You know the drill by now for my pasta dishes (if not see here and here). So this week I give you …

Our monthly collection of links to items you may have missed. It’s the usual miscellaneous collection.
Science, Technology, Natural World
That big explosive volcano in Tonga is still surprisngly intact although the caldera looks to be a huge hole.
On the curiosity of organ pipes apparently violating a rule of sound.
And now for something completely different, for which I see many new applications … Apparently female mice release banana-scented urine when pregnant to deter males. [£££]

You all know by now that wasps are one of my favourite subjects. Here are two articles from Seirian Sumner, who’s book on wasps Endless Forms is out this week. First a piece in the Observer Magazine, and then her take on five facts about the gruesomeness of solitary wasps. [Prof. Seirian Sumner is the academic who runs the Big Wasp Survey which I’ve contributed to over the last several years.]
Back to more mundane(?) animals, researchers have been looking at the domestication of the horse. [LONG READ]
Jackdaws are democratic and use noise to make decisions.
Health, Medicine
Medicine in particular, and all of us in general, need to reassess and update our knowledge and the history of the female body.
Having said which, here’s a piece on how sex affects our immune systems and our brains.
Sexuality
The UK’s Office for National Statistics has found that for the first time ever over 10% of young women identify as “lesbian, gay, bisexual or other”.
Social Sciences, Business, Law
On the issues around making conscious software, why we should an why we shouldn’t. [£££]

Art, Literature, Language, Music
Historian and mythographer Marina Warner visits the British Museum’s exhibition Feminine Power: The Divine to the Demonic, which explores the volcanic power of goddess cults.
History, Archaeology, Anthropology
New research on human coprolites reveals parasite eggs which suggest the builders of Stonehenge ate undercooked offal.
Workers at Osuna in southern Spain have uncovered an important, and hitherto unknown, Phoenician necropolis.
The Romans used silphium for just about everything: perfume, medicine, aphrodisiac and condiment. But in trying to cultivate it and increase yields they killed it.
Researchers have managed to successfully sequence the genome of a Pompeii victim. Turns out he was “Italian”!

Melting ice on an alpine pass in Norway has revealed a 1500-year-old shoe amongst many other artefacts.
The Amazon appears to be full of lost pre-Columbian settlements and urban sprawl.
A short item on Ragged Schools, and especially the one for girls in Hastings.
Modern purple dyes were invented in London in the 1850s and initially manufactured close to where I now live.
Two short articles on the eccentricity that is Winchelsea Beach in Sussex.
IanVisits goes to look at the de Haviland Aircraft Museum on the edge of North London.
Lifestyle, Personal Development, Beliefs
Now here’s a real first world problem if ever there was one … should we embrace a cashless society? But one thing the author overlooks is that in a cashless society everything becomes electronic – which is fine until there’s a computer or power outage (accidental or sabotage).
Our favourite zen master, Brad Warner, is another one with a new book coming out.
And finally … they’re generally hated, but we should really like them: stinging nettles. Eat them, make fabric from them, or just let them be to grow butterflies.

I’m not going to provide another round-up of news on monkeypox; I’ll do that when there is some useful news.
However there are two important articles in the last couple of days which I want to draw attention to.
How to tell if your rash is monkeypox? See this from the BBC: Got a new rash? Monkeypox or something else?
Secondly many experts are saying that monkeypox is actually not what we should be worrying about; there are far more dangerous diseases waiting to pounce. See: Monkeypox isn’t the disease we should be worried about.
My latest update on the background to the monkeypox scare.
UK Situation
Global Situation
Epidemiology
References
[1] https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/may/22/monkeypox-uk-health-security-agency-to-announce-more-cases
[2] https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-61546480
[3] https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1528450298901155841.html
[4] https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-61570562
[5] https://www.thisislocallondon.co.uk/news/national/uk-today/20159989.monkeypox-nhs-issues-warning-anyone-eats-meat-uk-cases-rise/
[6] https://www.thisislocallondon.co.uk/news/national/uk-today/20160206.monkeypox-outbreak-sex-raves-spain-belgium-may-blame/
Following up on my earlier comment about monkeypox being a DNA virus and different to SARS-Cov-2 (which is an RNA virus), I figured a bit more (very low tech) explanation may help. First off some very simple explanations. (Don’t worry if you don’t know what any of these things are; just think of them as “stuff” or “method”.)
Virus. A pseudo-cell basically composed of some minimal amount of genetic code (DNA or RNA) encapsulated in a lipid (ie. fatty) membrane. It is unable to reproduce on it’s own and has to hijack the machinery of a host cell to make more copies of itself.
DNA. This is the chemical code which holds all our genes. It is composed of the “double helix” of two strands of DNA twined round each other – think of two intertwined springs. In order for the cell machinery to read the text of the DNA the two strands have to be zipped apart and then afterwards zipped back together. Think of this as a whole jumbled box of knitting patterns
RNA. This is essentially a short piece of code created from a piece of a single strand of DNA; it typically provides the instructions for making a single protein. Think of it as a single knitting pattern, extracted from that box of patterns.
Transcription is the process of unzipping the DNA and copying it to make the RNA; this happens only in the cell nucleus (the strong box which holds the DNA). As in all copying, errors can creep in. So the machinery in the cell nucleus contains a proofreading function which finds the errors and discards the overwhelming majority of them.
There are essentially two types of virus, characterised by how they store their genetic information: DNA viruses and RNA viruses.
DNA viruses (for example, monkeypox) have to insert their genetic code, held as DNA, into the cell nucleus, as that’s the only place where it can be transcribed into RNA. So transcription errors are booted out by the proofreading function and mutation happens very rarely.
RNA viruses (for example, SARS-Cov-2 and flu) don’t have DNA; their genetic code is held as RNA. RNA doesn’t use the cell nucleus for transcription and hence can’t take advantage of the proofreading function. So transcription errors don’t get weeded out and mutations happen very frequently.
The process of using RNA as a blueprint to make proteins etc. is called translation.
And that is an incredibly simplified description of the processes. The details are hideously complex, so hideously complex one can quite see why some people find it hard to believe this has arisen through evolution.
Here’s an equally very simplified diagram (what I drew) of the processes.

So that hopefully shows why Covid-19 is dangerous, why we need a new flu vaccine every year, and why we hopefully don’t need to be too worried about monkeypox.
Here’s some more background on Monkeypox, following my item from Friday.
Let’s be very clear, right up front … We are not witnessing another Covid, and we’re not days away from lockdowns to contain the spread of monkeypox. However, this is an unusual and unprecedented monkeypox outbreak which has taken scientists who specialise in the disease by surprise – and that’s always a concern. [4]
Spread & Behaviour
Symptoms
Different Strains
Treatments
Pandemic?
Finally … Be vigilant. If you’re at all concerned phone 111 (in UK) or your doctor. But if you think you might have monkeypox DON’T just turn up at a doctor’s surgery (or sexual health clinic, or hospital); phone ahead so they know you’re coming and can prepare appropriate PPE and protective measures. [5]
References
[1] https://www.newscientist.com/article/2321212-could-monkeypox-become-a-pandemic-heres-everything-you-need-to-know/
[2] https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2022/05/18/monkeypox-faq/
[3] https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-61524508
[5] Meaghan Kall of UKHSA on Twitter; https://twitter.com/kallmemeg/status/1528044499288657920
Here’s another simple concoction.
This Peach and Apple Tart is so simple I’m not even going to write a full recipe.
First off, see what you have in the cupboard. As well as a block of puff pastry we had some frozen cooking apple and a big jar of peaches in brandy. But you could use almost any fruit (or roast(?) veg if you want a savoury version).
By now you know how to make a pastry case and blind bake it. If not, see this BBC Food video; it works for shortcrust and puff pastry. I prefer to use bought puff pastry – as I did in this case – but I will make shortcrust (see here). I don’t worry about my results looking as pristine as in the video – this is neither a restaurant nor a competition!
When I’d got my blind-baked pastry case, I put a layer of apple in the bottom and topped it with the peach halves. There was some of the light syrup left from the peaches, so I drizzled a couple of teaspoons of this on the apple in the gaps between the peaches. I finished off with a few fragments of walnut and glazed the edges of the pastry with some more of the syrup.
This was then baked for about 30 minutes, covered with foil for the last 15 minutes to stop the pastry over browning. When removed from the oven I immediately glazed the peaches and pastry again with the syrup, and left it too cool before removing from the tin.

Had I had any I would have used either glacé cherries or candied peel instead of the walnuts. But the idea here is to use what you happen to have – and if necessary be able to rustle something up quickly.
OK, so here are the answers to this month’s quiz questions. All should be able to be easily verified online.
May Quiz Questions: Mythology & Religion
Answers were correct when questions were compiled in late 2021.
OK guys, so here’s another (not quite new) zoonotic disease for us to get our heads round and which piques my forensic nature: Monkeypox.
As of writing there are now 20 cases reported in the UK [1], with over 100 across mainland Europe [5] – where there seems to be a hotspot in Spain – and cases in the US, Canada and Australia. It is being suggested [2] that a number of cases will be being missed due to a similarity with chickenpox.
Monkeypox is a viral disease which is thought to be carried mostly by rodents and is prevalent in remote central and western areas Africa. Cases outside Africa are almost always associated with travel to that continent. That makes the current outbreak in the UK and beyond especially interesting. Although the first reported UK case in early May was in someone recently returned from west Africa, many of the more recent cases apparently do not have an obvious connection to African travel. Perhaps even more interesting is that a significant number of the UK cases are in men who have sex with men (MSM).
The virus is not transmitted in the same way as Covid or flu, but through close bodily contact with an infected person; it can enter the body through broken skin, the airways, eyes, nose or mouth [3]. However it has not previously been described as a sexually transmitted infection – although sex tends to involve close bodily contact! Spread is also possible from infected animals (eg. monkeys, rodents) or from virus-contaminated objects (eg. bedding and clothing).
Unfortunately the initial symptoms are very much like most viral illnesses: fever, headaches, swollen glands, back pain, aching muscles and a general listlessness. Only later does the rash develop; it often begins on the face, and then spreads to other parts of the body, most commonly the palms of the hands and soles of the feet. The rash, which can be extremely itchy, goes through several stages before forming a scab, which later falls off. Although there is no treatment for monkeypox, and no specific vaccine, most cases resolve within 2-3 weeks.
As the name implies, monkeypox is an Orthopoxvirus very closely related to smallpox (also cowpox). The smallpox vaccine is reportedly highly effective protection [3], so anyone who has been vaccinated against smallpox should have some protecton. Have you been vaccinated against smallpox? Smallpox vaccination was compulsory in the UK between 1853 and 1971 [4] so many people over 50 will have been vaccinated, although apparently compliance was falling before the vaccination requirement was removed.
Should we be worried? Current advice is NO. The risk to the public at large is thought to be very low especially as the virus does not spread easily. But then we originally thought that about Covid-19. So no, don’t panic or be alarmed; but do remain alert and if in any doubt about symptoms talk to your GP.
References
[1] https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-61506562
[2] https://www.thisislocallondon.co.uk/news/national/uk-today/20154025.monkeypox-cases-uk-double-20/
[3] https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-45665821
[4] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK545998/
[5] https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/monkeypox-virus-infection-case-symptoms-live-uk-b2083515.html
Here’s another experiment from last weekend. And one which turned out as brilliantly as I had hoped.
Superior Cheese Scones

Makes about 12 small or 6 large
Prep Time: about 15 minutes
Cooking Time: about 25 minutes
Ingredients
280g Self-Raising Flour
50g Butter
150g Cheddar Cheese, grated; plus a bit extra for topping
160ml Milk
1 tsp Baking Powder (yes as well as the SR flour)
Pinch or two of Salt (not too much as the cheese is salty)
1 tbsp fresh ground Black Pepper
2 tbsp Tomato Paste
1 tbsp Garlic Paste
1 Egg, beaten (for glazing)
Method
Notes