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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
6/15/2012 1:37:13 PM
Sorry Michael, but I will not buy that. By definition, smog is smoke plus fog and to my knowledge, the main percentage of smoke is produced by man or derived from their activities. On the other hand, I have never denied it is present like specks in a big map, but that is not the point, we are talking about smog and it is mainly an urban phenomenon.

Now as to photochemical smog: if you read the paragraph I quoted, it clearly says it is caused by the action of solar ultraviolet radiation
on atmosphere polluted with hydrocarbons and oxides of nitrogen especially from automobile exhaust or, in other words, solar action alone will not produce it. Everything else is mere speculation or plain rubbish - to use a term Jim has been prodigal with.

Quote:
Miguel

Jim is right! only a fraction of a percentage of smog is man made.

1000s of volcanoes erupting around the world at any one time, wind storms cyclones weather elated, bush fires etc place 90+% of the smog into the atmosphere

Miguel if you got a pencil and drew a vertical line down the Sydney Harbor bridge that about it for mans effects. I will say in some concentrated areas of industry the smog looks very bad and it is in small areas, but in the over all picture it is just a dot on the canvas.


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
6/15/2012 9:57:15 PM

Are we loosing it?

The Fight For the Arctic










Here’s a conundrum for you to ponder: climate change is accelerating at a rate much faster than previously thought and one of the noticeable byproducts of this accelerated change is a rapidly melting Arctic region. This, in turn, is exposing more unchartered open ocean to offshore oil and gas drilling, which, of course, is one of the main sources of climate change.

Get all that? If not, here’s something else for you to think about: over the next few years, the Arctic will become the focus of vast global economic development (including tourism) connecting developing Asia to the West via a more exposed Northwest Passage. As the Arctic ice begins to disappear, so does the lengthy voyage cargo ships much take to exchange goods. Many businesses, namely Royal Dutch Shell, are wide-eyed and giddy with the financial possibilities of a melting polar region.

Sadly, none of this so-called “development” takes into account the sorry state of a melting planet. Scientists are still trying to fully understand the ramification of a disappearing Arctic, but one of the things they do know is that it’s not good news for Earth. Dr. Jane Lubchenco, NOAA Administrator, commentedthat, “What happens in the Arctic doesn’t stay in the Arctic. It has huge implications for the global system. And one of the reasons people are legitimately concerned about melting of sea ice are the uncertainties associated with the consequences of that for the rest of the planet.”

Another thing to be concerned about is the lack of United States presence in this vastly unexplored and unchartered area. The U.S. has not yet signed the Law of the Sea treaty, or UNCLOS, which defines the rights and responsibilities of world nations when using and protecting the world’s oceans. In addition to environmental awareness, UNCLOS also provides a framework for resolving any potential territorial disputes in the Arctic. Whether or not the U.S. wants to become more involved in Arctic exploration and/or protection remains to be seen. However, given the rapidly expanding interest in the area, it’s doubtful the U.S. will sit on the sidelines for long.

Still, no matter how many nations are itching to get a piece of the Arctic, it remains the last untouched and unscathed region of the planet, a region full of rich oceanic and terrestrial life. The Arctic is particularly important in that it keeps the planet cool by reflecting sunlight back into space, but as ice melts, more sunlight is absorbed and sea levels rise, creating a ripple effect we have only just begun to witness. The melting Arctic, however, is merely one example of what’s to come with continued climate change and the ensuing military and industrial interest in this fragile part of the planet will be something to pay great attention to in the coming years.

Related Stories:

Corporations Funding Climate Change Denial

Earth Wavers on Edge of Dangerous Tipping Point

Giving Polar Bears a Chance to Survive

Read more: , , , , ,

Photo Credit: Rear Admiral Harley D. Nygren, NOAA Corps (ret.)



Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/the-fight-for-the-arctic.html#ixzz1xtvDeUlE

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
6/15/2012 10:04:45 PM
Drill, Baby, Drill – Shell’s Arctic Madness















When it comes to effective industry campaigns,
Shell’s Arctic drilling campaign ranks as one of the best. It is so good they have run like a steamroller over opposition to their plans. So it looks as if they are soon going to sink their drills into the fragile environment of the Beaufort and Chukchi seas.

Efforts by groups such as the Center for Biological Diversity have slowed their plans, but the juggernaut rolls on, flattening the opposition. As Dan Ritzman wrote in “One Million for the Arctic”:

The Polar Bear Seas, also known as the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas, are home to the entire U.S. population of polar bears. Even after the gusher in the Gulf, Shell has no viable plan to clean up an Arctic oil spill.

Read more: , , , , , , , , ,

Photos from Shell’s Arctic drilling spoof site



Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/drill-baby-drill-shells-arctic-madness.html#ixzz1xtxiRr7S

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
6/15/2012 10:09:50 PM
Deformed Fish Found Downstream of Tar Sand Mines















Written by Jason Mark

Chief Allan Adam, the head of the Fort Chipewyan community in the far north of Alberta, has been fishing in Lake Athabasca for all of his life. His father, now 76 years old, has been fishing there even longer. And neither of them has seen anything like what they pulled from the lake on May 30: two grotesquely deformed, lesion-covered fish.

When they caught the sickly fish, each taken from a different part of the lake, the two Indigenous men immediately figured that it had something to do with the massive tar sands oil mines that lie about 300 kilometers upstream along the Athabasca River. “We have been putting two and two together, and raising concerns about the fast pace of [tar sands] development,” Chief Adam told me in a phone interview this week. “The tailing ponds are leaking and leaching into the rivers, and then going downstream to Lake Athabasca.”

Here in the United States, public opposition to the tar sands has centered on the proposed Keystone XL pipeline: how it could jeopardize the fresh water supplies of the Ogallala Aquifer and how it would increase greenhouse gas emissions by keeping us locked into the petroleum infrastructure. For now, those worries remain hypotheticals. But for the people of Ft. Chipewyan — a community of about 1,200 that is only accessible by plane most of the year — the environmental impacts of the tar sands are already a lived reality. According to a 2009 study by the Alberta Cancer Board, the cancer rate in Ft. Chipewyan is higher than normal. Many of the residents there blame the industrial development south of them for the disproportionate cancer rates.

The deformed fish caught two weeks ago included a northern pike that had lesions along its back and belly and a sucker that was missing many of its scales. Chief Adam says the strange fish are so worrisome because the majority of Ft. Chipewyan residents still rely on traditional foods, including fish from the lake, to eat.

Chief Adam sent the two fish to the labs of the Canadian Cooperative Wildlife Health Centre in Alberta for testing. It will take biologists there several weeks to determine the cause of the deformities.

This isn’t the first time that sickly fish have been pulled from Lake Athabasca. In September 2010, the Ft. Chipewyan band released photos of fish that were also lesion-covered.

The Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation are one of the most active and outspoken critics of the tar sands development. In 2011 the tribe filed a suit against Shell Oil Canada for failing to uphold agreements it had made for two of its open pit mine projects. Chief Adam has said that his tribe may follow the example of the Beaver Lake Cree and challenge proposed tar sands projects on the grounds that increased mining could violate the tribe’s treaty rights to practice hunting and fishing.

“They keep building and building, and something has to give,” Chief Adam says. “And it’s the environment down here in Lake Athabasca. We want answers before we want further development. If they won’t give us answers, we will give them further resistance.”

This post was originally published by the Earth Island Journal.

Related Stories:

Oil Sands Fever and Lack of Environmental Review

Why Tar Sands Oil Is The Dirtiest On Earth

Keystone XL Will Increase Gas Prices

Read more: , , ,

Top photo from Jim Liestman via flickr



Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/deformed-fish-found-downstream-of-tar-sands-mines.html#ixzz1xtzYNt00

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Patricia Bartch

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
6/16/2012 1:38:23 AM
This, in turn, is exposing more unchartered open ocean to offshore oil and gas drilling, which, of course, is one of the main sources of climate change. http://ozonewatch.gsfc.nasa.gov/

http://www.ouramazingplanet.com/3028-volcanic-eruptions-thin-ozone-layer.html
NOT TO MENTION MIGUEL.....we are also losing the ozone layer. Thanks for your posts. I agree with the data.

pat


Quote:

Are we loosing it?

The Fight For the Arctic










Here’s a conundrum for you to ponder: climate change is accelerating at a rate much faster than previously thought and one of the noticeable byproducts of this accelerated change is a rapidly melting Arctic region. This, in turn, is exposing more unchartered open ocean to offshore oil and gas drilling, which, of course, is one of the main sources of climate change.

Get all that? If not, here’s something else for you to think about: over the next few years, the Arctic will become the focus of vast global economic development (including tourism) connecting developing Asia to the West via a more exposed Northwest Passage. As the Arctic ice begins to disappear, so does the lengthy voyage cargo ships much take to exchange goods. Many businesses, namely Royal Dutch Shell, are wide-eyed and giddy with the financial possibilities of a melting polar region.

Sadly, none of this so-called “development” takes into account the sorry state of a melting planet. Scientists are still trying to fully understand the ramification of a disappearing Arctic, but one of the things they do know is that it’s not good news for Earth. Dr. Jane Lubchenco, NOAA Administrator, commentedthat, “What happens in the Arctic doesn’t stay in the Arctic. It has huge implications for the global system. And one of the reasons people are legitimately concerned about melting of sea ice are the uncertainties associated with the consequences of that for the rest of the planet.”

Another thing to be concerned about is the lack of United States presence in this vastly unexplored and unchartered area. The U.S. has not yet signed the Law of the Sea treaty, or UNCLOS, which defines the rights and responsibilities of world nations when using and protecting the world’s oceans. In addition to environmental awareness, UNCLOS also provides a framework for resolving any potential territorial disputes in the Arctic. Whether or not the U.S. wants to become more involved in Arctic exploration and/or protection remains to be seen. However, given the rapidly expanding interest in the area, it’s doubtful the U.S. will sit on the sidelines for long.

Still, no matter how many nations are itching to get a piece of the Arctic, it remains the last untouched and unscathed region of the planet, a region full of rich oceanic and terrestrial life. The Arctic is particularly important in that it keeps the planet cool by reflecting sunlight back into space, but as ice melts, more sunlight is absorbed and sea levels rise, creating a ripple effect we have only just begun to witness. The melting Arctic, however, is merely one example of what’s to come with continued climate change and the ensuing military and industrial interest in this fragile part of the planet will be something to pay great attention to in the coming years.

Related Stories:

Corporations Funding Climate Change Denial

Earth Wavers on Edge of Dangerous Tipping Point

Giving Polar Bears a Chance to Survive

Read more: , , , , ,

Photo Credit: Rear Admiral Harley D. Nygren, NOAA Corps (ret.)



Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/the-fight-for-the-arctic.html#ixzz1xtvDeUlE
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