Earth Changes
It was the buzz heard round the world. On Thursday, the front-page New York Times article titled, "Scientists and Soldiers Solve a Bee Mystery" was supposed to close the book on a four-year long case involving the unexplained death of millions of honey bees nationwide. Instead, it has only brought more confusion, unanswered questions, and anger in the science and beekeeping communities.
In 2006, once thriving bee colonies across America suddenly vanished, leaving behind empty beehives. The bodies of the bees were never found. Scientists soon gave a name to the mysterious phenomenon: colony collapse disorder (CCD)
From 2006 to 2009, over one-third of beekeepers reported colonies collapsing accompanied by a "lack of dead bees," according to a survey conducted by the Apiary Inspectors of America (AIA).
In March 2007, James Doan, formerly the largest commercial beekeeper in New York, delivered an emotional testimony to the House Committee on Agriculture concerning the large-scale and mysterious loss of honey bee colonies, which he attributed to CCD.
"The economic impact on my operation is that it will cost me $200,000 to replace the honey bees that I have currently lost," Doan wrote in a letter. "If we cannot survive as a beekeeping industry here in this country, there will not be an agriculture community here in the U.S., period."
See, it's not just the beekeeping business that has something to worry about - the loss of honey bees affects all people. That is because honey bees pollinate food crops of all kinds.
They provide more than $15 billion in value to about 130 crops, including berries, nuts, fruits, and vegetables, according to the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). And without honeybees to pollinate crops, our food supply is in danger.
This rare video footage - only 400 Sumatran tigers are left in Indonesia - was captured by WWF conservationists working in the Bukit Betabuh Protected Forest in Riau Province, Sumatra, with the help of camera traps. Triggered by heat sensors the cameras are set up in fixed locations to monitor nocturnal or rare species in the wild.
Like many aspects of the world around us, it seems there is much to the nature of this planet that sees little attention in the mainstream media; sometimes, we're lucky if we see anything reported about these subjects at all.
One particular instance that comes to mind here is the way heliospheric phenomenon (solar activity) may be affecting changes here on Earth, or even on other planets. Erratic temperatures - both record highs and lows - are too-often blamed on anthropogenic reasons where humans are considered a prime culprit, where in reality, evidence suggests that humankind's influence may be only one small part of a bigger climatic conundrum.
Tuesday, October 12, 2010 at 12:02:55 UTC
Wednesday, October 13, 2010 at 01:02:55 AM at epicenter
Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones
Location:
20.485°S, 173.951°W
Depth:
9.9 km (6.2 miles)
Region:
TONGA
Distances:
150 km (90 miles) ENE of NUKU'ALOFA, Tonga
205 km (125 miles) S of Neiafu, Tonga
495 km (305 miles) E of Ndoi Island, Fiji
2115 km (1320 miles) NE of Auckland, New Zealand
The ferocious front blew in out of the east, hitting the city at about 8:30 p.m. and prompting multiple severe storm warnings and flash flood warnings.
Joann Binns, 61, of Manhattan, said she was pelted by hail a quarter-inch in diameter.
"I started running. There were ice stones," said Binns, who sought shelter under the marquee outside Madison Square Garden. "They hit me and I said, 'I'm outta here.' They hurt."
The storm prompted transit officials to reroute the F subway line and suspend the G line because of station flooding. The wicked weather also delayed the Jets' game against the Minnesota Vikings in the Meadowlands for 45 minutes because of lightning.
The message explained that the bottle was part of an experiment. It contained directions for anyone who found the bottle to contact Ethan Hall at Melbourne High School in Melbourne, Florida.
Adam and his father did as the message in the bottle asked and contacted Hall, a marine-science teacher.
Hall told Florida Today that he used to joke with students that their bottle might find them an Irish pen pal if they were lucky. But none of his students' bottles had ever traveled to another country in all the years he had been using the experiment.

Spiritual experiences originate within primitive parts of the human brain, structures shared by animals, like dogs.
The Gist
- A neurologist and other scientists argue animals are capable of having spiritual experiences.
- The researchers hold that spiritual experiences originate within primitive parts of the human brain, structures shared by animals.
- The challenge lies in proving what animals experience.
Research suggests that spiritual experiences originate deep within primitive areas of the human brain -- areas shared by other animals with brain structures like our own.
The trick, of course, lies in proving animals' experiences.
"Since only humans are capable of language that can communicate the richness of spiritual experience, it is unlikely we will ever know with certainty what an animal subjectively experiences," Kevin Nelson, a professor of neurology at the University of Kentucky, told Discovery News.
An estimated 3.8-magnitude quake shook the small town of Guy in Faulkner County at about 8:30 a.m. Monday. The U.S. Geological Survey says the quake happened 15 miles north-northeast of Conway and 40 miles north of Little Rock.
Another quake hit at almost the exact same time about 150 miles away in northeast Arkansas. The U.S. Geological Survey says the 3.9-magnitude earthquake was centered about 15 miles southeast of Paragould.
Durrell's vontsira (Salanoia durrelli) was found in the threatened Lac Alaotra wetlands in central eastern Madagascar in 2004. Zoologists took photos of it at the time, and have now confirmed it is a new species after comparing it to specimens of the closely related brown-tailed vontsira (Salanoia concolor).
Named in honour of the late conservationist Gerald Durrell, the new vontsira weighs just over half a kilogram and belongs to a family of carnivores - Eupleridae - only known in Madagascar. It is likely to be one of the most threatened carnivores as their Lac Alaotra wetland habitat becomes threatened by agricultural expansion, burning and invasive plants and fish.
Floodwaters rose south of Naujan lake on Mindoro island after heavy rain began falling in the area before dawn Friday, national police spokesman Senior Superintendent Agrimero Cruz told reporters.
In addition to the drowned person, an undetermined number of farm animals was also lost in floodwaters that reached an average of three feet (0.91 metres), he added.
Some 8,148 families were affected in the towns of Socorro and Pinamalayan, and police are on standby to conduct rescues or evacuations where necessary.
Comment: For more information on unusual weather in New York, see this Sott article:
New York City Hit by a TORNADO: One Person Killed and a Trail of Destruction Left as 100mph Winds Rip Through City