Rogue Scholar Posts

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Appalachian Folklore & MythsHawkins County TNSullivan County TN
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Appalachian Folklore & Myths Series – Sensabaugh Tunnel: Ghost Tourism, Urban Legend, and the Real Sensabaugh Family Along the Holston North of Kingsport, Tennessee, the land folds into low ridges and narrow hollows along the North Fork of the Holston River. Farmhouses sit back from the road, the railroad keeps to its own bench above the creek, and narrow lanes carry locals through places that do not make most highway maps.

Appalachian Folklore & MythsAllegheny County PAMarion County WVMonongalia County WVWashington County OH
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Appalachian Folklore & Myths Series – The Rivesville River Monster: Ogua, Giant Turtles, and the Stories Marion County Tells Itself On a warm summer night at Rivesville in Marion County, the Monongahela River looks almost tame. Barges push coal up toward Pittsburgh. Fishermen sit on the bank near the mouth of Paw Paw Creek or lean against the rail of the pedestrian walkway, watching their lines disappear into the dark water.

CommunityCrossrefEquityGEMMembership
Published in Crossref Blog

As Crossref membership continues to grow, finding ways to help organisations participate is an important part of our mission. Although Crossref membership is open to all organisations that produce scholarly and professional materials, cost and technical challenges can be barriers to joining for many.

AllgemeinVeranstaltungshinweiseGerman
Published in Open Research Office Berlin

Anmerkung zu dieser Rubrik: Das Open Research Office Berlin erstellt monatlich eine Übersicht über Termine und Veranstaltungen zu Open Access und Open Research in Berlin bzw. an Berliner Einrichtungen. Der Fokus liegt dabei auf unseren Partnereinrichtungen und auf Veranstaltungen, die sich an die Öffentlichkeit richten bzw.

MetricsResearch AssesmentResearch EvaluationResponsible MetricsConference
Published in The Bibliomagician
Author Bibliomagician Staff

Elizabeth Gadd, Reingis Hauck, and Giovanna Lima This post by Elizabeth Gadd, Reingis Hauck, and Giovanna Lima examines whether societal impact can be assessed responsibly amid growing global efforts to reform research evaluation beyond publication-based metrics.

ACSCollaborationsComputational ChemistryInorganic ChemistryMechanism
Published in Dr. Joaquin Barroso's Blog

Obtaining hydrogen from water is one of those topics that attracts lots of attention from many fronts in chemistry; on paper, it can be clean, elegant, and deceptively simple. In practice, however, water is stubborn and breaking it apart requires catalysts, large energy inputs, or clever chemistry that juggles thermodynamics and kinetics.

Published in the modern peer
Author Leal Oburoglu

Have you ever had that person in your team that made sure to explicitly share that they have been working during crazy hours, every single time they had to do that? (I have, and what a pleasant person to listen to.) These types of glorifications are sometimes thrown around as if they were achievements. Even though it’s not strange to work overtime or do experiments on weekends, if you are a researcher.