Tuesday

Woods Hole = Harvard Square of Cape Cod


So, I guess I am not the only one who thinks the academic buildings of Woods Hole make the whole place feel a little like Cambridge on Cape Cod. And frankly, since I often refer to Cambridge as "utopia," when you mix utopia with great beaches and the positive ions of the ocean air, I guess you get...um... nirvana?

Harvard professor Louis Agassiz was an important force in the development of the Marine Biological Laboratory back in the 1880s. And along with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, there have been countless Harvard grads living and working here for the last 125 years. The MBL is billed as the oldest private laboratory in the country and it is famous for serendipitious scientific encounters such as the meeting of Franklin Stahl and Matthew Messelsen which resulted in the first replications of DNA. And lots of other cool stuff like that including all the research for Al Gore's movie "An Inconvenient Truth."

There are two or three Nobel prize winners living right in this little fishing village. So if you are into science, walking around here is like being on the red carpet at the science Academy Awards: "Look, there's Brad Pitt, err ... I mean Osamu Shimomura. He's married to Angelina Jolie, I mean ... He won the Nobel for harnessing the natural power of luminescence found in jellyfish."

Follow this link to the journalist who claims, "I like to think of Woods Hole, in Falmouth, as the Harvard Square of Cape Cod." She has a number of nice photos there too.

http://www.examiner.com/x-18360-
Cape-Cod-Science--Nature-Examiner~
y2009m8d31-Slideshow-Woods-
Hole-in-Falmouth

And if you want to know more about Shimomura, check this out:

http://www.mbl.edu/news/features/shimomura.html

But remember, the "nirvana" you may experience with those positive ions, the great beaches and our wonderful ocean views is not really science. To me, it's more like art.

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