Fire Earth

Mass die-offs from human impact and planetary response could occur by early 2016

Archive for March, 2009

STOP Killing Our Oceans!

Posted by feww on March 11, 2009

Thousands of marine mammals, sea turtles, seabirds and others, are choked or poisoned each year by eating trash discarded in the ocean… —Report

In a week that another tourist cruise ship on its way to destroy what is left of the fragile Antarctic ecosystems breaks down, giving the thousands of passengers time to reflect on their destructive behavior,  a report by U.S.-based Ocean Conservancy provides a “global snapshot of marine debris,” a record of garbage collected by about 400,000 volunteers in 104 countries and locations  in a single day in September 2008.

Tourism: A Major Destructive Force

aurora-breaks-down
P&O Aurora (in the background) passenger Reg Hirst and his wife (not picture) from Yorkshire, England, were among the 2,000 tourists whose trip around New Zealand was disrupted by a broken propeller on the ship. They had to stay in Auckland for a few nights (not as nice as Sydney, they said) but that’s no problem because there’s lots more to do on the way to San Francisco. Photo by JOHN SELKIRK/Dominion Post. Image may be subject to copyright.

The MV Aurora is owned and operated by P&O Cruises (now a part of Carnival Corporation). The ship has a Gross Registered Tonnage (GRT) of 76,152 tonnes and is 270 m long. It can carry about 2,000 passengers and a crew of about 900.  Aurora produces an estimated 6,500 tons of garbage and human waste and 100,000,000 liters of graywater each year. Aurora’s 4 engines produce about 60,000 kW of power enough to provide electricity for about  7,000 households. The carbon footprint for Aurora (full operation mode inclusive of passenger activities) is an estimated 500,000 tons of CO2 per year. In February alone, a staggering 25  cruise ships visited Auckland, New Zealand.

The highlights of the Ocean Conservancy report, a Rising Tide of Ocean Debris, is listed below.

1.  A tidal wave of ocean debris is a major pollution problem of the 21st century.

2.  Certain categories of debris show up more often in certain places.

3.  Of the 43 items tracked during the Cleanup, the top three items of trash found in 2008 were cigarette butts, plastic bags, and food wrappers/containers.

4. Marine debris kills. Every year, thousands of marine mammals, sea turtles, seabirds, and other animals are sickened, injured, or killed because of trash in the ocean. Animals choke or become poisoned when they eat trash, and drown when they become entangled in bags, ropes, and old fishing gear.

5.  Marine debris degrades ocean health and compromises its ability to adapt [sic] to climate change.

Full report is available for download at A Rising Tide of Ocean Debris and

For more information, visit their site at Ocean Conservency: Start a Sea Change.

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Posted in dead zones, Marine debris, Marine Mammals, plastics, polluted oceans | Tagged: , , , , | 4 Comments »

US Drought Forecast

Posted by feww on March 10, 2009

US Seasonal Drought Outlook

season_drought

Latest Seasonal Assessment [quoted from Climate Prediction Center, NWS/NOAA.] Heavy rain and snow from mid-February to early March raised river levels, boosted snow pack, and increased reservoir storage in drought-affected areas of California, but major reservoirs remained below normal. The seasonal drought outlook indicates continued improving conditions for northern and central parts of the state, but with the pace of improvement slowing due to forecasts of less rain and snow in coming weeks. Statewide reservoir storage increased from 58 percent of normal on February 17 to 71 percent of normal on March 3. Despite the improvement in water supplies, it is unlikely that shortages will be erased before the dry season sets in. With less precipitation in the forecast, little change in the drought situation is expected for those areas of southern California where drought exists, as well as in northwestern Nevada. Some improvement is forecast for other areas in the Great Basin. Elsewhere, drought has further worsened in the southern Plains, and short and long-range forecasts of below-normal precipitation and above-normal temperatures mean that drought could expand in Kansas, eastern Colorado, western Texas, and southern New Mexico. In contrast, heavy showers forecast during the first 2 weeks of the forecast period in March are likely to bring at least short-term relief to eastern drought areas of Texas and the northern Gulf Coast, with even some improvement possible in the hard-hit areas of south-central Texas. The drought has aggravated wildfire danger and damaged winter crops across the southwestern Plains. In early March, 63 percent of the Texas winter wheat crop rated poor to very poor. To the east, heavy rain and snow over the South at the end of February benefited remaining drought areas. More relief is anticipated from central Georgia northward, while drought should persist over southern Georgia and the Florida Peninsula. Development is forecast in northern Florida while lingering drought in parts of Hawaii should ease.  Forecaster: D. Le Comte

Soil Moisture Anomaly

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soil-moisture-outlook-end-april-2009

Top soil moisture

Vegetation Health

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Soil Moisture

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Posted in crop Health, drought and deluge, Mountain Snowpack, snow, Soil Moisture | Tagged: , , , , | 2 Comments »

AUSTRALIA: TC Hamish Moving South

Posted by feww on March 9, 2009

Australian Bureau of Meteorology predicts TC Hamish will remain a Category 4 system Monday night as it hovers near shoreline along the central Queensland coast.

Hamish, downgraded to a category 4 storm, is located near the Capricornia coast about 250 km east of Yeppoon and 240 km north-north-east of Bundaberg, moving south south-east at near 16 km per hour, a report said.

epa01658587 A handout image released by the Bureau of Meteorology, Japan Meteorological Agency on 08 March 2009 of an infrared satellite image dated 08 March 2009, showing the progress of cyclone Hamish over Australia. Australian Emergency services personal are being deployed from all around the state of Queensland to prepare for the approach of Tropical Cyclone Hamish, now a Category Five storm, as it creeps towards the Whitsunday Islands. EPA/JAPAN METEOROLOGICAL AGENCY / HO AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND OUT EDITORIAL USE ONLY

epa01658587 A handout image released by the Bureau of Meteorology, Japan Meteorological Agency on 08 March 2009 of an infrared satellite image dated 08 March 2009, showing the progress of cyclone Hamish over Australia.

Powerful winds could cause substantial damage to townships and  communities between Yeppoon and Hervey Bay. Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology expected sea levels to rise above normal tide line as Hamish moves south-east. Minor flooding may occur along the shoreline.

Hamish is expected to weaken further in the next 24 hours.

Earth Observatory: Tropical Cyclone Hamish


With winds near 240 kilometers per hour (150 miles per hour or 130 knots), Tropical Cyclone Hamish was a powerful Category 4 storm (on the Saffir-Simpson Scale) as it moved down the northeast coast of Australia on March 7, 2009. The storm formed on March 5 off the Queensland coast, and intensified as it moved southeast just off shore. By the time the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Terra satellite captured this image on the morning of March 7, the storm was well-formed. The intense storm has a distinct eye, surrounded by a wall of towering clouds. As of March 7, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center predicted that Hamish would come ashore just north of Brisbane on March 9. The storm was forecast to weaken before making landfall.

NASA image courtesy the MODIS Rapid Response Team at NASA GSFC. Caption by Holli Riebeek.

TROPICAL CYCLONE FORECAST TRACK MAP

Severe Tropical Cyclone Hamish

Tropical Cyclone Advice Number 33 issued at 10:43 pm EST Monday 9 March 2009

Community Threat Past Cyclone Details
Warning Zone – Gales within 24 hours
Watch Zone – Gales from 24 to 48 hours
Past Location and Intensity Number
Past Track and Movement
Current Cyclone Details Forecast Cyclone Details
(at 24 and 48 hours from issue)
Current Location and Intensity Number
Very Destructive Winds
Destructive Winds
Strong Gale Force Winds
Forecast Location and Intensity Number
Very Destructive Wind Boundary
Destructive Wind Boundary
Strong Gale Force Wind Boundary
Most Likely Future Track
Range of Likely Tracks

The forecast path shown above is the Bureau’s best estimate of the cyclone’s future movement and intensity. There is always some uncertainty associated with tropical cyclone forecasting and the grey zone indicates the range of likely tracks.

Due to the uncertainty in the future movement, the indicated winds will almost certainly extend to regions outside the rings on this map. The extent of the warning & watch zones reflects this. (Australia’s BoM)

Remarks:

Severe Tropical Cyclone Hamish is expected to maintain a southeast track parallel to the coast overnight, before slowing down and beginning to weaken during Tuesday.

Damaging winds are expected to continue to affect offshore islands between Yeppoon and Double Island Point (including Heron Island, Lady Elliot Island, and Fraser Island) during the next 24 hours.

Damaging winds are not expected to develop about the mainland coast between Yeppoon and Double Island Point during the next 24 hours, however they may develop later.

As the cyclone moves to the southeast, sea levels are expected to be elevated above the normal tide along the coastline and large waves may produce minor flooding along the foreshore. People living in areas likely to be affected by this flooding should take measures to protect their property as much as possible and be prepared to help their neighbours.

People on offshore islands between Yeppoon and Double Island Point (including Heron Island, Lady Elliot Island, and Fraser Island) should immediately commence or continue preparations, especially securing boats and property.

People on the mainland coast between Yeppoon and Tewantin should consider what action they will need to take if the cyclone threat increases. If you are unsure about the actions to be taken, information is available from your local government or local State Emergency Service. (Source: Australia’s BoM)

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Posted in Hervey Bay, landfall, Queensland coast, Yeppoon | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Desperate Times, Funny Science, Nutty Professors

Posted by feww on March 7, 2009

Lab meisters and the dodgy science of coaxing rocks to absorb minerals

Several types of rocks that are abundant in the U.S. may one day be charmed to absorb carbon dioxide at such phenomenal rates that could retard climate change, global warming retardation experts say.

But don’t we all know that? Rocks naturally absorb carbon dioxide, but the binding process takes thousands of years to form minerals like calcium carbonate.

Oh, but the process can be accelerated in the laboratory using a catalyst like sodium citrate.

“One day this could be an incredibly useful tool to help fight global warming,” said Sam Krevor, the lead author of a new study by scientists at Columbia University’s Earth Institute and the U.S. Geological Survey that maps such rocks in the United States, Reuters reported.

But that process occurs on too small a scale naturally and requires too much energy and other inputs to tackle the vast volumes of carbon dioxide responsible for the greenhouse effect that is causing global warming.

What are we waiting for? Errr … the rocks must first be crushed to a powder to  absorb larger amounts carbon dioxide!

And to repeat the laboratory process on any scale larger than the contents of test tube, you would need tremendous amount of energy to reduce the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

At about $45-dollar-a-barrel (crude oil April delivery NYME ), doesn’t it make sense to buy all the energy needed to absorb all the CO2 possible, right now?

About  15,540 sq km (6,000 square miles) of rocks that are rich in carbon dioxide absorbing minerals, namely olivine and serpentine,  could be supercharged to absorb carbon dioxide in California, Oregon and Washington, “and along the entire Appalachian belt of eastern North America from Alabama to Newfoundland,” the study suggests.

What about more research on this exciting new [sic] possibility?

The experts need more money.

Isn’t this a good time to get more money, with the stimulus package …?

Krevor believes the U.S. rocks could potentially absorb the equivalent of 500 years’ of the nation’s CO2 emissions. The United States is the world’s second-largest carbon dioxide emitter after China.

“The problem is not going to be a lack of rocks, it’s getting them to do the job,” Krevor said.

Well said, Dr. Haven’t they yet issued you with a magic wand, or a copy of Essenian Dead Sea scroll for the spells?

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Posted in calcium carbonate, CO2 absorption, olivine, Sam Krevor, serpentine | Tagged: , , , , | 1 Comment »

Magnitude 4.2 Quake Strikes W. Montana

Posted by feww on March 6, 2009

A Magnitude 4.2 Quake Strikes Western  Montana Northwest of Yellowstone Plateau volcanic field

A Magnitude 4.2 earthquake struck western  Montana Friday about 193 km (120 miles) northwest of Yellowstone Plateau volcanic field. A 2.2 Mw aftershock followed about 4 minutes later.

Additional seismicity of comparable magnitude may prove  significant for Yellowstone volcano.

10-degree Map Centered at 45°N,110°W

w-montana-42-quake-6mar09
Source: USGS

This Quake: Magnitude 4.2 – WESTERN MONTANA

Date-Time:

  • Friday, March 06, 2009 at 11:29:55 UTC
  • Friday, March 06, 2009 at 04:29:55 AM at epicenter

Location:  45.843°N, 112.132°W
Depth:  5 km (3.1 miles) set by location program
Region: WESTERN MONTANA
Distances:

  • 4 km (2 miles) SW (221°) from Whitehall, MT
  • 14 km (8 miles) W (260°) from Cardwell, MT
  • 31 km (19 miles) WNW (300°) from Harrison, MT
  • 408 km (254 miles) NE (51°) from Boise, ID
  • 566 km (352 miles) N (358°) from Salt Lake City, UT

Location Uncertainty:  horizontal +/- 4.2 km (2.6 miles); depth fixed by location program
Parameters NST= 52, Nph= 52, Dmin=24.5 km, Rmss=1.53 sec, Gp= 47°,
M-type=local magnitude (ML), Version=6

Source: USGS NEIC (WDCS-D)
Event ID: us2009dwa1

Information from Yellowstone Volcano Observatory

YELLOWSTONE VOLCANO (CAVW#1205-01-)

  • 44.43°N 110.67°W,
  • Summit Elevation 9203 ft (2805 m)
  • Volcanic Alert Level: NORMAL
  • Aviation Color Code: GREEN


An eruption of Old Faithful, perhaps the world’s best known geyser, rises above Yellowstone’s Upper Geyser Basin. Old Faithful is a periodic geyser, with eruptions to heights of about 40 m at intervals of 30 to 100 minutes. Old Faithful Lodge to the right provides a rustic backdrop to the Upper Geyser Basin, which contains more geysers than are known altogether in the rest of the world. The forested ridge in the background is underlain by massive post-caldera rhyolitic lava flows of the Madison Plateau. Photo by Lee Siebert, 1968 (Smithsonian Institution). Caption: GVP

Current Update, last updated Mar 3, 2009 05:33 MST:

February 2009 Yellowstone Seismicity Summary (Source: YVO)
During the month of February 2009, 51 earthquakes were located in the Yellowstone region. The largest event was a magnitude 2.1 on February 19 at 5:02 PM MST, located about 2 miles north of Fishing Bridge, YNP. There were no swarms during the month of February. Earthquake activity in the Yellowstone region is at relatively normal background levels.

An article on the recent earthquake swarm during December 2008 and January 2009 can be found at:

http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/yvo/publications/2009/09swarm.php

Scientists continue to look at data collected during the swarm and will publish their results over the coming months and years. However, if any findings have direct implications for public safety, they will be released to the public immediately.

Ground Deformation Summary: Through January 2009, continuous GPS data show that much of the Yellowstone caldera continued moving upward, though at a lower rate than the past several years. The WLWY station, located in the northeastern part of the caldera has undergone ~22 cm of uplift over this time period. The general uplift of the Yellowstone caldera is of scientific importance and will continue to be monitored closely by YVO staff.

An article on the current uplift episode at Yellowstone and discussion of long-term ground deformation at Yellowstone and elsewhere can be found at: http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/yvo/publications/2007/upsanddowns.php

Recent Earthquakes in the Intermountain West:

Yellowstone National Park Special Map

yellowstone
Source: University of Utah Seismograph Stations


Volcanic History Overview (Source: YVO)
The Yellowstone Plateau volcanic field developed through three volcanic cycles spanning two million years that included some of the world’s largest known eruptions. Eruption of the >2450 cu km Huckleberry Ridge Tuff about 2.1 million years ago created the more than 75-km-long Island Park caldera. The second cycle concluded with the eruption of the Mesa Falls Tuff around 1.3 million years ago, forming the 16-km-wide Henrys Fork caldera at the western end of the first caldera. Activity subsequently shifted to the present Yellowstone Plateau and culminated 640,000 years ago with the eruption of the >1000 cu km Lava Creek Tuff and the formation of the present 45 x 85 km caldera. Resurgent doming subsequently occurred at both the NE and SW sides of the caldera and voluminous (1000 cu km) intracaldera rhyolitic lava flows were erupted between 150,000 and 70,000 years ago. No magmatic eruptions have occurred since the late Pleistocene, but large phreatic eruptions took place near Yellowstone Lake during the Holocene. Yellowstone is presently the site of one of the world’s largest hydrothermal systems including Earth’s largest concentration of geysers. (Source: YVO)



Posted in Ground Deformation, hydrothermal system, Madison Plateau, Old Faithful, Yellowstone volcano | Tagged: , , , , | 1 Comment »

Tropics Heat Engine Uses More Fuel

Posted by feww on March 6, 2009

Less Efficient Heat Engine in the Tropics Uses More Fuel

The following image is from Earth Observatory’s archives.

A few years ago, researchers discovered that “incoming solar radiation and outgoing thermal radiation increased in the tropics from the 1980s to the 1990s.” There was less cloud in the atmosphere to block solar radiation reaching the tropics, and to trap the outgoing heat.

Watching the World Rev its Heat Engine

Absorption of solar energy heats up our planet’s surface and the atmosphere and makes life for us possible. But the energy cannot stay bound up in the Earth’s environment forever. If it did then the Earth would be as hot as the Sun. Instead, as the surface and the atmosphere warm, they emit thermal longwave radiation, some of which escapes into space and allows the Earth to cool. This false-color image of the Earth was produced on September 30, 2001, by the Clouds and the Earth’s Radiant Energy System (CERES) instrument flying aboard NASA?s Terra spacecraft. The image shows where more or less heat, in the form of longwave radiation, is emanating from the top of Earth’s atmosphere.

As one can see in the image, the thermal radiation leaving the oceans is fairly uniform. The blue swaths across the central Pacific represent thick clouds, the tops of which are so high they are among the coldest places on Earth. In the American Southwest, which can be seen in the upper righthand corner of the globe, there is often little cloud cover to block outgoing radiation and relatively little water to absorb solar energy. Consequently, the amount of outgoing radiation in the American Southwest exceeds that of the oceans. Also, that region was experiencing an extreme heatwave when these data were acquired.

Recently, NASA researchers discovered that incoming solar radiation and outgoing thermal radiation increased in the tropics from the 1980s to the 1990s. (Click to read the press release.) They believe that the reason for the unexpected increase has to do with an apparent change in circulation patterns around the globe, which effectively reduced the amount of water vapor and cloud cover in the upper reaches of the atmosphere. Without the clouds, more sunlight was allowed to enter the tropical zones and more thermal energy was allowed to leave. The findings may have big implications for climate change and future global warming.

This suggests that the tropical heat engine increased its speed,” observes Dr. Bruce Wielicki, of NASA Langley Research Center. “It’s as if the heat engine in the tropics has become less efficient, using more fuel in the 1990s than in the 1980s.”

Image courtesy Barbara Summey, NASA Goddard Visualization Analysis Lab, based upon data processed by Takmeng Wong, CERES Science Team, NASA Langley Research Center. Caption: Earth Observatory, NASA

Posted in circulation patterns, cloud cover, earth's energy budget, outgoing radiation, the tropics | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Weekly Volcano Watch: 5 March 2009 [Take 2]

Posted by feww on March 5, 2009

Latest U.S. Volcano Alerts and Updates for Thursday, Mar 5, 2009 at 06:40:05 PST

Volcano Hazards Program Webcams page links to webcams at 19 of the 169 active volcanoes in the U-S.

Volcanic Activity Report: 25 February-3 March 2009

Source: SI / USGS Weekly Volcanic Activity Report

New activity/unrest:

Volcano of the Week: Jan Mayen


Remote Jan Mayen Island, located in the Norwegian Sea along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge about 650 km NE of Iceland, consists of two volcanic complexes separated by a narrow isthmus. The large Beerenberg basaltic stratovolcano (Nord-Jan) forms the NE end of the 40-km-long island, which is ringed by high cliffs. Beerenberg is a large 2277-m-high glacier-covered stratovolcano with a 1-km-wide summit crater and numerous cinder cones that were erupted along flank fissures. It is composed primarily of basaltic lava flows with minor amounts of tephra. Historical eruptions at Beerenberg date back to the 18th century. The Sor-Jan group of pyroclastic cones and lava domes occupies the SW tip of Jan Mayen. The Holocene Sor-Jan cinder cones, tephra rings, and trachytic lava domes were erupted from short fissures with a NE-SW trend.
Photo by Gernot Hecker, 2005 (Wikimedia Commons). Caption: GVP.

  • Volcano: Jan Mayen
  • Country: Norway
  • Subregion: Jan Mayen Island
  • Volcano Type: Stratovolcano
  • Last Known Eruption: 1985
  • Summit Elevation: 2,277 m (7,470 feet)
  • Latitude: 71.08°N (71°5’0″N)
  • Longitude: 8.17°W (8°10’0″W)


Ongoing Activity:

Posted in Chaiten, Jan Mayen, Kīlauea, Redoubt, volcanoes | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Who needs Chesapeake crabs?

Posted by feww on March 5, 2009

Our Oceans, where life started Are Now Dying!

What is killing them? Among major causes Pollution from

  • Tourism
  • Coastal Developments
  • Industrial agriculture
  • Intensive farming
  • Coal-burning power plants
  • Shipping
  • Dumping

Causing

  • Eutrophication and Hypoxia
  • Desertification
  • Acidification
  • Dead Zones

Our Dead Zone Largest Ever This Year!

Ocean “deserts” are expanding much faster than predicted, it is believed that the ocean “desertification” may result in the population decline of many fish species.

globe2s.jpg
Black areas in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans are the least productive. (Credit NOAA)

Development takes toll on Chesapeake crabs

Wed Mar 4, 2009
By Andy Sullivan

REEDVILLE, Virginia (Reuters) – It doesn’t look like a disaster area.

Crab boats dart back and forth on this inlet of the Chesapeake Bay as they have for generations. On the shore, million-dollar vacation homes catch the morning sun.

But watermen aren’t pulling blue crabs out of the Bay this winter. After years of decline, the U.S. Commerce Department declared the fishery a federal disaster last September and Maryland and Virginia shut it down until spring.

It was a symbolic as well as an economic blow for the men who harvest the region’s defining culinary treat.

Watermen faced a stark choice: Stay ashore until March, or take a state job pulling abandoned crab traps and other junk from the bottom of the Bay.

So on this frigid winter morning, Spencer Headley is on cleanup duty, a floating janitor on one of the country’s most intractably polluted bodies of water.

It’s decent money — $300 a day plus expenses — and you can’t beat those government hours. But Headley, 32, wonders why he must now rely on the state rather than the water for his livelihood.

“We’re not trying to tear the Bay up. We’re just trying to make a living off a fishery that’s been going for more than 100 years,” he says, one eye on his sonar display.

“Why all of a sudden is it a disaster?”


The Susquehanna River, which enters the Chesapeake Bay at its northern end, carries 40 percent of the nitrogen that flows into the Bay—the largest single source. There is so much nitrogen in the northern Bay that algae have all the “fertilizer” they need, and changes in streamflow do little or nothing to affect the growth of algal blooms. This satellite image shows brown water flowing from the Susquehanna. (NASA image by Robert Simmon, based on Landsat-7 data provided by the UMD Global Land Cover Facility. Caption: Earth Observatory).

STEADY STREAM OF POLLUTANTS

That disaster has been steadily building since Europeans first mapped the Bay’s shores 400 years ago.

Stretching roughly 200 miles from northern Maryland to southern Virginia, the Chesapeake is the largest estuary in the United States and for hundreds of years was one of its most productive fisheries, yielding shad, sturgeon, oysters and baitfish. As recently as 1993, the Bay accounted for about half of the country’s blue crab harvest.

But the fishery has declined as the region has boomed. Roughly 16.6 million people live in its watershed, which stretches as far as upstate New York, and an average of 439 more move to the region each day. That means more houses and more traffic as urban sprawl eats up forests and farmland.

The impact of this growth can be seen along Sligo Creek, which draws herons and foxes to its banks as it winds through the densely packed suburbs northeast of Washington, D.C.

Along the way, the creek picks up a steady stream of pollutants: lawn fertilizer, pet feces, motor oil and silt, washing off the parking lots and other hard surfaces that cover 35 percent of its 12-square-mile watershed.

Local activist Bruce Sidwell points out a sewer line that runs across the creek, exposed by years of erosion. It could be leaking raw sewage before long.

Sidwell’s grass-roots group reports polluters and organizes litter pickups, and he’s eager to showcase the filtering pools that help clean the creek’s upper reaches.

But water quality remains poor and is not likely to improve without substantial changes in the landscape, Sidwell says.

“It would take quite an effort to get it up to ‘fair’ water quality,” he says.

On its journey to the Chesapeake, water from Sligo Creek mingles with runoff from farms and sewage treatment plans.

Nitrogen and phosphorus in that runoff feed massive algae blooms that suck oxygen out of the water each summer, killing clams and worms that provide the blue crab with food and aquatic grasses that give it shelter.

Last year, the “dead zone” covered 40 percent of the Bay.

Not surprisingly, crabs have suffered. The 2007 catch was the worst in recorded history, and last year the catch was even worse in Virginia and only slightly better in Maryland.

With fewer crabs in the Bay, watermen now routinely catch far more than the 46 percent that scientists say is the upper limit to maintain a healthy population.

Observers say time is running out to reverse the damage.

“The Bay is now degraded to the point that its basic ability to withstand even low levels of pollution is in jeopardy,” said Naval Academy professor Howard Ernst, an expert on the restoration effort.

A 25-year, $6 billion cleanup effort by state governments and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has come under widespread criticism as it has repeatedly fallen short of its stated goals. Officials also overstated their success to keep funding in place.

The Chesapeake Bay Foundation, an environmental group, sued the EPA last month to force it to set a firm cap on pollutants. The group is heartened that new EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson has promised to make the Bay cleanup a priority.

“We certainly are hearing the right words,” said foundation president Will Baker. “But to be honest, we have heard those words for 30, 35 years and what we need to see is action.”

‘GRASS THAT’S PAINTED ON’

Headley has seen the changes up close. He’s pulled up traps filled with dead crabs, suffocated in oxygen-depleted water. He’s seen the state reduce the number of traps he’s allowed to drop in the water from 500 to 350.

And he’s seen mansions sprout along the shoreline, their lawns fertilized with the very chemicals that are choking the Bay. “Grass as green as you’ve ever seen in your life, looks like it’s painted on,” he says.

Easing his 46-foot (14 meter) Chesapeake Bay Deadrise back to the dock, Headley passes rusted shacks and crumbling chimneys, the ruins of once-thriving oyster and baitfish industries.

The crab fishery, too, is a shadow of its former self, employing 40 percent fewer jobs than it did a decade ago.

There are only a handful of crabbers working out of Reedville now, Headley says, but plenty of people are moving to town to enjoy the scenery.

Headley knows everybody on the water, but sometimes when he comes ashore he doesn’t recognize a soul. A way of life is dying. (Editing by Alan Elsner). Copyright the author or news agency. URL: http://www.reuters.com/article/environmentNews/idUSTRE52302020090304

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    Posted in Coastal Developments, Continental Shelf, dead zones, pollution, Susquehanna | Tagged: , , , , | 2 Comments »

    Image of the Day: Clean Energy Demo

    Posted by feww on March 4, 2009

    Clean Energy, Same Insane Economy?

    What’s the upper limit to how much ‘Clean Energy’ you could pump into the putrid corpse of the  economic monster?


    Demonstrators for clean energy hold a rally on Capitol Hill in Washington March 2, 2009. The rally was organized by the group Powershift 09, which seeks to hold elected officials accountable for rebuilding the economy and reclaiming the future through bold climate and clean energy policy. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque. Image may be subject to copyright.

    What’s the point of ‘clean energy,’ without a new ‘radical’ economy?

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    Posted in CO2 pollution, Giga Trends, Mechanism of Collapse, Root Cause Matrix, World’s Collapsing Cities | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

    Protesters block runway at Scotland’s airport

    Posted by feww on March 3, 2009

    ‘Plane Stupid’ protesters break through Aberdeen airport’s fence to block runway


    Plane Stupid climate activists break through the perimeter fence at Aberdeen airport before setting up a barricade on an aircraft taxiway. Photograph: Plane Stupid. Creative Commons License.

    Flights at Aberdeen airport one of Scotland’s main airports were disrupted this morning when a dozen protesters from the Plane Stupid campaign group cut through the airport’s perimeter fence at about 02:00 to  protest plans to expand the airport.

    Airport operator BAA said flights to Amsterdam, London and Paris had been affected by the climate change activists.  Plane Stupid members locked themselves inside a “wire fortress” on a runway, as two protesters unfurled a banner on the terminal building.

    “There have been two cancellations and some flights to and from the airport have been delayed due to the action,” A BAA spokeswoman told reporters.

    Plane Stupid environmental activists managed to shut down London’s Stansted Airport for several hours in December 2008.

    Protesters were dressed as golfers imitating Donald Trump, the New York property magnet, who is building a $1.5bn golfing resort north of Aberdeen and reportedly supports the airport’s expansion.

    Ironically, Donald Trump was forced to resign last week from the board of Trump Entertainment Resorts, just days before the casino company filed for bankruptcy.

    A  Plane Stupid members from Edinburgh reportedly said: “We have been failed by the generation of Donald Trump and [Scottish politician] Alex Salmond.

    “Despite a catalogue of scientific reports warning them that they can’t keep on with aviation growth, they continue with disregard for all of us who will end up dealing with the impacts of the climate crisis.

    “The reality is that our generation’s future is vanishing so that people like Donald Trump and his super-rich friends can jet into Aberdeen for a round of golf.”

    Related News Links:

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    Posted in Alex Salmond, BAA, Climate Change, CO2e, Donald Trump | Tagged: , , , , | 2 Comments »

    Major snowstorm dumps a foot of snow

    Posted by feww on March 2, 2009

    A major late-winter snowstorm blanketed the eastern United States today dumping up to a foot of snow in parts of the mid-Atlantic states.


    Motorists and pedestrians make their way down Main Street in downtown Springfield during Monday’s storm which hit the area three weeks before the start of spring. Photo by Mark M. Murray/The Republican. Image may be subject to copyright.

    Here’s how the impact of the snowfall was felt across the eastern United States:

    • Schools were closed from Virginia to Maine.
    • Federal government in Washington delayed opening offices by two hours to allow commuters coping with up to a foot of snow.
    • Dozens of flights were canceled.
    • Up to a quarter of a million people  were left without power.
    • Snow affected states as  far south as Alabama and Georgia.
    • Up to 2  million schoolchildren in New York, New Jersey and Boston stayed home as schools closed for the day.
    • As many as 700 flights in New York and Boston areas were disrupted by cancellation and long delays as winds of up to 40 mph compounded the impact of snow fall on roads and runways.
    • State police in Virginia responded to hundreds of road accidents on Sunday and early Monday.

    Current Forecast

    Posted in Alabama snow, flight cancelation, power outages, road accidents, Virginia | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

    Cough and cold remedies can kill children

    Posted by feww on March 2, 2009

    Don’t harm your kids with over-the-counter medicines

    Parents are warned not to give a large list of cough and cold medicine to their children because they may be unsafe and ineffective, UK’s Daily Telegraph reported.

    “More than 60 popular over-the-counter medicines, some specifically labelled for children, will be marked with warnings that they must not be given to children under six and are not recommended for under-12s.”

    Wise Kids Say “NO!” to dangerous cough and cold remedies! Image may be subject to copyright.

    Some 15 ingredients widely used by pharmaceutical companies  in majority of cough and cold remedies for many years are thought to be linked to the deaths of at least five children under 2. At least “100 serious cases of suspected adverse reactions” were reported, with children being hospitalized for a host of  side effects including allergic reactions, hallucinations and other medical complications.

    At least five products for children under 2 have already been withdrawn.

    The dangerous ingredients are: “the nasal decongestants pseudoephedrine, ephedrine, phenylephrine, oxymetazoline and xylometazoline; the antihistamines diphenhydramine, chlorphenamine, bromopheniramine, promethazine, triprolidine and doxylamine; the cough suppressants dextromethorphan and pholcodine, and the expectorants guaifenesin and ipecacuanha.” The Telegraph said. [See also below list of products.]

    “By March next year, all over-the-counter cough and cold remedies containing the 15 ingredients will have warning labels on their packaging. Until then, notices will be placed on shelves advising that they should not be given to children under six and should only be given to those aged six to 12 after consulting a pharmacist. Chemists will be told to caution against their use for children under 12, unless there are special reasons. Some products should never be given to under-12s.

    “Reports submitted to regulators show that, when cases involving people of all ages are considered, dozens have died after taking medication containing the ingredients and more than 3,000 people have reported “adverse reactions”. Diphenhydramine, which is used in Benylin Children’s Coughs and Colds, was mentioned in reports of 27 deaths, while chlorphenamine, an ingredient in Tixylix Cough and Cold, was mentioned in reports of 11 deaths.” The Telegraph reported.

    Martin Shalley, a consultant in emergency medicine at UK’s Birmingham Heartlands Hospital, said of the remedies: “The names are confusing and often sound very innocuous; the dangers are only in the small print, and on top of the risks, there is no evidence that any of these products do any good.”

    Dr Hermione Lyall, a consultant pediatrician at St Mary’s Hospital in London, said: “These drugs carry a number of risks; they can affect the heart, speeding it up or down, and they can even affect the central nervous system, leading to convulsions.

    “Coughs and colds will run their course and if you are going to use any medication it is much better to rely on paracetamol or ibuprofen to reduce a child’s temperature.”

    Dr June Raine, from the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) in the UK, said that a review of 69 cough and cold remedies for children had “found no robust evidence that these medicines work,” and although many of the products have been used for years, no previous tests into their safety and effectiveness had been carried out on children.

    Simple cough syrups containing glycerol, honey and lemon as well as vapor rubs for a stuffy nose are thought to be safe and more effective.

    The full list of medicines that must NOT be given to kids under 6 and are NOT recommended for children  youger than 12. [Liat provided by the Daily Telegraph]

    • Afrazine Nasal
    • Allens Pine and Honey Balsam
    • Beechams Decongestant Plus with Paracetamol
    • Beechams Flu Plu
    • Beechams Powders
    • Benilyn Chesty Coughs (Non Drowsy)
    • Benilyn Chesty Coughs (Original)
    • Benilyn Dry Coughs (Non Drowsy)
    • Benilyn Dry Coughs (Original)
    • Benylin 4 Flu
    • Benylin Cold & Flu Max strength
    • Benylin Cough and Congestion
    • Benylin Dual Action Night Cough & Congestion
    • Care Pholcodine linctus
    • Covonia Original Bronchial Balsam
    • Day Nurse
    • Fenox Nasal
    • Lemsip Max Cold & Flu
    • Lemsip Max Day & Night Cold & Flu relief
    • Lemsip Max Daytime Cold & Flu relief
    • Lemsip Max Sinus Capsules
    • Non- Drowsy Sinutab
    • Non-Drowsy Sudafed Congestion & Headache Capsules
    • Non-Drowsy Sudafed Congestion Cold and Flu
    • Non-Drowsy Sudafed Dual Relief
    • Otrivine Antistin Eye Drops
    • Otrivine Mucron
    • Robitussin Dry Cough Medicine
    • Tixylix Dry Cough
    • Vicks Cold & Flu Care Daymed Capsules
    • Vicks Cold & Flu care Medinite Complete Syrup
    • Vicks Sinex Decongestant Nasal
    • Vicks Sinex Micromist
    • Vicks Sinex Soother
    • Beechams Veno’s Expectorant
    • Beechams Veno’s Honey & Lemon
    • Benilyn Childrens Chesty Coughs/
    • Calcough Chesty
    • Benilyn Childrens Coughs and Colds
    • Benilyn Childrens Night Coughs
    • Benylin Children’s Dry Cough
    • Calcold
    • Calpol Night
    • Care Glycerin lemon & honey with Ipecac
    • Cofsed Linctus
    • Family Meltus Chesty Coughs Honey and Lemon Flavour
    • Galenphol Linctus
    • Galenphol Paediatric Linctus
    • Galpseud linctus
    • Galsud
    • Junior Meltus Chesty Coughs with Catarrh
    • Junior Meltus Dry Coughs with Congestion
    • Lemsip Cough and Cold Chesty Cough Medicine
    • Lemsip Cough Chesty
    • Medised for Children
    • Multi-Action Actifed
    • Multi-Action Actifed Chesty Coughs
    • Mutli-Action Actifed Dry Coughs
    • Non- Drowsy Sudafed Childrens
    • Non Drowsy Sudafed Expectorant
    • Non Drowsy Sudafed Linctus
    • Otrivine Childrens Nasal Drops
    • Robitussin Chesty Cough Medicine
    • Robitussin Chesty Cough with Congestion
    • Tixilix Cough and Cold
    • Tixylix Chesty Cough
    • Tixylix Night Cough
    • Vicks Cough Syrup for Chesty Coughs
    • Vicks Cough Syrup for Dry Coughs

    Parents in other countries are advised to avoid the local equivalents of above remedies.

    Related Links:

    Posted in antihistamines, Benylin, nasal decongestants, Sudafed Expectorant, Vicks | Tagged: , , , , | 5 Comments »

    Possible Thule Eruption Disastrous for Antarctic Ice

    Posted by feww on March 2, 2009

    A Thule eruption may be a harbinger of an intense period of seismic and volcanic activities in  Antarctica, accelerating ice melt

    A possible Thule eruption could signal the start of an intense period of seismic and volcanic activities in Antarctica, FEWW Moderators believe. Increased seismic and volcanic activities in the region could accelerate the ice melt by up to  500 percent [possibly by an even larger factor, if the Antarctic plate fragments as a result of enhanced seismic activity.]


    Thule Islands.
    Thule (left) and Cook (right) islands are seen surrounded by ice floes in this ASTER satellite image. Douglas Strait, the ice-free area in the center of the image, is underlain by a 4.3 x 4.8 km wide caldera between the two volcanic islands. A third stratovolcano forms Bellingshausen Island, just out of view to the right. The Thule Islands lie at the southern end of the South Sandwich island arc bordering the Scotia Sea and consist of three stratovolcanoes constructed along an E-W-trending line. ASTER satellite image, 2003 (National Aeronautical and Space Administration, courtesy of ASTER science team). Caption: GVP.

    Baker forecast a possible eruption of  the Thule Islands volcano before the end of last century. According to Global Volcanism Program, GVP, “steam was observed at the summit crater of Thule Island in 1962,”  and ash appeared  there as well as on Bellingshausen Island, “indicating possible 20th-century eruptions (Baker, 1968).”  It’s also believed that a “small explosion crater formed on the southern flank of Bellinghausen Island sometime between 1964 and 1986.”

    Recent seismic activity near the Thule Islands suggest that an eruption may occur.

    Related Links:

    References:

    • Baker P E, 1968. Comparative volcanology and petrology of the Atlantic island arcs. Bull Volc, 32: 189-206
    • Thule Islands Data Sources

    Posted in Bellingshausen Island, Cook Island, E-W-trending line, South Sandwich island, stratovolcano | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

    Southern South America Gripped by Drought

    Posted by feww on March 1, 2009

    Drought in Southern South America

    Earth Observatory acquired image January 17, 2009 – February 1, 2009

    More than mere colors on the page, the blotches of brown and cream—with only faint dustings of green— in this image represent the impact of one of the worst droughts in southern South America in decades. Each tiny dot of brown is a two-kilometer square of land (250 meters per pixel in the large image) where plants were struggling to grow in the hot, dry weather. Since northern Argentina, Uruguay, and southern Brazil contain rich, intensively cultivated land, the dots include fields of corn, cotton, soy, wheat, or pastureland for grazing cattle. The brown tones reveal that these plants were growing far less vigorously than average in late January 2009.

    From mid-November 2008 through mid-February 2009, unusual weather patterns brought extreme temperatures and low rainfall to this normally productive agricultural region. The period is critical for many crops, including cotton, wheat, soy, and corn. As a result, crop yields in the three countries were expected to dip, with Argentina suffering the worst blow, said the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS). Even Argentina’s famous beef industry had been affected by the drought, reported BBC News, as pastureland disappeared, and cattle starved.

    Considered individually, many of the brown dots in the image represent a personal disaster, a farmer facing the prospect of a poor harvest or a herd of malnourished or dying cattle. As a whole, the image conveys something of the severity and extent of the disaster. In simple terms, the vegetation index is a scale of the amount of light plants absorb during photosynthesis. By comparing current vegetation index values with values recorded at the same period in previous years, scientists can tell how well plants are growing. While the impact of drought on vegetation is occasionally visible in photo-like satellite imagery, the vegetation index comparison is a more precise way to evaluate the impact of drought.

    This image, based on observations from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Terra satellite, compares the vegetation index for January 17–February 1, 2009, to the average vegetation index during the same period from 2000 through 2008. Brown shows where the current vegetation index is lower than average, meaning that less photosynthesis was occurring; cream shows where conditions were average; and the few spots of green show where the vegetation index was higher than average. Darker shades of brown stretch from the Pampas grasslands of Argentina to the croplands in southern Brazil. Severe drought clearly impacted the entire region.

    References

    • Foreign Agricultural Service. (2009, February). World Agricultural Production. Published in Crop Explorer.

      • United States Department of Agriculture.
      • Accessed February 27, 2009.
    • Piette, C. (2009, February 23). Drought sucks life from Argentina’s farms. BBC News.

      • Accessed February 27, 2009.
    • NASA image created by Jesse Allen, Earth Observatory, using data provided by Inbal Reshef, Global Agricultural Monitoring Project. Caption by Holli Riebeek.
    • Instrument: Terra – MODIS

    Posted in argentina, crop failure, southern Brazil, southern South America, Uruguay | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

     
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