0
   

Number 85 - To see a tree asmiling.

 
 
Stradee
 
  2  
Reply Mon 28 Feb, 2011 10:28 pm
@sumac,
Laughing

Yep, plus working in the house...

computer
work
computer
work
computer
sleep

Glad you're both still here, and i'm still not getting a2k notifications! grrr

or i'd be checking in more often

Saw a program on pbs last night 'Bears meet wolves" or something like the title...Yellowstone. Wolves hunt, bears take the kill...plus, at the end of the program there was a fully grown bear outside in the snow and way passed his hibernation time, sitting next to a wolf kill. Who says bears and other animals arn't intelligent. The wolves of course won't take on a full grown bear, so they wait paitiently till the animal has his dinner, then the wolves get left overs. Let us hope the wolves and bears do not leave the park for any reason, or they'll be fodder for rude hunters.

Dearhearts, I miss our chats and promise to check in more often. When the hamsters decide to get off their duffs and send notifications, i'll be here daily.

Thanks again sue for all your gifting at FB. You're a super friend. Smile

Dan, hope all is well in your neck of the woods...staying warm, and praying Pattie has more good days than challenging ones. Take care, sweetie.

danon5
 
  1  
Reply Tue 1 Mar, 2011 07:25 pm
@Stradee,
Hi Stradee --- glad to hear from ya again. Looks like you've been getting wet lately.

Interesting about the bears and wolves.


Stradee
 
  2  
Reply Tue 1 Mar, 2011 09:09 pm
@danon5,
Hi ya dan...not wet, frozen!

Today was a tad warmer...snow visible yet...and tonight they say rain. Weathers been something, hasn't it?

Took the chevy to the garage today...alls well! yipeee

Filled the gas tank...not yipeee...and wondered how in the hell people can travel for work paying 50 dollars for 12 gallons of gas. "Historically" they say...reasons for price hikes...and i say b.s. to that! Amazing how corporations and the government get away with gouging taxpayers.

wow, way to much chocolate today

anyhooo, hope you all are doing well, and if you're expecting more snow...stay warm! Sue, sorry to hear you're dragging the hose around the yard. My friend who lives in Chapparell, NM. receives one inch of rain per year. Most days she's eating residue from dust storms, and when her Jilly goes outdoors for biz...the poor baby can hardly breath. My friend douses a washcloth and bathes the dog from ears to neck removing dust so Jilly doesn't cough. Poor baby.

Have a good evening all ~
danon5
 
  1  
Reply Wed 2 Mar, 2011 01:08 pm
@Stradee,
Oh my, yes, aren't those pump prices something else. And, at the beginning of the whole mess the news people said we USAers use only about 3% of our gas from that region. I guess it's the EU people who are in trouble and causing all the gas in the world to rise in price.

Stay warm and cozy - it's really comfy down here. Day and night.

sumac
 
  2  
Reply Wed 2 Mar, 2011 07:06 pm
@danon5,
We have had some decently warm day time highs too, but it will be taking a dip for a couple of days. But not below freezing (except for tonight). I will go click.
sumac
 
  2  
Reply Thu 3 Mar, 2011 04:02 pm
@sumac,
Good to see you here Stradee. You need to come every day. Important article below.


March 3, 2011

Politics Seen to Limit E.P.A. in Regulation of Natural Gas

By IAN URBINA
When Congress considered whether to regulate more closely the handling of wastes from oil and gas drilling in the 1980s, it turned to the Environmental Protection Agency to research the matter. E.P.A. researchers concluded that some of the drillers’ waste was hazardous and should be tightly controlled.

But that is not what Congress heard. Some of the recommendations concerning oil and gas waste were eliminated in the final report handed to lawmakers in 1987.

“It was like the science didn’t matter,” Carla Greathouse, the author of the study, said in a recent interview. “The industry was going to get what it wanted, and we were not supposed to stand in the way.”

E.P.A. officials told her, she said, that her findings were altered because of pressure from the Office of Legal Counsel of the White House under Ronald Reagan. A spokesman for the E.P.A. declined to comment.

Ms. Greathouse’s experience was not an isolated case. More than a quarter century of efforts by some lawmakers and regulators to force the federal government to police the industry better have been thwarted, as E.P.A. studies have been repeatedly narrowed in scope, and important findings have been removed.

For example, the agency had planned to call last year for a moratorium on the gas-drilling technique known as hydrofracking in the New York City watershed, according to internal documents, but the advice was removed from the publicly released letter sent to New York.

Now some scientists and lawyers at the E.P.A. are wondering whether history is about to repeat itself, as the agency undertakes a broad new study of natural gas drilling and its potential risks, with preliminary results scheduled to be delivered next year.

The documents show that the agency dropped some plans to model radioactivity in drilling wastewater being discharged by treatment plants into rivers upstream from drinking water intake plants. And in Congress, members from drilling states like Oklahoma have pressured the agency to keep the focus of the new study narrow.

They have been helped in their lobbying efforts by a compelling storyline: Cutting red tape helps these energy companies reduce the nation’s dependence on other countries for fuel. Natural gas is also a cleaner-burning alternative to coal and plentiful within United States borders, so it can create jobs.

But interviews with E.P.A. scientists, and confidential documents obtained by The New York Times, show long and deep divisions within the agency over whether and how to increase regulation of oil and gas drillers, and over the enforcement of existing laws that some agency officials say are clearly being violated.

Agency lawyers are in a heated debate over whether to intervene in Pennsylvania, where drilling for gas has increased sharply, to stop what some of those lawyers say is a clear violation of federal pollution laws: drilling waste discharged into rivers and streams with minimal treatment. The outcome of that dispute has the potential to halt the breakneck growth of drilling in Pennsylvania.

The E.P.A. has taken strong stands in some places, like Texas, where in December it overrode state regulators and intervened after a local driller was suspected of water contamination. Elsewhere, the agency has pulled its punches, as in New York.

Asked why the letter about hydrofracking in the New York City watershed had been revised, an agency scientist who was involved in writing it offered a one-word explanation: “politics.”

Natural gas drilling companies have major exemptions from parts of at least seven of the 15 sweeping federal environmental laws that regulate most other heavy industries and that were written to protect air and drinking water from radioactive and hazardous chemicals.

Coal mine operators that want to inject toxic wastewater into the ground must get permission from the federal authorities. But when natural gas companies want to inject chemical-laced water and sand into the ground during hydrofracking, they do not have to follow the same rules.

The air pollution from a sprawling steel plant with different buildings is added together when regulators decide whether certain strict rules will apply. At a natural gas site, the toxic fumes from various parts of it — a compressor station and a storage tank, for example — are counted separately rather than cumulatively, so many overall gas well operations are subject to looser caps on their emissions.

An Earlier Reversal

The E.P.A. also studied hydrofracking in 2004, when Congress considered whether the process should be fully regulated by the Safe Drinking Water Act.

An early draft of the study discussed potentially dangerous levels of contamination in hydrofracking fluids and mentioned “possible evidence” of contamination of an aquifer. The final version of the report excluded these points, concluding instead that hydrofracking “poses little or no threat to drinking water.”

Shortly after the study was released, an E.P.A. whistleblower said the agency had been strongly influenced by industry and political pressure. Agency leaders at the time stood by the study’s findings.

“It was shameful,” Weston Wilson, the E.P.A. whistleblower, said in a recent interview about the study. He explained that five of the seven members of that study’s peer review panel were current or former employees of the oil and gas industry.

“The study ended up being the basis for this industry getting yet another exemption from federal law when it should have resulted in greater regulation of this industry,” Mr. Wilson added.

Some E.P.A. scientists say this pattern may be playing out again in the national study of hydrofracking that Congress will consider as it decides whether drillers will have to operate under stricter rules.

Internal documents from early meetings, obtained through public-records requests filed by The Times and provided by E.P.A. officials who are frustrated with how research is being handled, show agency field scientists demanding that certain topics be included in the study. And earlier versions of the research plan indicate that many of those topics were to be included.

For example, the study was to consider the dangers of toxic fumes released during drilling, the impact of drilling waste on the food chain and the risks of this radioactive waste to workers.

But many of these concerns, cited by field scientists in earlier documents as high priorities, were cut from the current study plan, according to a version of it made public on Feb. 8.

Earlier planning documents also called for a study of the risks of contaminated runoff from landfills where drilling waste is disposed and included detailed plans to model whether rivers can sufficiently dilute hazardous gas-well wastewater discharged from treatment plants.

These topics were cut from the current study plan, even though E.P.A. officials have acknowledged that sewage treatment plants are not able to treat drilling waste fully before it is discharged into rivers, sometimes just miles upstream from drinking water intake plants. While the current study plan clearly indicates that the agency plans to research various types of radioactivity concerns related to natural gas drilling, this river modeling, which E.P.A. scientists say is important, has been removed.

In interviews, several agency scientists and consultants, who declined to be named for fear of reprisals, said the study was narrowed because of pressure from industry and its allies in Congress, as well as budget and time constraints.

Brendan Gilfillan, an agency spokesman, said that the plan remained broad and that the agency had taken additional steps to investigate the impacts of drilling, including recently issuing a subpoena against the energy services company Halliburton to force the company to provide fuller disclosure about its drilling operations.

Federal scientists also say the national study is being used to squelch other research by the E.P.A. on hydrofracking. At a January meeting in Washington, Jeanne Briskin of the E.P.A.’s Office of Research and Development informed regional directors that the national study would be the only forum for research on hydrofracking.

This meant, these scientists said, that some projects under way in regional offices would probably have to be stopped.

“That may impact our plans to pursue some of the other research,” wrote Ron Landy, regional science liaison of E.P.A. Region 3, in an e-mail to another agency official in January in which he complained about the new directive.

He suggested that until the directive was lifted, his staff should keep quiet about its continuing hydrofracking research and instead emphasize its work on coal to superiors. “I think we can go ahead, but keep the focus on mining, and prepare for moving these efforts into hydraulic fracking once these limitations are lifted,” Mr. Landy wrote.

Though the E.P.A. has emphasized the importance of openness and public involvement in the study, internal e-mails show agency officials expressing concern about the reaction if the public were to learn of the narrowing scope of the study.

In those e-mails, these officials strongly discourage anyone from putting anything in writing about the national study unless it is vetted by managers.

In one e-mail, forwarded to The Times by David Campbell, director of the E.P.A. Region 3 Office of Environmental Innovation, described the instructions he had been given by the agency’s regional administrator, Shawn M. Garvin.

“He could not have been more adamant or clear about the development of any documentation related to our efforts on Marcellus,” Mr. Campbell wrote last December, referring to the Marcellus Shale, a gas-rich rock formation that stretches under Pennsylvania and other states. “His concern is that if we spell out what we think we want to do (our grandest visions) that the public may have access to those documents and challenge us to enact those plans.”

Mr. Gilfillan, the E.P.A. spokesman, said the e-mail exchange — which was shown to him for comment — did not reflect the agency’s efforts to understand the impacts of natural gas extraction better.

But in interviews, agency scientists and lawyers said Mr. Garvin’s office had been most resistant to stepping up its regulatory role in Pennsylvania.

These scientists and lawyers said that high-level agency officials in Washington had made it clear in meetings that some of the resistance to more rigorous enforcement was also coming from members of the environmental and energy staff at the White House.

Clark Stevens, a spokesman for the White House, rejected these assertions and argued that the Obama administration had taken “unprecedented steps” to study the impacts of natural gas drilling.

Support in Washington

In its efforts to oppose new federal regulations, the oil and gas industry has found strong allies in Congress to lobby the agency about its current research.

“I am confident this study, if truly focused on hydraulic fracturing,” wrote Senator Tom Coburn, Republican of Oklahoma, last April to the E.P.A. administrator, Lisa P. Jackson, “will prove the process indisputably safe and acceptable.”

Last September, Senator James M. Inhofe, also a Republican from Oklahoma, wrote to agency officials to offer his guidance about who should be allowed to review the research.

“We caution against potential panelists who have been longtime critics of hydraulic fracturing,” he wrote in a letter.

Over their careers, the two lawmakers from Oklahoma, a major drilling state, have been among the Senate’s top 20 recipients of oil and gas campaign contributions, according to federal data.

The oil and gas industry has not hesitated to convey its views to the agency about the study now under way, frequently quoting the language used in 2010 by a Congressional committee, which urged the E.P.A. “to carry out a study on the relationship between hydraulic fracturing and drinking water.”

In one comment submitted to the agency, Chad Bradley, a lobbyist for Chesapeake Energy, criticized the E.P.A., saying it was going beyond its “mandate” from Congress, adding new topics resulting in “mission creep.”

Virtually all of the companies echoed his comments.

But Representative Maurice D. Hinchey, Democrat from New York, who wrote the original language, said his words were being taken out of context. He added that the E.P.A. had full jurisdiction to study other risks from hydrofracking, like air quality or toxic waste being discharged into rivers.

“The language I authored does not at all limit the scope of the E.P.A.’s study, rather it sets forth the minimum that Congress expects,” he added. “Any assertion otherwise by industry is a blatant attempt to misrepresent Congress’s intentions.”

The argument over the scope of the study will affect whether certain exemptions for the oil and gas industry will remain intact.

These exemptions have led to conflicting impulses in Washington for a long time. For example, Carol M. Browner, the E.P.A. administrator in the Clinton administration, has argued both for and against these sorts of exemptions.

“Whatever comes out of the ground, you don’t have to test it, you don’t have to understand what’s in it, you can dump it anywhere,” Ms. Browner, said in a 1997 interview on “60 Minutes,” discussing exemptions for toxic wastes from the oil industry, which also apply to natural gas drillers.

“That’s how broad the loophole is,” she added at the time (her office declined to answer questions about those comments). “There’s nothing like it in any environmental statute. Congress should revisit this loophole.”

And yet, Ms. Browner, who announced in January that she was stepping down as President Obama’s top adviser on energy and climate change, has also been a strong supporter over the years of natural gas drilling. For example, she helped ensure in 1995 that hydrofracking would not be covered by certain parts of the Safe Drinking Water Act.

Exemptions Stymie E.P.A.

The natural gas drilling boom is forcing the E.P.A. to wrestle with questions of jurisdiction over individual states and how to police the industry despite its extensive exemptions from federal law.

In Wyoming, for example, the agency is investigating water-well contamination in an area of heavy drilling, even though some within the E.P.A. said in interviews that because of industry exemptions, the agency might not have powers to conduct such an investigation.

In Texas, after an aquifer was contaminated, E.P.A. officials in December ordered a drilling company to provide clean drinking water to residents despite strong resistance from state regulators who said the federal action was premature and unfounded.

The stakes are particularly high in Pennsylvania, where gas drilling is expanding quickly, and where E.P.A. officials say drilling waste is being discharged with inadequate treatment into rivers that provide drinking water to more than 16 million people.

Drillers throughout the country are watching Pennsylvania to see whether the federal agency will overrule the state’s decisions on how to dispose of drilling waste.

The central question on this issue: Should drillers in Pennsylvania be allowed to dump “mystery liquids” into public waterways?

Under federal law, certain basic rules govern sewage treatment plants. At their core, these rules say two things: operators have to know what is in the waste they receive, and they have to treat this waste to make it safe before discharging it into waterways.

But in Pennsylvania, these rules are being broken, according to some E.P.A. lawyers.

“Treatment plants are not allowed under federal law to process mystery liquids, regardless of what the state tells them,” explained one E.P.A. lawyer in an internal draft memo obtained by The Times. “Mystery liquids is exactly what this drilling waste is, since its ingredient toxins aren’t known.”

This fact has led to a heated fight within the E.P.A.

Some agency lawyers say the state is not policing treatment plants properly in some instances and is acting beyond its authority in others — allegations that state officials reject.

These lawyers are calling for the E.P.A. to revoke, at least temporarily, Pennsylvania’s right to give treatment plants operating permits to handle drilling waste. Last year, state regulators created their own pretreatment standards for plants handling this waste, even though these regulators lacked federal permission to do so, agency lawyers say.

E.P.A. scientists working on the agency’s national hydrofracking study have also emphasized that sewage treatment plants are not, technically speaking, treating the waste.

For example, when one agency scientist wrote in a draft plan for the national study that wastewater could be “discharged to surface water after treatment to remove contaminants,” another scientist corrected the statement in the margin.

Using the federal definition of treatment, the second scientist wrote, “we really don’t fully treat the waste.”

Nevertheless, the E.P.A. Region 3 office, which oversees Pennsylvania, has staunchly resisted calls from agency lawyers to order the state to stop issuing permits to treatment plants handling drilling waste.

“The bottom line is that under the Clean Water Act, dilution is not the solution to pollution,” the enforcement lawyer wrote. “Sewage treatment plants are legally obligated to treat, not dilute, the waste.”

“These plants are breaking the law,” the lawyer said. “Everyone is looking the other way.”
sumac
 
  2  
Reply Fri 4 Mar, 2011 09:54 am
@sumac,
Trees Matter, Too

Andrew M. Sugden


CREDIT: JONATHAN BLAIR/CORBIS
Although a variety of factors contribute to global wildfire activity, climate is thought to be a major determinant. Ohlson et al. now find that tree species composition has had at least as strong an influence as climate on wildfire activity over time in late Holocene boreal forests. By analyzing humus and peat records in northern Europe, the authors show that the invasion of Norway spruce, Picea abies, southwesterly across the region starting 4500 years ago was accompanied by a reduction in the frequency and severity of fire. The presence of Norway spruce would tend to make the forest more dense and shaded in the drier summer months, which would increase the local humidity of the understory and inhibit the spread of fire. Although the spruce invasion corresponded with a period of cooler and wetter climate, the tight spatial correlation of the arrival of spruce and the reduction in fire in specific locations argues for a key role of species composition in governing the fire regime. In turn, the reduction in fire would have led to other ecological consequences, notably increased sequestration of carbon by the vegetation and the establishment of other species requiring longer-term continuity. Thus, the results show how changes to the dominant forest species can exert a cascading effect on the regional ecology for centuries or millennia to come.
J. Ecol. 99, 395 (2011).
sumac
 
  2  
Reply Fri 4 Mar, 2011 11:00 am
@sumac,
Hi Danon,
Did my 10 or so clicking. Don't know why the system is letting me do it, but I'll do it.

We expect to get your rain on Sunday.
High Seas
 
  2  
Reply Fri 4 Mar, 2011 01:51 pm
@Stradee,
So glad I looked in - was wondering how y'all (sorry Danon, it's contagious!) are doing. There is a long movie about wolves and elk on National Geographic also, in addition to the wolves v. grizzlies saga; nature can be terrible, but the rule in Yellowstone, Denali, other national parks (rightly) is non-interference:
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0405/feature6/images/ft_hdr.6.jpg
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0405/feature6/index.html
danon5
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Mar, 2011 04:04 pm
@sumac,
Hi sumac, thanks for the articles.......... There was recently a small earthquake in AR -- the result of drilling for Nat'l Gas....
A few years ago there were earthquakes in W. TX -- the result of drilling for oil.
We are taking so much from underneath our feet that the earth is sinking in places.

0 Replies
 
danon5
 
  2  
Reply Fri 4 Mar, 2011 04:08 pm
@High Seas,
Hi High Seas -- Good to hear from ya. You may say y'all any time you want. Even down S. We only use those words and phrases to attract tourists......Grin

Y'all come on down and we'll go yonder n see some stuff.

Happy clicking all.........

High Seas
 
  2  
Reply Fri 4 Mar, 2011 04:25 pm
@danon5,
danon5 wrote:

Hi High Seas -- Good to hear from ya. You may say y'all any time you want. ...
Y'all come on down and we'll go yonder n see some stuff.

Thanks for adding to my limited down-south vocabulary, Danon - hope all is well with you and as well as can be with Mrs Danon. I know she loves animals as much as all of us here do - so she may choose to do the same thing I did, not watch these documentaries (call me chicken, it's OK Smile). Nature, as the poet wrote, is "red in tooth and claw" - and it's not for us to say how things should be improved; but I did - and Mrs Danon may wish to do that also - look up the pictures at this link, and just looking at the young moose in this one was heart-breaking: he knows he's doomed. Look at his eyes, worth "literary" volumes:
Quote:
Two weeks earlier, a pack of wolves had attacked him, ripping open his right thigh, but that failed to bring him down. Now he's trapped: The river's frigid glacial waters will quickly sap the moose's strength if he doesn't move to dry land—but the wolves will threaten again if he does.

http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0405/feature6/images/zm_zoomin.6.1.jpg
sumac
 
  3  
Reply Sat 5 Mar, 2011 08:45 am
@High Seas,
Good to 'see' you, Danon. I would say that to High Seas too but I fear that she is long gone. Hope Stradee stops by,


March 4, 2011

On Climate, Who Needs the Facts?
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

PRESIDENT’S F.Y. 2010-11 REQUEST: $2.3 MILLION

HOUSE VOTED: $0



The IPCC is the leading international scientific body studying climate change. Despite criticism — much of it manufactured by climate-change deniers — the panel has for more than a decade provided rigorous and balanced information to policy makers to help guide their efforts to prevent and mitigate the potentially disastrous effects of global warming.

Regrettably, politics trumps science among House Republicans, who recently voted to zero out this country’s extremely modest $2.3 million annual commitment to the IPCC. The bill also slashes spending on a half-dozen domestic programs that study the causes and effects of climate change.

The budget for the Energy Information Agency — which gathers information on energy production, consumption and pollution — would be cut by one-sixth. Small but vital Interior Department programs that measure the impact of climate change on animal, plant and fish species and their habitat were reduced and in some cases nearly wiped out.

We have already pointed to devastating amendments to the budget resolution that, unless reversed by the Senate, will undermine the Environmental Protection Agency’s authority to regulate greenhouse gases. The bill would also make it impossible for President Obama to meet his promises to help poor countries save their rainforests and deploy clean energy technologies, also essential for addressing global warming.

Mr. Obama asked for $400 million for the World Bank’s clean technology fund, $95 million for the bank’s program to prevent deforestation and $90 million for its program to help at-risk nations cope with the effects of a warming planet by, for instance, developing drought-resistant crops. The House’s answer in all three cases: zero.

An appalling performance. But the worst of it was the House’s apparent belief that wishing away the evidence will eliminate the problem.
sumac
 
  2  
Reply Sat 5 Mar, 2011 08:15 pm
@sumac,

http://www.digitaltrends.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/Bacteria-in-Meteorites.jpg


SEE PICTURE ABOVE

Aliens exist, and we have proof.

That astonishingly awesome claim comes from Dr. Richard B. Hoover, an astrobiologist at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center, who says he has found conclusive evidence of alien life — fossils of bacteria found in an extremely rare class of meteorite called CI1 carbonaceous chondrites. (There are only nine such meteorites on planet Earth.) Hoover’s findings were published late Friday night in the Journal of Cosmology, a peer-reviewed scientific journal.

“I interpret it as indicating that life is more broadly distributed than restricted strictly to the planet earth,” Hoover, who has spent more than 10 years studying meteorites around the world, told FoxNews.com in an interview. “This field of study has just barely been touched — because quite frankly, a great many scientist would say that this is impossible.”

Hoover discovered the fossils by breaking apart the CI1 meteorite, and analyzing the exposed rock with a scanning-electron microscope and a field emission electron-scanning microscope, which allowed him to detect any fossil remains. What he found were fossils of micro-organisms, many of which he says are strikingly similar to those found on our own planet.

“The exciting thing is that they are in many cases recognizable and can be associated very closely with the generic species here on earth,” said Hoover. Some of the fossils, however, are quite odd. “There are some that are just very strange and don’t look like anything that I’ve been able to identify, and I’ve shown them to many other experts that have also come up stump.”

In order to satisfy the inevitable hoard of buzz-killing skeptics, Hoover’s study and evidence were made available to his peers in the scientific community in advance of the study’s publications, giving them a chance to thoroughly dissect his findings. Comments from those who decided to sift through the evidence will be published online, alongside the study.

“Given the controversial nature of his discovery, we have invited 100 experts and have issued a general invitation to over 5,000 scientists from the scientific community to review the paper and to offer their critical analysis,” writes Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics scientist Dr. Rudy Schild, who serves as the Journal of Cosmology’s editor-in-chief. “No other paper in the history of science has undergone such a thorough vetting, and never before in the history of science has the scientific community been given the opportunity to critically analyze an important research paper before it is published.”

Needless to say, if Hoover’s conclusions are found to be accurate, the implications for human life will be staggering. Here’s to hoping that he’s right.[/url]
0 Replies
 
Stradee
 
  3  
Reply Sat 5 Mar, 2011 10:44 pm
@High Seas,
Stopped in to say howdy, and there you are H.S!! Hope all is well and the cold that attacked NY has finally subsided. Wow, whatta storm!

I saw the Dance of Death and thought how very tough it is for natures wild animals. Tough for nature's tame animals too anymore...but at least we arn't out hunting and gathering...living in caves. Can you imagine what it must've been for early man when they got an absessed tooth, or broke a bone? Death is what.

We've come a long way...thank God...but still...

Today, was chatting with two of my elderly neighbors, when one of the ladies
collapsed. Was able to steer her to a bench before she feinted. Displaying signs of a heart attack, prayed the 89 yr old lady would begin breathing again...and she, God Bless her Heart, did. Scared the beejeezes out of me...but thankfully she became concioius just a few minutes before the ambulance arrived. Her son had thankfully arrived home shorty after he'd visited his mom earlier, and answered the telephone! The family was notified of thier moms circumstances before my neighbor left for the hospital. Luck

Heart Arrhythmia the diagnosis

Busy day...caring for my neighbors animals...who btw i've not seen hide nor hair of Molly the cat since her humans left for a month long cruise. Molly hides in the house, but does 'meow' occasionally so i know she's still alive. However, Golda the fish is a very sweet and a welcomig charge. When I say "hi" to her she smiles then breaches. Now there is a very cool gold fish.

Molly is very sweet though...akin to my Mz Bella who whenever anyone attempts to befriend her, says 'eek' then flees. Skiddy Kitties

Well dears, gotta sit for a few seconds and relax after a very hectic day. Take good care HS, Dan, and sue. Smile

sumac
 
  3  
Reply Sun 6 Mar, 2011 07:41 am
@Stradee,
http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2011/03/03/134167145/i-sniff-therefore-i-am-are-dogs-self-conscious

Worth reading. It is about animals who exhibit self-consciousness and a test for dogs.
sumac
 
  2  
Reply Sun 6 Mar, 2011 08:38 am
@sumac,
March 5, 2011

Soup Without Fins? Some Californians Simmer

By PATRICIA LEIGH BROWN
SAN FRANCISCO — As the proprietor of Chung Chou City, a packed-to-the-gills dried seafood emporium in Chinatown here, Anna Li presides over barrels full of coveted ingredients like dried shrimp eggs and scallops and fried fish stomachs.

The Rolls-Royce of the sea is her shark’s fin, the pricey pièce de résistance of traditional Chinese banquets. “No shark’s fin soup, you’re cheap,” said Mrs. Li, summing up the prevailing ethos toward the steamy glutinous broth, for centuries a symbol of virility, wealth and power.

But in a move that has infuriated Mrs. Li and others in this community, a bill recently introduced in the California Legislature would ban the sale and possession of shark fins, including the serving of shark’s fin soup. Down the rickety alleyways and produce-laden byways of San Francisco’s Chinatown, some see the proposed law as a cultural assault — a sort of Chinese Exclusion Act in a bowl.

Similar to a measure passed in Hawaii, the bill seeks to curtail shark finning, a brutal, bloody practice of the global trade in which the fins are typically hacked off a live shark, leaving it to die slowly as it sinks to the bottom of the sea.

In Hawaii, restaurants have until June 30 to cook or dispose of their fin inventories, and penalties for possession will be severe, with fines of $5,000 to $15,000 for a first offense. Similar bills were introduced in Oregon and Washington State.

Scientists cite a growing international demand for shark’s fin soup, especially popular with China’s expanding middle class. As the once-ceremonial dish becomes more accessible, up to 73 million sharks are being killed a year.

The bill is attracting a motley group of supporters, including the state’s sport and commercial fishermen’s associations, aquariums, chefs, scientists and numerous environmental groups.

But in a city where food and the environment are perhaps equal obsessions, the politics of soup has also highlighted a generational divide between eco-conscious children and their tradition-bound elders.

Charles Phan, the 48-year-old executive chef of the widely acclaimed restaurant the Slanted Door, was weaned on the soup, cooked by his Chinese mother in Vietnam. But he has come out in favor of the fin ban, much to the chagrin of many Asian colleagues.

“The real message is not to eat the soup,” he said. “Times have changed. When the ocean is decimated, you just can’t afford to eat it.”

Although federal law prohibits bringing sharks onto shore without fins attached, a loophole permits importing fins, which come primarily from China and Mexico, said John E. McCosker, chairman of the aquatic biology department at the California Academy of Sciences. Sharks like the great white are slow to reproduce and can take up to 15 years to mature, making farming virtually impossible.

Scientists say that as many as 90 percent of sharks in the world’s open oceans have disappeared. “They’re among the ocean’s most vulnerable animals,” Dr. McCosker said. “The whole food web becomes bollixed when you take out the top-level predator.”

Much to the consternation of some in the Chinese community — from politicians to chefs with rhapsodic Zagat ratings — the proposed legislation in California was co-sponsored in the Assembly by Paul Fong, a Silicon Valley Democrat who grew up with shark’s fin soup and spoke Cantonese at home.

“It’s a horrific scene,” he said of finning. “Being environmentally conscious, I took the scientists’ side.”

On the other side, State Senator Leland Yee, who is running for mayor of San Francisco, said the ban went too far, outlawing fins even from legally caught sharks.

“The practice of shark’s fin soup has been in our culture for thousands of years,” he said. “There ought to be a way to find a balance between the environment and preserving culture and heritage.”

California has been a leader in shark conservation, enacting legislation protecting white sharks in 1997.

Chris Lowe, a shark specialist and a professor of marine biology at California State University, Long Beach, said fins had historically not been the only shark organ in demand: in the 1930s, Professor Lowe said, the popularity of shark liver oil depleted California’s once-plentiful soupfin shark population, whose livers are rich in vitamin A.

Shark fins come in varying grades, priced accordingly, with the thick caudal, or tail, fin, the most expensive. It can sell for nearly $800 for a 1.6-pound bag or $320 for a taffeta-ribboned gift pack.

At the R&G Lounge, a leading Chinatown restaurant, Kinson K. Wong, 58, defends the slippery delicacy.

“People come to America to enjoy the freedom, including what’s on the plate,” he said. Mr. Wong, who credits his success here to shark’s fin soup and to President Richard M. Nixon’s overtures to China, serves a double-boiled shark’s fin soup for $15 a cup; a $75 double order for 10, on Banquet Menu C, is accompanied by Longevity Noodle with Abalone Sauce and Baked Maine Lobster in Supreme Broth.

Eliminating shark’s fin soup, he said, would cost waiters tips and cost the restaurant profits.

Mrs. Li of Chung Chou City is irate about the bill, albeit politely, predicting a domino effect in Chinatown (or the mah-jongg tile equivalent).

“If the government stops shark fin,” she said grimly amid her dried marine bounty, “next will be the fish stomach.”

The tempest in a soup pot represents a seismic shift. Like many young people born in the Bay Area, Frank Wong, Kinson Wong’s 31-year-old son, has mixed feelings about shark’s fin, a fixture of his youth. ”It’s not as big a deal for me as it is for my parents,” he said.

Even the elder Mr. Wong admitted he might not recommend a lavish banquet with shark’s fin soup when his son gets married. “I suggest to him, don’t have a banquet — keep the money,” Mr. Wong said.

Jennifer Cheung, 27, an industrial designer, refused the soup at her family New Year’s dinner, trying — in vain, she said — to explain the importance of the ecosystem to her elderly uncle, a Chinese herbalist.

“It was, ‘Oh, Jennifer’s being a hippie,’ ” she said.

“I come from a culture where food is very important,” she continued. “But I think this is a very hefty price to pay just for a bowl of soup.”
sumac
 
  2  
Reply Mon 7 Mar, 2011 08:14 am
@sumac,
Giant hyena's bone-cracking habit

By Matt Walker
Editor, Earth News

Scientists have established how the largest bone-cracking carnivore to have ever lived went about its business.

The giant hyena, Pachycrocuta brevirostris, roamed Africa more than 2.5 million years ago.

Using new evidence uncovered from recently unearthed fossils, and a biomechanical analysis of the hyena's jaws, scientists have worked out what it ate and how.

The study also helps reveal how much the giant hyena hunted or scavenged.

Fossils of the giant hyena were first discovered several decades ago, at a range of sites.

The force that this hyena was able to exert with its huge premolar teeth was an order of magnitude higher than in living bone-crackers
Palaeontologist Paul Palmqvist
"However, very little was known about its behaviour prior to our studies," Professor Paul Palmqvist told the BBC.

That was until his team unearthed a huge assemblage of Pleistocene fossils at Venta Micena in southeastern Spain.

These mammal remains rest in what is thought to be a den belonging to giant hyenas.

So far, 5,800 identifiable skeletal remains have been found, belonging to 225 animals from 21 types of mammal.

All the remains are thought to have been originally brought to the site by giant hyenas.

Professor Palmqvist's team have used a range of techniques to interpret this assemblage.

These include working out the frequency at which each species was scavenged by the giant hyenas, and which bones the carnivore preferred.

Horse, bison and deer species were a particular favourite of the hyena.

Results published in the journal Quaternary International showed that hyenas preferred to crack open bones high in marrow content, breaking into femur and tibia bones from the rear legs, and humerus bones from the front legs of prey.

Other bones were left relatively unscathed.

This preference helps show the giant hyena almost exclusively scavenged rather than preyed on live animals.

Cracking force

Pachycrocuta brevirostris is known as the giant short-faced scavenging hyena.

Fossil remains found at Venta Micena suggest it weighed approximately 110kg, making it significantly larger than modern hyenas and similar in size to a modern lioness.

It is the largest bone-crushing carnivore yet discovered, and had massive limbs, including short, powerful front legs that helped the hyena pick up and drag heavy carcasses.

It also had a heavy powerfully built jaw with robust, well developed teeth.

Analyses of the hyena's jaw also show it must have contained hugely strong muscles to crack large bones with, and was capable of resisting the great stresses that breaking such bones would create.

Thick and strong molar teeth did much of the crushing and cracking of bones.

"Our study has revealed that the force that this hyena was able to exert with its huge premolar teeth for fracturing bones was an order of magnitude higher than in living bone-crackers," says Professor Palmqvist, of the University of Teatinos, Malaga, Spain.

However, there was a downside to the hyena's immense bone-cracking capability.

The structure of the creature's jaw meant it was not capable of using its longer, sharper canine teeth to bite down with much force.

That means the animal was actually a less effective predator than modern hyenas.

Instead it offset this loss of ability by being a more effective scavenger.

Hyena versus human

One mystery remains, however.

The giant short-faced hyena was a specialised scavenger, but its short, thick front legs, would not have made it a good runner.

That means it was unlikely to have roamed large distances on the look out for carrion.

Instead, the researchers believe it followed other large predators which lived at the same time, such as sabretoothed cats, and stole their kills, or used carrion-eating birds such as vultures to home in on carcasses.

In doing so, it may have jostled with early humans for its meals.

"We have studied this giant hyena using quite different approaches, and all point to an emerging picture of a colossal scavenger that may have represented a serious competitor with hominids for accessing carrion," Professor Palmqvist told the BBC.

The giant hyena in Europe died out around 800,000 years ago, when it was replaced by the spotted hyena, which today weighs just half as much as it giant forebear.

The decline of the giant hyena was probably linked to the decline and subsequent extinction of the sabretoothed cat.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/earth/hi/earth_news/newsid_9412000/9412549.stm

Published: 2011/03/04 09:02:53 GMT

© BBC 2011
danon5
 
  1  
Reply Mon 7 Mar, 2011 09:24 am
@sumac,
Hi everyone........ Good clicking to all.

sumac, I've seen some Giant hyena's around here recently. Grin.
Thank you for all the very interesting stuff and links - I love the one about aliens. We have been looking for other possibly livable planets only approx three or four yrs now and all of a sudden I heard the other day that instead of the one or two - there are BILLIONS of possible ones. There is a much better chance that intelligent life is out there than winning the lotto !!!!! Problem is, it's a BIG space. And that's just OUR galaxy!!! We actually don't even know how big the entire universe is.

Hi Stradee - glad to hear the lady is ok for now. I hope to grow that old. Then I think I'll quit. also grin

High Seas --- you have hit the essence of life squarely on the hip (so to speak). The wolves have to eat also. It's like I've said many times, we get up in the morning, get breakfast, get dressed and then open the front door and step into a crapshoot. (Gambling type not the other)

Thanks for the input and article.

Another tree is asmiling today because of us.

sumac
 
  2  
Reply Tue 8 Mar, 2011 09:23 am
@danon5,
Hi all. I think I forgot to click yesterday but got them in today. Today is Science day in the NYT so I hope to be able to post some interesting articles.
 

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