Archive for September, 2006

‘Drastic’ shrinkage in Arctic ice

Thursday, September 14th, 2006
By Richard Black
Environment correspondent, BBC News website

A Nasa satellite has documented startling changes in Arctic sea ice cover between 2004 and 2005. The extent of “perennial” ice – thick ice which remains all year round – declined by 14%, losing an area the size of Pakistan or Turkey.

The last few decades have seen summer ice shrink by about 0.7% per year.

The drastic shrinkage may relate partly to unusual wind patterns found in 2005, though rising temperatures in the Arctic could also be a factor.

The research is reported in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.The Arctic is warming about twice as fast as the global average; and recent studies have shown that the area of the Arctic covered by ice each summer, and the ice thickness, have been shrinking.

September 2005 saw the lowest recorded area of ice cover since 1978, when satellite records became available.

More…

The End of Eden

Wednesday, September 13th, 2006

This is a must read article.   You may think that I serve such a constant diet of doom and gloom articles here that if you just read every third one, you won’t miss much.   You may be right but, if you read anything today, read this one!

———————————-

James Lovelock Says This Time We’ve Pushed the Earth Too Far

Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, September 2, 2006

ST. GILES-ON-THE-HEATH, England

Through a deep and tangled wood lies a glade so lovely and wet and lush as to call to mind a hobbit’s sanctuary. A lichen-covered statue rises in a garden of native grasses, and a misting rain drips off a slate roof. At the yard’s edge a plump muskrat waddles into the brush.

“Hello!”

A lean, white-haired gentleman in a blue wool sweater and khakis beckons you inside his whitewashed cottage. We sit beside a stone hearth as his wife, Sandy, an elegant blonde, sets out scones and tea. James Lovelock fixes his mind’s eye on what’s to come.

“It’s going too fast,” he says softly. “We will burn.”

Why is that?

“Our global furnace is out of control. By 2020, 2025, you will be able to sail a sailboat to the North Pole. The Amazon will become a desert, and the forests of Siberia will burn and release more methane and plagues will return.”

Sulfurous musings are not Lovelock’s characteristic style; he’s no Book of Revelation apocalyptic. In his 88th year, he remains one of the world’s most inventive scientists, an Englishman of humor and erudition, with an oenophile’s taste for delicious controversy. Four decades ago, his discovery that ozone-destroying chemicals were piling up in the atmosphere started the world’s governments down a path toward repair. Not long after that, Lovelock proposed the theory known as Gaia, which holds that Earth acts like a living organism, a self-regulating system balanced to allow life to flourish.

Biologists dismissed this as heresy, running counter to Darwin’s theory of evolution. Today one could reasonably argue that Gaia theory has transformed scientific understanding of the Earth.

Now Lovelock has turned his attention to global warming, writing “The Revenge of Gaia: Earth’s Climate Crisis and the Fate of Humanity.” Already a big seller in the United Kingdom, the book was released in the United States last month.  Lovelock’s conclusion is straightforward.

To wit, we are poached.

More…

research credit -> John P.

Scientists dissect mystery of genius

Wednesday, September 13th, 2006

By Sanjay Gupta
CNN

ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico (CNN) — A young man in a white physician’s coat and a bow tie is walking toward us down the sidewalk, a plastic five-gallon bucket swinging from his hand.

“That must be our brain,” I say to my producer.

We’re at the Mental Illness and Neurodiscovery, or MIND, Institute, where they literally look inside the brain to try to spot creativity and genius.

The MIND Institute, an independent research site funded mostly with federal dollars, has perhaps the largest collection of sophisticated brain imaging devices in the world.

As a neurosurgeon, I don’t normally slice brains open, right down the middle, so this will give me a different perspective.

With pathologist Robert Reichard and Rex Jung, a psychologist at the MIND Institute who studies creativity, we head to the dissection room.

More…

The Mess in Montgomery

Wednesday, September 13th, 2006

Those responsible for the failure to prepare polling stations must be held accountable.

UNTOLD NUMBERS of people were turned away from polling places yesterday in Montgomery County. The official responsible for their disenfranchisement called it “a clerical error.” We call it gross incompetence that strikes at the very heart of our government. More than apologies are in order.

Election officials in Maryland’s largest and richest jurisdiction, one that prides itself on a reputation for good service, forgot to deliver the computer cards that operate the voting machines. Confusion reigned. Some people were told they couldn’t vote and should come back later. Others were given paper provisional ballots, but many precincts ran out of the forms. Communication was abysmal. Many voters who could not make a return trip were frustrated — as were candidates who feared that the debacle could well make the difference in a close race. With important local, state and federal offices at stake, some were questioning the legitimacy of the election even before the polls closed.

The county Board of Elections has one essential job — to ensure fair elections — and yesterday that job wasn’t done. The system needs to be held to account. Board President Nancy H. Dacek has promised an investigation, but her standing has been so damaged that she must consider whether her continuance in office serves the public good. Election Director Margaret Jurgensen is paid $113,033 a year to run day-to-day operations; part of that must be telling the public exactly who and what went wrong and what the consequences and remedies are.

More…

China unveils curbs on foreign news distribution

Wednesday, September 13th, 2006

BEIJING (Reuters) – China announced rules on Sunday requiring foreign media to seek approval from its state news agency to distribute news, pictures and graphics domestically, and warned against reports that “endanger national security.”

The rules, released by Xinhua and with immediate effect, also empowered the news agency to censor news distributed in China by foreign media and delete contents deemed forbidden.

Xinhua did not identify any foreign news agency.

The rules said foreign news, pictures and graphics can be sold in China only through agents approved by Xinhua.

More…

Gases escaping permafrost alarm scientists

Wednesday, September 13th, 2006

WASHINGTON – Global warming gases trapped in the soil are bubbling out of thawing permafrost in amounts far higher than previously thought and may trigger what researchers warn is a climate time bomb.

Methane – a greenhouse gas 23 times more powerful than carbon dioxide – is being released from permafrost at a rate five times faster than thought, according to a study being published today in the journal Nature. The findings are based on new, more accurate measuring techniques.

The effects can be huge,” said lead author Katey Walter of the University of Alaska at Fairbanks. “It’s coming out a lot and there’s a lot more to come out.”

Scientists worry about a vicious global warming cycle that was not part of their already-gloomy climate forecast: Warming already under way thaws permafrost, soil that has been frozen for thousands of years. Thawed permafrost releases methane and carbon dioxide. Those gases reach the atmosphere and help trap heat on Earth. The trapped heat thaws more permafrost, and the cycle continues.

More…

research credit -> Candice

Futuristic car that ruins on Hydrogen

Wednesday, September 13th, 2006

You can see a short video of this here:

An arms race of ideas

Tuesday, September 12th, 2006

It will always essentially be an arms race between the Liberals and the Conservatives. And there will always be move and counter-move. Perhaps the central thing that distinguishes these two philosophies is that one, the Conservative, is more naturally described as an extension of our deep biological imperatives (those deep-seated and unconscious biological urges to reproduce and to control the environmental surround to better ensure the survival of one’s progeny) whereas the Liberal POV can be more naturally described as an semi-conscious attempt to transcend those same imperatives.

A transcendence driven by the vague recognition that while our biological imperatives have served as an optimal strategy for us and all other biological forms since life first began on this planet, the time has finally arrived, now that human expansion has finally hit the limits of this finite planet, to recognize that these imperatives have within them an implicit assumption of infinite space and resources which is fundamentally unsupportable.

This simple dichotomy is the core issue underlying the problems our species faces now. Will we continue to act out our biological imperatives blindly and wreak havoc on this beautiful blue planet? Or will we rise to the challenge of consciously recognizing that we must transcend our biological urges so that we may adopt a strategy that allows us to achieve a steady-state balance with the biosphere and live within its limitations indefinitely?

Economist Magazine acknowledges Global Climate Crises

Monday, September 11th, 2006

The September 9th-15th, 2006 issue of the Economist Magazine has Global Climate Change as its front page story.

The Economist Magazine, along with the Wall Street Journal, have long been staunch defenders of the POV that the various impending ecological, climatic and economic problems in the world are overblown. After all, many business readers, who are their bread and butter, don’t want to hear this kind of news.

It’s interesting to see, as the problems loom larger and larger, how those who previously denied the problems come to grips with the necessity of revising their public positions on the issues. Some, like the current administration, are still deep into denial and bluffing it out. Others, like the Economist, just take up a new line and never mention their previous doubts. And others, like Michael Shermer, founder of the Skeptics Society, come out directly and admit their change of heart and openly discuss the factors that turned them around.

This slow permeation of awareness, whether it be for ecological awareness, democracy or human rights, is what advances humanity in its evolution towards more enlightened ways of doing things. It’s just a shame that we hardly have time for everyone to ‘wake up’. The problems are approching much faster than our awareness of them is growing and therein lies our core problem.

Siberian thaw to speed up global warming

Sunday, September 10th, 2006

The release of trapped greenhouse gases is pushing the world past the point of no return on climate change

Robin McKie and Nick Christian
Sunday September 10, 2006
The Observer

The frozen bogs of Siberia are melting, and the thaw could have devastating consequences for the planet, scientists have discovered.

They have found that Arctic permafrost, which is starting to melt due to global warming, is releasing five times more methane gas than their calculations had predicted. That level of emission is alarming because methane itself is a greenhouse gas. Increased amounts will therefore accelerate warming, cause more melting of Siberian bogs and Arctic wasteland, and so release even more. ‘It’s a slow-motion time bomb,’ said climate expert Professor Ted Schuur, of the University of Florida.

The discovery of these levels of methane release, revealed in a report in Nature last week, suggests that the planet is rapidly approaching a critical tipping point at which global warming could trigger an irreversible acceleration in climate change. ‘The higher the temperature gets, the more permafrost we melt, the more tendency it has to become a more vicious cycle,’ said Chris Field, director of global ecology at the Carnegie Institution of Washington. ‘That’s the thing that is scary about this.’

More…