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Superman's "S" stands for sociology

An episode of the Specimen the Sociologist podcast, hosted by Jessamyn Reichmann, titled "Superman's "S" stands for sociology" was published on November 19, 2024 and runs 22 minutes.

November 19, 2024 ·22m · Specimen the Sociologist

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Tune into the sequel of our trailer “It’s a Bird … It’s a plane … It’s Specimen the Sociologist." Learn where our host, Jessamyn Reichmann, has been over the past few months. In this episode, she will explain the story of how this podcast was created out of her personal process of healing and how science became a tool for her to stabilize her social interactions.  Put your capes on and get ready to fly with this next episode! Additional resources: https://linktr.ee/specimenthesociologist

Tune into the sequel of our trailer “It’s a Bird … It’s a plane … It’s Specimen the Sociologist." Learn where our host, Jessamyn Reichmann, has been over the past few months. In this episode, she will explain the story of how this podcast was created out of her personal process of healing and how science became a tool for her to stabilize her social interactions. 


Put your capes on and get ready to fly with this next episode!


Additional resources: https://linktr.ee/specimenthesociologist


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Specimen Stories Klara Norden Have you ever wondered what secrets lurk in the basement of a natural history museum? Museums around the world are the keepers of vast natural history collections with millions of specimens, ranging from fish in jars to dinosaur fossils. Most of the specimen are not on display, but are an invaluable resource for researchers. But what exactly can we learn from natural history collections? What stories do the specimens tell us? In this podcast, I talk to the people working in collections, and explore some of the amazing and surprising science they discovered. The Andes and The Amazon James Orton This book, with the subtitle "Across the Continent of South America" describes the scientific expedion of 1867 to the equatorial Andes and the Amazon. The route was from Guayaquil to Quito, over the Cordillera, through the forest to Napo, and, finally, on the Rio Napo to Pebas on the Maranon. Besides this record, the expedition - under the auspices of the Smithsonian Institute - collected samples of rocks and plants, and numerous specimen of animals. The scientists also compiled a vocabulary of local languages and produced a new map of equatorial America. James Orton (1830 - 1877) was Professor in Natural History in Vassar College, and corresponding member of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. (Summary by Availle, from the Preface) MBAH PRIMBON Radio One What is Lorem Ipsum?Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry's standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book. It has survived not only five centuries, but also the leap into electronic typesetting, remaining essentially unchanged. It was popularised in the 1960s with the release of Letraset sheets containing Lorem Ipsum passages, and more recently with desktop publishing software like Aldus PageMaker including versions of Lorem Ipsum. Captain Salt in Oz (Version 2) by Ruth Plumly Thompson (1891 - 1976) LibriVox A voyage on the famous Nonestic Ocean! What could be more thrilling than that? We—many of us—have taken trips on the prosaic Atlantic or even Pacific, but have we found a SEA FOREST with flying fish and swimming birds? Have we been pursued by a real SEA SERPENT, or had our ship transfixed by the immense ivory tusk of a NARWHAL? Have we come upon the glittering island of PEAKENSPIRE, or made friends with a charming talking hippopotamus?Yet all these things and more befall Captain Salt, one time Pirate and now Royal Explorer of Oz, and his merry crew. They come back with their hold bursting with unique and fascinating specimens, with their chart crowded with new islands, claimed for Ozma, and drawn so realistically by the delightful little boy Tandy, Cabin Boy and Artist of the Expedition.
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