Help Keep the Lighthouse Burning
The Eric Pepin vs. SOTT.net suit continues, we've just unveiled a new SOTT.net, and other changes are coming. But we're running on fumes here, folks! We need your help.
You can read more about all this in Laura's latest: Storm Warning! Dark Days Ahead!
|
   
|
| 0€ |
Current Total: 59,187€ |
71,000€ |
| Check or Money Order: |
|
You can mail a check or money order in US dollars (or an anonymous 5 dollars or euros in a greeting card) to the following address:
QFG, Inc. PO Box 4322 Boulder CO 80306 USA
|
Euro to Dollar exchange rate can be found by typing 'euro' into google, or visiting www.xe.com.
The current rate is about $1.25 to 1€
The Associated Press
Sat, 31 May 2008 17:57 UTC
QUITO, Ecuador: A volcano on the largest of the Galapagos Islands has begun erupting and authorities are evaluating possible dangers to the island's famed plant and animal life, officials said Friday.
Rangers and tour guides spotted lava flowing down the northeastern flank of the Cerro Azul volcano on the seahorse-shaped island of Isabela late Thursday, the Galapagos National Park said in a statement.
Ecuador's Geophysics Institute said that satellite data and a flyover of the island by park officials showed a "small amount of ash" coming out of the volcano, located on the southwestern edge of the island.
Park official Oscar Carvajal told Radio Quito that as many as four lava flows "have consumed a lot of vegetation," but do not pose a threat to the famed Galapagos tortoises.
Neither was the eruption endangering people on the island, park official Vinicio Pauta said.
The 5,600-foot (1,690-meter) Cerro Azul - one of five active volcanoes on the island - last erupted in September 1998, causing minor damage to plant life. Cerro Azul is located in the unpopulated southwestern corner of the island.
The Galapagos Islands, 625 miles (1,000 kilometers) off of Ecuador's Pacific coast, are known for unique plant and animal life, including giant tortoises, marine iguanas and seabirds known as blue-footed boobies. Charles Darwin's observations of the islands' finches helped inspire his theory of evolution.
Reader Comments
( No Comments )
224 people have viewed this page since Sun, 01 Jun 2008
Emails sent to Signs of the Times, Ark, Laura, or Cassiopaea become the property of Quantum Future Group, Inc and may be republished without notice.
Some icons appearing on this site were taken from KDE-look.org, Afterglow, Mayosoft, Everaldo, IconDrawer, VisualPharm, IconFactory, Klukeart, Icons-land, TpdkDesign.net, and IconShock.com.
Remember, we need your help to collect information on what is going on in your part of the world!
Send your article suggestions to:
Original content © 2008 by SOTT.net/Signs of the Times. See: Fair Use Policy