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pronunciation issues

Note to Americans talking about Melbourne

It is not pronounced Mel-BOORN (actually, I don’t think I can even capture with phonetic spelling the strange things you do to the ‘ourne’ section). MEL-b’n is the more common pronunciation. If you’re being fancy about it, you can extend to MEL-ben, or even MEL-bern. But never Mel-BOORN. Melbs is also satisfactory, if you have begun to develop the Australian thirst for abbreviation.

(More photos and more interesting things coming once I sort out my current issues with getting my laptop online at home)

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you can’t get the wood, you know

On the advantages of driving on the right-hand side of the road… I am left-footed. When I go cycling in traffic in Australia, I have to grovel about standing in the gutter, with my right foot resting on the road. Meanwhile everyone else stands proudly tall, their left foot on the kerb. However, when I get to cycling on American roads, finally I have my day, and can stand on the kerb with pride (I was excited when I discovered this).

Also, I’ve torn my A2 pulley (sounds rather impressive and doctor-waffley doesn’t it? It’s the tendon in my left ring finger). Luckily it’s only a partial tear. This is what I get from climbing in the gym.

Are you a millionaire?
No, I’m seven and six short.
Blast.

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aussie

I found this website, called Simply Australian. And when it comes to the Aussie Food section, all I have to say is ARGH! Now I can’t keep looking through it and craving all of the food that I can’t possibly get in the supermarket over here. I might just have to place an order. Before it starts getting too warm, so I can get chocolate as well :)

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sprung

Well, it’s comparitively warm, and quite definitely wet. I think Spring has definitely sprung in DC.

Cherry blossoms that remembered to blossom.

Flags outside the J. Edgar Hoover FBI Building in DC.

“… and of course we’ll have a flag out the front of the building.”
“How about two flags? One at either end? That would create a bit of a statement wouldn’t it?”
“Well, it would certainly demonstrate the patriotism of the FBI.”
“You know, I think it would be even more patriotic if we had more flags…”

There’s a thunderstorm rolling in at the moment (accompanied by a downpour that started as I was walking home with my groceries). All I need now is a verandah to sit on and watch it from.

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life as a mutant

young evilmoose

Skin and hair pigment is made up of different types of melanin. There are two broad groups of melanin: eumelanin, which is brown, and phaeomelanin, which is red. Hair colour is a mixture of how much eumelanin and phomelanin is in your hair.

Humans usually end up with very little phomelanin because of the product of a gene called MC1R ( the melanocortin 1 receptor). The MC1R gene lets the conversion of phomelanin into eumelanin happen. If your MC1R gene mutates in a certain way, the conversion from phomelanin into eumalanin doesn’t happen anymore, leading to a buildup of phomelanin, which results in red hair (as well as fair skin and freckles). If only one of your MC1R genes is mutated, and not the other, then you have an increased chance of having red hair but you’ll probably just end up with freckles and being more sun sensitive than the average person.

So, roughly speaking, if someone has predominantly eumelanin, they would have dark hair. Somebody with very bright red hair will have little eumelanin but lots of phaeomelanin. People with auburn hair will have some of both, strawberry blonde is a little of each.

If one of the parents of a child has bright red hair (and therefore carries two of the changes – one on each of their chromosomes), and the other parent is a carrier, then perhaps 50% of the children might have red hair. And the first (mutant) redheads probably walked the earth around twenty thousand years ago.

(Thanks to the various genetics websites from which I cobbled together this explanation. Apologies to any geneticists who happen to read this and are offended by the simplifications involved.)