Tag Archives: arctic

French Balloonist Becomes First To Cross North Pole Alone

French explorer Jean-Louis Etienne has become the first solo person to fly across the Arctic by a hot air balloon. He’s aboard the Generali Arctic Observer, a hybrid hot air balloon that took off from Longyearbyen in April 05, 2010 at 6:10 local time. Jean-Louis Etienne, 63 years old, is a doctor from south-west France. He aims to cross 3,500 km within ten days by his hybrid hot air balloon. He planned to travel west over the North Pole to Alaska. During his expedition, he wanted to make some scientific observations which include measuring carbon dioxide levels and studying the earth’s magnetic fields. A team of technical and scientific experts on the ground helped keep track of him and they also informed him of the wind directions and weather conditions. Five days after taking off, he was picked up by a helicopter in Bagatai, Russia. He traveled more than 3,000 kilometers on his expedition over the Arctic Circle. Due to bad weather, he changed his course of landing instead of doing it in Alaska. French Balloonist Becomes First To Cross North Pole Alone is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Shell gets ready to start Arctic drilling within weeks after Obama go-ahead

Only hours after President Obama opened up vast tracts of America’s coastline to exploration, Royal Dutch Shell said yesterday that it plans to start drilling for oil in the Arctic Sea, north of Alaska, within weeks. Marvin Odum, the chief executive of Shell’s North America business, said that Shell was “absolutely ready to drill in terms of infrastructure and manpower” in Alaska and signalled that activity could begin within ten weeks. “Ideally we would aim to drill two to three wells this summer in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas,” he told The Times, adding that the company wanted to make full use of the three to four months’ ice-free period in the summer. Mr Odum also said that Shell would bid for new oil and gas leases in the eastern Gulf of Mexico that would become available following President Obama’s decision. In 2008, Shell paid $2 billion for exploration licences in the remote Arctic Sea to the north of Alaska. Since then, the company has been waiting for government permission to drill and has been embroiled in a legal dispute with environmental groups concerned about the impact on the endangered bowhead whale. However, Shell said it had received a government permit yesterday allowing it to drill in Chukchi, the sea between northwest Alaska and northeastern Siberia. It is believed to hold 15 billion barrels of oil and 76 trillion cu ft of gas, according to US government figures. Shell cautioned that an appeal could still be made against the permit within 30 days. The group said it was waiting for a final permit for the Beaufort Sea, which is also thought to be rich in oil. Mr Odum said that Shell was “absolutely” interested in bidding for new exploration licences in the eastern Gulf of Mexico, which had previously been off-limits. He said: “We have made discoveries right up to the area where leasing had been stopped. We know a lot about that trend and think those discoveries will continue. It’s a very good fit for us.” He said that the opening of large parts of the American East Coast to oil exploration presented big opportunities but that the impact would be long-term. Years of seismic investigations would be necessary before drilling or production would begin. Mr Odum was speaking as Shell announced the start-up of its Perdido floating production facility in the Gulf of Mexico, producing 100,000 barrels a day. It is the world’s deepest offshore production platform and stands in water as deep as five Empire State Buildings. The decision to open up new areas of the American coastline to oil and gas development is part of a calculated political move by the Obama Administration to win Republican support for proposed climate change legislation. The decision has upset environmental groups, but was welcomed yesterday by other oil companies. added by: JanforGore

Guy’s Frozen Penis Snaps Off in Ian McEwan’s New Novel [Book Excerpt]

Post- Atonement Ian McEwan wrote a satirical global-warming thriller wherein a man tries to pee outdoors in -26F Norway, then experiences shrinkage so severe his dick turns into a frosty popsicle, cracks, and slips out the leg of his pants. Praise be the gods of Page Six that this is the first excerpt I’ve seen from Solar . Protagonist Michael Beard is a physicist whose wife leaves him when she discovers he’d had eleven affairs. He goes on a trip to the Arctic to “see global warming for himself.” While in Norway, the following occurs: As the polar wind raged … he watched in horror as his penis shrank even smaller, and curled tighter against the zip. And not only was it diminishing before his eyes, but it was turning white. Not the white of a blank page, but the sparkling silver of a Christmas bauble. …his unfortunate [member] was as hard as ice … He let himself be guided back to [his guide’s] Ski-Doo and it was there that the calamity finally happened. As he raised a leg to hoist himself onto his place behind the guide, he felt, and even thought he heard, a terrible rending pain in his groin, a cracking and a parting, like a birth, like a glacier calving. He gave a shout… The punch line, Page Six writes, “is one of the sickest meet-cutes ever.” Beard boards an Arctic cruise ship and a pretty lady initiates conversation: “This just dropped out the bottom of your trousers.” Dear Literary Master Ian McEwan, I am pre-ordering your book right now. [ P6 ]

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Guy’s Frozen Penis Snaps Off in Ian McEwan’s New Novel [Book Excerpt]

Climate change melts Antarctica ice shelves -USGS

This is also happening in the Arctic… so much so, that it is said to account in part for the massive loss of perennial ice in the Arctic that took place in 2007. The Arctic is the canary in the coalmine regarding climate change/global warming, not a few inches of snow in Dc. It is simply ignorant to say global warming does not exist based on snow falling outside your window without looking beyond it. Sea ice extent in the Arctic is refreezing at a much slower rate; pereninial thicker ice is disappearing, thus giving way to thinner ice which then allows the water below the surface to warm, thus causing faster melting, thus causing less sun to be reflected back, thus also affecting the ocean conveyor belt which could be partly responsible for the cold weather and snowfall being experienced in Europe and on the Eastern seaboard. To see this now happening in Antarctica should indeed make us aware of the message this is bringing. Also, in the summer of 2003, France also had a heatwave that killed over 30,000 people. EXTREMES in temperature are a harbinger of climate change, and they are now much more prevalent. It isn't hard too see the reality and connect the dots. But of course, those with an ideological agenda or who are paid to have one will never admit to the reality of what is now going on. Those of us who do must get beyond the rhetoric now. The ice caps will not wait. added by: JanforGore

Shocking new poll about Americans’ belief in global warming

WASHINGTON — Americans seem to be cooling toward global warming. Just 57 percent think there is solid evidence the world is getting warmer, down 20 points in just three years, a new poll says

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Shocking new poll about Americans’ belief in global warming

Alaska Blob Could Be Alive: Floating Arctic Goo

A giant blob of oily biological material is making its way through Alaskan waters, and this floating arctic goo may in fact be alive. It is floating in the Arctic Ocean’s Chukchi Sea in the Bering Strait

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Alaska Blob Could Be Alive: Floating Arctic Goo

Arctic glacier to lose Manhattan-sized ‘tongue’

The biggest glacier in the Arctic is on the verge of losing a chunk of ice the size of Manhattan. A group of scientists and climate change activists who are closely monitoring the Petermann glacier’s ice tongue believe the rapid flow of ice is in part due to warm ocean currents moving up along the coast of Greenland, fuelled by global warming

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Arctic glacier to lose Manhattan-sized ‘tongue’