Tag Archives: pacific-ocean

Johngarthia cocoensis is new species of large land crab

University researchers from Costa Rica and the United States discovered the new species, named #39;Johngarthia cocoensis,#39; on the Pacific Ocean island. The distinguishing characteristic of J. cocoensis, according to the researchers, is its large size-a male can measure 40cm with their front legs extended (females measure smaller). A new species of large land crab was discovered on Cocos Island in Costa Rica, a local newspaper reported on Monday. The crabs live in holes dug into the soil and

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Johngarthia cocoensis is new species of large land crab

Jamie Yeo Photo Biography

Jamie Yeo was born in Singapore on April 17, 1977, studied in Fairfield Methodist Primary School and Nanyang Girls High School before moving to Dayton, Ohio, for four years, where her father was posted as an engineer in the Republic of Singapore Air Force. She attended Dayton Christian High School and graduated with #39;a near 4.0 GPA#39;. On returning to Singapore she entered Ngee Ann Polytechnic and studied mass communications, graduating in 1998. She began dating DJ Glenn Ong in 2001 and the

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Jamie Yeo Photo Biography

100 foot long Narco Sub seized in S. America

The U.S. government announced on Saturday afternoon that for the first time ever a fully operational submarine used by drug traffickers has been seized in the waters of South America. The craft, which could move multi-ton loads of cocaine, was seized in a jungle tributary of Ecuador leading to the Pacific Ocean by Ecuadoran authorities using Drug Enforcement Administration intelligence. The sub is diesel-powered, has a periscope and air conditioning and measures 100 feet long and 9 feet tall. At least one person was arrested and an investigation continues, according to a news release from DEA. Although traffickers have used so-called “narco subs,” low-slung boats that are fully covered and ride low in the water, this is the first full-on submarine ever found in their hands. added by: Stoneyroad

"Recycled Island" Turns Ocean Plastic into a Paradise

Image via Recycled Island Ever dreamed of living on a giant island of plastic? Well, with all the plastic that floats around in the ocean as a toxic soup threatening all manner of marine life, one architecture firm has a bold vision to create an eco-paradise called “Recycled Island” in the Pacific Ocean with sustainability at its core. It’s a bold plan, but not only would the project help clean the oceans, the firm claims, it might just be a perfect home for

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"Recycled Island" Turns Ocean Plastic into a Paradise

Cartoonist Explains the Pacific Garbage Patch With Talking Sealife (Slideshow)

Photo by poolie So just how does garbage get from your hand all the way out into the middle of the Pacific Ocean where it swirls in a soup of trashy debris — or if not there, then to one of the 4 other trash gyres in the oceans across the globe? Cartoonist Jim Toomey decided to send two of his characters off on an adventure to show you in the comic strip Sherman’s Lagoon . The journey starts in the fictional Kapupu Lagoon by the island of Kapupu in the South Pacific Ocean, west of the Elabaob Islands in the Palauan archipelago… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Cartoonist Explains the Pacific Garbage Patch With Talking Sealife (Slideshow)

Air Force’s Falcon Hypersonic Glider Disappears Mysteriously

The Air Force's Falcon Hypersonic Technology Vehicle 2—designed to attack global targets at Mach 20—has disappeared nine minutes into its first test flight, just after separating from its booster. Contact was lost, and it hasn't been found yet. The Falcon was supposed to splash down in the Pacific Ocean after a 30-minute, 4,100-nautical-mile test flight. Not to be confused with the unmanned X-37B space shuttle—which launched on April 22—the Falcon Hypersonic Technology Vehicle 2 blasted off last week from the Vandenberg Air Force Base on a Minotaur IV rocket. Instead of completing its flight, however, the Air Force lost all contact with the aircraft. According to DARPA's Johanna Spangenberg Jones: Preliminary review of data indicates the HTV-2 achieved controlled flight within the atmosphere at over Mach 20. Then contact with HTV-2 was lost. This was our first flight (all others were done in wind tunnels and simulations) so although of course we would like to have everything go perfectly, we still gathered data and can use findings for the next flight, scheduled currently for early 2011. Just that: The telemetry data signal vanished, and the aircraft is nowhere to be found. Being a semi-secret project, nothing else has been disclosed. The only logical explanations are 1) a massive structural failure, 2) Nazi UFOs or 3) somebody lost it in a beer garden. I will pick number two for the time being. The hypersonic glider is built by Lockheed Martin under a DARPA program. It's designed to launch conventional weapons against any target in the planet in just one hour. This capability makes it a perfect substitute for Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles. Unlike ICBMs loaded with conventional heads, the plane can't be mistaken with a nuclear missile, so it won't make other nuclear powers to hit the red button. Maybe. http://gizmodo.com/5526308/air-forces-falcon-hypersonic-glider-disappears-myster… added by: pjacobs51

Flying Boat To Navigate Around the Globe in 40 Days

Something might have gone wrong here. Is it flying or sailing? Well, the answer is both. The flying feature allowed this boat to become the fastest boat in the record. It is called the Hydroptere. It is designed and made by Frenchman Alain Thebault. He has a vision to circumnavigate the world in 40 days. If he can make it, he will be cutting the the record of the Jules Verne novel “Around the World in 80″. The movie version has starred Jackie Chan. The Hypdroptere gets its speed from its underwater wings or the foil . It lifts the boat enabling it to fly. Thebault started this project 25 years ago and was even mocked by friends to be crazy. The Hydroptere is traveling at over 50 knots (over 100 km/h) over 500 meters and one nautical mile. Having this speed is really very dangerous. Thebault and his team has been planning to build to larger version ‘Hydroptere Maxi’ which can accommodate 10 sailors and it is one that they wold be using to circumnavigate the world in 40 days. They are estimating it to be finished in 2013. As of the moment, their team is planning to cross the Pacific Ocean in 3 days by 2011. Flying Boat To Navigate Around the Globe in 40 Days is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

‘Amelia’ Sneak Peak

Richard Gere showed up last night at a special screening of Amelia alongside director Mira Nair (pictured right)

Cities of Refuse

I’ve mentioned before on my blog about the giant mound of trash twice the size of Texas floating around in the Pacific Ocean, but only as part of another blog. Since National Geographic wrote about it today, along with some of the first documentation of the phenomenon, I thought I’d bring it up again. Here is a link to the National Geographic article. Here is a better picture of it. The floating plastic trash creates a hazard for aquatic life and consumers of aquatic life in the area, and represents 10% of the total worldwide plastic thrown away each year. No one knows how deep the marine dump is. The Scripps company is funding the effort to document to floating island of garbage. For those of you unfamiliar with Scripps, they own HGTV, several magazine holdings, and a news station and news paper in almost every state. They own a station in Tulsa and a paper in Muskogee here in Oklahoma. I am interested to see where this project leads in the future. If you assume we can ever even stop the annual input of plastic to this contribution, you still have the problem of what are we going to do with what is already there? Will we tie it together and create new land masses? The cities of the future? Or will we put it in a rocket ship and blast it off into the sun. I would love to be a part of this project, but barring that, I am excited to at least see someone researching it finally. Continue reading

Sad Day for Train Zealots

I received this e-mail from representative Tom Kovach today, who works with OnTrac to promote commuter rail in Oklahoma: All: It was reported to us yesterday that construction crews have commenced work on removing the old passenger platforms at Union Station as part of the final phase of the new Crosstown Expressway. Clearly, this marks the beginning of the demolition and excavation work that will eliminate Union Station’s railyard. We are deeply saddened by the avoidable and regrettable loss of this invaluable, one-of-a-kind facility. It is a sorrowful commentary on where are as a state with regard to transportation and rail transit. At a time when our peer cities and states are well on their way to developing 21st century transportation systems, we can only hope this loss also marks the end of Oklahoma’s ambivalence and disregard for the importance of rail transit. If we wish to remain economically competitive and to provide our citizens the job and transportation opportunities they deserve for a better quality of life, its imperative that we all work together even harder now if we hope to make rail transit a reality for Oklahoma.

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Sad Day for Train Zealots