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New Study Shakes Up Scientists’ View of California’s San Andreas Earthquake Risk

Study shakes up scientists' view of San Andreas earthquake risk Researchers find major quakes on the southern section, on average, every 88 years — three times as often as previously thought. It's the strongest evidence yet that we're overdue for a massive quake. San Andreas fault study Photo: Sarah Robinson, 23, a graduate student at Arizona State University, runs along a trench at the Bidart Fan sector of the San Andreas fault in June 2009. She is on a team of geologists trying to construct a history of earthquakes on the San Andreas fault by reading lines of sediment in the earth. (Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times / June 1, 2009) ___ By Rong-Gong Lin II, Los Angeles Times August 21, 2010 Southern California is long overdue for a major earthquake along the San Andreas fault, according to a landmark study of historic seismic activity released Friday. The study, produced after several years of field studies in the Carrizo Plain area about 100 miles northwest of Los Angeles, found that earthquakes along the San Andreas fault have occurred far more often than previously believed. For years, scientists have said major earthquakes occurred every 250 to 450 years along this part of the San Andreas. The new study found big temblors on the fault every 88 years, on average. The last massive earthquake on that part of the fault was in 1857, leading scientists to warn that another such temblor is likely in Southern California. “The next earthquake could be sooner than later,” said Lisa Grant Ludwig, a UC Irvine earthquake expert and co-author of the study, which was published online in the journal Geology. “It was thought that we weren't at risk of having another large one any time soon. Well, now, it might be ready to rupture.” Other seismic experts described the revelation as a major change in the way they think about earthquake risks along the southern San Andreas fault. Thomas Jordan, director of the Southern California Earthquake Center, said the fault is “locked and loaded. It's been a long time since an earthquake has occurred on that fault — over 150 years.” To reach the new conclusion, scientists dug trenches deep into the Carrizo Plain. They used carbon dating and sophisticated imaging technology known as lidar to find signs of earth movements. They were able to detect earthquakes dating back to the 15th century, creating a far more complete record than had previously been known. The research found that earlier examinations of the San Andreas had badly undercounted the number of major earthquakes. Those were based on observations made in the 1970s when scientists used measuring tape to look for evidence of past earthquakes. “Now we have better techniques,” Grant Ludwig said. “We can see there's actually more earthquakes.” Scientists now estimate that earthquakes occurred on that section of the fault in 1417, 1462, 1565, 1614 and 1713. The finding adds weight to the view of many seismologists that the San Andreas has been in a quiet period and that a major rupture is possible. A 2009 study, which Grant Ludwig also participated in, suggested that the San Andreas was overdue for a rupture. But Friday's report offers a much more grim estimate of how frequently quakes have occurred on that segment of the fault. The San Andreas fault is considered one of the most dangerous in Southern California, partly because it is so long that its southern section is capable of producing a temblor as large as magnitude 8.1. By contrast, earthquake experts consider 1994's destructive 6.7-magnitude Northridge quake, which occurred on a different fault, to be a medium-sized quake. The San Andreas is a sleeping giant. It's hard to imagine the power of a huge quake on the southern section because the last one occurred more than a century ago when the area was sparsely populated. Just 4,000 people lived in Los Angeles at the time. The 1857 temblor, with an estimated magnitude of 7.9, is known as the Fort Tejon quake, but that's a bit of a misnomer because it is thought to have started farther north, way up in Parkfield in Monterey County. The quake then barreled south on the San Andreas for about 200 miles, through Fort Tejon near the northern edge of what is now Los Angeles County, then east toward the Cajon Pass in San Bernardino County, near what is now the 15 Freeway. The quake was so powerful that the soil liquefied, causing trees as far away as Stockton to sink. Trees were also uprooted west of Fort Tejon. The shaking lasted 1 to 3 minutes. The study was conducted by scientists at UC Irvine and Arizona State University. As preliminary data went out for peer review, other earthquake scientists immediately took note. The U.S. Geological Survey was so concerned that it dispatched its own team of investigators to the Carrizo Plain to look over the initial findings and review the evidence in the trenches. “These investigators really were challenged by their scientific peers,” said Ken Hudnut, a geophysicist at the U.S. Geological Survey. “And they made it through. They ran the gantlet and came through with a really solid paper.” Hudnut said the “Big One” wouldn't compare to most quakes Californians have endured. Such a large quake on the San Andreas, generally above a magnitude 7, would send enormous V-shape energy waves spreading out from the fault. If the earthquake energy hit the Los Angeles Basin, the soft sediment underneath it could actually amplify the waves, making the shaking worse. Hudnut said the study offers both “bad news and good news,” noting that it also concluded future earthquakes along that section of the San Andreas could be smaller than the 1857 quake. “It's not the kind of news that ought to make people crawl into the fetal position. Rather, it's the kind of information that ought to once remind people about basic earthquake preparedness,” Hudnut said. Grant Ludwig said her research should motivate people to prepare. “If you're waiting for someone to tell you when we're close to the next San Andreas earthquake, just look at the data,” she said. “If we look at the only data we have, it's not very comforting. I'm preparing for that possibility.” added by: EthicalVegan

Canadian ‘peter meter’ youth program halted; tester charged with sexual assault – Boing Boing

I've covered Canadian psychology hijinks before, and how a handful of them are leading the push to expand which sexual interests are mental illnesses( http://boingboing.net/2010/01/08/you-will-become-ment.html ). Now comes another scandal that's like something out of Clockwork Orange. Late last month, Youth Forensic Psychiatric Services in Burnaby, British Columbia was forced to shut down a decades-old program where troubled youths had a device placed on their penises while they were subjected to media depicting stuff like rape and child pornography. The final straw was when one of the test administrators was arrested for a sexual assault allegedly committed during leisure time. The whole sordid story follows. Canada has had a long, hard fixation with catching people getting aroused over things Canadian “experts” consider mental illnesses. One program in the mid-20th century, nicknamed the “fruit machine( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fruit_machine_ (homosexuality_test)),” led to over 9,000 Canadian citizens being investigated as suspected homosexuals, with some even being tested and drummed out of government jobs. In the wake of the fruit machine program, the fine folks at Toronto's Centre for Addiction and Mental Health( http://boingboing.net/2010/01/07/toronto-global-epice.html ) developed and still promote penile plethysmography (PPG). The device, nicknamed a peter meter, is supposedly a lie detector for male genitalia. It's not admissible in court cases as evidence( http://www.smith-lawfirm.com/Scientific_Evidence_Brief.html ) for the same reason as a polygraph: the data can be manipulated by both subject and tester, and there's little standardization in equipment or stimuli. Because the whole concept is based on the premise that the subject is a “non-admitter” who needs to be caught, sometimes they jam another sensor up the subject's butt to ensure he is not clenching his sphincter to alter the blood flow into his penis. Males in general and teenage boys in particular can get spontaneous erections for any number of reasons that may or may not be related to the stimulus presented. They might even chub up just because of the test itself (the stress, touching, humiliation, etc.). According to those who learned how to game the device, it's also pretty easy for other subjects to suppress tumescence by thinking of something decidedly unsexy. In case you are wondering, they've also created one for young ladies that gets inserted in the vagina, but the testers are much, much, much more interested in teen peen. PPG evangelists have fanned across North America, using their device in all kinds of questionable ways for decades. Then a 2009 article, ironically published in the journal Sexual Abuse, reported on the long-running practice of hooking up penile plethysmographs to minors charged with sex offenses in British Columbia. That got the attention of civil rights groups. The sexual assault arrest of one of the testers was the last straw for local lawmakers, who finally pulled the plug on the abusive plethysmograph for kids program. The current guy in charge of Sexual Abuse( http://www.camh.net/research/scientific_Staff_profiles/bio_detail.php?cuserID=51 ) is, unsurprisingly, a CAMH employee, so he is a huge proponent of penile plethysmography. In fact, you can often find him on Wikipedia altering articles on sexuality( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/James_Cantor ) to promote theories and devices his coworkers developed via the CAMH Phallometry Lab( http://www.camh.net/About_CAMH/Guide_to_CAMH/Mental_Health_Programs/The_Law_and_… ) (an actual tax-funded Toronto lab). Anyone interested in measuring penises should consider an internship or even a career as a Canadian psychologist. Perhaps you can even be part of history by developing the next-gen fruit machine or peter meter… To learn more about how high-tech penile plethysmography is, you can visit this major manufacturer's cutting-edge website( http://www.dmdavis.com/rs3104.html ) (complete with 1995-style Under Construction sign and email gif). The Skeptic's Dictionary has a good overview of PPG( http://www.skepdic.com/penilep.html ), too. B.C. permanently halts sexual arousal testing( http://www.ctvbc.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20100729/bc_penis_sex_tests_hal… ) [ctv.ca] Sex charge prompts expanded probe of youth-offender penile test( http://www.theprovince.com/technology/charge+prompts+expanded+probe+youth+offend… ) [theprovince.com] B.C. used penile teen sex test for decades( http://www.cbc.ca/canada/british-columbia/story/2010/08/08/bc-teen-sex-testing.h… ) [cbc.ca] added by: toyotabedzrock

Biochar Alone Could Offset 12% of All Human Greenhouse Gas Emissions: Study

Through application to soil in farmer’s fields, biochar both can help increase soil fertility and store carbon emissions. Photo: Feral Arts via flickr. More new info on the potential of biochar to help combat climate change: A study in the journal Nature Communications shows that up to 12% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions caused by humans could be offset by p… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Biochar Alone Could Offset 12% of All Human Greenhouse Gas Emissions: Study

Jodie Fisher Harassed: HP CEO Mark Hurd Ousted (PHOTOS)

Hewlett-Packard CEO Mark Hurd paid his harassment accuser, actress Jodie Fisher, a hefty private settlement and then tendered his resignation after his company determined he was guilty of irregularities. added by: gmc1

Today Show Invites on Rolling Stone Reporter to Complain About Pentagon Ban

NBC’s Today show invited on the reporter, whose Rolling Stone article essentially got General Stanley McChrystal fired, on Thursday’s show to complain that the Pentagon denied him an embed because the war in Afghanistan isn’t going well. After Today co-anchor Meredith Vieira questioned Michael Hastings for his explanation as to why the Pentagon denied him an embed, Hastings concluded “This is a symptom of essentially the war, and how the war is going…The war has hit its all-time low.” This caused Vieira, herself, to cry censorship, as she asked: “Do you think the military is trying to say to reporters,’We will stifle you, if you don’t tell the story the way we want it told?'” MEREDITH VIEIRA: So why do you think, ultimately, you lost this, this right to an embed? I mean, what do you think is going on? Is it the McChrystal article or is there something much bigger than that? MICHAEL HASTINGS: I think it’s, I think it’s much bigger. This is not just about a Rolling Stone reporter being banned from an embed. This is a symptom of essentially the war, and how the war is going. June and July were the deadliest months that we’ve ever seen in the war in Afghanistan. The war has hit its all-time low in approval ratings, so clearly there’s great concern in Washington about how the war is going, and the response to this embed. The response to me on this embed sort of indicates that. I think it’s important to, to just let you know, with this helicopter story, these are stories that I’m very passionate about telling. And it is a great privilege to tell the story of the troops. VIEIRA: But do you think, but do you think the military is trying to say to reporters, “We will stifle you, if you don’t tell the story the way we want it told?” The following Jim Miklaszewski set-up piece and entire interview with Hastings were aired on the August 5 Today show: MEREDITH VIEIRA: And now to the war in Afghanistan. It has been a difficult summer for U.S. troops there. July was the deadliest month yet for Americans. And a new commander took over after a controversial Rolling Stone article led to the end of General Stanley McChrystal’s military career. Well now the Pentagon is refusing to let that reporter, the reporter who wrote it, embed with another unit in Afghanistan. We’re gonna talk about that with Michael Hastings in a moment. But first NBC’s Jim Miklaszewski is at the Pentagon. Mik, good morning to you. [On screen headline: “Pentagon Payback? McChrystal Reporter Not Allowed Back With Troops”] JIM MIKLASZEWSKI: Good morning, Meredith. It’s been a couple of months since the story broke that forced General McChrystal out of the Army, but the fallout over media military relations is far from over. On his last day as a soldier, General Stan McChrystal managed to joke about the article that ended his career, with a word of warning to his fellow soldiers. GEN. STANLEY MCCHRYSTAL: I have stories on all of you, photos on many, and I know a Rolling Stone reporter. MIKLASZEWSKI: That reporter is Michael Hastings. In an interview on Today in June, Hastings explained how he landed that Rolling Stone scoop. MICHAEL HASTINGS: The access I got was almost a throwback to the old days of “fly on the wall” reporting, where, nowadays, access is almost so controlled, it’s always very so controlled. So it was very rare to get this kind of access anyway. MIKLASZEWSKI: But not any more. The U.S. military has revoked Hastings’ recent request to embed with American forces in Afghanistan, after first granting the request last month. Pentagon spokesman Colonel David Lepenn insists it’s not retribution but explains “a key element of an embed is having trust,” and essentially commanders in Afghanistan no longer trust Hastings. But as a freelancer, Hastings has covered the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan for various publications, and Internet news blogs with no apparent complaints. Military officials have, in fact, praised Hastings’ upcoming piece in the Men’s Journal on Army combat helicopters saying “It accurately portrays the Army’s warrior mentality.” So what is going on here? Media watchdogs claim the military is striking back. LUCY DALGLISH, THE REPORTERS COMMITTEE FOR FREEDOM OF THE PRESS: Since they have all of the power, all of it, once he’s published his story they have, if he wants back in, they have all of the power. If they say they don’t trust him to do what they want him to do anymore, they’re just not going to play in the sandbox with him anymore. MIKLASZEWSKI: Meanwhile, the Army Inspector General is still investigating whether if any of McChrystal’s aides who were blindly quoted in that article should face disciplinary action. And as a reporter who’s often been embedded with the military, there is, indeed, a fine line between trust and control. And while the military can control a reporter’s access, there must be no control over the reporter’s content. Meredith? MEREDITH VIEIRA: Mik, thank you very much. Michael Hastings is with us, exclusively. Good morning to you. MICHAEL HASTINGS: Good morning, thanks for having me. VIEIRA: Not at all. Just so people are clear on this, you were offered this embed in June, then the article on General McChrystal comes out at the end of June, between then and now you didn’t hear anything, and then you get this letter this week. Who is it from, and what did it say? HASTINGS: The letter was from a public affairs official in Kabul, named Colonel Wayne Shanks, and it just basically laid out the case that I, noting that I had, had approval and that approval was being revoked because the military was unhappy with, first, the helicopter story, and actually, they, they, they mentioned the helicopter story, and then they mentioned the story that I wrote about General McChrystal for Rolling Stone. VIEIRA: So they specifically pointed out two stories? HASTINGS: Two stories, yes. But the more important part of their case being, what seemed it to be the General McChrystal story. And in fact, what they refer to as the “political fallout” from the General McChrystal story. So nothing to do, really, or there was no specific cases where they mentioned accuracy or anything I got wrong, or, or any, any rules I supposedly broke. VIEIRA: Well when asked about this, a spokesperson for the Defense Department said this, and I’m quoting here, “There is no right to embed. It is a choice made between units and individual reporters. And a key element of an embed is having trust that the individuals are going to abide by the ground rules. The command in Afghanistan decided there wasn’t the trust requisite, and denied your request.” In other words, they didn’t trust you to accurately report. HASTINGS: And that’s what’s very troubling about this. I’ve been doing this for five years. I’ve gone on dozens of embeds with American troops, accompanied them on many combat missions, traveled regularly with senior military officials and I’ve never had an issue. In fact I have many great friends, both Marines and soldiers, who, who I’ve met along the way for this. I think what also should be made clear is that my travels with General McChrystal were not considered an embed at the time. And if the military’s position now is that it was an embed, then the rules for embeds are very clear. Rule number seven says all comments are on the record. All interviews with service personnel are on the record. VIEIRA: Did you take comments off the record- HASTINGS: No. VIEIRA: -in that, in that interview with General McChrystal at all? HASTINGS: No, and, in fact, if you look at the, the people who are sort of making that assertion, and what, and what appears to be their case about why they’re, why they’re saying I can’t do this embed, those assertions are being made by people who, unfortunately, lost their job as a result of the article, and they’re currently under investigation. So they’re not necessarily the most credible sources. VIEIRA: So why do you think, ultimately, you lost this, this right to an embed? I mean, what do you think is going on? Is it the McChrystal article or is there something much bigger than that? HASTINGS: I think it’s, I think it’s much bigger. This is not just about a Rolling Stone reporter being banned from an embed. This is a symptom of essentially the war, and how the war is going. June and July were the deadliest months that we’ve ever seen in the war in Afghanistan. The war has hit its all-time low in approval ratings, so clearly there’s great concern in Washington about how the war is going, and the response to this embed. The response to me on this embed sort of indicates that. I think it’s important to, to just let you know, with this helicopter story, these are stories that I’m very passionate about telling. And it is a great privilege to tell the story of the troops. VIEIRA: But do you think, but do you think the military is trying to say to reporters, “We will stifle you, if you don’t tell the story the way we want it told?” HASTINGS: That appears to be the case. You’d have to ask the military if that’s what they’re doing. But, but I think if we look at just, say, the, the, the story about the Kaiwa pilots — the Kaiwa is a kind of an attack helicopter – you know, sometimes, sometimes reporters will do a story about policy. Sometimes that’s going to be very critical. I think that’s a good thing to be critical about policy, especially if the policy is not going well. And sometimes you do it about the people who are fighting the war, the American men and women over there who are actually implementing the policy, and whose stories deserve to be told. And for that I’ve always said it’s a privilege to, to be able to see that. VIEIRA: Alright, Michael Hastings. Thank you so much for joining us this morning. Appreciate it. HASTINGS: Thanks for having me. Appreciate it.

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Today Show Invites on Rolling Stone Reporter to Complain About Pentagon Ban

Men Wearing Red Found to Trigger Female Desire

Forget chocolates and flowers, guys. If you want to make a big impression on the opposite sex, try adding red to your daily wardrobe. Lots of red. The color apparently makes a man more attractive, more powerful and more sexually desirable to women, according to a study appearing in the Journal of Experimental Psychology. The research suggests that woman's thoughts and feelings toward men are partly, primitive, a finding sure to open another chapter in the endless discussion of the perennial question `What do women want?' Females were found to view men wearing red-colored clothing as being higher in status and more likely to earn a better living. And it was that very high-status judgment which triggered the attraction, according to according to University of Rochester Psychologist Andrew Elliot, the lead author of the study, which included co-authors from Europe and China. “I definitely think that there's a learned component such that one learns red is the royal color or a powerful color or a color tie that you pull out if you want to make an impression,” he said in an interview with CBSNews.com. “But that also begs the question where that came from and the cross-cultural aspects, where it's found across cultures which otherwise have very little in common.” Indeed, a so-called “red effect” between men and women has been observed in different cultures in both East and West. That may hint at a connection to historical and biological factors. In many societies, for example, the ruling classes equated red clothing with high status. Elliot also said that spilled over in the use of red carpets to celebrate someone's special achievement or the use of red to make a sartorial impression in a business setting. “Part of this is the learned piece,” says Elliot, who noted that when women see red, it evokes deeper reactions that may be biologically ingrained. “The other is the biological piece which might explain why that learning takes place.” Humans share 99% of their genes with primates and in primate societies, the color red is usually found on alpha males. But this goes beyond primates. The study notes that “male red appears to carry an amorous meaning for females” in several animal species where males display intense red coloration. This female attraction to male red has been found in crustaceans, fish, birds and nonhuman primates.” Red, Rank, and Romance in Women Viewing Men As societies around the world incorporated red into their cultures, reinforcing the biologically-based use of the culture, it helped foster a situation where red did need to be natural or observed on the body to exert influence. The study found that “artificial red displayed in close proximity to the body may be sufficient to produce ornament and status effects.” Andrew Elliot, University of Rochester professor of psychology (Credit: Adam Fenster) The biggest surprise for Elliot was the realization that it was status and not raw power which helped drive this “red effect.” “In the wild, red is an indicator of physical strength and dominance,” he said. “Here it wasn't strength and dominance; it was something more involved, though the underlying meaning was the same – that this is a male who will take care of me and has good genetic material and can provide.” The experiments relied on responses from male and female undergraduates from the United States, England, Germany, and China. The findings built on research Elliot and and Daniela Niesta, did a couple of years earlier, when they concluded that the color red enhanced men's attraction to women. But he said that the reason men were attracted to women in red was due to red's association as “the color of sexual receptivity” in the animal kingdom. added by: onemalefla

Leading Chinese Economists Urge Government To Dump U.S. Treasuries, Buy Gold

Prominent economists in China are calling for their government to ditch vast holdings of U.S. Treasuries in favour of tangible assets such as gold, a move that would have a far reaching impact on the economy. Reuters reports that Yu Yongding, a former academic adviser to the Chinese central bank has appealed to state representatives to move away from U.S. debt and invest in assets denominated in other currencies, as well as other financial instruments and real goods. “Although assets in other currencies and forms are not an ideal replacement for U.S. Treasury bonds, diversification should be a basic principle,” Yu wrote in the China Securities Journal. “When demand for U.S. Treasury securities is strong, it’s a rare opportunity for us to gradually pull back. That way, it will not have a big impact on prices and China will not suffer too much,” he said. Another influential financial expert, Zhang Monan, of the powerful think tank The State Information Center, also commented to the journal that China should replace increasing amounts of its foreign exchange reserves with hard assets such as gold. The move could send gold prices back toward record highs following a recent slide China holds the world’s largest stockpile of reserves, worth some $2.5 trillion. China cut its U.S. treasury holdings by $32.5 billion in May, yet it still holds $867.7 billion, making it the largest holder of U.S. government debt in the world. In the past China has repeatedly threatened to use the so called “nuclear option” and liquidate its vast holding of US treasuries in response to continued pressure on the Communist state to force a yuan revaluation. Such an event could trigger a dollar crash which would now have disastrous consequences for an American economy mired in recession. Such an eventuality could lead to runaway inflation, making the cost of living unaffordable to even middle class Americans as food prices skyrocket. Continued at: http://www.prisonplanet.com/leading-chinese-economists-urge-government-to-dump-u… added by: Dagum

Noted Climate Scientist Stephen H. Schneider Passes

photo via Stanford Today, the world lost Stephen H. Schneider, a Stanford University climate scientist who has for decades built the foundational case that the planet is warming and that action is needed–now. Schneider, 65, shared the 2007 Nobel Prize with former Vice President Al Gore, and was a heavyweight climatologist, who Gore called, “A prolific researcher and author, co-founder of the journal Climatic Change, and a wonderful communicator, his contributions to the … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Noted Climate Scientist Stephen H. Schneider Passes

Gibbs Evades Question of Whether Obama Agrees With His Medicare Director That Health-Care System Must Redistribute Wealth

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs has evaded answering the question of whether President Barack Obama agrees with Dr. Donald Berwick, his newly appointed administrator of Medicare and Medicaid, who has insisted that health-care systems must redistribute wealth. “Excellent health care is by definition redistributional,” Berwick said in a speech delivered on July 1, 2008. When asked directly at the July 7 White House press briefing whether Obama agreed with this, Gibbs would not answer the question. Instead, he parried it with jocular statements about the provenance of the quote.

More Frequent Extreme Heatwaves Commonplace Across the US by 2040

image: Noah Diffenbaugh/Stanford Univ. Just as one extreme snowstorm in winter not meaning the world isn’t continuing to warm, one summer heatwave doesn’t prove it. That said, the trend is definitely towards more extreme heatwaves , as new research from Stanford University confirms. Writing in the journal Geophysical Research Letters , the scientists say that exceptionally long heatwav… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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More Frequent Extreme Heatwaves Commonplace Across the US by 2040