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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: 14633, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Time travel book to be made into a film by Spike Lee

ronmallett.jpg Ron Mallett is determined to invent a time machine Some time ago during the research for my book 'Dr Midas and the Pirates' I watched a fascinating documentary about whether time travel would ever be possible. One of the people interviewed was Ronald Mallett a scientist hooked on trying to create a real-life time machine after reading a comic book version of the HG Wells book 'The Time Machine.' Ronald Mallett also had a very personal reason for wanting to invent a time machine - so he could travel back in time to spend time with his father who died when he was a boy. Ronald is convinced time travel will be possible - but only ahead in time beyond the point when the machine is created. Of course in my book Dr Midas travels to the past but I have used some of the same rules in my explanation as to how he can do it. lee_spike.jpg Director Spike Lee Now news has broken that Spike Lee will co-write and direct an adaptation of Ronald Mallett’s memoir Time Traveler: A Scientist’s Personal Mission to Make Time Travel a Reality. Spike Lee describes Time Traveler as a “fantastic story on many levels (and) also a father and son saga of loss and love.” The memoir - co-written by best-selling author Bruce Henderson - tells a story of Ronald Mallett’s rise from poverty to becoming a distinguished academic, one of the first African Americans to earn a Ph.D in theoretical physics. Now a physics professor he is also raising funding for his Space-time Twisting by Light project pictured below. timetravelconcept.jpg Now I wonder if I can convince a film director to adapt my time travel book? ;) * Ronald Mallett's website is at http://www.physics.uconn.edu/~mallett/main/main.htm

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2. Tasmanian tigers

tasmanian%20tigers.jpg Some of the last known Tasmanian Tigers My Dr Midas books often include endangered or extinct animal characters, so I was very interested to hear about a new DNA experiment involving the Tasmanian Tiger. I wish there was a way to bring this and other animals back to life - with a time machine perhaps (lol) - but at least this new study gives an insight into their make-up. Australian scientists have taken genetic material from a 100-year-old museum specimen and put it into a mouse embryo to see how it works. Dr Andrew Pask, of the Department of Zoology, said it was the first time that DNA from an extinct species had been used to carry out a function in a living organism. "As more and more species of animals become extinct, we are continuing to lose critical knowledge of gene function and its potential," he said. "This research was developed to examine extinct gene function in a whole organism." The Tasmanian Tiger (Thylacine) was hunted to extinction in the wild at the start of the last century with the last known Hobart Zoo in 1936, but several museums around the world still hold tissue samples preserved in alcohol. The University of Melbourne team extracted DNA from some of these specimens, and injected a gene involved in cartilage formation into developing mouse embryos. Blue dye then showed were the DNA was working. Prof Rawson, is involved in the Frozen Ark, a global project to preserve genetic information from threatened species. Some scientists hope mammoths will be next to be examined. Prof Rawson said: "To go back to animals and plants that went extinct thousands of years ago, there is less chance to get a sizeable portion of DNA to unravel it," he explained. "But modern techniques are developing all the time - we can now get information from material we once thought was impossible." sidestep_.jpg Guess what I'm reading now Reading about the Tasmanian Tiger has also prompted me to read a book that's been on my shelf a while. 'Stripes of the Sidestep Wolf' by Australian Sonya Hartnett. The story follows Satchel O'Rye and Chelsea Piper, who find their own survival becomes inextricably intwined with that of an animal they believe to be the last-ever Tasmanian Tiger. Sonya was the Christopher Paolini (teenage author of Eragon) of her day, she wrote her first book, Trouble All the Way, at thirteen and it was published when she was just fifteen. She has written a number of books for young adults since then and has won many awards including the prestigious Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award.

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