Science Blurts - Introduction

When I tweet links to science articles, I lose them in the Twitter stream of "more" as they descend further and farther below the bottom of the page.

I use Twitterbar to tweet as I browse during research for various freelance writing gigs. On most days, I tweet several science links, intending to return to the items. But I rarely do.

Posting science links with briefest descriptions here as "blog-blurts" might serve me better. An example: Earth's geodynamo may have churned up as early as 3.45 billion years ago (via Scientific American).

Aurora Australis, the Southern Lights, like Aurora Borealis (Northern Lights), seen during geomagnetic storms, Kangaroo Island, South Australia, by David Miller/National Geophysical Data Center, via Image Editor Flickr.com photostream 
Image: Aurora Australis, the Southern Lights, like Aurora Borealis (Northern Lights), seen during geomagnetic storms, Kangaroo Island, South Australia, by David Miller/National Geophysical Data Center, via Image Editor on Flickr.com 

My plan is forming: I am hoping to blurt more often than I have been blogging. One to three links with tweet-length descriptions, accompanied by a related image is my current concept of a blog-blurt.

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