Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
texas homes
Texas residents flee as earth gives way climate change prime example and the cover up some kind of soil issues wow.
Friday, January 22, 2010
climate change
The talk of the town "climate change" its been raining in areas where hardly it ever rains.The ice is melting in cold areas the hot places cold and cold places hot.What are we going to do as humans.Over the last few days out here in California the effects of climate change has shown dramatically.Winter is here as we go into a new year 2010 there is alot of raining,flooding,storms and in some rural areas tornadoes.There has been of 800 evacuations through out California. What has occurred here is scary and I mean tornadoes not twisters.The affects of climate change is kept secret you don't here much about it but its here.I wonder if we have played a major roll in this change over the last hundred years.Over the last 100 year we have came into this big tech boom nuclear energy for example all exposed within the last 100 years.So my point is what will happen within the next 100 or even 50 years will we see the effects of our advancing technology destroy the place we call home if so where will we go what will our children do.Is the very thing that's making our lives easy punishing our trees ruining our air destroying are protection from harmful radiation from the sun and other forms of light throughout the universe etc.
Thanks for reading my posting and news
Thanks everyone for reading and looking at my news "Im new in the system" and also a writer one day I hope to write my own book or become a journalist.I also have dreams of becoming a director.I would love to create a movie about my life ,please be kind to help me with a small donation to help me with those goals.THANKS OUT THERE!!!
haiti earth quake info
Rescue teams who have been working around the clock to find the last survivors of the earthquake began winding down their operations in Port-au-Prince today as cries from the rubble turned silent.
While dozens of specialised search and rescue teams, who have pulled scores of people from beneath the rubble, will remain on standby in the shattered Haitian capital, they were reporting few alerts to indicate any more suspected survivors still alive and trapped beneath the fallen concrete.
A crew from California's Los Angeles county fire department clambered over a destroyed downtown apartment block in the slim hope that someone might be living beneath.
One of the crew's dogs seemed to have detected signs of life earlier in the day but two other dogs suggested there was nothing. "It's worth trying," said fireman Dennis Cross, his blue uniform coated in white dust. "Even when it seems it may be a long shot."
Other rescue teams took a chance to rest after over a week of frantic exertions. The focus was shifting, they said, from rescue to the recovery of bodies.
Fragments of normality resumed amid the chaos. In areas which escaped the devastation people washed cars with hoses, an unthinkable sight last week when people were desperate for water. Drinking water remains scarce. The damaged port partially reopened after structural engineers gave the green light for limited aid shipments.
Some money transfer offices reopened and were instantly besieged by hundreds of people hoping to collect cash sent by relatives overseas. A few homemade signs sprouted across the city: "God bless you came to help us." They remained heavily outnumbered by those pleading for help.
As the rescue effort was scaled back, the commander of US forces in the region said officials have opened a third alternative airport in the Dominican Republic, to hasten the movement of relief supplies in an attempt to clear the backlog of more than 1,400 flights waiting to use the Haitian capital's airport.
General Douglas Fraser, head of US Southern Command, told a Pentagon news conference that 120-140 flights a day are now able to land at what was the country's single airport in Port-au-Prince, which was damaged in last week's earthquake.
The latest efforts to speed the flow of aid came as the remains of Hedi Annabi, the UN mission chief in Haiti, killed in last week's earthquake, were returned to his native Tunisia and received with military honours.
It also came as medical clinics warned that they have 12-day patient backlogs and that injuries left untreated in makeshift camps housing thousands of survivors risked fostering disease.
"The next health risk could include outbreaks of diarrhoea, respiratory tract infections and other diseases among hundreds of thousands of Haitians living in overcrowded camps with poor or nonexistent sanitation," said Dr Greg Elder, deputy operations manager for Doctors Without Borders in Haiti.
The death toll is estimated at 200,000, according to Haitian government figures relayed by the European Commission, with 80,000 buried in mass graves. The commission now estimates that 2 million are homeless, up from 1.5 million, and says 250,000 are in need of urgent aid.
While dozens of specialised search and rescue teams, who have pulled scores of people from beneath the rubble, will remain on standby in the shattered Haitian capital, they were reporting few alerts to indicate any more suspected survivors still alive and trapped beneath the fallen concrete.
A crew from California's Los Angeles county fire department clambered over a destroyed downtown apartment block in the slim hope that someone might be living beneath.
One of the crew's dogs seemed to have detected signs of life earlier in the day but two other dogs suggested there was nothing. "It's worth trying," said fireman Dennis Cross, his blue uniform coated in white dust. "Even when it seems it may be a long shot."
Other rescue teams took a chance to rest after over a week of frantic exertions. The focus was shifting, they said, from rescue to the recovery of bodies.
Fragments of normality resumed amid the chaos. In areas which escaped the devastation people washed cars with hoses, an unthinkable sight last week when people were desperate for water. Drinking water remains scarce. The damaged port partially reopened after structural engineers gave the green light for limited aid shipments.
Some money transfer offices reopened and were instantly besieged by hundreds of people hoping to collect cash sent by relatives overseas. A few homemade signs sprouted across the city: "God bless you came to help us." They remained heavily outnumbered by those pleading for help.
As the rescue effort was scaled back, the commander of US forces in the region said officials have opened a third alternative airport in the Dominican Republic, to hasten the movement of relief supplies in an attempt to clear the backlog of more than 1,400 flights waiting to use the Haitian capital's airport.
General Douglas Fraser, head of US Southern Command, told a Pentagon news conference that 120-140 flights a day are now able to land at what was the country's single airport in Port-au-Prince, which was damaged in last week's earthquake.
The latest efforts to speed the flow of aid came as the remains of Hedi Annabi, the UN mission chief in Haiti, killed in last week's earthquake, were returned to his native Tunisia and received with military honours.
It also came as medical clinics warned that they have 12-day patient backlogs and that injuries left untreated in makeshift camps housing thousands of survivors risked fostering disease.
"The next health risk could include outbreaks of diarrhoea, respiratory tract infections and other diseases among hundreds of thousands of Haitians living in overcrowded camps with poor or nonexistent sanitation," said Dr Greg Elder, deputy operations manager for Doctors Without Borders in Haiti.
The death toll is estimated at 200,000, according to Haitian government figures relayed by the European Commission, with 80,000 buried in mass graves. The commission now estimates that 2 million are homeless, up from 1.5 million, and says 250,000 are in need of urgent aid.
Monday, January 4, 2010
here is a amazing alien ufo video
This information is the best on the market I haven't seen nothing like it great.
Friday, January 1, 2010
Russia's Armageddon plan to save Earth from collision with asteroid
The head of the Russian space agency said today that it was considering a Hollywood-style mission to send a spacecraft to bump a large asteroid from a possible collision course with Earth.
Anatoly Perminov told the Russian radio station Golos Rossii: "People's lives are at stake. We should pay several hundred million dollars and build a system that would allow us to prevent a collision, rather than sit and wait for it to happen and kill hundreds of thousands of people."
The mission would be aimed at an asteroid called Apophis, he said, which is expected to pass close to the Earth in 2029 and again in 2036. "Calculations show that it's possible to create a special-purpose spacecraft within the time we have, which would help avoid the collision. The threat of collision can be averted."
The Hollywood action films Deep Impact and Armageddon both featured space missions scrambling to avert catastrophic collisions, the latter led by Willis.
But the creation of a system to deflect asteroids has long been the subject of scientific debate. Some experts have proposed sending a probe to circle around a dangerous asteroid and gradually change its trajectory. Others suggested sending a spacecraft to collide with it and alter its momentum, or using nuclear weapons.
Perminov said details of the project still needed to be worked out. But he said the agency would invite Nasa, the European Space Agency and others to participate.
When Apophis was discovered in 2004, astronomers made headlines when they said there was a one in 37 chance that the 350-metre-wide rock would collide with Earth in 2029. Further studies ruled out such an impact, but there remains a one in 250,000 chance it could strike in 2036.
Perminov said he had heard from a scientist that Apophis is getting closer and may hit the planet. "I don't remember exactly, but it seems to me it could hit the Earth by 2032," he said.
Nasa has estimated that if the asteroid hit the Earth, it would release more than 100,000 times the energy released in the nuclear blast over Hiroshima. Thousands of square miles would be directly affected by the blast but the whole of the Earth would see the effects of the dust released into the atmosphere.
Nasa experts have already discussed the option of landing an astronaut on an asteroid to test whether it could develop techniques to deflect a doomsday rock.
Breaking it up with an atomic warhead could generate thousands of smaller objects on a similar course, which could have time to re-form. Scientists agree the best approach, given enough time, would be to nudge the object into a safer orbit.
Matt Genge, a space researcher at Imperial College London, has calculated that something with the mass, acceleration and thrust of a small car could push an asteroid weighing a billion tonnes out of the path of Earth in just 75 days.
Perminov said: "We will soon hold a closed meeting of our collegium, the science-technical council, to look at what can be done. "There won't be any nuclear explosions. Everything will be done according to the laws of physics."
Mirrors, lights and even paint could change the way the object absorbed light and heat enough to shift its direction over 20 years or so. With less notice, mankind could be forced to take more drastic measures, such as setting off a massive explosion on or near the object to change its course.
Anatoly Perminov told the Russian radio station Golos Rossii: "People's lives are at stake. We should pay several hundred million dollars and build a system that would allow us to prevent a collision, rather than sit and wait for it to happen and kill hundreds of thousands of people."
The mission would be aimed at an asteroid called Apophis, he said, which is expected to pass close to the Earth in 2029 and again in 2036. "Calculations show that it's possible to create a special-purpose spacecraft within the time we have, which would help avoid the collision. The threat of collision can be averted."
The Hollywood action films Deep Impact and Armageddon both featured space missions scrambling to avert catastrophic collisions, the latter led by Willis.
But the creation of a system to deflect asteroids has long been the subject of scientific debate. Some experts have proposed sending a probe to circle around a dangerous asteroid and gradually change its trajectory. Others suggested sending a spacecraft to collide with it and alter its momentum, or using nuclear weapons.
Perminov said details of the project still needed to be worked out. But he said the agency would invite Nasa, the European Space Agency and others to participate.
When Apophis was discovered in 2004, astronomers made headlines when they said there was a one in 37 chance that the 350-metre-wide rock would collide with Earth in 2029. Further studies ruled out such an impact, but there remains a one in 250,000 chance it could strike in 2036.
Perminov said he had heard from a scientist that Apophis is getting closer and may hit the planet. "I don't remember exactly, but it seems to me it could hit the Earth by 2032," he said.
Nasa has estimated that if the asteroid hit the Earth, it would release more than 100,000 times the energy released in the nuclear blast over Hiroshima. Thousands of square miles would be directly affected by the blast but the whole of the Earth would see the effects of the dust released into the atmosphere.
Nasa experts have already discussed the option of landing an astronaut on an asteroid to test whether it could develop techniques to deflect a doomsday rock.
Breaking it up with an atomic warhead could generate thousands of smaller objects on a similar course, which could have time to re-form. Scientists agree the best approach, given enough time, would be to nudge the object into a safer orbit.
Matt Genge, a space researcher at Imperial College London, has calculated that something with the mass, acceleration and thrust of a small car could push an asteroid weighing a billion tonnes out of the path of Earth in just 75 days.
Perminov said: "We will soon hold a closed meeting of our collegium, the science-technical council, to look at what can be done. "There won't be any nuclear explosions. Everything will be done according to the laws of physics."
Mirrors, lights and even paint could change the way the object absorbed light and heat enough to shift its direction over 20 years or so. With less notice, mankind could be forced to take more drastic measures, such as setting off a massive explosion on or near the object to change its course.
hi
It is a new year and I want to thanks everyone who has been viewing my page.This year will be a wonderful year for me no exeptions so by the time next year I be so happy ILL want to fly to mars.Happy new years all.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)