Tag Archives: fossil

Stopping the Real Welfare Queens

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By @KYYellowDog When it comes to actual waste in the federal budget, nothing beats subsidies to oil companies and other fossil fuel follies. They are multiply lethal: economically suicidal, fiscally suicidal and environmentally suicidal. Ending them is a bigger lift than health care reform, but the first huge step is President Obama saying publicly it has to happen. Full transcript here. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : They gave us a republic Discovery Date : 17/03/2012 09:30 Number of articles : 2

Stopping the Real Welfare Queens

Senator James Inhofe(Sociopath, OK)

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Commentary By Ron Beasley While peak oil may threaten our civilization peak water threatens our species. Hydraulic fracking is seen by some to be the next solution to the fossil fuel shortage but what about it’s impact on water resources. While we are told that it can be done safely experience tells a different story. This from yesterday: Gas Drilling… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Newshoggers Discovery Date : 22/04/2011 03:14 Number of articles : 2

Senator James Inhofe(Sociopath, OK)

"North America’s Greenest Hostel" Opening in Toronto Soon

Part of terrific info-graphic in the Globe and Mail Here Tom Rand, green entrepreneur and author of Kick the Fossil Fuel Habit:10 Clean Technologies to Save Our World , practices what he preaches. He and hostelier Anthony Aarts are opening what is being called “North America’s greenest hostel” this month and it makes Pablo’s answer to the question

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"North America’s Greenest Hostel" Opening in Toronto Soon

Is Anaerobic Digestion Needed to Avoid Massive Famine?

Image credit: AgCert Peak oil is a subject that has gained much traction (even inspiring some sexy if pessimistic dancing from Oily Cassandra ). After all, it’s hard to ignore the fact that our dependence on oil and other fossil fuels leaves us vulnerable to supply shortages or sudden price hikes. But it’s less well known that we may face a simultaneous, and equally troubling shortage of another key resource—phosphorous. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Is Anaerobic Digestion Needed to Avoid Massive Famine?

International Team of Paleontologists Uncovers Earliest Known Multicellular Fossils | Push back Fossil Records to 2.1 Billion Years Ago; They Lived 200 Million Years Earlier Than Originally Thought

An international team of paleontologists has uncovered the earliest known multicellular fossils, pushing back the fossil record for such life forms to 2.1 billion years ago and suggesting that they lived 200 million years earlier than scientists had thought. Multicellular fossils may be world's oldest Fossils found in Gabon suggest complex organisms lived as far back as 2.1 billion years ago, paleontologists say. Photo: Paleontologists used X-ray tomography to virtually reconstruct the outer form, left, and inner structure of the fossil specimens. By Amina Khan, Los Angeles Times July 1, 2010 An international team of paleontologists has uncovered the earliest known multicellular fossils, pushing back the fossil record for such life forms to 2.1 billion years ago and suggesting that they lived 200 million years earlier than scientists had thought. Since most fossils in that period were microscopic and single-celled, finding fossils that stretched as long as 4.75 inches was “like ordering an hors d'oeuvre and some gigantic thick-crust pizza turning up,” said Philip Donoghue, a paleontologist at the University of Bristol, who co-wrote a commentary on the finding. The report detailing the fossils, along with the commentary, was published online Wednesday in the journal Nature. The organisms, which don't resemble modern-day living things, existed when Earth's atmosphere would have been uninhabitable for today's plants and animals. Their fossils provide “the first record of that fundamental threshold in organismal complexity being surpassed,” Donoghue said. “To put it into context, the godfather of evolutionary biology, John Maynard Smith, identified eight major events in evolutionary history; achieving multicellularity was one of these.” Get important science news and discoveries delivered to your inbox with our Science & Environment newsletter. Sign up

Frozen Velociraptor Found Scavenging Another Bigger Dinosaur

Scientists revealed that the swift seizer Velociraptor, a genus of dromaeosaurid theropod dinosaur, has been caught frozen in time evidently scavenging on a remains of another larger dinosaur Protoceratops. Protoceratops, meaning First Horned Face, fossil remnants were discovered by paleontologists alongside the plant-eater that match the marks. The fossils that was discovered in 2008 from a red sandstone mound in Inner Mongolia and China consist of a collection of heavily eroded Protoceratops bones with two small, curved, serrated teeth that belonged either to Velociraptor or a close relative. Back when they lived roughly 65 million to 70 million years ago, the area was probably a scrubby desert with lots of sand and rocks and not too much vegetation, though there were bodies of water, with life quite lush closer to the rivers. The size of the Velociraptor and Protoceratops teeth suggest are fullgrown. The raptor was roughly 5 feet long (1.5 meters), while the herbivore might have been anywhere from 4.6 to 6.5 feet long (1.4 to 2 m). Bite marks on and around the herbivore’s jaws suggest the raptor did not kill the plant-eater, but was instead scavenging on its carcass. “This is a big animal, packing lots of muscle and lots to eat. Why then, would the killer be biting away on the cheeks and jaws so heavily that it lost a couple of teeth and left marks on the bones? The obvious answer is this didn’t happen,” explained researcher David Hone, a paleontologist at the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology of China in Beijing. Instead, when the raptor got there, “this was a carcass with little left on, and it was scraping off the last accessible fragments of meat on the bones,” Hone said. “This pattern is also seen in living carnivores – when faced with a large body, they start on the belly and hindlegs and the head is nearly always the last to go. Here the skull and jaws are the bones with the marks on and thus most likely to be the bits left over, not those first taken on.” These new findings support a famous discovery made more than 30 years ago in Mongolia seemingly of a Velociraptor and Protoceratops locked in mortal combat. Although these fossils, dubbed the “fighting dinosaurs,” certainly suggested the raptor hunted the herbivores, one could readily argue such an instance was a chance encounter, with Velociraptor only rarely eating Protoceratops. The “fighting dinosaurs” suggest Velociraptor could act as a predator, while this new find suggests it could act as a scavenger. This is true of many living carnivores as well, Hone said, such as lions and jackals. It remains unknown as to what might have killed the Protoceratops, as its bones were simply not well preserved enough. “They probably were once in magnificent condition, but they had eroded,” Hone said. “If we’d got there a few months earlier it might have been a perfect specimen – a month or two later and we might have found nothing but dust.” Frozen Velociraptor Found Scavenging Another Bigger Dinosaur is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading