Between a Rock and a Hard Place

Between a Rock and a Hard Place

Do we need to suffer to succeed?

KT Cooper is a PhD student in the School of Earth Sciences at the University of Bristol. A carbonate geochemist by training, she has just returned from a three-month secondment to Houston, Texas, USA working with Exxon Mobil.

Last week the newly formed Bristol Doctoral College hosted a postgraduate seminar entitled “Surviving the stress of a PhD” by James Hayton, PhD.  My initial thoughts on attending a talk such as this were that it might be a little patronising (no one wants to hear about how someone’s PhD experience was a walk in the park) and would incorporate a re-hash of project management techniques such as Gantt charts, to-do lists and the like.

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Science Snap (#16): Primary colours at Kawah Ijen

Mel Auker is an Earth Sciences PhD student in the School of Earth Sciences at the University of Bristol. A mathematician by trade, Mel’s PhD uses numerical approaches to better understand past, present, and future global volcanic hazard and risk.

Kawah Ijen volcano forms part of the Ijen volcano complex situated at the eastern end of Java, Indonesia. Kawah Ijen is topped by a 1 kilometre-wide, 200 metre-deep, crater lake. The lake is bright turquoise in colour, and as well as being incredibly photogenic, is one of the most highly acidic lakes in the world and the site of a huge sulphur mining operation.

Kawah Ijen

The summit of Kawah Ijen complete with acidic crater lake and sulphurous fumeroles. Photo credit: Richard Arculus

The Boston Globe has featured Kawah Ijen and its sulphur mine in two of its “The Big Picture: News stories in photographs” in recent years. The articles and accompanying stunning photographs can be found here and here.

The images depict the sulphur in its various, colourful states. Firstly, red, liquid sulphur condenses in stone or ceramic pipes that have been constructed to cap the volcano’s gas-emitting fumaroles. As this sulphur cools, it moves down the pipes and condenses to form yellow deposits. It is these solid deposits that the miners extract and carry in loads of up to 70kg to the weighing station, dubbed “Camp Sulfutara”. To enable them to earn more money, many miners work at night, illuminating the volcano by torch light. As the torches drip, they ignite the sulphur and it burns bright blue – the last of the primary colour trio.

Top ten free apps & websites to make writing your PhD easier

‘Tis the season of thesis writing! Well, in my office of fourth years (!) at least. By this stage of PhD life, most of us have our own ‘toolkit’ of computer applications that we’ve settled upon to complete the task, but in the first year or two, it’s a case of trying lots of options and finding the one that works best for your PhD and style of working.

Here, I’ve listed my top ten freely downloadable computer apps and accessible websites that have proved invaluable so far. I should mention that although I use a Mac, almost everything listed below has an equally useful Windows version (some entries are specific to petrology, so if you’re a non-geology PhD student, you can probably skip those bits…).

Click on the links below to go to each section

1) LaTeX
2) Detexify
3) Bibdesk
4) PDF to Word
5) R
6) Textwrangler
7) Tetlab/Trinity
8) Georoc database
9) Generic Mapping Tools (GMT)
10) MELTS

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Science Snap (#15): Big freezes

Satellite image of North America's Big Freeze, January 2014. Image credit: BBC

Satellite image of North America’s Big Freeze, January 2014. Image credit: NASA

Satellite images are not just wonderful for science, they also capture public interest during periods of intense and news grabbing weather. Earlier this month North America was gripped by a prolonged Arctic Chill, plunging the continent into freezing temperatures and smashing temperature records in the process. Consecutive satellite images tracked the southward progress of the freezing continent that looked unnervingly like the scenes from The Day After Tomorrow

The UK hasn’t been exempt from similar chills. Remember the winter of 2010 anyone!?

Satellite image of the UK's big freeze, November-December 2010. Image Credit: the Met Office

Satellite image of the UK’s big freeze, November-December 2010. Image Credit: the Met Office