Earth ChangesS


Fish

Girl lucky to be alive after sting by deadly jellyfish

Image
© AFP/File/Lawrence BartlettA sign outside a hotel warns swimmers of box jellyfish, in Darwin. A 10-year-old Australian girl who survived being stung by the world's most venomous creature, may have rewritten medical history, an expert said Tuesday
A 10-year-old Australian girl who survived being stung by the world's most venomous creature, the deadly box jellyfish, may have rewritten medical history, an expert said Tuesday.

Schoolgirl Rachael Shardlow lost consciousness after being badly stung by the jellyfish while swimming in a river in eastern Queensland state with her brother in December, but lived to tell the tale.

"When I first saw the pictures of the injuries I just went, 'you know to be honest, this kid should not be alive'," said Jamie Seymour, professor of zoology and tropical ecology at James Cook University.

"I mean they are horrific. Usually when you see people who have been stung by box jellyfish with that number of the tentacle contacts on their body, it's usually in a morgue," he told public broadcaster, the ABC.

Often deadly, the box jellyfish has long, trailing tentacles and is able to squeeze through even the smallest of nets as it is only the size of a fingernail.

Evil Rays

Keeping Track of Grizzly Bears in the Northern Rockies

Image
© Kim Keating , U.S. Geological Survey A female grizzly bear family rambles through Yellowstone National Park. USGS researchers study population dynamics of these bears, as well as hazards they face. This information is used by resource managers and decision makers.
Rural areas with human development can lessen grizzly bear survival in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, and innovative bear rub tree surveys can successfully monitor grizzly population dynamics in the Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem, suggest two new studies released by the U.S. Geological Survey in the Journal of Wildlife Management.

The studies highlight dynamic tools to assist in conservation and management of grizzly bears in the Greater Yellowstone and Northern Continental Divide ecosystems, the two largest strongholds for grizzly populations in the contiguous United States.

While previous studies identified roads and developed areas as primary hazards, the new findings also indicate that rural home development and areas open to fall ungulate hunting can negatively affect bear survival in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. Scientists used 21 years of grizzly bear tracking information to develop a model that predicts areas hazardous to grizzlies.

"Our research shows that bears living in areas with human development and activity including roads, campgrounds, lodges, and homes have a greater chance of dying than bears living in more remote and secure areas," said Chuck Schwartz, a USGS wildlife biologist and lead of the Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team.

Bizarro Earth

Violence of Baja quake seen in desert fish video

Death Valley National Park - The violence of this month's big Baja California earthquake was captured in scientists' video of tiny fish that live in a deep Mojave Desert cavern.


Question

Hundreds of Crab Shells Show Up on North Oregon Coast

This article has been removed from our database due to receipt of the following notice:

Bizarro Earth

Volcano spews sand, ash over Guatemala

Image
© photovolcanica.comOverview of Santiaguito lava dome complex from Santa Maria, Dec. 2007
The Santiaguito volcano showered sand and ash on Monday over a large area of western Guatemala in an "unusual" and "violent" display, the national seismological institute said.

The institute said winds were carrying the ash in a northeasterly direction from the 2,500 metre (7,500 foot) high volcano in the province of Quetzaltenango, 206 kilometres west of the capital.

The ash plume spread across six provinces, raising fears of damage to crops, the institute said while classes were suspended at schools in three provinces.

Santiaguito's worst eruption occurred in 1929 when 2500 people were killed.

Comment: For more information on this volcano see this link.


Padlock

Best of the Web: Remember that Ash Cloud? It Didn't Exist

Image
No ash cloud here: Deep blue skies over London April 16. So, if planes weren't grounded for 6 days because of the "ash cloud"...
Britain's airspace was closed under false pretences, with satellite images revealing there was no doomsday volcanic ash cloud over the entire country.

Skies fell quiet for six days, leaving as many as 500,000 Britons stranded overseas and costing airlines hundreds of millions of pounds.

Estimates put the number of Britons still stuck abroad at 35,000.

However, new evidence shows there was no all-encompassing cloud and, where dust was present, it was often so thin that it posed no risk.

The satellite images demonstrate that the skies were largely clear, which will not surprise the millions who enjoyed the fine, hot weather during the flight ban.

Jim McKenna, the Civil Aviation Authority's head of airworthiness, strategy and policy, admitted: 'It's obvious that at the start of this crisis there was a lack of definitive data.

'It's also true that for some of the time, the density of ash above the UK was close to undetectable.'

Magnify

Mice Make Own Morphine

Image
© N. Grobe & N. WeirMice can synthesize morphine from various intermediate chemicals.
Mammals could have opiate factories.

Mammals may possess the biochemical machinery to produce morphine - a painkiller found in the opium poppy, according to a new study.

Meinhart Zenk of the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center in St Louis, Missouri, and colleagues detected traces of morphine in the urine of mice after injecting chemical precursors of the drug. They report their findings today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.[1]

Like other opioids, morphine is a potent, potentially addictive pain reliever. Scientists have speculated for decades that animals naturally synthesize morphine because specialized receptors in the brain respond to the drug. Trace amounts of morphine had been found in human urine and cells.[2] But studies using living animals yielded inconclusive results because of possible contamination from external sources of morphine in their food or in the environment.

Bizarro Earth

Taiwan: Earthquake Magnitude 6.5 - Southeast of Taiwan

Image
© USGS
Date-Time:
Monday, April 26, 2010 at 02:59:50 UTC

Monday, April 26, 2010 at 10:59:50 AM at epicenter

Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones

Location:
22.247°N, 123.733°E

Depth:
10 km (6.2 miles) set by location program

Region:
SOUTHEAST OF TAIWAN

Distances:
245 km (150 miles) SSW of Ishigaki-jima, Ryukyu Islands, Japan

270 km (170 miles) ESE of T'ai-tung, Taiwan

270 km (170 miles) NE of Basco, Batan Islands, Philippines

2145 km (1340 miles) SW of TOKYO, Japan

Bizarro Earth

US: Earthquake Magnitude 4.0 - Southern Texas

Image
© USGS
Date-Time:
Sunday, April 25, 2010 at 02:10:41 UTC

Saturday, April 24, 2010 at 09:10:41 PM at epicenter

Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones

Location:
27.762°N, 97.891°W

Depth:
5 km (3.1 miles) set by location program

Region:
SOUTHERN TEXAS

Distances:
8 km (5 miles) SW (226°) from Rancho Banquete, TX

15 km (10 miles) WNW (288°) from La Paloma-Lost Creek, TX

16 km (10 miles) W (270°) from Spring Garden-Terra Verde, TX

48 km (30 miles) W (273°) from Corpus Christi, TX

570 km (354 miles) S (191°) from Dallas, TX

Cloud Lightning

US: Tornadoes tear through Southeast, killing 10

Image
© AP Photo/ The Meridian Star, Paula MerrittA tornado ripped through the Meehan area in Lauderdale County, Miss., Saturday, April 24, 2010, leaving damage to the The walls of the Green Grove Missionary Baptist Church were blown out as a ripped through the Meehan area in Lauderdale County, Miss. on Saturday, April 24, 2010, leaving damage to the Green Grove Missionary Baptist Church.
Yazoo City, Mississippi - Tornadoes ripped through the Southeast on Saturday, killing 10 people in Mississippi and injuring more than a dozen others. Roofs were torn off businesses, homes were splintered, vehicles were overturned and roads were blocked by toppled trees.

Gov. Haley Barbour told The Associated Press there was "utter obliteration" in parts of Yazoo County, an area known for cotton, catfish, blues music and picturesque hills rising abruptly from the flat Mississippi Delta.

Mississippi Emergency Management Agency spokesman Greg Flynn said five people were killed in Choctaw County, including two children. Four victims were in Yazoo County and one was in Holmes County.

More than 15 other counties were also damaged. The swath of debris forced rescuers to pick up some of the injured on all-terrain vehicles the west-central part of the state.

Tornadoes were also reported in Louisiana, Arkansas and Alabama, and the severe weather continued to track eastward.

In Yazoo City about 40 miles north of Jackson, Malcolm Gordon, 63, stood with members of his family peering through a broken window. Above them, the roof was gone, a tree lay across part of the house and power lines stretched across the yard in a neighborhood made up of modest houses and mobile homes on a street that winds around hills and ravines. The smell of shredded pine trees hung the warm breeze.