Earth Changes
Wednesday, July 20, 2011 at 22:05:02 UTC
Thursday, July 21, 2011 at 09:05:02 AM at epicenter
Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones
Location:
10.340°S, 162.150°E
Depth:
54.5 km (33.9 miles)
Region
SOLOMON ISLANDS
Distances:
27 km (17 miles) ENE (63°) from Kira Kira, Solomon Islands
238 km (148 miles) SE (138°) from Auki, Solomon Islands
260 km (161 miles) ESE (112°) from HONIARA, Solomon Islands
1640 km (1019 miles) E (95°) from PORT MORESBY, Papua New Guinea
Plenty of people have heard of the recent oil spill on the Yellowstone River in Montana. Few are aware, however, that three weeks ago another leak formed a creek of crude running down to Cut Bank River just miles from Glacier National Park.
Cowardly local papers, perhaps for fear of hurting tourism or stepping in front of juggernaut corporations, have completely ignored reports from environmental officials and concerned citizens. They have often repeated the drilling company's press releases verbatim.
We were on site and documented it.
The corporation's reports are false. How can 420 gallons of oil travel a mile through a wheat field into a wetland, down a winding ravine and into a river? It was much much larger. We also do not know when it began, but we know it was three weeks ago was when it was first reported.

Children cool off in the water from an opened fire hydrant in the Bronx borough of New York July 19, 2011.
Hospitals in Wichita, Kansas, treated 25 heat-related illnesses, according to the Weather Service report. In Des Moines, Iowa, 16 people were hospitalized because of the heat.
In Minneapolis dozens of fans at recent Minnesota Twin games have been treated for heat issues, even though the club did take extra precautions such as providing free water stations and having first aid and guest service staff on hand to monitor crowds.
Day after day of high temperatures and humidity with no relief overnight was taxing the region.
"It's just draining, physically draining," said Chris Vaccaro, a Weather Service spokesman.
The 6.2-magnitude earthquake at 1.35 a.m. local time (1935 GMT Tuesday) was centered about 15 kilometres (9.3 miles) east of Okhna, a village in the Batken Province of Kyrgyzstan near the border with Uzbekistan. It struck about 10 kilometres (6.2 miles) deep, making it a shallow earthquake, according to the Kazakhstan National Data Center (KNDC).
The United States Geological Survey (USGS), which measured the strength of the earthquake at 6.1 on the Richter scale, estimated that some 50,000 people may have felt 'very strong' shaking, which could result in moderate to heavy damage. It estimated that some 7.6 million others may have felt moderate to strong shaking.
The visitors were identified Wednesday as 22-year-old Hormiz David of Modesto, 27-year-old Ninos Yacoub of Turlock, and 21-year-old Ramina Badal of Modesto.
Witnesses saw the group was swept over Vernal Falls after they crossed a barricade to pose for photographs.
Yosemite search and rescue rangers are searching the Merced River downstream for the bodies.
The stark reality, as conservation scientist Professor Andrew Balmford explained, is that biodiversity is not a luxury, it's a necessity for human life: "As well as being a vital source for many people of food and fuel, wild nature is crucial for every one of us in mitigating climate change, regulating water flows, and buffering people from the impact of storms and floods."
"World agriculture developed and flourished during a period of climate stability," he added. "We don't yet know how our current agricultural systems will be affected by climate change but my guess is that they will be more sensitive than we realise. For me, this uncertainty underscores the importance for the future of farming of agriculture having least possible impact on what remains of nature."
Professor Balmford, who helps lead the Conservation Science Group in the Department of Zoology, advocates thinking smart from the start. "It's vitally important to integrate biodiversity concerns into the inevitable expansion in agriculture, especially in developing countries and regions where crop farming is likely to increase the most," he said, "and to do this at an early stage, not when it's too late to save remaining wild habitats and the species that depend on them."
A special meeting of the United Nations security council is due to consider whether to expand its mission to keep the peace in an era of climate change.
Small island states, which could disappear beneath rising seas, are pushing the security council to intervene to combat the threat to their existence.
There has been talk, meanwhile, of a new environmental peacekeeping force - green helmets - which could step into conflicts caused by shrinking resources.
The UN secretary general, Ban Ki-Moon, is expected to address the meeting on Wednesday.
But Germany, which called the meeting, has warned it is premature to expect the council to take the plunge into green peacemaking or even adopt climate change as one of its key areas of concern.
Comment: As Andres Perezalonso pointed out in Climate Change, Food Shortages and Economic Crisis - Coming to a Town Near You, the Pentagon is well aware of the real nature of climate change and is preparing itself accordingly:
In February 2004, The UK Observer reported that a study commissioned by the Pentagon predicted that food riots would result from abrupt climate change. The grim document described how the planet would reach the edge of anarchy and countries would threaten each other with nuclear weapons to defend and secure dwindling food, water and energy supplies. "Disruption and conflict will be endemic features of life," the analysis concluded. "Once again, warfare would define human life."
The Pentagon paper is remarkable for several reasons. Through it we see how the United States establishment understands that the real threat we are facing is climate change, not the manufactured threat of 'terrorism'. But a more frank admission is that 'climate change' is an abrupt phenomenon - not relatively gradual as most proponents of man-made global warming insist when they refer to computer models that chart rises in temperatures over a time-frame of several decades. The report specifically states that Britain will plunge into a 'Siberian' climate by 2020.
The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) used Environmental Protection Agency data to rank the top 20 worst states for air pollution from power plants.
According to the report, half of all air pollution from industrial sources in the United States comes from coal- and oil-fired power plants.
According to the NRDC, here are the 20 most toxic states, from worst to best:
- Ohio
- Pennsylvania
- Florida
- Kentucky
- Maryland
- Indiana
- Michigan
- West Virginia
- Georgia
- North Carolina
- South Carolina
- Alabama
- Texas
- Virginia
- Tennessee
- Missouri
- Illinois
- Wisconsin
- New Hampshire
- Iowa

Dozens of people were injured and more than 100 flights cancelled as strong Typhoon Ma-On lashed southern Japan on Wednesday with torrential downpours and gale-force winds, meteorologists and reports said.
The storm system, packing winds of up to 108kmh, was located 140km offshore on Wednesday, slowly heading east and further from the main island of Honshu.
The Japan Meteorogical Agency said Ma-On was still expected to bring downpours overnight in the country's eastern and northern regions including coastal areas hit by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami which sparked a crisis at a nuclear power plant in the area.
The drowned body of an 84-year-old man was found on the bank of a river on Shikoku Island on Wednesday after he went missing a day earlier while checking his boat, local police said.
The eye of Ma-On, which spanned 1,600km, made landfall on Shikoku in southwestern Japan late Tuesday, bringing up to 120cm of rain since Sunday, the weather agency said.
More crops are being grown on the Brazilian savannah, where ranchers have traditionally raised their cattle. As crops take the place of cattle on the savannah, the ranchers move into the forest.
Marcelus Caldas, an assistant professor of geography at Kansas State University, and his colleagues at the University of Texas at Austin and Michigan State University analyzed land use data from 2003-2008. They examined geographic information systems, maps and statistics to determine how large scale monocultures were indirectly leading to deforestation.
"Our data shows that the Amazon now has 79 million heads of cattle," Caldas said in a press release. "Fifteen years ago, it had less than 10 million. That means that there's a problem with cattle moving inside the forest."












Comment: Recommended watching:
Lierre Keith on 'The Vegetarian Myth - Food, Justice and Sustainability'