, especially of the polka genre, please take heart that I appreciate you.

6. While I wear it quite often, I really haven’t got eye makeup down.  Sometimes, practice does not make perfect.

About this whole “tag 6 others, let each know they’ve been tagged and leave a comment on their blog” thing, that’s way too much work and I don’t know who reads this blog any more.  So, you’re all it.  Spew randomly and prosper.

Let me get this straight. Nevada doesn’t have enough water. This is why people flock there to build palacial abodes, hence altering the natural landscape and creating more environmental stress adjacent to a manmade reservoir. Got it. It is quite a view, though.

Heading To Lake Mead

My turkey is a punk rocker.

The Beeb has a pretty good roundup of the attacks still in progress in Mumbai.  That the Indian government knew of this threat but did not take it seriously is criminal.  This cycle of stupidity – India blames and hurls verbal barbs at Pakistan, no real investigation of the terrorist act is conducted, Indians burn Pakistani officials in effigy, innocent Muslims are beaten or killed and their homes burned, return to business as usual, next terror attack – has to stop.  And while the targeting of Indian Muslims who have nothing to do with anything is reprehensible, it behooves Indian Muslim leaders to openly condemn Islamic-fundamentalist attacks on Indian cities and request them to stop in the name of all that is right and holy. Country before ideology.

Today, I give thanks for being safe at home with D and not having to travel anywhere.  This song goes out to the world. Happy Thanksgiving, y’all.

All hell is breaking loose in Mumbai as a result of serial bomb blasts, shootings and now the taking of hostages.  80 are now dead and hundreds injured.  The word on the street is that the terrorists are targeting those with American and British passports and have taken many hostage inside hotels in the ritzier southern part of Bombay.  As of this writing, two terrorists are confirmed dead and seven in police custody, but it is still unknown whether the terrorists are homegrown or foreign.  (If you’re up to looking at it, here is a picture of one of the terrorists.)  Sadly, the chief of the State of Maharashtra Anti-Terrorism Squad, Hemant Karkare, was killed along with two other senior officers.

As usual, mainstream media is useless and slow in its updates.  I’ve been following the #mumbai Twitter feed and Mahalo is doing a great job rounding up all the news.  Blogger Vinu is on the scene and is uploading many of his pictures to Flickr.  Gauravonomics has an excellent post up about the power of real-time citizen journalism during these attacks; he has a more extensive set of links.  Here is an annotated Google map of Mumbai attack locations.  Although a friend in Mumbai says the CNN-IBN and NDTV coverage are pretty restrained, here are links: CNN-IBN and NDTV

Twitter user yelvington just said, “Fascinating. CNN is filling airtime; #mumbai channel is full of tidbits posted by witnesses.”  Another chided India’s NDTV for showing footage from one part of the city and referring to it as another (New Orleanians, remember when FOXCNNMSNBC did this during Katrina and Gustav?  It’s not just us.)

This is especially painful right now because my parents are in India, even if in Chennai many hundreds of miles away.  We have friends in Mumbai, friends who are getting ready to travel there and D, my parents and I are planning to visit northern and northwestern India next year.  Only a little while ago, Jaipur, Delhi and Bangalore were hit.  The scariest part is not knowing what’s next, where, by whom and why.  All those people hurt by people who want to hurt …

The Indian army is finally moving in.  I often refer to the Indian government and army as approximately as useful as New Orleans city government or our spineless Democrats, but Mumbai can now use all the help it gets.

Please hope and pray for India.

For even rocks evolve.

… Wouter Bleeker, an Ottawa-based researcher with the Geological Survey of Canada, is one of eight members of an international team whose theory of “mineral evolution” – the idea that many of the Earth’s rocks are dynamic “species” which emerged and transformed over time, largely in concert with living things – is generating a major buzz in the global scientific community since its publication last week in a U.S. journal.

“The key message,” Bleeker told Canwest News Service, “is how closely intertwined the mineral world is with life and biology.” He said human teeth – with their key ingredient of apatite – are vivid reminders that the “seemingly static, inorganic” physical Earth should be viewed more like a “living organism” underpinning the biosphere.

Makes sense.  As the world’s chemical components and physical processes (and biochemical reactions at the surface) change, so would the availability of minerals and subsequently the mineral composition of sediment and rocks.  Earth scientists and laypeople  usually think of geology and mineralogy influencing life on earth from the very beginning, but not of life guiding the generation of minerals and rocks.  Even when I was out in the Nevadan desert a few weeks ago, I looked for plants that grow on soils generated by certain rocks to help me differentiate strata.  Little did I think of those plants and that how they change affects a mineral’s composition.  So, what stands out most is the following (emphasis mine):

… Among the best known examples of how living things transform the Earth’s rock layers is limestone, which is accumulated from the dissolved shells of tiny marine creatures. But the new study provides the first comprehensive analysis of the multitude of rock-life interactions and documents how mineral evolution unfolded rapidly as life took hold early in the planet’s history.

“Biochemical processes may thus be responsible, either directly or indirectly, for most of the Earth’s 4,300 known mineral species,” the study states.

… “For at least 2.5 billion years, and possibly since the emergence of life, Earth’s mineralogy has evolved in parallel with biology,” Hazen added. “One implication of this finding is that remote observations of the mineralogy of other moons and planets may provide crucial evidence for biological influences beyond Earth.”

This is so cool!  The next time I’m out in the field, I will have to pay attention to the plants out there instead of accusing them of getting between me and the outcrop.

Ferns On Quartzite At Rock Springs Quarry

Am I the only one who thinks a big enough deal is not being made in American media about New Orleans Police Chief Warren Riley’s irresponsible words and actions and JEEZUS CHRIST CHENEY AND GONZALES HAVE BEEN INDICTED (and I just found out on a Daily Show rerun)??!?!  When I asked him if what our former leaders (into the Pit Of Doom) are accused of qualifies as RICO, D said, “No, it’s Suave.”  I know, I married the man.