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Tue, 26 Oct 2021
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Bizarro Earth

Warning sign on the Colorado River

Glen Canyon Dam
© T. Ross Reeve
Red alert - Dropping water levels behind the Glen Canyon Dam will force operators to cut downstream flows for the first time in dam’s 47-year history. Researchers say climate change could make such moves more common in the future.
In an ominous precedent, dam operators on the Colorado River will cut the amount of water released over next year from Lake Powell, a massive reservoir in the Western United States. The river flows through the Grand Canyon, eventually supplying millions of homes in Las Vegas and large farms in Arizona and California.

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation announced today it will reduce the flow out of Glen Canyon Dam by 9% starting in October. Homeowners and farmers will still get the same amount as they do now, but the decision highlights the likelihood of future shortages. "I view this as another serious warning to users of the Colorado River that we're headed for big trouble," says water and climate specialist Peter Gleick of the Pacific Water Institute in Oakland, California.

Historically, the untamed Colorado River flooded after the snow melted in the Rocky Mountains and then water levels dropped during the summer. Two massive dams changed that behavior, regulating the river throughout the year and also generating billions of kilowatts of electricity. Glen Canyon Dam in northern Arizona created the vast Lake Powell in 1966. And more than 575 kilometers downstream, Hoover Dam, completed in 1936, heads up a reservoir called Lake Mead near Las Vegas, Nevada.

Phoenix

Fires in Eastern Russia - Urals and Siberia

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© Jeff Schmaltz LANCE/EOSDIS MODIS Rapid Response Team, GSFC. Caption by Lynn Jenner with information from pbs.org
The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA's Aqua satellite detected dozens of fires burning in eastern Russia in this satellite image captured on August 15, 2013. The fires are outlined in red. Smoke appears as grayish, wispy air currents.

The location, widespread nature, and number of fires suggest that these fires were deliberately set to manage land. Farmers often use fire to return nutrients to the soil and to clear the ground of unwanted plants. While fire helps enhance crops and grasses for pasture, the fires also produce smoke that degrades air quality.

X

Floods in Russia's Far East claim more areas - Ministry

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© RIA Novosti. Vitaliy Ankov
Floods in Russia’s Far East Claim More Areas – Ministry
The number of populated areas affected by flooding in Russia's Far East has risen to more than 120, affecting more than 32,000 people, the Emergencies Ministry said Saturday.

Ninety-four of the areas affected are in the Amur Region, a ministry spokesperson told RIA Novosti.

More than 17,000 people have been evacuated, including 6,100 children, the spokesperson said.

The Amur Region is one of three regions in Russia's Far East - together with the Khabarovsk Territory and the Jewish Autonomous Region - that have been affected by flooding following heavy rain in the area.

Bizarro Earth

USGS: Earthquake Magnitude 6.1 - Southwest Indian Ridge

South Indian Ocean_170813
© USGS
Event Time

2013-08-17 16:32:31 UTC
2013-08-17 20:32:31 UTC+04:00 at epicenter

Location
34.884°S 54.067°E depth=10.0km (6.2mi)

Nearby Cities
1286km (799mi) SSE of Fort Dauphin, Madagascar
1318km (819mi) SSE of Amboasary, Madagascar
1323km (822mi) SSE of Ambovombe, Madagascar
1345km (836mi) SE of Tsiombe, Madagascar
1557km (967mi) S of Saint-Denis, Reunion

Technical Details

Attention

Marapi volcano (Sumatra, Indonesia): small eruptions

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© Wahyu Sikumbang/Sindo TV
Marapi volcano
The volcano continues to produce small explosions every now and then. Local press reported two small eruptions this morning.

The first one occurred at 7:49 am (local time WIB), producing an ash plume of 300 meters height, and the second at 8:32 am with an ash plume rising 600 meters.

The alert status had previously been raised from Normal to Alert (level 1 to 2) on 3 August and an exclusion zone of 3 km radius around the crater is in place.

All news about: Marapi volcano

Information about: Marapi volcano


Bug

More than one million more bees die off near Hanover, Canada


There is more troubling news for beekeepers.

Another die-off has a local producer sounding the alarm, and provincial inspectors have stepped in to get to the bottom of the issue.

Beekeeper Dave Schuit estimates that 1.3 million bees have died in his yard north of Hanover in the past 24 hours. Schuit says he has seen this before, and it looks like the bees have been poisoned

"I believe it's in the soil, the neonicotinoids," says Schuit of Saugeen Country Honey. "I believe it's in the water and it's in the pollen."

Neonicotinoids are extremely toxic to bees, even in tiny amounts. They are now widely used to protect corn, soy and wheat seed. The pesticide is water-soluble and persists in the environment for several years. Neonicotinoids were recently banned in Europe while more research is being done.

According to the Ontario Bee Keepers Association, the number of acute poisonings like this is mounting this summer and the total number of incidents is expected to surpass last year when 240 were reported. Laboratory testing confirmed the presence of neonicotinoids in 80 per cent of those cases.

Info

Alaska: Veniaminof volcano still rumbling away

Volcanoes behaving badly: Mount Veniaminof, an 8,225-foot peak 25 miles southwest of Chignik Lake and 485 miles from Anchorage which first rumbled to life in early June of this year, is again showing signs of elevated activity, spitting at least one cloud of ash and steam into the air earlier this week and featuring higher levels of seismic activity and surface temperature. One plume on Monday rose to a height of about 12,000 feet, according to the Alaska Volcano Observatory. Meantime, NASA recently flew over the volcano and snapped a spectacular satellite picture showing the way that fresh ash is painting the peak, topping off the snow falling at the higher elevations of the mountain.

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Chalkboard

Lexicon Shift Alert: global warming gets another name change

Back in 2010, I pointed out that White House science adviser John Holdren had made a shift in naming conventions for the twice renamed "global warming".

It seems that another shift in the lexicon has occurred, again at the White House. Organizing for Action, President Obama's campaign machine declared Tuesday that there was a new name.
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The lexicon shift in 2010

The Washington Times picked up on this shift, and I've updated the graphic to reflect the new name. There's also a poll to choose/predict the next name after this one.

The doomed planet movement has been losing momentum. Inconvenient scientific findings have confirmed the lack of any significant warming of dear old Earth over the past 16 years. It's hard to scare people into action when nothing bad is happening. That's why the White House has changed its vocabulary again - first "global warming" was changed to "climate change" - and now the correct name of the scam is "carbon pollution." It's a way to paint carbon dioxide as if it were black soot billowing out of industrial smokestacks. Carbon dioxide is actually what humans exhale, and it's food for plants.

Read more: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/aug/13/wearing-out-words/#ixzz2c3XmuaV7

Bizarro Earth

Rare ragfish washes up on Alaskan Beach

Ragfish
© Michael Hays
This ragfish washed up on the shore of Lena Beach early in the month of August. According to Mary Willson, a retired professor of ecology, ragfish are very distantly related to perch and bass, but they are characterized by a skeleton that is mostly cartilage and flabby flesh. Juveniles look quite different from adults in body shape and fin shape, and adults have no body scales.
Although this gnarly fish isn't uncommon in Alaska waters, it's rare that one of them makes an appearance on shore, especially in Juneau. A dead ragfish, scientific name Icosteus aenigmaticus, washed up on Lena Beach early this month, Juneau resident Michael Hays told us.

It was longer than a shovel, battered and looking less than appealing. However, this particular specimen is small for its size - ragfish can reach an astounding 7 feet in length, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration biologist Dave Csepp said.

The fish are widespread throughout Alaska waters off the Bering Sea slope, hanging out deep, around 1,420 meters. However, they're not as common near Juneau - NOAA's Auke Bay Laboratories usually only get a few sightings of the fish each year, Csepp said in an email. They're most commonly caught in trawl nets or while trolling, and not very often found on beaches.

Attention

12-year-old girl attacked by black bear near Cadillac, Michigan

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A black bear, like this one shown in a file photo, attacked a 12-year-old girl near Cadillac.
Abby Wetherell, the 12-year-old girl attacked by a black bear, is in stable condition after she underwent surgery for a deep lacerations on her thigh, the state Department of Natural Resources said.

Abby, the daughter of Chris and Elizabeth Wetherell, underwent surgery this morning and is doing well, a family member told The Grand Rapids Press and MLive.com.

The girl was attacked Thursday, Aug. 15, while returning from a cabin down a two-track road in Haring Township, north of Cadillac.