RobertBrown
Elite Member
I can see that next month's TBN newsletter will highlight this thread.![]()
You must be so proud to have been a part of it. I know I am...
I can see that next month's TBN newsletter will highlight this thread.![]()
You must be so proud to have been a part of it. I know I am...(800 posts later :shocked
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Maybe TBN can get us a group rate with a shrink.I can see that next month's TBN newsletter will highlight this thread.![]()
Maybe TBN can get us a group rate with a shrink.
Count me in
Terry
I can see that next month's TBN newsletter will highlight this thread.![]()
I wonder which faction will be highlighted
I agree... it is difficult to bring the masses 'up to speed' without painful laboring and having to endure the petty comments of the 'johnny come lately' crowd. We are having enough difficulty with keeping the squirrelists on track.To date, posters to this thread have been members of the scientific community. Featuring this thread in the newsletter would serve to draw the attention of the general membership, and they would certainly learn about science by reading our posts. However, the general membership may include those who have inflated opinions of their own knowledge of science and the scientific method. I fear that those members, the science il-literati, will think that they know more than we scientists, and will offer "wacky" theories to explain the pallet formations. Our progress will be slowed as we take the time to debunk their puerile conjectures.
Steve
Well then, no evaluation for me! And the rest of you know who you are! Actually, I am not sure about the validity of that last poignant point.Anyone who's posted more than ten messages on this thread, should be able to get in without an evaluation.
Oh and TomSellers I am sure, will join you on the board of directors.
Ouch!To date, posters to this thread have been members of the scientific community. Featuring this thread in the newsletter would serve to draw the attention of the general membership, and they would certainly learn about science by reading our posts. However, the general membership may include those who have inflated opinions of their own knowledge of science and the scientific method. I fear that those members, the science il-literati, will think that they know more than we scientists, and will offer "wacky" theories to explain the pallet formations. Our progress will be slowed as we take the time to debunk their puerile conjectures.
Steve
So the pallets are migratory... I think I can accept that notion on a grand scale but these in the fields, seemed to have strayed from the beaten path.The scientific persuit of the cause of pallets in fields has been a noble endeavor. I'm afraid we've been focusing on the wrong area of study, however. It's not science but, HISTORY that suggest that these pallets might be lost emigrants from the Palatine area of Germany. They come to New Jersey, in the warmer months, huddle together in fields until it gets cold, then make their way back to the fatherland. A new shipload of these tempest tossed masses finds it's way to the Jersey Shore every year.
I suspect these particular pallets are trying to settle with more of their own kind, in Palatine N.Y. or Palatine Illinois. They likely become disoriented on the long ocean voyage.So the pallets are migratory... I think I can accept that notion on a grand scale but these in the fields, seemed to have strayed from the beaten path.
The scientific persuit of the cause of pallets in fields has been a noble endeavor. I'm afraid we've been focusing on the wrong area of study, however. It's not science but, HISTORY that suggest that these pallets might be lost emigrants from the Palatine area of Germany. They come to New Jersey, in the warmer months, huddle together in fields until it gets cold, then make their way back to the fatherland. A new shipload of these tempest tossed masses finds it's way to the Jersey Shore every year.
The scientific persuit of the cause of pallets in fields has been a noble endeavor. I'm afraid we've been focusing on the wrong area of study, however. It's not science but, HISTORY that suggest that these pallets might be lost emigrants from the Palatine area of Germany. They come to New Jersey, in the warmer months, huddle together in fields until it gets cold, then make their way back to the fatherland. A new shipload of these tempest tossed masses finds it's way to the Jersey Shore every year.
I suspect these particular pallets are trying to settle with more of their own kind, in Palatine N.Y. or Palatine Illinois. They likely become disoriented on the long ocean voyage.
I find this fascinating that history may provide us the answer we are seeking after all of our research. Before Steve discredits your idea, you may want to check if the area of Germany is called "Palatinate". As was somewhat customary the early Pallets possibly changed the spelling of their kind when they passed through Ellis Island to match the spelling on their immigration paperwork.
Sentient pallets? Balderdash!
Next you'll have us believe that 'wire hangers' multiply in our closets when we're not looking.
I can debunk this so called "theory" quick-smart if Steve would loan me his Scientific X-ray Glasses!
I promise to have them back by Thursday... Friday at the latest.
Steve,I think we can all guess who received an atlas for Christmas.![]()
It's unfortunate that the publishers of the atlas hired incompetent proofreaders.![]()
Steve
Steve,
Actually, some of my ancestors were from the Palatine area of Germany. If your family have been long time residents of the upstate, there's a good chance that you have a little Palatine in your ancestry too. Most discrepencies in spelling are probably due to the fact that spellings have changed over the years or my sad disability in that area.