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What you read on Southern Fried Science in January

Posted on January 31, 2024 By Andrew Thaler
Blogging

By pretty much every metric, this month was the best month we’ve had at Southern Fried Science since the pandemic began. It turns out people do still read blogs and just a little bit of effort posting regular updates goes a long way. 13,500 of you stopped by to see what we were writing and we’re glad to have you.

So what were the top posts for January, 2024? A lot of new ones and a few classics (the captive whale shark article is 14 years old!). In order of popularity.

  • The world’s largest cold water coral reef lies beside the first experimental deep-sea mining test site
  • I was the entertainment at a 5th birthday party: A new favorite science communication gig
  • A good joint is built to last: archaeologists uncover evidence for the earliest structural use of wood. 
  • Cherry, Maple, and Walnut: My 2023 woodworking year in review.
  • Alberta, Canada is the proud owner of the largest man-made pyramid on the planet
  • 15 things I’m proudest of in 15 years of science blogging
  • I turned my woodshop into a personal solar farm.
  • It is your ocean. You should have access to the tools to study it.
  • Ethical Debate: Captive whale sharks

Our biggest referrers were the usual suspects: Google, Bing, and Facebook. But more folks are finding the blog through the WordPress Android App. And, in a turn that is not unexpected but still a little surprising, Twitter has fallen from it’s longstanding position as the top social media referrer. Facebook, Reddit, and LinkedIn all surpassed the once venerable site and even upstart BlueSky, with a fraction of Twitter’s userbase, drove 2.5X as much traffic as Twitter.

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