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@carbonmire
i love you semicolon. no one look at my 80 word sentence

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"i'm just glad we brought back the poop question" is definitely a normal thing to say during your labmate's dissertation defense. which is why it was not me who said it.
🚨🚨🚨DISSERTATION COMPLETE 🚨🚨🚨
*pending edits from the committee
my advisor went 'why the fuck would you do this', referring to a table she thought i just left chopped in half in the middle of my dissertation. and i was like 'no??? i didn't????'
come to find out she adjusted the line spacing herself. which fucked everything up. which took her 10 minutes of me frantically searching through my version of the document trying to figure out where that asshole table was to remember that she did it to herself. mean to me.
part of your phd that nobody tells you about
feeling gross while writing your dissertation because it's a single author document and every reference to 'we' throughout your data chapters and conclusions has to be changed to 'I'. this definitely isn't a problem everyone has but i had so many amazing people contribute to getting samples and data analysis and figure design that it feels Incorrect to erase them

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just throwing this out there
nobody actually knows how to write a dissertation
your advisor only wrote one dissertation and probably got as much feedback from their advisor as they are giving you. you're (probably) doing it once and never doing it again. at some point you have to decide that how you've done it is how it's going to be.
grad school is the most unserious here is an email i am sending to my advisor at midnight
Okay, I was just going to reblog this without commentary, but I can't keep this to myself. I'm a PhD student in environmental science and this is my fucking highway.
The first published study about climate change (that I am aware of-- feel free to point out if there's an older one) is an 1896 paper by Svante Arrhenius. He pointed out the link between the greenhouse effect and changes in atmospheric CO2.
Plate tectonics, which the geoscience community now recognizes as near indisputable, was a fringe theory until about the 1960s.
Just in case anyone thought that climate change was a "recent fad" in research.
come do an environmental chemistry phd, they said. it'll be fun, they said. you'll get to learn and use words like heteroscedasticity and autochthonous even though you're not a data scientist OR a geologist!
come do an environmental chemistry phd, they said. it'll be fun, they said. you'll get to learn and use words like heteroscedasticity and autochthonous even though you're not a data scientist OR a geologist!

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my favorite part about being a phd student so far, now that i'm 4 years and 9 undergrads in, is how many times i've said to my undergrad mentees "i don't know how to do that yet but give me fifteen minutes and i'll figure it out for you"
After three years of working on it: my first manuscript is done ✨✨✨
sometimes being a scientist is saying "poop is just dirt with different microbes" out loud, in front of your non-scientist friends and watching them go through the five stages of grief in real time
my zotero just had a seizure and now every single one of my 70 citations in my manuscript how has vomited their abstracts. into my document.
if anyone was curious, this is what grad school is like

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one of my distinct memories from high school physics class was, after watching The Martian, someone in my class asking our teacher if being Educated In Science ruins sci-fi for you. my teacher said no.
im a phd candidate now and that was definitely a lie. im watching rebel moon for the first time and the narrator just called a pile of bones (CLEAN AND DRY BONES) organic matter. bones is not organic
The slimy strings from okra and the gel from fenugreek seeds can trap microplastics better than the slightly-toxic synthetic polymer in use.
"The substances behind the slimy strings from okra and the gel from fenugreek seeds could trap microplastics better than a commonly used synthetic polymer.
Texas researchers proposed in 2022 using these sticky natural polymers to clean up water. Now, they’ve found that okra and/or fenugreek extracts attracted and removed up to 90% of microplastics from ocean water, freshwater, and groundwater.
With funding from the U.S. Department of Energy, Rajani Srinivasan and colleagues at Tarleton State University found that the plant-based polymers from okra, fenugreek, and tamarind stick to microplastics, clumping together and sinking for easy separation from water.
In this next stage of the research, they have optimized the process for okra and fenugreek extracts and tested results in a variety of types of water.
To extract the sticky plant polymers, the team soaked sliced okra pods and blended fenugreek seeds in separate containers of water overnight. Then, researchers removed the dissolved extracts from each solution and dried them into powders.
Analyses published in the American Chemical Society journal showed that the powdered extracts contained polysaccharides, which are natural polymers. Initial tests in pure water spiked with microplastics showed that:
One gram of either powder in a quart (one liter) of water trapped microplastics the most effectively.
Dried okra and fenugreek extracts removed 67% and 93%, respectively, of the plastic in an hour.
A mixture of equal parts okra and fenugreek powder reached maximum removal efficiency (70%) within 30 minutes.
The natural polymers performed significantly better than the synthetic, commercially available polyacrylamide polymer used in wastewater treatment.
Then the researchers tested the plant extracts on real microplastic-polluted water. They collected samples from waterbodies around Texas and brought them to the lab. The plant extract removal efficiency changed depending on the original water source.
Okra worked best in ocean water (80%), fenugreek in groundwater (80-90%), and the 1:1 combination of okra and fenugreek in freshwater (77%).
The researchers hypothesize that the natural polymers had different efficiencies because each water sample had different types, sizes and shapes of microplastics.
Polyacrylamide, which is currently used to remove contaminants during wastewater treatment, has low toxicity, but its precursor acrylamide is considered toxic. Okra and fenugreek extracts could serve as biodegradable and nontoxic alternatives.
“Utilizing these plant-based extracts in water treatment will remove microplastics and other pollutants without introducing additional toxic substances to the treated water,” said Srinivasan in a media release, “thus reducing long-term health risks to the population.”
She had previously studied the use of food-grade plant extracts as non-toxic flocculants to remove textile-based pollutants from wastewater and thought, ‘Why not try microplastics?’"
-via Good News Network, May 10, 2025