Monday, June 8, 2020

168 Men Lost - America's Greatest Hard Rock Mining Disaster

                                                                                                                                                                                        Photo: Banjodog
Half an hour before midnight on the 8th of June 1917, one simple, wrong move in a single, split second a half-mile below ground sparked what was then the worst hard-rock mining disaster in U.S. history.

Today, a century later, the Granite Mountain fire in Butte still holds that infamous distinction, even though there is no consensus on the precise number of lives it took. The numbers, skewed by confusion and uncertainty, range from 163 to 173.
Many miners were killed within minutes, others died in the dark hours and hours later — some more than two days later — succumbing to poisonous gases or simply exhausting every last bit of that most precious, basic requirement for life — oxygen.
...history lives on, especially in Butte, and even 100 years has not softened two tragic ironies about the disaster: It was during efforts to make the mine safer that it all began, and it was because the mine was ventilated so well — usually a great thing — that flames and deadly smoke spread so fast.  
--  The Missoulian  June 8, 2017

Monday, April 6, 2020

PPE Now Needed for Animal Care Professionals

Every zoo in the US (the world for that matter) has crews working 24/7 to feed and care for their animals.  Early in the spread of Covid-19 some dogs in Hong Kong were determined to be carrying the virus, but not necessarily to be infected by the virus.  The dogs were considered to be contaminated in the same way a door handle or counter-top might be a vehicle to pass on the virus.  This tiger in New York appears to be infected with the virus as opposed being contaminated by the sloughed off residue of viral material.  Animals in US zoos testing positive for the virus could put lots of zoo workers and animals at risk.
A Malayan tiger at the Bronx Zoo has tested positive for the coronavirus, according to statements from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Wildlife Conservation Society, which manages the New York City zoo.
Why it matters: It's the first known animal to test positive for the virus in the United States. The tiger is believed to have contracted the virus from an asymptomatic zookeeper.



For more Covid-19 related posts go to Old Man and the Apocalypse site.

Saturday, March 28, 2020

Friday, March 27, 2020

Taking A Break

Been traveling - not anymore, of course.  Taking a break on this site during the Covid-19 crisis.

Recommend the Johns Hopkins tracker to follow the virus around the world.

Saturday, February 29, 2020

No Answers from Politicians

In a small Australian town real people are asking who pays the human costs when the coal fired power plants and coal mines are closed?  Nobody seems to have a practical answer.  
“I don’t think there’s been a great deal of thinking or attention to what [a climate transition] means for small towns like us. What I see is politicians, tourism people, saying each one of our jobs is going to be replaced by a new tourism job. But I don’t see that as practical at all. It fails to take into account that we own houses, businesses, we have settled families. What exactly is our transition plan for these people? Should we just leave our homes and businesses and move..."
Only governments can solve the climate crisis and they will only act if we take to the streets and demand not just technical solutions, but human solutions.

Thursday, February 27, 2020

Lenticular Cloud Formation

...lenticular clouds are common around mountains that force incoming air to rise. If that air is carrying water vapor, then when it rises through the atmosphere and its temperature drops, the water will condense into a crowd of water droplets, the same way that droplets cover a cold glass on a warm, humid day. In the sky, the massive collection of suspended droplets forms a lenticular cloud, which erodes as the air sinks back down.
A single lenticular cloud recently appeared downwind of California’s Mount Shasta, per the Post. But Mount Washington’s cloud had another trick to share. Unstable conditions in the atmosphere can lead air currents to rise, while fast, low-density wind sweeps along the top. These wind currents can “sculpt” a cloud into the curlicue shape of a Kelvin-Helmholtz wave, meteorologist Jesse Ferrell tells AccuWeather’s Lauren Fox.  ---  Smithsonian Magazine

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

The Ocean Will Win


Sea level rise is going to happen.  Wait, that statement is incorrect.  Sea level rise is happening right now.  Multiple California communities are struggling with the encroachment of the ocean most often with expensive project that may, at best, delay the inevitable.  Just north of Monterey, the small town of Marina is planning for the ocean to win and how to accommodate the changes that victory will entail while still retaining their community.
At a time when Del Mar, Pacifica and other coastal cities are fighting to defend their homes and roads from the rising sea, Marina has embarked on a path less traveled. Here in this Army turned university town, residents are learning how to adjust with the ocean as the water moves inland.
“Marina is such a good test case,” said David Revell, a coastal geomorphologist who has advised numerous cities, including Marina, on sea level rise. “Here we have the precedent of a community who understands that … there has to be enough lead time to get things out of the way — before it’s in the way.
“That is a really powerful message to the rest of California.”

Who Says TV Isn't Educational?

Researchers in Finland studied two species of  local birds, the great tit (Parus major) and the blue tit (Cyanistes caeruleus).  These birds have shown the ability to learn foods to avoid by watching how other birds react after eating them.  The researchers showed some of the birds videos of their peers eating and reacting to almonds where some of the almonds had been treated with a bitter substance.  Birds who ate those almonds reacted by "wiping their beaks and shaking their heads."  
Birds that had watched the videos ate fewer of the icky prey packets than those that had not, the researchers found. Blue tits seemed to learn better after watching videos featuring members of their own species, while great tits performed similarly regardless of what species had been featured in the videos.
“By watching others, [great tits and blue tits] can learn quickly and safely which prey are best to eat,” Hämäläinen says. “This can reduce the time and energy they invest in trying different prey, and also help them avoid the ill effects of eating toxic prey.”

Friday, February 21, 2020

An Army Of Denialist Bots

A new study of social media site Twitter finds that there is provides a voice to a vast army of automated Twitter bots routinely providing climate change denialist misinformation and expressing disdain and skepticism regarding legitimate climate change science and information.
The social media conversation over the climate crisis is being reshaped by an army of automated Twitter bots, with a new analysis finding that a quarter of all tweets about climate on an average day are produced by bots, the Guardian can reveal. 
The stunning levels of Twitter bot activity on topics related to global heating and the climate crisis is distorting the online discourse to include far more climate science denialism than it would otherwise.
On an average day during the period studied, 25% of all tweets about the climate crisis came from bots. This proportion was higher in certain topics – bots were responsible for 38% of tweets about “fake science” and 28% of all tweets about the petroleum giant Exxon.
The study doesn't identify the sources behind the bots, but considering their content it seems clear that the goal of the bots is to continue to inject confusion regarding climate science and support the goals of those who wish to delay action on reducing fossil fuel consumption.  Who could have goals like that?

Wednesday, February 19, 2020

There Is Always A Worse Worst Case

In The Future We Choose, Christina Figueres and Tom Rivett Carnac, two key figures in the development of the Paris Climate Agreement, describe a pair of potential futures for our planet and human civilization.  
In the Guardian, they summarize the best cast and worst case for our future.

The Worst Case (of course things could always be worse)
...Our world is getting hotter. Over the next two decades, projections tell us that temperatures in some areas of the globe will rise even higher, an irreversible development now utterly beyond our control...Now there are few forests left, most of them either logged or consumed by wildfire, and the permafrost is belching greenhouse gases into an already overburdened atmosphere...in five to 10 years, vast swaths of the planet will be increasingly inhospitable to humans...No one knows what the future holds for their children and grandchildren: tipping point after tipping point is being reached, casting doubt on the form of future civilisation. Some say that humans will be cast to the winds again, gathering in small tribes, hunkered down and living on whatever patch of land might sustain them.
And, the Best Case (already cast in doubt):
While we may have successfully reduced carbon emissions, we’re still dealing with the aftereffects of record levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. The long-living greenhouse gases have nowhere to go other than the already-loaded atmosphere, so they are still causing increasingly extreme weather, though it’s less extreme than it would have been had we continued to burn fossil fuels.
Glaciers and Arctic ice are still melting and the sea is still rising. Severe droughts and desertification are occurring in the western United States, the Mediterranean and parts of China. Ongoing extreme weather and resource degradation continue to multiply existing disparities in income, public health, food security and water availability. But now governments have recognised climate crisis factors for the threat multipliers that they are. That awareness allows us to predict downstream problems and head them off before they become humanitarian crises.
Sadly, the Best Case here requires immediate and sustained planet wide activities that aren't even being considered by the largest greenhouse gas producing countries.  The Worst Case on the other hand could easily be the title of the Trump Republican environmental policy.  A policy being adopted by other countries with like minded autocratic governments.

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Resorts Flying in Snow

A French ski resort is under fire for using a helicopter to deliver 50 tonnes (110,000 pounds) of snow that allowed the resort to continue to operate on a limited basis.  Despite the incredible carbon emissions cost of helicopter snow delivery the resort justified their actions as a job preservation measure.  Climate change driven by CO2 emissions is a primary cause of reduced snowfall, so the irony of using an extravagant delivery system to protect of small number of jobs isn't lost on the critics.  
This is a problem at ski resorts everywhere; Vail Resorts has been trying to go Net Zero by 2030 and is running its new high efficiency snow guns on wind power, but you can't make snow when it's 50°F out. According to research published in Geophysical Research Letters, the amount of snow mass in the USA had dropped 41 percent since 1980 and the snow season has shrunk by 34 days.
If only Senator James Inhofe (OK-Oil Shill) could deliver snow to ski resorts the way he did in the US Senate a few years ago.

The Recycling Scam - Part the Infinity

Today, Greenpeace issued a comprehensive report on the state of recycling in the US.  The report is clear in it conclusion and also crystal clear in its indictment of the packaging industry which continues to hide behind the essentially phony recycling symbol that it attaches to tons of single use plastic packaging material.
Companies are liable and at risk now. Companies that make “recyclable” claims in marketing materials or on products are liable for misrepresentation and need to ensure that the claims are accurate and not deceptive or misleading. Recyclable claims or labels on products other than PET #1 and HDPE #2 bottles and jugs are not accurate in the U.S. and expose companies to legal, reputational and financial liability risks.
By claiming that their products are recyclable packaging companies and their corporate customers are promoting a lie.  These companies know that the vast majority of the plastic material that they are using is not recyclable, but that virtually all of it ends in dump sites, incinerators or casually tossed out in our parks or on our beaches.  The cost of disposing of this "recyclable" material is left to communities.  
“This report shows that one of the best things to do to save recycling is to stop claiming that everything is recyclable,” said John Hocevar, director of Greenpeace’s Oceans Campaign. “We have to talk to companies about not producing so much throw-away plastic that ends up in the ocean or in incinerators.”
The plastic packaging industry needs to make major changes, but so do consumers. We need to understand that virtually all plastic packaging material is not recyclable and that all but a tiny fraction ends up in as garbage - waste that is filling out landfills or generating air pollution as it is incinerated.

Monday, February 17, 2020

Coyote and Badger On An Adventure



This video of a young coyote and a badger has gone viral.  This notoriety is due in large part to the playful behavior of the coyote and the way the two seem to be on an adventure together.   Behavioralist Jennifer Campbell-Smith sees something more than just a cute video.  She sees a lesson in animal behavior that illustrates the growing understanding that animal behavior is more than stimulus and response, but is often based on the "personality" of the individual animals themselves.
Scientifically, we are finally emerging from a dark period of studying nature simply as a stimulus-and-instinct-driven movie that humans can observe — the kind of thinking used to justify government-funded culls and mass indiscriminate killing of native species. Recent research demonstrates the cognitive and cultural capabilities of non-human animals, as well as the importance of their proclivities and personalities, and more data keep piling up.
This video comes from the Bay Area's Open Space Trust.  Please support their work.


Saturday, February 15, 2020

Bighorn Airlift


Nevada's Pyramid Lake is an ancient natural lake fed by the Truckee River that transports water from Lake Tahoe down the eastern face of the Sierra Nevada Mountains.  The Northern Paiute Tribe was squeezed onto the Pyramid Lake reservation in the 19th century, although the Paiutes had lived in the Great Basin and ranged between the Rocky and Sierra Nevada Mountains for hundreds of years.  

Pyramid Lake provided the Paiutes with fish, the cui-ui and Lahontan cutthroat trout, both struggling, but on the rebound due to the tribe's conservation efforts.  However, bighorn sheep that were a critical part of the tribe's culture had been missing from the reservation for a century.  Until now.
For the first time in roughly a hundred years, the Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe will have a flock of bighorn sheep on tribal land that was once a part of the sheep’s historic habitat. Not only will the effort help restore the species; it will also renew hunting and tanning traditions and support ceremonial uses — practices disrupted as the sheep population declined.

Friday, February 14, 2020

Berry Important to Wolves


An interesting observation of wolf behavior is generating some serious questions.
In 2017, biologist Austin Homkes of Northern Michigan University in Marquette noticed some unusual behavior. He was following the GPS signal from previously installed wolf collars. It seemed like a gathering where several wolves met up — indicative of a hunt, he thought.
It’s common for wolves to hunt something and then bring the pups to the carcass to feed. But this wasn’t the case. It was, indeed, a rendezvous site. Homkes watched from a distance, observing as pups gathered around an adult wolf. They started licking its mouth, which stimulates adults to throw up. Then, Homkes thought, it must be still some meat the adult wolf had previously consumed.
But this wasn’t the case here. Homkes watched in shock as the wolf regurgitated piles of partially chewed blueberries, which the pups munched on.
The question of blueberry consumption illuminates the need to understand the contribution to wolf nutrition that food like these berries provide.  Could wolves benefit from forestry practices that encouraged the growth of berries?   You can review the study here.

                                                                                                                   Photo:  ODFW

Arrokoth


Photographed by the New Horizon spacecraft.  

Arrokoth comes from a region of the Solar System called the Kuiper Belt, specifically from an area that's outside the gravitational influence of Neptune, the outermost large planet. In this region, there was enough material to form icy bodies, but it was spread so thinly that the bodies seem to have remained small, without interacting frequently enough to form larger planets. Neptune's influence scattered some of the Kuiper Belt objects further inward, where collisions with other bodies were more likely and the influence of the Sun was stronger. But Arrokoth currently orbits beyond the point where that was likely to happen. --- Ars Technica

                                                                                                                  Photo: NASA

A Gold Rush When the Ice Melts

I can't wait for someone from the Trump crime family to discuss how great it will be to exploit the mineral resources of Antarctica once all that pesky ice melts.
Brazilian scientists measured a temperature of 20.75 degrees Celsius (approximately 69.35 degrees Fahrenheit) on Seymour Island Feb. 9...
"We'd never seen a temperature this high in Antarctica," Brazilian scientist Carlos Schaefer told AFP.
It's just a matter of time.
...Antarctica as a whole has warmed by almost three degrees Celsius over the past 50 years, according to WMO data reported by BBC News. During that time, about 87 percent of the glaciers on its western coast have retreated. The region also just recorded its warmest January on record.

Thursday, February 13, 2020

"burned away with god's own blessed fire"

After a discussion of two of the most egregious examples of the corruption of Donald Trump's war on the environment and public health and safety, Charles Pierce talks about what will be necessary when Trump is defeated in November. 
I don't want conciliation if this president* loses in the fall. I don't want to look forward and not backwards, and I sure as hell don't want to turn any pages. I want democratic government restored to its full and righteous power until the last slime that has seeped into our institutions has been burned away with god's own blessed fire. This isn't vengeance. It's justice, full, transparent and complete. And it is our common right to see it done.

The Wall Trumps All

For nearly three decades the Malpai Borderlands Group, a coalition of ranchers along the southern border of Arizona and New Mexico, has worked to protect and preserve 800,000 acres of range land.  They have worked with environmental groups and various government agencies to preserve the open land and protect the environment.
Ranchers have worked to restore the watershed through a series of small rock structures that slow water runoff during heavy rains, recharging groundwater. A cattle-pond enhancement project aided the threatened Chiricahua leopard frog. The group has received money from the Natural Resources Conservation Service, a federal agency, to enhance water sources for both the ranchers’ cattle and the wildlife that cross through their land, and their work has helped inform regional fire-management decisions. Approximately 86,000 acres of land have been protected through conservation easements, maintaining ecological connectivity in a region that both ranchers and environmentalists feared would be fragmented by subdivisions.
Since some of this vast acreage runs along the US-Mexico border, the group has worked successfully with the Border Patrol to support border security while maintaining environmental responsibility. 
The group takes border security seriously; in the early 2000s, some of its ranches were situated along drug-trafficking routes. The ranchers helped the Border Patrol place surveillance towers on their property, and over the years, border crossings fell significantly in their sector.
That was before Trump and his border wall.  Now the Trump Administration is building the wall directly through some of the most environmentally sensitive areas of the borderlands.
In January... the 30-foot bollard wall was being erected...  carving up wildlife habitat, cutting off water sources for animals like jaguars, javelina and mountain lions, and cordoning off open space between the United States and Mexico...
Despite its history of close cooperation with the Border Patrol and what the group believed was an understanding with the government, the border wall is going up.
...Bill McDonald, the former executive director and founding member of the Malpai Borderlands Group...A fifth-generation cattle rancher, he won the prestigious MacArthur Foundation “genius grant” in 1998 for his work in land conservation.
When asked about his thoughts on the border wall, he told me he feels betrayed by the government. The group approached Border Patrol much the same way it pursued relationships with diverse regional stakeholders — through building trust. Until last March, McDonald thought they were all on the same page.
There is no "same page" with Trump, the environment will always suffer and people of goodwill will always be betrayed. 



For more background on the Malpai Borderlands Group.

Wednesday, February 12, 2020

Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Ignorance Is Bliss - Titanic Syndrome

Ever wonder what the impact of decades of climate change denialism and Republican's routine attacks on science have on people when they are introduced to the potential impact of climate change on their very homes?   Those people most likely to suffer directly, deny the science.  
The study was intended to assess how residents might perceive the vulnerability of their property and their communities to severe storms. We asked residents about their political affiliation and their support for policies such as zoning laws, gasoline taxes and other measures to address climate change.
Surprisingly, we found that those who had viewed the maps were, on average, less likely to say they believed that climate change was taking place than those who had not seen the maps.
Further, those who saw the maps were less likely than those survey respondents who had not seen the maps to believe that climate change was responsible for the increased intensity of storms. Respondents who classified themselves as Republicans had the strongest negative responses to the maps.
Those who saw the maps were no more likely to believe that climate change exists, that climate change increases the severity of storms or that sea level is rising and related to climate change. Even more dramatically, exposure to the scientific map did not influence beliefs that their own homes were susceptible to flooding or that sea level rise would reduce local property values.
Facts are easier to ignore when that ignorance is reinforced by politicians, corporations and media outlets like Fox News.

Monday, February 10, 2020

Look What Crashed Through My Window

The average life span of a bald eagle in the wild is 20 years, so it's a pretty big deal when a 30 year old eagle crashes through your window while you are tying flies for fishing season
Meghan Warren from the Teton Raptor Center captured the bird Tuesday after it flew through a double-paned window and crashed onto the fly-tying desk of Reed Moulton. Moulton thought the bird had died, but after a few minutes it stood up and perched among Moulton’s hooks and feathers.
A band on the rescued bird’s right leg revealed that it had been banded in the Yellowstone Ecosystem in the spring of 1989 and is 30 years old. The Exxon Valdez spilled its cargo in Prince William Sound that year, Mike Sullivan was the governor and the B52s released the hit “Love Shack.”
The male eagle is looking forward to a quick release and return to soaring with his pals. 

                                                                         Photo:  by  

Global Warming Drives Declining Bee Populations

When the most useful insects become extinct, what bugs will likely survive?   Mosquitos, the ubiquitous cockroach, ants....?  A world without bees will also be a world with fewer flowers, fruits and, of course, almonds.
The study found that in the course of a single human generation, the chances of a bumble bee population surviving in a given place has dropped by an average of over 30 percent.
"Bumble bees are the best pollinators we have in wild landscapes and the most effective pollinators for crops like tomato, squash, and berries," says fist author Peter Soroye, a PhD student in the Department of Biology at the University of Ottawa. "Our results show that we face a future with many less bumble bees and much less diversity, both in the outdoors and on our plates."
The bright side is that the authors of this study have created a tool to determine the likelihood of extinction for a species.  So  there is that.

Monday, February 3, 2020

Hotter and Faster....Maybe.

Global warming models are critical to understanding the impact of atmospheric CO2 build-up on almost every aspect of life on the planet.  Sea level rise, loss of arable land, species extinction, wildfire risks, deforestation…..the doomsday list goes on and on. 

For almost 50 years these models have had a strong track record in predicting global warming.  The results of those models figure strongly in the calculations and international commitments made in the Paris Agreement.  The global response to a predicted three decree Celsius temperature increase by 2100 is based on the scientific models.
“Particularly impressive” were models from the 1970s because there wasn’t much observable evidence for warming at that time. Back then, the paper noted, “the world was thought to have been cooling for the past few decades.”

In the last year, warming models have begun to generate results that indicate that both the magnitude of warming and the timeframe for meaningful human action are much more critical.   It's getting hotter faster are the basic results of multiple highly respected models.
The reason for worry is that these same models have successfully projected global warming for a half century. Their output continues to frame all major scientific, policy and private-sector climate goals and debates, including the sixth encyclopedic assessment by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change due out next year. If the same amount of climate pollution will bring faster warming than previously thought, humanity would have less time to avoid the worst impacts.

Warming models have become more sophisticated over the years and more complex.  The basic data doesn’t change, but assumptions regarding the impact of both current warming, human activity and even clouds can influence the results the models predict.  Scientists know that the models are critical to the complex web of political considerations and decision that must be made to ameliorate the worst impact of global warming.  They are working to refine the models and develop a consensus of the scenarios to help shape the necessary global response.
In the next year, climate-modeling groups will peruse each other’s results to figure out how seemingly good improvements in cloud and aerosol science may have pushed the models into hotter states. These conversations happen in the open, through peer-reviewed journals, conferences and blog posts. The authors of the main UN climate-science reports will follow along and try to stitch together a big picture, for release in 2021.

Saturday, February 1, 2020

Pass this On - This is Who Trump Is


This is the man who has decided that all of the climate science is wrong and the answer to the world's problems is more fossil fuel.  He loves "clean coal."  And, the Republicans are happy to let this mentally compromised man destroy the world.   

                                                                                                    From Real Time with Bill Maher

Thursday, January 30, 2020

Doomsday Glacier - What's Next?



The climate emergency routinely uncovers multiple “doomsday” scenarios, events and cascade points – the Thwaites Glacier is another entry on the ledger that could send humanity back to the Middle Ages. 
The Thwaites Glacier has been called the "doomsday" glacier and the "most important" glacier in the world, BBC News explained. The glacier, roughly the size of Britain or Florida, already contributes four percent a year to global sea level rise. Not only that, it acts as a stop on the rest of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, which could raise sea levels by more than three meters (approximately 10 feet).

Thwaites hasn’t been on the top of the global disaster list because it is so remote, a factor that has limited the ability of scientist to take on-site measurements. Researchers have now made the journey and taken measurements of the water temperature below the glacier.
Researchers specifically took measurements from the glacier's grounding zone. That's the place where the glacier's ice moves off of bedrock and into the sea, NYU explained. Thwaites is especially precarious because the bed it rests on slopes downward, according to BBC News. As warm water melts the ice between the glacier's surface and the bedrock, the glacier retreats and the ice on top is more likely to break off. "The fact that such warm water was just now recorded by our team along a section of Thwaites grounding zone where we have known the glacier is melting suggests that it may be undergoing an unstoppable retreat that has huge implications for global sea level rise," Holland told NYU.

The ramifications of the climate emergency become more crystal clear every day - except in Washington, DC. 


                                                                                                                                                                                  Photo: NASA 

Each One the Size of Texas



An image of the Sun with the highest spatial resolution ever has been taken by the Daniel K Inouye Solar Telescope. Shown above is the full field image, which is displayed in false colour and shows infrared light at 789 nm wavelength.

The granular structures in the image are convection cells, which are each about the size of the US state of Texas. Hot plasma from inside the Sun bubbles up in the bright centres of the cells. It then cools by radiating its heat and falls back into the Sun in the gaps between the cells – which are dark because they are cooler.  ---  PhysicsWorld

                                                                                                                 (Photo: NSO/AURA/NSF)  

Planting Trees Only Matters if the Trees Live



When politicians (or autocrats) plant trees as photo opportunities, things often go bad.  In Turkey, a widely ballyhooed project to plant 11 million trees in that country appears to be on its way to produce over nine million dead saplings.  Growing healthy trees is a way to impact greenhouse gases, but only if the saplings become viable trees.
“We said it was wrong to run the campaign in a period without adequate rainfall just to get into the Guinness Book of World Records. Besides that, the people recruited to plant the trees were not adequately trained. If only we had been wrong,” the union’s chairman Şükrü Durmuş said.
“This is a murder. We are warning the Forestry and Agriculture Ministry once more. Over 17 years you have handed over thousands of hectares to international companies to develop as mines. You won’t fix the destruction caused by these companies by planting 11 million trees,” he said.
You can't fix the damage caused by the industrial plundering of the environment with a poorly planned and executed PR stunt.


Sunday, January 26, 2020

Coronavirus Markets In China



Will a global pandemic dampen the Chinese obsession with eating wild and exotic animals?  I would like to see the autocratic Chinese government step in and lock down the Chinese driven trade in endangered species, but since they can't even control the trade of more domestic wildlife, I don’t have much hope.
A new nationwide ban on the sale of wildlife will affect markets, restaurants and online shops. Health experts have long raised concerns about unhygienic and cramped conditions in some Chinese markets, where wild and often poached animals are packed together.

Scientific evidence that various strains of the coronavirus are directly linked to wild animals is conclusive.  The direct link to the current outbreak hasn’t been established, but it is only a matter of sorting the evidence, which will unfortunately occur after most of the victims are buried.
Health teams are working urgently to determine the origin of the disease. It is from the same family of viruses as Sars, which was passed to humans from bats by masked palm civets, and Mers, which was carried from bats to humans by camels.

Friday, January 24, 2020

Ministry of Silly Walks



The helmeted guineafowl is capable of strong flight, but it is mainly terrestrial often choosing to run rather than fly. They typically roosts in trees. 

This diurnal bird calls with a rasping, stuttering, grating "keerrrr." Lives in flocks of up to hundreds of birds, and forages on open ground

Helmeted Guineafowl are both monomorphic and monochromatic meaning that both males and females are similar in size, appearance and color.

These birds tend to form breeding pairs that are highly monogamous.

Guineafowl are mentioned in Greek mythology. Meleagros was the son of Oeneus, King of Calydon. According to legend, upon his death, his sisters were transformed into guineafowl.  --- SeaWorld

Tuesday, January 21, 2020

What Will Happen in the Senate?



“A well-constituted court for the trial of impeachments is an object not more to be desired than difficult to be obtained in a government wholly elective. The subjects of its jurisdiction are those offenses which proceed from the misconduct of public men, or, in other words, from the abuse or violation of some public trust. They are of a nature which may with peculiar propriety be denominated POLITICAL, as they relate chiefly to injuries done immediately to the society itself. The prosecution of them, for this reason, will seldom fail to agitate the passions of the whole community, and to divide it into parties more or less friendly or inimical to the accused. In many cases it will connect itself with the pre-existing factions, and will enlist all their animosities, partialities, influence, and interest on one side or on the other; and in such cases there will always be the greatest danger that the decision will be regulated more by the comparative strength of parties, than by the real demonstrations of innocence or guilt.”  --- Alexander Hamilton – Federalist #65 (Lawyers, Guns & Money)

Monday, January 20, 2020

Red Sky at Morning - Take Warning


We shall overcome because the arc of the moral universe is long but it bends toward justice. – Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., “Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution.” 

That arc does not bend by itself, its course is changed by the moral gravity we impart to the universe.  Keep in mind there are other forces that are at work to bend that moral arc away from justice.

Saturday, January 18, 2020

Snow Leopards and Global Warming


In the great mountains of central Asia, the snow leopard (Panthera uncia) is facing the consequences of climate change. In Pakistan the snow leopard’s range is being impacted by warmer temperatures that both reduce the population of prey animals and open the snow leopard high mountain range to common leopards (Panthera pardus). Common leopards are more aggressive than snow leopards which makes them poor neighbors in the high mountain ranges that were once the sole province of the snow leopard.
The snow leopard has a wide habitat range of about 80,000 square kilometres in Pakistan and mostly lives above the treeline. In the Hindu Kush range, it is found in the Chitral district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and in the Karakoram range it is found in Gilgit, Ghizer, Hunza-Nagar, Skardu and Ghanche districts. Mehmood Ghaznavi, the conservator with the government of G-B’s Parks and Wildlife Department said that the estimated population of the snow leopard in Gilgit Baltistan is around 200.
Photo traps are providing evidence that common leopards are using the same game trails as snow leopards.
“We couldn’t believe that it was the camera trap photo of a common leopard captured in prime snow leopard habitat,” Hussain said. “The common leopard has never been reported in the Chitral Gol National Park before.”

According to Hussain, field experts believe that it is likely that climate change caused the common leopard to intrude on the snow leopard’s habitat.

“There is a likelihood that the common leopard might have come from the closest common leopard habitat, but that is yet to be known. The presence of the common leopard in the snow leopard’s territory can be dangerous for the snow leopard due to its aggressive nature.”
If you interested in snow leopard conservation, check out this site.

Friday, January 17, 2020

Taal Volcano Makes Lightning

Volcanic lightning is a somewhat common phenomenon (common relative to how often volcanic eruptions take place). Volcanic lightning arises from particles of volcanic ash (and sometimes ice) ejected in the atmosphere. These particles generate static electricity within the volcanic plume, triggering a “dirty thunderstorm.” --- ZME Science


Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Everything They Say is a Lie



I love the first snow of the year as much as the next gal, but whoever was in charge of the White House Twitter account could only have been one of three things: mistaken, lying, or hallucinating. That’s because on Sunday, the weather in D.C. rose to a balmy 70 degrees F. The day before, January 11, was even warmer — 61 locations across the East Coast broke or tied their record high temperatures that day. The picture was actually taken about a week earlier, when a flurry of snow did reach D.C.

It’s quite possible that whoever manages Trump’s social media prescheduled the tweet last week without bothering to take a look at the weekend forecast. But it’s also possible that the Trump administration — which has rolled back environmental regulations, gutted federal science agencies, propped up a dying coal industry, and slashed funding for renewable energy — is so deeply in climate change denial that it made a point of lying about snow falling on the hottest day of winter.   ---  Grist

Monday, January 13, 2020

Not Bad On His First Day


Wolf Cukier, a 17-year-old NASA intern, distinguished himself when he discovered a planet just three days into an assignment. Originally, the teen was instructed to look into the brightness of certain stars captured by NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, TESS, but he ended up finding what is now being called TOI 1338 b, a planet that’s estimated to be almost seven times bigger than the size of Earth.  --- Hypebeast

Will Resume Shortly

 Taking a break from blogging.  Worn out by Trump and his fascist followers, Covid-19 pandemic fatigue, etc.....