Archive for September, 2009
Posted by feww on September 10, 2009
As Cosmos delivers new stars …

Full-field image of a stellar jet in the Carina Nebula, imaged by Hubble’s WFC3/UVIS detector. Composed of gas and dust, the pillar resides in a tempestuous stellar nursery called the Carina Nebula, located 7,500 light-years away in the southern constellation Carina. More of these aweinspring images at New Hubble Images
Homo sapiens sapiens seen leveling home planet …

Mountaintop removal. Photo by Vivian Stockman; source: OVEC; flyover courtesy SouthWings. Original caption: What does it say about human nature that we allow this kind of destruction to go on?
And filling her with garbage

Plastic Ocean. Image source: HCCC
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Posted in garbage mountains, killing the oceans, Mountaintop Removal, ocean pollution, plastic ocean, the cosmos | Tagged: Carina Nebula, constellation Carina, home planet, Home sapiens sapiens, Hubble telescope, Hubble’s WFC3/UVIS | Leave a Comment »
Posted by feww on September 9, 2009
Deadly Flash Floods Submerge Parts of Istanbul, Turkey
Flash floods caused by torrential rain in Istanbul, Turkey’s largest city, kill at least 25 people leaving dozens missing and many more stranded, city officials said.

People on a flooded road in Istanbul wait to be rescued. Photo: Ibrahim Usta/AP. Image may be subject to copyright.
Seven of the victims were female textile workers who drowned in a micro-bus taking them to work in Bagcilar, a working-class suburb of Istanbul.
Many other vehicles were swept away with the drivers trapped inside. “TV pictures showed roads near Istanbul’s main airport submerged by deep water.” BBC reported.
“The flooding was caused by two days of torrential rainfall – the worst in 80 years.”
Related New Links:
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Posted in Bagcilar, Climate Change, Istanbul airport | Tagged: Extreme Rain Events, flash floods, istanbul floods, torrential rainfall, turkey deadly floods | Leave a Comment »
Posted by feww on September 9, 2009
SoCal Corporate Arson Good for GDP
This UPDATE was posted on September 8, 2009 at 5:23 PM PDT (September 9, 2009 at 00:23 UTC)
Between them, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors and the state of California, are offering a total rewards of $150,000 for information leading to the conviction of the arsonists.
“Sheriff’s homicide detectives searching for the arsonist who set the deadly Station fire are appealing for anyone who travelled on the Angeles Crest Highway just above La Cañada Flintridge around 3:30 p.m. on August 25.” LA Times reported.
“Obviously if someone saw something that day we would like them to come forward and speak to investigators. But even if they didn’t see anything we would also like them to contact detectives if they traveled past there around that time,” said Steve Whitmore, sheriff’s spokesman.
Guess what folks, FEWW said who would be responsible for the 2008 SoCal fires (as well as all other expensive fires in the previous years) as early as a year ago. As for the rewards, please give it to the family of the fire personnel who unwittingly lost their lives playing against the corporate arsonists. [BTW, are you serious about catching the fire bogs? A $100million fire, and only $150,000 reward?]
What part of what FEWW said about the Fire Industry being the Arsonists you don’t understand?
Meanwhile, Station fire, which has consumed more than 160,000 acres (649 km²/ 251 sq miles) in 15 days, is now 56% contained, however, the winds are picking up again, causing concern for the fire crews.
Fires in Los Angeles County [NASA Earth Observatory - Posted September 9, 2009]
Two weeks after [one or more] arsonist[s] ignited the drought-dry forest north of Los Angeles, the Station fire had become the ninth largest fire in California since 1933. On the morning of September 8, 2009, the fire had burned more than 250 square miles (about 650 square kilometers) of land, according to the Station Fire Incident Report from September 8. This image, captured by the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) on NASA’s Terra satellite on September 6, shows the extent of the burned area. The newly charred land is black in this false-color image, which was made with near infrared light. Plants are dark red, and man-made surfaces, particularly the dense urban centers of Pasadena and Burbank, are blue and white. NASA image created by Jesse Allen, using data provided courtesy of NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team. Caption by Holli Riebeek. [Edited by FEWW.]
Meanwhile another fire in SoCal was reported by the NIFC
Oasis (Sonoma-Lake Napa Unit, Cal Fire), 400 acres at 15 percent contained. This fire is five miles southwest of Wilber Springs, NIFC reporetd.
For background information and logged entries go to: Calif Fires 2009
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Posted in Angeles Crest Highway, Fire Industry, La Canada Flintridge, Lake Napa, Oasis fire, Sonoma | Tagged: calif fires 2009, Calif Fires Forecast, Corporate Arsonists, corporate arsons, SoCal Fires, Station Fire | Leave a Comment »
Posted by feww on September 8, 2009
Temp in Paraguay capital Asuncion plunged from 35°C to 12°C.
As a ferocious storm devastated parts of northern Argentina and southern Brazil, temperature in Paraguay capital Asuncion plunged from 35°C to 12°C.

A traffic warden (C) stands in an intersection following a power cut due to a heavy storm in Brazil. Photo: AFP. Image may be subject to copyright.
Winds of 120km/h, torrential rain and hail destroyed homes and crops killing about 20 people and injuring dozens more in Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay. Uruguay was also hit by the freak storm.
Meteorologists said a severe depression caused by collision between tropical warm air and frosty air caused the freak storm.
In Argentina, the towns of Pozo Azul, San Pedro, Santa Rosa and Tobuna were reported as the worst affected areas, where a senior official called the devastation “incredible.”
Torrential rains flooded many areas across the entire region destroying hundreds of homes, causing traffic problems and cutting off electricity and phone service. Landslides were also reported.
“We’ve always had very strong winds and torrential rains here. But this was a phenomenon never seen before. Houses were completely destroyed,” a Brazilian official said.
“Damage was registered in the areas of Neembucu, San Pedro, Paraguari, Cordillera, Canindeyu and Caaguazu. Many crops were damaged,” an official in Paraguay told reporters.
“Whole houses disappeared,” a rescue official in Santa Rosa, Argentina said. “There are posts down, trees down, and there are more than 50 injured.”
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Posted in drought and deluge, extreme rain, landslides, mudslide, Pozo Azul, San Pedro, Santa Rosa, Uruguay | Tagged: Argentina storm, Brazil Tornado, El Niño, freak storm, temperature plunge, Tornado | 1 Comment »
Posted by feww on September 8, 2009
ENSO Cycle: Recent Evolution, Current Status and Predictions
The following UPDATE is prepared by
Climate Prediction Center / NCEP – 8 Sept 2009
The latest weekly SST departures are:
- Niño 4 ~ 0.8ºC
- Niño 3.4 ~ 0.9ºC
- Niño 3 ~ 1.0ºC
- Niño 1+2 ~ 0.7ºC

El Niño Map. [SOURCE: NOAA/ Climate Prediction Center / NCEP]
Niño Region SST Departures (ºC) - Recent Evolution

SST Departures (°C) in the Tropical Pacific During the Last 4 Weeks

During the last 4-weeks, equatorial SSTs were at least 0.5°C above-average across the Pacific Ocean and at least 1.0°C above average near the Date Line and in the eastern Pacific.
Global SST Departures (°C)

During the last four weeks, equatorial SSTs were above-average in the Pacific and Indian Oceans. Also, above-average SSTs covered large areas of the Northern Hemisphere mid-to-high latitudes.
ONI (°C): Evolution since 1950

The most recent ONI value (June – August 2009) is +0.7°C.
Information and images on this page are sourced from Climate Prediction Center/NCEP/NOAA.
Summary
- El Niño is present across the equatorial Pacific Ocean.
- Sea surface temperatures (SST) remain +0.5 to +1.5 above-average across much of the equatorial Pacific Ocean.
- Based on current observations and dynamical model forecasts, El Niño is expected to strengthen and last through Northern Hemisphere winter 2009-10.
For additional information see following links.
Relate Links:
El Niño Updates
ENSO, wind anomaly El Niño, Indian Ocean, Ocean SST, Pacific Ocean, Positive SST
Posted in ENSO, Indian Ocean, Ocean SST, Pacific Ocean, Positive SST, wind anomaly El Niño | Tagged: El Niño weekly report, equatorial Pacific Ocean, Global SST anomalies, Indian Monsoon | 1 Comment »
Posted by feww on September 8, 2009
Images of the Day: Cars NOT Welcome!

Vehicles piled up by flood waters after heavy rains inundated Tlanepantla, Mexico. (Photo: The Associated Press/Eduardo Verdugo). Image may be subject to copyright.

The landslides are blamed on heavy rains that have fallen instead of the usual winter snowfall. Photo: AFP. Image may be subject to copyright.
Heavy rain triggered rock and mud avalanches near the capital Santiago, killing at least two people and leaving one missing, Reuters reported.
The first avalanche buried homes and cars and swept a woman into a river, killing her on Sunday. The victim’s 1-year-old daughter is missing, AP reported the authorities as saying.
A second avalanche at Anglo American’s Los Bronces copper mines wept away buildings, killing a security guard and injuring at least 10 others.
About 1,500 people , mostly tourists, have been stranded, according to various reports.
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Chile: Mudslides leave at least two dead and one missing
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Posted in Anglo American mines, chile, Extreme Rain Events, floods, landslides, Los Bronces copper mines, mudslides, Santiago landslides | Tagged: Carbon Footprint of your car, Carbon Footprint of Your Dollar, Climate Change, Nature Rejects Cars, World CO2 Emissions | Leave a Comment »
Posted by feww on September 8, 2009
Magnitude 6.2 Strikes South of Java, Indonesia
10-degree Map Centered at 10°S,110°E

EQ Location Map. USGS Map.
Earthquake Details
GFZ Potsdam – Earthquake Bulletin
Region: South of Java, Indonesia
Time: 2009-09-07 16:12:22.0 UTC
Magnitude: 6.2
Epicenter: 110.59°E 10.34°S
Depth: 20 km
Status: manually revised

© Helmholtz-Zentrum Potsdam Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum – GFZ
The earthquake occurred close to a site forecast by FEWW as epicenter of a major 2009 earthquake measuring ≥ 8.4 Mw. [See location map above.]
Meanwhile …
Magnitude 5.0 EQ struck Hokkaido, Japan Region
The quake struck onshore close to the south coast of Hokkaido on September 07, 2009 at 16:24 UTC. The earthquake was the second of the same size to strike the area in 5 days.
10-degree Map Centered at 40°N,145°E

EQ Location Map. Source: USGS
EQ Details:
- Magnitude: 5.0
- Date-Time: Monday, September 07, 2009 at 16:24:27 UTC [Tuesday, September 08, 2009 at 01:24:27 AM at epicenter]
- Location: 42.167°N, 142.824°E
- Depth: 71 km (44.1 miles)
- Region: HOKKAIDO, JAPAN REGION
- Distances:
- 155 km (100 miles) SW of Kushiro, Hokkaido, Japan
- 160 km (100 miles) SE of Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan
- 770 km (480 miles) NNE of TOKYO, Japan
- 7095 km (4400 miles) NE of MOSCOW, Russia
- Source: USGS NEIC (WDCS-D)
- Event ID: us2009lgbc
JAPAN EARTHQUAKE UPDATE:
At 10:03 JST on Sep 08, 2009 a magnitude 3.9 quake struck Chiba-ken Hokuseibu region centered at 35.8N, 140.1E and at a depth of 50km, JMA reported. [For background information and FEWW forecast see: Earthquake Forecast: Tokyo, Japan]
Soon after, Sicily was struck …
Magnitude 5.0 EQ Strikes Sicily, Italy
The quake struck on Monday, September 07, 2009 at 21:26 UTC.
10-degree Map Centered at 40°N,15°E

EQ Location Map. Source: USGS
Earthquake Details
- Location: 38.652°N, 14.074°E
- Depth: 10 km (6.2 miles)
- Region: SICILY, ITALY
- Distances:
- 85 km (50 miles) NE of Palermo, Sicily, Italy
- 140 km (85 miles) WNW of Messina, Sicily, Italy
- 155 km (95 miles) NW of Catania, Sicily, Italy
- 385 km (240 miles) SSE of ROME, Italy
- Source: USGS NEIC (WDCS-D)
- Event ID: us2009lgbr
See also: FEWW forecast: Earthquake Forecast: Southern Italy, Sicily
An hour or so later …
Magnitude 6.2 Strikes Georgia (SAK’ART’VELO)
The strong mainshock was followed by a magnitude 5.0 aftershock about 8 minutes later.
10-degree Map Centered at 45°N,45°E

EQ Location Map. Source: USGS
EQ Details (mainshock)
- Magnitude: 6.2
- Date-Time: Monday, September 07, 2009 at 22:41:37 UTC [Tuesday, September 08, 2009 at 03:41:37 AM at epicenter]
- Location: 42.712°N, 43.483°E
- Depth: 10 km (6.2 miles) set by location program
- Region: GEORGIA (SAK’ART’VELO)
- Distances:
- 80 km (50 miles) NE of K’ut’aisi, Georgia
- 105 km (65 miles) WSW of Vladikavkaz, Russia
- 135 km (85 miles) E of Zugdidi, Georgia
- 155 km (95 miles) NW of TBILISI, Georgia
- Source: USGS NEIC (WDCS-D)
- Event ID: us2009lgbw
The two events were similar to a pair of quakes, measuring 5.9 and 5.3, that struck eastern Chechnya at a depth of 10km, about 240km to the NE, on October 11, 2008.
The Chechnya quakes killed more than a dozen people and injured up to 150 others.
Related Links:
Posted in Hokkaido quake, Italy quake, Japan quakes, Palermo, SAK'ART'VELO quake, seismic activity report | Tagged: earthquake forecast, Earthquakes, Earthquakes 2009, Java Quake, Sicily quake | 1 Comment »
Posted by feww on September 7, 2009
Major Disaster in Timor Sea
Image of the Day: “The Water is an Orangy Color”
Will the Australian oil spill grow to an even bigger disaster than Exxon Valdez?

“The water is an ‘orangy’ color, the birds have gone and marine life is sick and dying.” —Commercial Fisherman, George Hamilton, who visited the dispersal area in Timor sea. Image is a frame grab from a video broadcast by ABCNews (Australia). Image may be subject to copyright.
The oil spill will continue for many weeks, possibly months before the leak can be stopped.
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Posted in australian oil spill, Kimberley coast, leak at the West Atlas oil rig., leaking oil rig, Montara development, Montara Well Head Platform, offshore oil wells, offshore Australian oil well, oil slick, Sunda Trench, West Atlas oil rig | Tagged: Australian Oil Disaster, critical migration routes, harm to wildlife, PTTEP Australasia, Timor Sea, Timor Sea Holocaust | 1 Comment »
Posted by feww on September 7, 2009
FEWW Moderators had never heard of the “Con the Nasty Traveler”
That’s until the “ghost readers” of Condé Nast Traveler allegedly voted Italy and New Zealand as the top 2 tourist destinations in the world [sic.]
Moderators believe tourism [euphemistically, eco-tourism] is an intentional [informed and willing] act of eco-terrorism. How would YOU define tourism and air travel?
Every time you fly someone will die!
MSRB has estimated the carbon pollution (CO2e) associated with air travel:
Each air passenger produces about 1.36 lbs. [0.62 kg] of CO2 and other Greenhouse Gases (called CO2 Equivalents or CO2e) for every air mile flown.
Italy is in Europe, but New Zealand is “downunder.” So what sort of damage do you inflict on the environment when you fly all the way to New Zealand?
NewZeelend, a New Zealand news blog says:
On a return flight from the United States to New Zealand, each visitor produces about 7.4 metric tons of CO2 pollution. [Note: Driving an average passenger car in the US over a year, traveling 12,500 miles (20,112 km), which burns about 581 gallons (2,200 liters) of gasoline, produces about 11,450 pounds (5.2 metric tons) of carbon dioxide.] A couple on a return flight from the US to NZ produce as much CO2 as driving their car for about THREE years! A UK visitor produces about 17.64 metric tons of CO2. A European/UK couple on a return flight to NZ produce more CO2 than in EIGHT years of driving.]
Was tourist safety a factor before Nast[y] Traveler dished out its readers’ award [sic] to New Zealand?
If it did, it would be a massive irony, not to mention downright fraudulent claims.
NewZeelend wrote:
Did you know that between January 1, 2000 and August 9, 2009 at least 1,585 foreigners were killed in New Zealand? [The 450 permanently missing American, Chinese, Japanese, Korean ... nationals are not included] That is as many as 36 percent of all US troops killed in Iraq during a comparable period. [Between March 2003 and August 9, 2009, some 4,330 US military personnel were killed in Iraq—officially acknowledged.]
Who’s Masashi Hayama?
Masashi Hayama, 22, a Japanese male, was the 1,603rd foreigner to be killed/murdered in New Zealand [the latest known victim who was found dead just yesterday] since January 1, 2000. If Condé Nast Traveler could interview him now, he would probably have a few words to say about the award.
What about Food Safety in New Zealand?
Ask the 63 percent of all British households who abstained from eating New Zealand lamb throughout 2008 !
Much of New Zealand food is “contaminated with disease-causing bacteria and viruses as a result of over-crowded factory farming conditions and unhygienic processing plants.” NZ Green Party said.
“New Zealand has the highest rates of Campylobacter food poisoning in the developed world, nearly 3 times higher than the next highest countries, England and Wales, and 10 times higher than America and Canada.”
“An extraordinary 75,000 New Zealanders [nearly 2 percent of their population] are affected by Campylobacter food poisoning every year.” [See report highlights.]
And New Zealand Beaches?
Steer clear of deadly fish on New Zealand beaches. Poison from dead fish piling up on New Zealand beaches can kill you in 60 minutes. Deadly fish washed up on New Zealand beaches have prompted health authorities to warning the public to stay away.

The warning signs will not be removed until investigating agencies believe Auckland’s beaches are safe. Photo: PHIL REID/The Dominion Post
Image may be subject to copyright. (Source: Lethal Coastal Waters Kill Deadly Fish!)
Any Other Health Concerns in New Zealand?
See: New Zealand Visitor Health Warnings
You can express your opinion about air travel, tourism award, or eco-terrorism by emailing the Editor, [discredited] CNTraveller.com at emma.lundin@condenast.co.uk
Related links:
Posted in air travel, CO2e emissions, Condé Nast Traveler, eco tourism, eco-terrorism, Every time you fly someone will die | Tagged: "top 2 tourist destinations", 10 worst places, ghost readers, Masashi Hayama, Nasty Traveler, Tourism, Travel, travel award | 4 Comments »
Posted by feww on September 6, 2009
“It’s got to get worse, before it could get better [sic]“

A worker walks along a railway track at a coking factory in Changzhi, Shanxi province August 28, 2009. REUTERS/Stringer. Image may be subject to copyright.
Chairman Mao (1940 speech):
For the purpose of attaining freedom in the world of nature, man must use natural science to understand, conquer, and change nature, and thus attain freedom from nature.
Freud:
There is, indeed, another and a better path: that of becoming a member of human community, and, with the help of a technique guided by science, going over to attack against nature and subjecting her to human will.
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Posted in carbon footprint, Carbon Footprint of Your Dollar, CO2 pollution, greenhouse gases, Homo Sapiens Sapiens, industrial pollution | Tagged: attack against nature, Changzhi, china emissions, CO2 Emissions, coking factory, freedom from nature, Shanxi | Leave a Comment »
Posted by feww on September 6, 2009
Ozone Hole as it appeared on September 2, 1979 and 30 years later, on September 2, 2009 [NASA Ozone Hole Watch.]
Note: Data for the 2009 image may be erroneous [doctored.]
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Posted in Earth's atmosphere, freons, halons, ozone, ozone depletion, photodissociation of chlorofluorocarbon, plankton reduction, ultraviolet light, UVB | Tagged: Antarctic Ozone Hole, Dobson units, Largest Antarctic Ozone Hole, ozone hole, ozone hole images, ozone layer, stratosphere | 1 Comment »
Posted by feww on September 5, 2009
Supervolcanoes may awaken
VOW: Mt Tambora

Photo: Mark Webster/Lonely Planet Images. Image may be subject to copyright.
Tambora Photo
Country: Indonesia
Region: Lesser Sunda Islands (Indonesia)
Volcano Type: Stratovolcano
Last Known Eruption: 1967 ± 20 years
Summit Elevation: 2,850 m (9,350 feet)
Latitude: 8.25°S
Longitude: 118.00°E
Source: GVP

Tambora volcano on Indonesia’s Sumbawa Island was the site of the world’s largest historical eruption in April 1815. This NASA Landsat mosaic shows the 6-km-wide caldera truncating the 2850-m-high summit of the massive volcano. Pyroclastic flows during the 1815 eruption reached the sea on all sides of the 60-km-wide volcanic peninsula, and the ejection of large amounts of tephra caused world-wide temperature declines in 1815 and 1816. NASA Landsat7 image (worldwind.arc.nasa.gov). Caption GVP.
Mount Tambora (or Tomboro) is an active stratovolcano on Sumbawa island, Indonesia. Sumbawa is flanked both to the north and south by oceanic crust, and Tambora was formed by the active subduction zones beneath it. This raised Mount Tambora as high as 4,300 m (14,000 ft), making it one of the tallest peaks in the Indonesian archipelago.
Tambora erupted in 1815 with a rating of seven on the Volcanic Explosivity Index, making it the largest eruption since the Lake Taupo eruption in about 180 AD. It was the largest volcanic eruption in recorded history. The explosion was heard on Sumatra island (more than 2,000 km away). Heavy volcanic ash falls were observed as far away as Borneo, Sulawesi, Java and Maluku islands. Most deaths from the eruption were from starvation and disease, as the eruptive fallout ruined agricultural productivity in the local region. The death toll was at least 71,000 people (perhaps the most deadly eruption in history), of whom 11,000–12,000 were killed directly by the eruption. The eruption created global climate anomalies; 1816 became known as the Year Without Summer because of the effect on North American and European weather. Agricultural crops failed and livestock died in much of the Northern Hemisphere, resulting in the worst famine of the 19th century. (Source: Wikipedia; edited by FEWW)
SI /USGS Weekly Volcanic Activity Report
(26 August-1 September 2009)
New activity/unrest:
- Kanlaon, Negros Island (central Philippines)
- Kolokol Group, Urup Island (Kurile Islands,Sakhalin Oblast region, Russia)
- Koryaksky, Eastern Kamchatka, Russia
Ongoing Activity:
- Batu Tara, Komba Island (Indonesia)
- Chaitén, Southern Chile
- Dukono, Halmahera
- Karymsky, Eastern Kamchatka
- Kilauea, Hawaii
- Kizimen, Eastern Kamchatka
- Pacaya, Guatemala
- Popocatépetl, México
- Rabaul, New Britain
- Sakura-jima, Kyushu (Japan)
- Santa María, Guatemala
- Shiveluch, Central Kamchatka (Russia)
- Suwanose-jima, Ryukyu Islands (Japan)
Related Links:
FEWW Links:
FEWW Volcanic Activity Forecast
Posted in Chaiten, Kanlaon, Kolokol Group, Koryaksky, Kīlauea, Popocatépetl, Shiveluch | Tagged: Mt Tambora, Sumbawa Island, Supervolcanoes, Volcanic Activity Report, VolcanoWatch, VolcanoWatch Weekly | 1 Comment »
Posted by feww on September 5, 2009
Image of the Day: Heavy rain causes widespread damage in NE Scotland

Police view the damage of a bridge that has been washed away during flooding in the Burnbank area on Friday in Fochabers, Scotland. Heavy rain has caused widespread damage to the north east parts of Scotland. (JEFF J MITCHELL, GETTY IMAGES/September 4, 2009). Iamge may be subject to copyright.
About 500 homes in the Elgin and Fochabers, Moray, Scotland, were evacuated due to the rivers Lossie and Spey flooding their banks after a record amount of rainfall. The residents were forced to spend the night in makeshift shelters.
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Posted in Elgin, Fochabers, Moray, river Lossie, river Spey, Scotland | Tagged: Climate Change, drought and deluge, greenhouse gases, landslides, record rainfall, the CAR | 1 Comment »
Posted by feww on September 4, 2009
“Climate engineering could provide a cheap, rapid and effective response to global warming,” the economists said.

Oceans contain 6 times more plastic than plankton!
Related News Links:
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Posted in Bjorn Lomborg, Finn Kydland, Great Pacific Garbage Patch, IPCC, seawater, Thomas Schelling, Vernon Smith | Tagged: Climate Engineering, Global Warming, marine cloud whitening, marine cloud whitening technology, oceans plastic content | Leave a Comment »
Posted by feww on September 4, 2009
FEWW Earthquake Warning:
Large Earthquake Forecast in Japan Region
A large earthquake east of Honshu, Japan Region, may be imminent (in the next few hours).
10-degree Map Centered at 35°N,140°E

Location Map of latest earthquakes in Japan. Source: USGS
Related Links:
Posted in earthquake warning Honshu, large earthquakes, Tokyo Bay earthquake, tokyo earthquake | Tagged: earthquake forecast, Earthquakes, Japan earthquakes, Yokohama | 3 Comments »