Earth Changes
Professor Robert Watson said ministers should await the results of their inquiry into biofuels' sustainability.
Some scientists think biofuels' carbon benefits may be currently outweighed by negative effects from their production.
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| ©Unknown |
| Mt Oldonyo Lengai (file picture) |
In the past the community living at the foot of Oldonyo Lengai defied government orders to evacuate after the mountain erupted.
They argued that they could not move out because they had lived there for generations and had grown used to the volcanic ash from "the mountain of God" in northern Tanzania. But nine months after it continued to emit smoke into the sky and spewing molten rocks on its slopes, many of the defiant people are now moving out without being asked to.
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| ©Charlene Meyers. Images of Hawaii |
| Photographer and national park volunteer Charlene Meyers
took this 72-second time exposure Tuesday night of the glowing spot in Halemaumau Crater. |
Big Island photographer Charlene Meyers must have been one of the last people to see the glowing red vent inside Halemaumau Crater before the unusual feature blew itself apart early Wednesday morning.
People weren't sure if it was pollution, but it was getting all over cars and windows.
"I don't know, I've never seen this before," said Magne Turoy, who is from Norway. "I'm used to rain, lots of rain, but I've never seen this before."
| ©WOAI |
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| ©iStockphoto/Erik Kolstad |
| Cumulonimbus storm cloud forming over the warm Gulf Stream along the Norwegian coast. The system is sometimes called a polar low. |
The river, one of many out of its banks across wide areas of the Midwest, could top levels recorded in a devastating flood 25 years ago, National Weather Service meteorologist John Robinson warned.
"There will be water going into areas where people have not seen it before, and may not be expecting to see high water," Robinson wrote in an e-mail to reporters Sunday.
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| ©NOAA |
| Map of US spring flood risk. |











Comment: The University of Utah, as a member of the Advanced National Seismic System (ANSS), maintains a series of seismograph stations at Yellowstone National Park. Recent readings capturing a short series of quakes can be seen at their site.