快猫短视频

Not to worry, no giant radioactive wasps here

Feedback remembers Godzilla, and feels a little nervous about the wasp nest found at an old nuclear weapons site in South Carolina

Feedback is 快猫短视频鈥檚 popular sideways look at the latest science and technology news. You can submit items you believe may amuse readers to Feedback by emailing feedback@newscientist.com

Super wasps

One of Feedback鈥檚 least favourite genres of news story is 鈥渞eports that sound like foreshadowing from the first 5 or 10 minutes of a disaster movie鈥. You know, stories with titles like 鈥淭remors along seismic fault near major city鈥, 鈥溈烀ǘ淌悠祍 create sapient robot with machine guns for arms鈥 or 鈥溾. (That last one is real, by the way.)

So we were more than a little horrified to see a BBC News report on 31 July headlined 鈥溾.

The nest was found at the Savannah River Site near Aiken, South Carolina. The site produced parts for nuclear bombs during the Cold War, and is now home to tanks holding millions of gallons of liquid nuclear waste. However, investigators reassured everyone who would listen that none of the tanks had leaked. Instead, the nest had picked up 鈥渙nsite legacy radioactive contamination鈥, meaning residual contamination from when the site was being used to manufacture weapons-grade plutonium.

Apparently, the nest was sprayed to kill any wasps and then bagged as radiological waste. No wasps were found, which Feedback hopes is because they all died of radiation poisoning and not because they flew away to mutate in secret before returning to wreak havoc. We鈥檝e seen enough Godzilla movies to know that animals consistently grow larger when exposed to radiation, regardless of the laws of biophysics, and 2025 is difficult enough as it is without a plague of giant radioactive wasps rampaging up and down the US eastern seaboard.

Just in case, Feedback pulled out our dilapidated copy of 快猫短视频鈥榮 book Does Anything Eat Wasps? Therein we learned that the striped insects are predated by other insects such as dragonflies and various birds including bee-eaters (duh, we guess), plus badgers and many more. We propose sending a clan of badgers to the Savannah River Site for radiation-induced giganticisation. It鈥檚 the only way to be sure.

Seeing high dogs

Reporter Matthew Sparkes was skimming press releases in search of potential stories when he came across one that asked a very direct question in its title: 鈥溾 Upon being sent this, Feedback鈥檚 immediate thought was 鈥渢ake it for a walk鈥, but apparently that is neither helpful nor correct.

The press release refers to a about a chihuahua being brought into a veterinary surgery following an 鈥渁cute onset of lethargy and a transient episode of unresponsiveness鈥. Its urine contained 鈥渃ocaine, cocaine metabolites, norfentanyl and trace amounts of fentanyl鈥 鈥 which would definitely leave Feedback feeling a tad lethargic. This cocktail had seemingly caused the dog鈥檚 heart to slow, a symptom the veterinarians successfully treated.

So all was well in the end, however, Feedback can鈥檛 help but imagine how much more infuriating a chihuahua 鈥 already the yappiest of yappy dogs 鈥 would be if it was high on coke.

Reading further, we learned that the dog had 鈥渁 history of dietary indiscretion鈥. Two things about that. First, Feedback can relate. Second, we were once acquainted with a rather dim-witted spaniel that would eat pretty much anything she found on the ground, regardless of how unsanitary it might be or the ensuing cataclysmic effects on her not-terribly-robust digestive system. Because of where we lived, this was mostly confined to old takeaway boxes and piles of fox droppings. But perhaps she might have ingested something more psychoactive if we had taken her for a walk in London鈥檚 Soho.

Shorten, no matter what

Feedback often has to read through the lists of references at the end of academic papers, searching for vital context. They all look something like 鈥淭homas, Richard & Harold, 鈥楽omething very complicated,鈥 Nature vol 13 p 666 (1984)鈥.

To save space, the names of the academic journals are often abbreviated, and while there are governing the forms the abbreviations must take, the results can be impenetrable without some background knowledge.

Recently we were completely thrown when we came across a journal abbreviated as Fish Fish. Were its editors so keen on scaly water-dwelling vertebrates that they named their publication twice? Eventually we twigged that the journal was actually called Fish and Fisheries.

Our curiosity suitably piqued, we wondered if this was the most ridiculous journal title abbreviation.

There are some obvious trends. For instance, words like 鈥渁nalyses鈥 are typically shortened to 鈥渁nal鈥. This is for Advances in Risk Analysis (Adv Risk Anal) and it isn鈥檛 great for (Accident Anal Prev) or poor old Analytical Methods. Likewise, a lot of journal titles include library-themed words like 鈥渂ibliography鈥. This explains why is apparently referred to as Z Bibl Bibl.

Some bullets have been dodged. The American Chemical Society has an entire series on , but it didn鈥檛 do the thing we might have expected.

The sheer number of journals, combined with Feedback鈥檚 limited life expectancy, means we can鈥檛 possibly find all the best ones. We therefore open up the quest for ridiculous abbreviations of journal names to the wider readership.

Got a story for Feedback?

You can send stories to Feedback by email at feedback@newscientist.com. Please include your home address. This week鈥檚 and past Feedbacks can be seen on our website.

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