Earth Changes
You can read the comment in its entirety here, complete with useful links, as well as all the comments (some of which dissent from dougr's claims) made in response. Sharon notes, to the inevitable question of why pass along an anonymous comment: "This one passes my smell test, which is usually pretty good - that doesn't mean I claim commenter Doug R is right - it means I think his information is interesting enough to be worth exposing to a wider audience for clarification or correction." As the Oil Drum staff explains to it's own readers regarding this post: "Were the US government and BP more forthcoming with information and details, the situation would not be giving rise to so much speculation about what is actually going on in the Gulf. This should be run more like Mission Control at NASA than an exclusive country club function--it is a public matter--transparency, now!" Amen.

The Deepwater Horizon ablaze on April 21, the day after the oil rig exploded
The concern with the method BP chose, the document said, was that if the cement around the casing pipe did not seal properly, gases could leak all the way to the wellhead, where only a single seal would serve as a barrier.
Using a different type of casing would have provided two barriers, according to the document, which was provided to The New York Times by a Congressional investigator.

A BP Plc contract worker picks up oily containment boom in the marshlands outside of Cocodrie, Louisiana
BP's attempts so far to cap the well and plug the leak on the seabed a mile below the surface haven't worked, while the start of the Atlantic hurricane season this week indicates storms in the Gulf may disrupt other efforts.
"The worst-case scenario is Christmas time," Dan Pickering, the head of research at energy investor Tudor Pickering Holt & Co. in Houston, said. "This process is teaching us to be skeptical of deadlines."
Destin, Florida -- More than 100 tar balls washed ashore on northwest Florida's Emerald Coast, fouling white beaches, as state officials warned of more "shoreline impacts" soon.
The tar balls moving in on Okaloosa Island, within Florida's Panhandle, from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill were part of a growing number of streams of brown and rusty red oil dotted with floating quarter-size tar patties landing on an area roughly bounded by Pensacola on the west and Port St. Joe on the east, officials said.
Hardest hit so far is an area around Destin, which styles itself as "The World's Luckiest Fishing Village."

The microbes Orcutt and her team study receive no light that far beneath the ocean floor, so part of what they are exploring is how these microscopic organisms survive in such harsh conditions.
Beth Orcutt, a post-doctoral fellow at Aarhus University in Denmark and the University of Southern California, presented her new findings about this little researched realm at Goldschmidt 2010, an annual conference sponsored by a number of international geochemical societies and hosted this year by the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
"I think this research is exciting because it offers us a glimpse into a habitat on Earth that we know next to nothing about," Orcutt said.
"If you consider how much ocean crust there is on Earth, and how much of that is hydrologically active, then this environment could be one of the most massive habitats for microbial life on Earth. There may be new species of life and new types of metabolism that we haven't discovered yet."
on Wednesday, to more than one-third of US federal waters there.
The area closed was 80,806 square miles (209,271 square kilometers), or about 33.4 percent of the Gulf's federal waters, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported.
On June 7, a total of 32.3 percent of Gulf federal waters were closed to fishing.
"Closing fishing in these areas is a precautionary measure to ensure that seafood from the Gulf will remain safe for consumers," NOAA said.
The closed area expanded northward to include waters off Panama City beach in northern Florida, NOAA said, noting that the federal closure does not apply to any US state waters.
Thursday, June 17, 2010 at 13:06:45 UTC
Friday, June 18, 2010 at 01:06:45 AM at epicenter
Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones
Location:
33.065°S, 179.817°E
Depth:
156.1 km (97.0 miles)
Region:
SOUTH OF THE KERMADEC ISLANDS
Distances:
220 km (135 miles) SSW of L'Esperance Rock, Kermadec Islands
475 km (295 miles) SSW of Raoul Island, Kermadec Islands
625 km (390 miles) NE of Auckland, New Zealand
1020 km (630 miles) NNE of WELLINGTON, New Zealand
Thursday, June 17, 2010 at 14:23:24 UTC
Thursday, June 17, 2010 at 07:23:24 AM at epicenter
Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones
Location:
46.118°N, 120.745°W
Depth:
2.2 km (1.4 miles) set by location program
Region:
WASHINGTON
Distances:
31 km (19 miles) S (186°) from White Swan, WA
34 km (21 miles) N (10°) from Goldendale, WA
35 km (22 miles) SSW (206°) from Harrah, WA
154 km (95 miles) ENE (69°) from Vancouver, WA

Noctilucent clouds (NLCs) over Dundalk, Ireland (Canon 450D, 20mm wide angle lens, 6 sec , f3.2, ISO100)
"They were not the most intense NLCs I've seen, says McCabe, "but they bode well for the weeks ahead." Indeed, as northern summer unfolds, NLCs should become even more intense. The seasonal peak is not fully understood but it rarely fails to produce vivid displays in June and July.
An Ambulance Victoria spokesman says the woman was hit by a tree around 11:00am (AEST) and died at the scene.
The wild weather has brought down trees and cut power to some areas.
Justin Kibell from the State Emergency Service (SES) says they have had 300 calls for help so far today after receiving about 100 calls overnight.
"These requests have been around trees that have been blown down on to roads or on to property, on to cars," he said.
"We've also had a number of roofs that have been dislodged with roofing materials blown off."











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