Tag Archives: ocean

How Much Is Left? The Earth’s Resources made Interactive

Explore the world's resources and our role in the future with this cool interactive map from Scientific American! “If the 20th century was an expansive era seemingly without boundaries—a time of jet planes, space travel and the Internet—the early years of the 21st have showed us the limits of our small world. Regional blackouts remind us that the flow of energy we used to take for granted may be in tight supply. The once mighty Colorado River, tapped by thirsty metropolises of the desert West, no longer reaches the ocean. Oil is so hard to find that new wells extend many kilometers underneath the seafloor. The boundless atmosphere is now reeling from two centuries’ worth of greenhouse gas emissions. Even life itself seems to be running out, as biologists warn that we are in the midst of a global extinction event comparable to the last throes of the dinosaurs. http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=interactive-how-much-is-left added by: DeliaTheArtist

Dead fish all over east coast-lack of oxygen from gulf ecocide?

What a coverup. It doesn't take a genius to figure out that the oil more than likely has entered the ocean current loop and may well be depriving oxygen to marinelife causing these huge fishkills all up the East Coast. The media is covering it up, the government is covering it up. And yes, there are such things as fishkills and that is understood. However, this seems out of the ordinary. It isn't enough that we are killing the oceans with our plastic, poisons, acidification, overfishing and agricultural run off, we will now let BP get away with dealing the final blow. added by: JanforGore

Heidi Montag Has Trouble With Her Bikini

We all know that everything about Heidi Montag is fake, fake hair, fake marriage, fake divorce, fake sextape and amazing fake boobs. So it shouldn’t come as much of a surprise that I’m guessing these pictures of her in the ocean struggling to keep her bikini top on are also fake. Luckily, when a chick with massive fake boobs like Heidi pretends that her bikini top is falling off in the surf…. It’s pretty damn hot. I’ve never been this jealous of an ocean before.

Life Unexpected Season 2 Episode 1 – Ocean Uncharted

Watch Life Unexpected S2E1: Ocean Uncharted Life Unexpected is back from almost 5 months break and with it, Ryan and Cate also comes back from their well deserved honeymoon, but upon their return, they were shocked by the changes that have happened in the radio station while they were away. Meanwhile, Baze hooks up with his new bartender, Paige because of his confused state regarding his feelings with Cate. Eric, who is a new comer in town easily hits it off with Lux when they get to meet at Baze’s bar. Bug and Lux relationships goes hitting the turning point. The premiere installment of this latest season of our favorite foster child ofLife Unexpected, which is entitled “Ocean Uncharted” is the hit teen drama TV series’ 1st episode of the 1st season that aired last 09/14/2010 Tuesday at 9:00 PM on CW. Watch Life Unexpected 2×1(0201) Free Online Streaming Full Episodes Replay of the Latest Season and Video Clip Download Link:

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Life Unexpected Season 2 Episode 1 – Ocean Uncharted

Critically Endangered Whales Stop Feeding Thanks To Russian Oil & Gas Exploration

Photos via ICUN The issue of how marine noise impacts whales is a subject of intense study. We’re seeing more and more evidence of how human activity in the ocean negatively affects whales and dolphins. Most often the culprits pointed out are the shipping industry and naval sonar. But other harmful noises include that of… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Critically Endangered Whales Stop Feeding Thanks To Russian Oil & Gas Exploration

Boston Globe Sees ‘Global Warming Double Punch’ Worsening Hurricane Earl in Massachusetts — Whoops

The Boston Globe, long notorious as promoters of global warming doom and gloom — see Ross Gelbspan, for example — sometimes get embarrassed by the actual climate. On “The Green Blog,” the Globe’s Beth Daley projected that a “global warming double punch” could make Hurricane Earl much worse for Massachusetts — except when it actually passed by, it turned out to be a dud for Bostonians and it could be watched on the coast with a glass of wine:   The large waves, storm surge, and flooding that Hurricane Earl will spawn as it strikes Massachusetts tomorrow night comes with an added dollop of trouble; Sea level rise. Very gradual — and in some cases accelerating — rises in sea level off our coast over the last century will boost the height of Earl’s storm surge — expected to be one to four feet — meaning the wall of water will be able to travel that much farther inland and over higher elevations to flood basements, streets, and other low-lying areas…. Sea level is rising, scientists say, in large part because of a global warming double punch: higher ocean temperatures that expand the volume of water, and melting glaciers that add water to the sea. So future hurricanes are likely to cause more widespread flooding. “Sea level rise is fairly insidious and one of those things that we think is in the background and not in our lifetime or our children’s lifetime but it keeps adding up,” said Greg Berman, coastal processes specialist with Woods Hole Sea Grant and Cape Cod Cooperative Extension. He said sea level rise in the last century has coincided with the mass migration of people to live near the coast, and while “we drew a line in the sand where the sea should stop, it’s not listening to us.” While the downgraded tropical storm Earl caused some coastal drama, the storm wasn’t dramatic enough in  Boston, according to the Globe : Away from the Cape and Islands, the storm was decidedly less dramatic. In South Boston, Carson Beach was largely deserted late last night, except for three young women who decided to go swimming under a light but steady rain. “You get a hurricane like every 20 years,’’ said Amy McCarthy 23, of Dorchester. “So why not check it out?’’ Her friend, Rebekah Lehtonen, 23, of Connecticut, was unimpressed. “I wish it was a little bit more windy,’’ Lehtonen said. The storm was apparently calm enough that you watched it on the beach with a glass of wine: But as it became clear that the storm would be more like a nor’easter than a hurricane, many people ignored warnings and flocked to beaches to watch Earl arrive. At a beach in Oak Bluffs, as the wind picked up and waves swelled yesterday evening, Jane and Steve Edmonds of Sharon sipped shiraz, their backs to the churning sea. Suddenly, a wave sprayed Jane Edmonds, causing her to shriek. “I’m not moving! I’m not moving!’’ she said defiantly, covering her glass with her hand. Near the water, Irene Sherman and her husband, Marc Littlejohn, stood with their children, Maya, 13 and Zach, 10. Marc Littlejohn had heard the warnings that people shouldn’t watch the storm from the beach, but the prospect of seeing it up close was too enticing. “We couldn’t help ourselves,’’ Littlejohn said. “It’s pretty amazing.’’ Still, the family agreed, they were happy the storm was not as intense as what was forecast. “We don’t want a natural disaster,’’ Maya said. A news media eager to go looking for the peril of global warming in every tropical storm are going to occasionally end up with a little salty surf in their shiraz. But are they humble enough to admit when they’ve overdone it?

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Boston Globe Sees ‘Global Warming Double Punch’ Worsening Hurricane Earl in Massachusetts — Whoops

Investigative Report: How the BP Oil Rig Blowout Happened

Investigative Report: How the BP Oil Rig Blowout Happened Three Mile Island, Challenger, Chernobyl—and now, Deepwater Horizon. Like those earlier disasters, the destruction of the drilling rig was an accident waiting to happen. Here, engineers in the growing science of failure analysis identify seven fatal flaws that led to the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and draw lessons on how to prevent future catastrophes. By: Carl Hoffman PART ONE… April 20 was a triumphant evening for British Petroleum and the crew of Transocean's Deepwater Horizon. Floating 52 miles off the coast of Louisiana in 5000 feet of water, the oil rig was close to completing a well 13,000 feet beneath the ocean floor—an operation so complex it's often compared to flying to the moon. Now, after 74 days of drilling, BP was preparing to cap the Macondo Prospect well until a production rig was brought in to start harvesting oil and gas. Around 10:30 in the morning, a helicopter flew in four senior executives—two from BP and two from Transocean, to celebrate the well's completion and the rig's seven years without a serious accident. What unfolded over the next few hours could almost have been written as a treatise in the science of industrial accidents. As with the Three Mile Island nuclear plant partial core meltdown in 1979, the chemical leak in Bhopal, India, in 1984, the space shuttle Challenger disintegration in 1986 and the Chernobyl nuclear plant explosions and fi re that same year, there is never one mistake or one malfunctioning piece of hardware to blame. Instead, the Horizon disaster resulted from many human and technical failings in a risk-taking corporation that operated in an industry with ineffective regulatory oversight. By the time the blowout came, it was almost inevitable. “It's clear that the problem is not technology, but people,” says Robert Bea, an engineering professor at the university of California–Berkeley. “It was a chain of important errors made by people in critical situations involving complex technological and organization systems.” Bea and other engineers subject catastrophes like Deepwater Horizon to the science of failure analysis for good reason: Studying industrial disasters can lead to understanding the root causes behind every accident, which is the critical first step toward improving safety and preventing future big bangs. If we learn from mistakes, failure can drive innovation, both technical and organizational. “A lot of intelligence came out of Three Mile Island,” says Larry Foulke, former president of the American Nuclear Society and an adjunct professor at the university of Pittsburgh, knowledge that led to improvements like better control-room ergonomics and the standardization and accreditation of industry-wide training programs.Since Three Mile Island, there has not been another major accident in the U.S. nuclear industry. The following lessons drawn from forensic engineering should spur changes in the oil industry and government agencies that will lead to better risk assessment, more useful regulatory oversight, safer operating procedures and rapid crisis response. The blowout was a punishing lesson: 11 workers were killed and 17 injured in the accident itself. The resulting oil spill damaged the economy and environment of the entire Gulf Coast. But out of this calamity can come changes that will reduce the chances of such a tragedy occurring again, not just in deepwater drilling but in other high tech, high-risk industries as well. Success Breeds Complacency A simple but counterintuitive fact led to the Horizon disaster: wells, even ones drilled in deep water, had worked most of the time, just as the space shuttle and chemical and nuclear plants had functioned successfully, in some cases for decades. Although underwater drilling is complex and challenging, there are 3423 active wells in the Gulf of Mexico, 25 in water deeper than 1000 feet. Seven months before the blowout and about 250 miles southeast of Houston, the Horizon had drilled the world's deepest well—an astounding 35,055 feet. What was impossible just a few years earlier had become seemingly routine as BP and Transocean banged out record firsts on the farthest frontiers of technology and geography. The same offshore techniques and equipment that worked in shallow hydrocarbon formations seemed to function fine at ever greater depths and higher pressures. The offshore rush was on, and nothing was going to stop it. “when you think you've got a robust system,” says Henry Petroski, a professor of civil engineering at Duke university, “you tend to relax.” Other industries have lapsed into the same sense of false security. “By the time of Three Mile Island,” Foulke says, “the nuclear industry had not had a major mishap in 25 years. when you get an attitude that nothing bad happens, it leads you to believe that nothing ever will. ” It's called hubris, and it set the stage for the Deepwater disaster. “In the event of an unanticipated blowout resulting in an oil spill,” read the exploration plan that BP submitted on March 10, 2009, to the u.S. Department of the Interior's Minerals Management Service (MMS), which then managed and regulated offshore drilling, “it is unlikely to have an impact based on the industry-wide standards for using proven equipment and technology for such responses . . . ” That was nonsense. Although offshore blowouts occur frequently—there were 173 in the Gulf of Mexico alone from 1980 to 2008—there had never been one in deep water. In fact, neither BP nor any of its competitors had “proven equipment or technology” or any backup plan for a catastrophic failure at great depth. “The industry has not developed an oil spill plan for the low probability, high- consequence event when everything fails,” says Greg McCormack, director of the Petroleum Extension Service at the university of Texas. CONTINUED… added by: EthicalVegan

Mickey Rourke’s Mail Order Pussy is Hot of the Day

I like mail order brides….except when they lose their fucking minds and you wake up to them having flashbacks from her war torn communist years that involve a butcher knife to your fucking neck….cuz they don’t love you..they don’t even like you…they are just with you cuz they have to be and because you paid for them to be there and if they ever leave you…they know their pimp will find them, torture and kill them….but at least they look good doing it.

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Mickey Rourke’s Mail Order Pussy is Hot of the Day

Chinese Lingerie Ad Features Princess Diana in Lingerie of the Day

The Chinese, normally known for being sensitive to all Western traditions, by doing things like tainting our kids toys with lead, ripping off things we sell for a lot of money and selling it for less, and a whole lot of other amazingness that makes China the greatest place in the fucking world, in terms of constant excitement, dealing with funny people, and pretty much feeling like you are on another planet…. I wasn’t surprised to see this new Chinese Lingerie company called “Diana”….The slogan reads Feel the romance of British royalty. Which is apparently aslo the same chinese symbol tattooed on half the cast of Jersey Shore thanks to a booth on Ocean City boardwalk….and really who cares…dead princesses in lingerie is hot….so focus on that.

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Chinese Lingerie Ad Features Princess Diana in Lingerie of the Day

New Research Shows Bleak Future for Life in Acidic Oceans By Century’s End

Photo via Science Daily, Credit University of Plymouth There’s little good news about the ocean these days, unfortunately. We’ve taken it past the point of any sort of speedy recovery, from rising shorelines to over-fished species, from plastic pollution to acidification . And for this last problem, it looks like dire consequences are inevitable within this century, according to new research from the University of Plymouth and the University of Santa Catarina, Braz… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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New Research Shows Bleak Future for Life in Acidic Oceans By Century’s End