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Illustration via Max Fleishman

The science community responds to Boaty McBoatface

Scientists are so clever

 

Cynthia McKelvey

Internet Culture

Posted on Mar 22, 2016   Updated on May 27, 2021, 1:32 am CDT

In response to the Internet’s tenacious efforts to name a British research vessel Boaty McBoatface, scientists began to apply the naming convention to objects in space.

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It started out innocently enough… 

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Soon other members of “Space Twitter” joined in.

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https://twitter.com/mirikramer/status/712009349674221568

https://twitter.com/PlanetDr/status/712010099397677056

But then Biology Twitter swooped in and took over. With GIFs.

https://twitter.com/Rob0Sullivan/status/712034220173094913

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https://twitter.com/Rob0Sullivan/status/712034811137884160

https://twitter.com/Rob0Sullivan/status/712042043070160896

But Space Twitter wasn’t about to back down.

https://twitter.com/LonelyProbe/status/712084753231392769

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Meanwhile, both groups were having fun with the memes.

https://twitter.com/ryan_zany/status/712068377582264320

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https://twitter.com/LonelyProbe/status/712089262154489856

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But the war raged on.

https://twitter.com/Rob0Sullivan/status/712094870471581696

Space Twitter didn’t have a response that we could find. But it seems scientist Rob O’ Sullivan, who started the #TheInternetNamesAnimals meme was a good sport about it.

https://twitter.com/Rob0Sullivan/status/712111728230793217

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People are still tweeting on both hashtags, but we think the blue-footed booby had the last laugh.

https://twitter.com/gloverkatherine/status/712067693587750912

Illustration by Max Fleishman

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*First Published: Mar 22, 2016, 5:23 pm CDT
 

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