Letters
By Science News
- More than 2 years ago
Religion at Sacred Ridge?
  I  follow your magazine with zeal. I was somewhat surprised by “Massacre at Sacred  Ridge” (SN: 11/6/10, p. 22), which seems to attribute the slaughter to some  action by those who were murdered and does not discuss potential religious  overtones of the attack. Is organized religion the culprit in this incident?  Man’s inhumanity to man has often been triggered by some form of religious  belief system.
Charles Havnen, New Orleans, La. 
Religious beliefs of the Ridges Basin groups are poorly understood, though the documented ethnic differences would imply at least some religious differences. How religion may have played into the massacre at Sacred Ridge is unknown. — Bruce Bower
Measured confusion
  There is a subtle but  fairly egregious error in “Science Stats: Reading  between the lines” (SN: 1/1/11, p. 4). The short article is (ironically) about  the unclear labeling of medication measuring devices, but the graphic contains  a huge infographic gaffe: It shows the values as regular markings up the side  of a representation of a 3-D cup. But the cup is not cylindrical, being wider  at the top than the bottom (just as many medicinal cups are). This implies that  what’s being measured is the volume, not the height. 
Since the cup  is a right frustum (a chopped-off cone), the volume contained does not scale  linearly with height. It may not look like it, but this false implication  suggests that each point gained near the top of the scale is worth much more  than each point that is gained near the bottom of the scale. 
Even putting  this aside, the graphic has another problem: The top label (“148 products …  with measuring devices”) looks like it represents the white area at the top of  the cup, but it doesn’t actually represent that area.
Erik Max Francis, San    Jose, Calif.