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27 New Zealand Miners Feared Trapped Underground After Explosion

New Zealand miners feared trapped underground by suspected gas blast No deaths reported but there are fears the air supply could be running out msnbc.com staff and news service reports updated 6 minutes ago 2010-11-19T10:59:32 WELLINGTON, New Zealand — Rescue teams were searching for 27 people feared trapped after an explosion ripped through New Zealand's largest coal mine Friday, its operating company said. Five miners stumbled to the surface, including one who was blown off his vehicle by the blast while working at about 5,000 feet into the mine. Police said the electricity in the mine went out shortly before the blast and this may have caused ventilation problems. Police spokeswoman Barbara Dunn stressed it was too early to say why the explosion occurred, but one mine safety expert said a gas explosion was a possible cause. The new mine, which only began shipping coal this year, is dug into the side of a mountain range in a remote area near the town of Atarau in the country's rugged South Island, burrowing into a deposit that, according to one recent visitor, was relatively gaseous. Rescue teams and emergency workers rushed by helicopter and by road to the mine, but had not entered because of the potential danger of any gas build-up. 'Not good news at all' “It's not good news at all,” Tony Kokshoorn, the mayor of nearby Greymouth, told National Radio. “We don't know at what depth the explosion is but there's certainly a big explosion. With a bit of luck, things might be OK.” New Zealand's Prime Minister John Key said the government would do whatever it could, according to the New Zealand Herald. “Our hearts and thoughts go out to them [affected families] at this time. It will be a very worrying time for them,” he said, the newspaper reported. “It has the potential to be a very serious situation.” The Herald said relatives of the missing miners had started to gather outside the site, in scenes reminiscent of the recent Chilean mining accident, which ended with the rescue of 33 trapped men after weeks underground. The Atarau mine's operator, Pike River Coal, initially said the number could be around 30, but chief executive Peter Whittall later amended that, saying 27 people were missing — 15 miners employed by the company and 12 local contractors. Energy Minister Gerry Brownlee said the explosion happened at about 3:45 p.m. (9:45 p.m. ET)and the last contact with any of the miners was about half an hour later. Brownlee said emergency exit tunnels were built into the mine but that he didn't know if they could be accessed by the miners. Whittall said two miners, including the machine operator who was blown off his vehicle, had walked out at first and three more emerged later. One of the men had been able to make a call on his cell phone before reaching the surface, he said. Whittall said he was not aware of any deaths caused by the blast. “Whether they (the miners) are trapped or choosing to stay underground and shelter from whatever the extent of the incident is, we don't know at this stage,” Whittall told Television 3. He told the New Zealand Herald that the miners were up to 1.5 miles into the mine, but could actually only be about 120 feet below the surface because it drills into the side of the mountain. The coal seam is more than 600 feet underground. One vertical ventilation shaft rises 354 feet from the tunnel to the surface, according to the company's website. This was blocked by falling rocks within the shaft in early 2009, delaying mining for months. Whittall said the horizontal mine tunnel would make the rescue effort easier than if the shaft was at a steep angle. “We're not a deep-shafted mine so men and rescue teams can get in and out quite effectively, and they'll be able to explore the mine quite quickly,” he said. “They will work throughout the night and they'll work until they can go right throughout the mine and determine the extent of the incident and the safety of our employees.” He said the men were trained to go to a place of safety and wait after an incident, he told the Herald. “Every worker carried a safety rescue device at all times including a breathing apparatus with oxygen,” Whittall told the paper. “I personally know every employee of the company … I know what the shift is and who the men are on that shift, and I'm still waiting to get a full list of the employees involved,” Whittall added. Air supply affected? The men who came to the surface were taken to a hospital for treatment of light injuries. “They're being interviewed and we're trying to determine … the full nature of the incident,” Whittall said. It was not immediately clear if all of those underground were together or in separate groups. “There is concern that ventilation inside the mine shaft may be compromised by the power outage,” Dunn, the police spokeswoman, said. Mine safety expert David Feickert said the blast could have been a gas explosion. “There are different kinds of explosions that can occur in a coal mine — methane gas, coal gas and so on,” he said. “If rescue teams can go in, that's good news indeed.” The Greymouth district's deputy mayor, Doug Truman, told Reuters by phone he had visited the mine and understood the coal deposit to be gaseous, but he stressed the safety standards there were very high and the workers highly trained. “It's a very high-quality coal but it's gaseous — but they know that,” Truman said. Rescue crews were assembling at the opening of the mine but had not yet entered. Dunn said the rescuers had to make sure it was safe before entering the mine, the New Zealand Herald reported. “They're itching to get in there and start looking for other people and a bit frustrated at having to stand and wait,” Ms Dunn said. St. John Ambulance service said three rescue helicopters and six ambulances had headed to the mine. Pike River has been operating since 2008, mining a seam with 58.5 million tons of coal, the largest-known deposit of hard coking coal in New Zealand, according to its website. Pike River says its coal preparation plant at the site is the largest and most modern in New Zealand and processes up to 1.5 million tons of raw coal a year. The mine is not far from the site of one of New Zealand's worst mining disasters — an underground explosion in the state-owned Strongman Mine on Jan. 19, 1967, that killed 19 workers. The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report. added by: EthicalVegan

Ancient Roman Site Unearthed in West London, England

Ancient Roman landscape unearthed near London By the CNN Wire Staff November 18, 2010 10:37 a.m. EST London, England (CNN) — Archaeologists have uncovered an ancient Roman landscape beneath a park in west London, with a Roman road, evidence of a settlement, and unusual burials among the finds. They say the discovery — at the site of a planned luxury hotel near the edge of the River Thames — gives valuable and rare insight into the daily life of what was then an agricultural village. Dating back nearly 2,000 years, the village would have supplied the ancient Roman city of Londinium and also given shelter to passing travelers. “It helps us build a picture of the Roman landscape and shows how the busy metropolis of Londinium connected with the rest of Roman Britain,” said Jo Lyon, a senior archaeologist at the Museum of London Archaeology, which carried out the excavations. The site is in Syon Park, owned by the Duke of Northumberland and located across the river from Kew Gardens. Waldorf Astoria is building a luxury hotel on the grounds that is set to open early next year. The Museum of London made the discovery while doing excavations in August 2008 ahead of the hotel's construction. Everything was found under just half a meter (1.5 feet) of soil, and the finds were kept secret until the fieldwork was finished. Some of the finds will be displayed at the hotel, Waldorf Astoria said. The site revealed a section of one of Roman Britain's most important roads, linking Londinium with the Roman town of Silchester, which lies farther west. “That's one of the key national roads, (a) very, very busy road, and we don't really find fragments of the actual roads themselves very often in London,” Lyon said. The dig also revealed evidence of a rural settlement and an ancient tributary of the Thames. Thousands of Roman artifacts were recovered from the site, including two shale armlets and fragments of a lava quern stone, used for grinding grains. Archaeologists also found a fragment of an “exceptional” Late Bronze Age (1000-700 BC) gold bracelet that probably predated the site, as well as hundreds of coins. “All of the coins came from the Roman road,” she said. “That road was in use for 400 years across the Roman period, and people have just dropped coins over those hundreds of years.” One of them is a coin made of copper alloy that features a V, which Lyon said could refer to Vespasian, who was Roman emperor between 69 and 79 AD. There were also the skeletons of those who may have been former occupants of the settlement. They were found unusually buried in ditches, lying on their sides without any grave goods, which the museum said was “particularly curious” and in need of more research. Lyon said she initially thought they were Iron Age burials because the style was so “casual.” It could be that the method was a local one adopted by the Romans who lived there, she said. The dig also showed that the British landscape changed considerably under Roman influence, with the establishment of towns connected by roads, the museum said. Londinium, the ancient name of London, was founded in 48 AD on an uninhabited site, and its strategic position on the Thames helped it rapidly become the most important and largest commercial town in the province. The site on Syon Park would have been an attractive place for a settlement because it lay between the road and the Thames, the museum said. The land was easy to cultivate and the presence of the road would have given the community another source of income from travelers wanting refreshment and lodging. added by: EthicalVegan

Atomic Tom Rock Thrillist.com Birthday Bash

Brooklyn band’s NYC club performance of its viral hit ‘Take Me Out’ got partygoers dancing, singing along. By Rya Backer Atomic Tom’s Luke White Photo: MTV News Wednesday night at Manhattan’s Le Poisson Rouge nightclub, lifestyle website Thrillist.com celebrated its fifth birthday. The milestone was rung in with ample friends, liquor sponsors and a performance by Atomic Tom — a band from just across the East River in Brooklyn that recently earned worldwide renown. The NYC foursome became a viral sensation after posting a video online of them performing their single “Take Me Out” live on the subway, using only iPhone apps as instruments. “As a band we’ve always done these creative video blogs … and we try to showcase our music through it as well. This most recent one was no different,” explained guitarist Eric Espiritu, whose little brother thought up the concept. “He pitched it, and we were like, ‘Yes! Let’s do this. Let’s figure out how we’re gonna do it, where we’re gonna do it, and let’s just do it.’ Audio’s all live, it’s all one take. Video is one take cobbled together from three different iPhone video cameras.” In addition to garnering nearly 4 million views on YouTube, the clip also has won over some notable fans. “Alyssa Milano tweeted our video!” gushed Espiritu. “What’d she accompany it with? It said, like, ‘I like this,’ and then the link.” Weezer’s Rivers Cuomo has supposedly seen the video as well. At the Thrillist.com bash, Atomic Tom performed an energetic 40-minute set of anthemic power-pop with a few ballads thrown in for good measure, mostly from their album The Moment , which drops on Tuesday (November 22). (Despite hailing from the hipster mecca, bassist Phil Galitzine says the group has no indie designs: “We’re not really an indie band, we don’t really have an indie-band sound.) Lead singer Luke White — whose voice could be mistaken for that of the Killers’ Brandon Flowers — flawlessly pulled off frontman duties, keeping the crowd engaged, while drummer Tobias Smith, Galitzine and Espiritu steadfastly took to their respective instruments. The show culminated in a revved-up cover of Tears for Fears’ “Everybody Wants to Rule the World,” followed by “Take Me Out.” The finale had everyone dancing and some even singing along. Atomic Tom played the song that put them on the map with so much might that they seemed almost worn once it ended. But it was worth it — by the end of the evening it seemed evident that many more people would be playing that tune on their own iPhones. Related Artists Atomic Tom

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Atomic Tom Rock Thrillist.com Birthday Bash

Thousands remain stranded after floods Channel 4 reports seven weeks after Pakistan was hit by the worst floods in its history

Seven weeks after Pakistan was hit by the worst floods in its history, Channel 4 News Foreign Affairs Correspondent Jonathan Miller finds people are still without shelter and safe drinking water. Tens of thousands of people remain stranded in villages and farmsteads across the northwest of Sindh Province, seven weeks after Pakistan's disastrous floods first struck. Channel 4 News has flown over the region with US marines who are providing a lifeline to those marooned without any supplies in what is still an ocean of floodwater. Even as this airlift continues, new areas are still being inundated. Further south, near the town of Dadu, we travelled to a region in which 150 villages have been flooded since Tuesday. The fresh flooding is not due to more rain, but was caused by the breaching of levees surrounding Manchar Lake, which is fed by the Indus River and had grown to four times its normal size. Aerial view Flying out of the Pakistani Army base at Pano Aqil, four huge CH-53 Super Sea-Stallion helicopters and four smaller CH-46 Sea Knights have spent more than a month flying several such mercy-missions each day. Their airdrops have been focused on a region, on the east bank of the River Indus, southwest of the city of Jacobabad, whose population was evacuated last month. From the air, travelling at 170 miles per hour, all you can see below is water, stretching from horizon to horizon for mile after mile. The helicopters land where they can find enough dry ground to put down, but usually end up dropping their aid supplies, flour and high-energy biscuits, as they hover 20 feet above the ground. The US Marines, accompanied by Pakistani soldiers, are greeted by scenes of desperation, as hungry villagers, who will not have eaten properly in weeks, chase after the jettisoned boxes and sacks and fight the powerful downdraft of the helicopter rotors to get to them first. It is the survival of the fastest. The Marines, many of whom until this mission had been stationed in the Gulf of Aden in anti-piracy operations off Somalia, have been deeply affected by what they have witnessed in Pakistan. “I see our mission here as trying to help people who are starving. I see our mission as trying to alleviate human suffering. That is our mission,” said Rear Admiral Sinclair Harris, Commander of Expeditionary Strike Group Five. “If a side bit of it happens with better will, better relations with the Pakistan government, that's fine. I know we've made a difference, especially to those starving on ground. These people have not eaten for four to six weeks. We will do anything we can to get out and help them sustain while we wait for roads to open up. I know we’ve made a difference.” Flying over this region we spotted many farms, villages, and even entire towns which had been entirely abandoned, their inhabitants evacuated to the hundreds of camps which have been set up for displaced people. There are more than 200 such camps in the city of Sukkur, which straddles the Indus, a short distance from the big Pakistan army base from which the US Marines fly. More than 150,000 people have converged on Sukkur, having been forced to abandon their homes. Contaminated water In villages where people do remain, drinking water sources will have been contaminated. No one has yet begun to assess the health situation in these isolated areas. There have been warnings of a looming malarial epidemic as mosquitoes are breeding in huge numbers in the stinking, stagnant flood water as it evaporates. Other waterborne diseases pose serious health risks, while malnutrition, particularly among children, could lead to many deaths. Rice crops in flooded areas are ruined and the seed crop destroyed. Ten million Pakistanis will be reliant on food aid for at least another year. Ever greater numbers are being added to the ranks of the homeless. South of Dadu, near the town of Bhan Saeedabad, more than 150 villages have been submerged since Tuesday, the result of a kilometre-long breach in nearby Manchar Lake. The lake proved unable to cope with the pressure of floodwater build-up. We took a boat to the village of Jadani, a few miles south of Bhan Saeedabad. Half the village has been submerged and many of its 650 residents have evacuated following a government warning. We heard of many villages, however, which were hit by the floodwater without warning. 'Shock and sadness' The rice fields of Jadani, which is home to the Pahnwar tribal clan, are now under six to eight feet of water. A woman whose house was also submerged told us: “We are in a state of shock and sadness. Many of our homes have been destroyed,” said Naseeba Khatoon. “I am staying in someone else's house for now. The children are hungry. There is no clear clean water to drink. There is no sanitation. What will we do? When the water recedes, we will just have to rebuild,” she said. Thousands of people have fled into Bhan Saeedabad district, but they are receiving little in the way of assistance and Channel 4 News did not encounter any international relief organisations in the area. The Pakistan Navy is running a rescue operation, ferrying villagers who have been forced to evacuate, to Bhan Saeedabad. On the southern side of this flooded area, the city of Sehwan which is sacred to Sufis, has been badly affected. More than 1,400 houses are reported to have collapsed there. Local newspaper reports on Friday said the floodwater now threatens to breach another protective embankment between Sehwan and Larkana, hometown of the Bhutto dynasty. added by: treewolf39

Iska River Disappears Overnight

The Iska River in Slovenia vanished overnight after residents reported hearing loud crashing sounds. ::..::.. On Tuesday, the Iska River was bubbling past the village of the same name. On Wednesday… it was gone. Residents say they heard crashing and drumming sounds during the night. When they went to the river the next morning, they watched what was left of it disappear before their eyes. Geologists believe the water disappeared into the porous limestone riverbed and is now flowing under ground. It's said the same thing happened to the river before during World War II. It's not clear when or if the water will resurface. ::..::.. http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=6898039n added by: vancitysage

Student creates Instant Youtube, Gets job offer

http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/1732609/bored-student-creates-instant-y… For many students looking for work after graduation can be a scary thought, though luckily for Feross Aboukhadijeh he's just received a job offer from the co-founder and CEO of YouTube Chad Hurley. “A BORED Stanford University student who created an instant version of Youtube was surprised when he got a letter from a Youtube boss offering him a job. Youtube, which is owned by Google, spends millions of dollars on development but somehow failed to see that Google's Instant software could be applied to Youtube. Apparently the software caught the attention of Youtube CEO Chad Hurley and, rather than issue the normal cease and desist, which is common in stories like this, he offered Aboukhadijeh a job.”-TheInquirer Luckily Feross Aboukhadijeh created the search engine which will find and play the video you're looking for as you type. From the sounds of this article, this is youtube finding innovative minds and rewarding them with jobs. added by: Mcellie

Burglars Robbed Houses Based on Facebook Updates

Talk about another kind of high-tech crime! If you plan to go to the beach and announce it on Facebook by updating your status, well you … http://bit.ly/c0aO3I added by: itgrunts

UK teen banned from US for sweary email to Obama

After watching a documentary about September 11th, a drunk Luke Angel got angry and decided to send an email. This usually happens when people get drunk, though it is probably best to email a close friend and not the White House, since the email response caused Luke to meet local police along with a lifetime ban on visiting the US. “Luke Angel was reprimanded by police on both sides of the Atlantic after firing off a drunken message to the White House calling the president a “p****”. The FBI intercepted the message and contacted police in the UK who went to see the 17-year-old at his home in Silsoe, Bedfordshire.”-Sky News In the story, Luke states he doesn't care about the ban but mentioned his parents are not happy. http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/UK-News/Luke-Angel-Teenager-Banned-from-America… :_Teenager_Banned_from_America_For_Life_For_Sending_Abusive_Email_To_Barack_Obama_ added by: Mcellie

Redbull Flugtag Philadelphia 2010

If you’re unfamiliar with Flugtag, you are missing out. Red Bull’s Flugtag (German for Airshow) is an amazing craze that was first popularized in 1991. Due to popularity, it has since been run every year in over 35 cities around the world. The rules are simple: build an aircraft that meets Red Bull’s guidelines, launch yourself from a 30 foot deck, stay flying as long as you can, and eventually careen into the river below. What could be better? On September 4th, 2010, Thirty-Four teams got in line to launch their manned aircrafts over, and into the Delaware. Check out the video highlights of the event here: http://drinkphilly.com/index.php/drinks/artprofile/144 added by: DrinkPhilly