
Episode 3 - “Computers don’t like -20 degree temperatures” with Nick Holschuh
02/06/15 • 54 min
Feedback
- We received an article from listener Hannah about using tech in education. Thanks Hannah!
Interview with Nick Holschuh
Nick is a graduate student at Penn State. He tells us about his field experience, getting to Antarctica, and dealing with equipment malfunction in the field!
Fun Paper Friday
- Dread Risk, September 11, and Fatal Traffic Accidents
- Economic theory is built on the idea that humans, in aggregate, behave rationally. But in individual instances, under specific conditions, we find that humans rarely exhibit rationality, and so the study of these individual instances of decision-making gave birth to its own field (Behavioral Economics). It is super interesting, and is relevant to the world of science policy and public education. Here’s a crazy example of what we, as humans, do, when we fail to be rational.
Contact us:
Show - www.dontpanicgeocast.com - @dontpanicgeo - [email protected]
John Leeman - www.johnrleeman.com - @geo_leeman
Shannon Dulin - @ShannonDulin
Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of our employers or funding agencies.
Feedback
- We received an article from listener Hannah about using tech in education. Thanks Hannah!
Interview with Nick Holschuh
Nick is a graduate student at Penn State. He tells us about his field experience, getting to Antarctica, and dealing with equipment malfunction in the field!
Fun Paper Friday
- Dread Risk, September 11, and Fatal Traffic Accidents
- Economic theory is built on the idea that humans, in aggregate, behave rationally. But in individual instances, under specific conditions, we find that humans rarely exhibit rationality, and so the study of these individual instances of decision-making gave birth to its own field (Behavioral Economics). It is super interesting, and is relevant to the world of science policy and public education. Here’s a crazy example of what we, as humans, do, when we fail to be rational.
Contact us:
Show - www.dontpanicgeocast.com - @dontpanicgeo - [email protected]
John Leeman - www.johnrleeman.com - @geo_leeman
Shannon Dulin - @ShannonDulin
Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of our employers or funding agencies.
Previous Episode

Episode 2 - If you’re doing geology in pen, you’re just not doing geology right
This week we discuss field tools - everything from clothing to pens and notebooks! Shannon panics due to Earth’s close encounter with an asteroid and John talks about the smell after rainstorms. We want to hear your feedback!
- John has been playing more with radar during the northeast blizzard.
- Shannon has been keeping an eye on asteroid 2004 BL86 as it passed near the Earth Monday. There are already a lot of neat radar images coming from this event.
- Shannon is also planning her first class field trip for a field methods class.
Field Packs
- People use everything, backpacks, fanny packs, etc.
- John has a holster thing like SWAT teams. Looks a little like a weapon holster though, so be careful. (He also can’t find anyone that still sells them.)
- Shannon uses a wait-pack.
- John and Shannon use stretchy belts to hold their hammers.
- Lots of folks use their hammer as a ruler in the field.
Clipboards
- John has a clipboard with storage under it. The black ones gets really hot in the sun though.
- Shannon uses a taped together fiber-board/lexan map board. It’s large!
Field Clothing
- Clothing tech revolutionized geology!
- Drilling with quick-dry pants vs. carrying rainsuits that you sweat in anyway.
- All drab colors! Consider wearing a safety vest!
- Hat suggestions? Maybe we should go back to full academic dress?
- Polarized sunglasses are a must. Just beware that they can alter the color of things!
Field Notebooks
- Traditional Write-in-the-Rain/Field books. Shannon doesn’t like these because of pencil writing quality.
- Extras in the back of different series of notebooks can be problematic
- Notebook closures: Binder clip, rubberband, or elastic over notebook
- If you’re really into this stuff, you would probably like the Pen Addict Podcast.
- Do you attach your pen/pencil to your field book?
- Pocket protectors, John has the stealth.
Writing Instruments
- 0.5 mm pencils for writing in the field books
- For sketching/musing Palomino Blackwing 602
- Shannon misses the Zebra301 ultra
Compasses/Hand-lenses
- Bruntons are the standard, with really no substitue
- Handlens are now available with led lights (and uv if you’re that into it)
- iPads vs. regular topo map concerns
- Battery life
- Weather resistance
- Overheating
- GPS (integrated or separate)
- Does it take too much away from basic navigation skill development?
Fun Paper Friday
- “Aerosol generation by raindrop impact on soil” Nature Communications, Jan 2015
- There is great high speed video to go with the paper.
- Carl Sagan did his own version of outside of field reading! See his notes.
- A good fiction work to start with is “The Martian”
Contact us:
Show - www.dontpanicgeocast.com - @dontpanicgeo - [email protected]
John Leeman - www.johnrleeman.com - @geo_leeman
Shannon Dulin - @ShannonDulin
Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of our employers or funding agencies.
Next Episode

Episode 4 - "Is that cumulonimbus cloud storage?" Data Backups
- Technicians at the KGRK weather radar encountered a rattlesnake during an upgrade this week. The official NWS statement says “DUE TO COMPLICATIONS INVOLVING A RATTLESNAKE DURING TODAYS UPGRADE...THE KGRK RADAR WILL REAMIN DOWN THROUGH THE OVERNIGHT HOURS AND POSSIBLY INTO WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON.”
Why should you backup?
- Not lose your data
- Not waste money, effort
- Legal obligation (taxes, grant data policy, etc)
What makes a good backup?
- Local and offsite
- Multiple backups
- Harward and software independence
- Copies of raw and processed data (if possible)
- Archivable formats
- Incremental snapshots and clones
It’s not okay to “backup” versions of files like this!
Backup Solutions
- Backblaze (cloud, $50/yr) - This is what John uses for one of his backups
- Carbonite (cloud, $varies) - Not carbon copy cloner as said in the show
- Time Machine for Mac - Another backup method John uses
- Super Duper (Mirroring)
- Carbon Copy Cloner (bootable backups)
Fun Paper Friday
- The Earth’s core is complex with possible tectonics happening at the inner core interface.
- Also, the inner core has been divided into two regions with the names: outer-inner core and inner-inner core.
- Geophysics: Tectonics in the Earth’s core (Olson, 2009)
- Equatorial anisotropy in the inner part of Earth’s inner core from autocorrelation of earthquake coda (Wang et al)
Contact us:
Show - www.dontpanicgeocast.com - @dontpanicgeo - [email protected]
John Leeman - www.johnrleeman.com - @geo_leeman
Shannon Dulin - @ShannonDulin
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