User:Masoninman
I'm a science journalist living in Cambridge, Massachusetts. I mostly cover global climate change—also known as the climate crisis—but I write about nearly any area of science, from physics to archeology, for a variety of outlets, including National Geographic News, New Scientist, Nature, Science, Seed Magazine, Inkling, and others.
My homepage, with most of my articles on it, is: masonmade.com.
A while back, I had a strange day. I was talking to a scientist for an article I was writing, and when I asked him about light-harvesting structures in bacteria, he said, "Just look it up on Wikipedia." Then later, when I was talking to my editor about the same article, and we were arguing a bit about how solar cells work, she said that I should look at the Wikipedia page on solar cells.
I still won't assume something I read on Wikipedia is true and use it in an article—I'll always check the facts with experts or against books or journal articles. But Wikipedia is often the place I start when researching things.
But I'm a stickler about misspellings, grammar, and so on, and it's hard for me to look at Wikipedia pages and not tinker with them. I try not to spend too much time working on these pages, because it's easy to get sucked in. I hope I can contribute more to Wikipedia by writing the kinds of articles that become the source material and references for pages here.