Synopsis: Waterways & watercourses:


Nature 04648.txt

advocates warned that Europe risks becoming a scientific backwater as the rest of the world increasingly adopts the technology."


Nature 04663.txt

The calving event dumped a 720-square-kilometre chunk of ice into the Amundsen Sea off western Antarctica,


Nature 04664.txt

but it s a very small possibility, says Norman Ellstrand, a plant biologist at the University of California, Riverside.


Nature 04708.txt

peatlands and wetlands rich in sequestered carbon causing large emissions of carbon dioxide.""It s kind of obvious if you think about it,


Nature 04716.txt

In California s Central Valley, where farmers use water flowing from the Colorado river Basin for irrigation,

because saltwater from the west coast began seeping into groundwater as a result of overdrawing. If farmers using water-efficient irrigation methods are encouraged similarly to grow less water-intensive crops


Nature 04744.txt

says Norman Ellstrand, a plant geneticist at the University of California in Riverside. Â Â But now a study led by Lu Baorong, an ecologist at Fudan University in Shanghai, challenges that view:


Nature 04802.txt

Arctic ice low The extent of Arctic sea ice reached its minimum for the year on 13 Â September,

This year s minimum falls short of 2012 s record-breaking thaw but is the sixth lowest since 1979,


Nature 05001.txt

The test cloud was created on 30 Â October by spraying particles collected from Iceland s Eyjafjallajã kull volcano into the air off the west coast of France (see Nature 502,422-423;


Nature 05026.txt

when it made landfall on 8 Â November. By some estimates wind speeds topped 310 kilometres per hour as the storm reached the coast,

placing Haiyan at or near the top of the list of strongest known storms. The storm surge destroyed much of the coastal city of Tacloban.


Nature 05038.txt

Estrada's study would be had stronger it also considered changes in ocean heat uptake and aerosol cooling,


Nature 05147.txt

led by Sylvain Bonhommeau, a fisheries scientist at The french Research Institute for Exploitation of the Sea in S Â te,


Nature 05158.txt

found in Brazil s Araguaia River basin, is the first such discovery in almost 100 Â years,

and probably diverged from similar South american river species more than 2 Â million years ago. About 1, 000 individuals may live in the Araguaia River basin, the scientists estimate.

Antihydrogen made Physicists have produced a stream of antihydrogen atoms for the first time. Members of the Atomic Spectroscopy And Collisions Using Slow Antiprotons experiment at CERN,


Nature 05184.txt

invasive fish have crowded out native cutthroat trout in Yellowstone Lake at the heart of the park,


Nature 05194.txt

and another company, INEOS Bio, started up a facility near Vero Beach in Florida. This year


Nature 05200.txt

says Nathan Stephenson, an ecologist at the US Geological Survey in Three Rivers, California, and the first author of the study, which appears today in Nature1."


Nature 05221.txt

The efforts could herald a sea change for imaging. Conventional imaging satellites, which are the size of a van


Nature 05244.txt

Sea sickness Europe s seas are in poor health. This is the conclusion of two reports published on 20 Â February detailing the state of the continent s marine ecosystems.

One of the reports, from the European commission, says that the European union is failing to meet a pledge to clean up its seas by 2020.


Nature 05259.txt

Fukushima water Radioactive cooling water stored at the destroyed Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant might need to be dumped into the sea.


Nature 05279.txt

and predict the periodic and disruptive ocean-warming event known as El  Ni  o. The 2014 federal-government budget,


Nature 05283.txt

and moose populations on Isle Royale in Lake superior wax and wane in response to each other, disease and the weather.

Lake superior froze for the first time in six years. The 24-kilometre ice bridge could let wolves from the Canadian mainland cross to the US island,

Occasionally, however, Lake superior freezes. The very first wolves came to Isle Royale over an ice bridge in the early 1940s, some 30 years after the first moose.

The lake froze nearly every year at the beginning of the study but that has changed. The most recent ice bridge was in 2008;

and are flying along the island shore in their Super Cub plane two or three times a week,


Nature 05310.txt

Amy George/USGSCARP invasion Asian carp that have run amok in the rivers of the midwestern United states are spawning farther north in the Mississippi river than previously recorded,

USGS scientists found embryos (pictured) of bigheaded carp about to hatch in the river running through Lynxville, Wisconsin.


Nature 05316.txt

Water returns to arid Colorado river deltaone of North america s most iconic rivers is about to undergo an unprecedented experiment in ecological engineering.

The goal is to dampen broad swathes of the arid Colorado river delta for the first time in decades,

what was once 800,000 Â hectares of lush wetlands, as well as a rare opportunity for ecologists worldwide to watch what happens.

300-kilo  metre course (see River run). Before the 1930s, when dams began to throttle the river,

its water ran unfettered into the Gulf of california. But most was diverted soon to slake the thirst and agricultural fields of millions of people in the American Southwest.

A 1944 international treaty granted Mexico just 10%of the river s original flow; vast delta wetlands shrivelled to patches of vegetation clinging to sandy plains.

In 2012, officials drew up an addendum to the original water treaty. Known as Minute  319, the agreement lays out how the United states

and Mexico will share water surpluses and shortages until the end of 2017. But it also mandates the experimental release of what it calls"water for the environment.

That is less than 1%of the river s average annual flow, but it is still significant,

says Francisco Zamora Arroyo, director of the Colorado river Delta Legacy Program at the Sonoran Institute in Tucson, Arizona."

Shafroth helped to lead related experiments on a Colorado river tributary, the Bill Williams River in Arizona, in 2005 and 2006.

The goal was to restore sandbars and beaches in areas such as Grand canyon national park, but early attempts failed

because the newborn beaches quickly eroded (see Nature 420,356-358; 2002).")" We don t really know what s going to happen,


Nature 05336.txt

and INEOS Bio near Vero Beach, Florida (see Power plants).(Both plants are currently idle, pending upgrades.


Nature 05349.txt

the Northern Sea Route a shipping lane running through the Arctic could be ice-free and navigable for at least nine weeks each year,

It also projects that the region s waterways will see rising activity from fishing, tourism,


popsci_2013 00002.txt

I ended up at the Rawah Lakes just west of Fort Collins. The sun just went down.

You might not remember that wolves have been listed federally de in the Great lakes and Rocky mountain Regions for a few years now.


popsci_2013 00052.txt

Curiosity aroused we set off on the long journey to Dufftown Banffshire in the land of thistle and loch.


popsci_2013 00154.txt

10am on August 29 2005 the eye of Hurricane Katrina made landfall in Buras-Triumph La. going on to devastate much of the Gulf Coast.

After entering the Gulf of mexico it intensified rapidly going from a Category 1 hurricane when it passed through southern Florida on August 25 2005 then gaining momentum and jumping from a Category 3 all the way up to Category 5 status over the span of about a day later that weekend.

riff raffperhaps vortexes of magma under the Earth crust are swirling about of the East coast of Africa causing the solar cosmic radiation to make swirling vortexes


popsci_2013 00187.txt

For now at least the moon is like the sea: everyone can use it but no one can own it.

and the high seas than we are to treat it like Manhattan. If not he says we would take all the problems

if the conditions pressure and maybe having some depth in the ground of the moon there could be a underground lake of sorts trapped pool of water.

I have read they have found life in the dry salt lake of Death valley and life the boiling minerals surrounding Yellowstone national park.

I have heard of life being found at the bottom of the ocean. It seems life

So they drill to the lake and quickly start making good use of this water.


popsci_2013 00314.txt

Ozone holes like that over Antarctica (which today are due to an entirely different cause related to man) could form as solar particles interact with the atmosphere in a cascade of chemical reactions.

As this subterranean ocean of liquid metal slowly whirls around it behaves like a dynamo generating electrical currents and magnetic fields.

Remarkable footage has been taken of one of them with huge upwelling of ocean water as magma boils it from below.


popsci_2013 00370.txt

Thousands of leaky gas bombs were dumped at sea off the coasts of New jersey and Florida. I wonder if it could be why the dolphins are dying. adaptation lol who is we you

and on about his lake of understanding but you get the idea. Oh enough both of you.@


popsci_2013 00886.txt

While I find the animal habitat strange to see perhaps scientifically it would prove to be beneficial similar to artificial underwater reefs.


popsci_2013 00924.txt

and sea salt (Has to be iodized NON) 2 teaspoons of salt to 1 quart of WARM water. maybe a pinch of lemon juice and then down the hatch.


popsci_2013 00933.txt

and sea) available to provide resources and to absorb wastes under the constraints of current technology and management practices.

Overfishing of the oceans is a real problem. Aquaculture is improving rapidly to address those concerns.

Beyond that is being absorbed into the oceans and raising the ppm of the atmosphere. Both are warming.

As for the free carbon acidifying the ocean why would that be worrying? The acidity is neutralized by the dissolution of Calcium

which gave them an advantage over the various shellfish that dominated earlier oceans). Likewise when that carbon is needed that calcium will be freed up once again.


popsci_2013 00938.txt

The report also adjusts its expectations for important climate change effects such as how much sea levels will rise

They drive decisions about what do to prepare towns and nations for rising sea levels more extreme weather and other effects from climate change.

If my local community suggested addressing concerns about a 1-3 foot sea level rise between now and the year 2100

because the sea level is going to rise 23 meters destroy Manhattan and Florida and cause the near-extinction of humanity by this time next Friday that's hype hysteria and purposeful misrepresentation of

Then with the panic out of the way we can start discussing how to take advantage of slightly longer growing seasons slightly deeper ports and slightly closer seashores.

I am prepared to offer one dollar (US$1) per acre for any small seaside town that will shortly be submerged underwater due to manmade global warming.

the largest year to year drop in Arctic sea ice; the rapid melting of glaciers; the National Weather Service having to recalculate wind chill to accommodate the air having more heat than it used to;

It is obvious from past IPCC assessments that they exclude studies that show no significant warming no significant sea level rise no significant negative impact of climate change and so forth.

Their preordained conclusion is that human CO2 emissions are causing catastrophic global warming and sea level rise.

The IPCC bases its predictions on computer-generated global climate models not on extrapolating real world measures of things like sea level rise or global temperature trends.

and sea level rise based on arbitrary guesstimates of how much say CO2 aerosols water vapor etc. affects global climate.

http://www. ncdc. noaa. gov/sotc/service/global/global-land-ocean-mntp-anom/201101-201112. pngco2 measured at Mauna loa compared to temperatures:

Current global sea level rise appears to be slowing slightly from the 60-year trend of 1. 7 Ã0. 3 mm per year.

Ã0. 8 mm/yr. By the way 1. 7 mm a year works out to 6. 7 inches of sea level rise every 100 years. http://ibis

a) in their parameterizations of climate feedbacks and atmosphere-ocean coupling;(b) in their neglect of indirect response by the stratosphere and of possible additional climate effects linked to solar magnetic field UV radiation solar flares and cosmic ray intensity modulations;(


popsci_2013 00953.txt

Found mostly in warm freshwater lakes rivers and hotsprings Naegleria fowleri can travel up a person's nose


popsci_2013 00966.txt

's western lagoon. A limestone ridge thick with vegetation juts into the cloudless blue sky behind him.

Out of sight the autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) an oceanographic workhorse called a Remus begins gliding through the lagoon in a pattern that resembles the long linear passes of a mowed lawn.

For the past few years Terrill's team has used a Remus to study the ocean circulation around Palau.

The mangroves growing along the shore around Palau are so dense that aluminum wreckage from aircraft has been found sitting on top of the tree canopy about 30 feet up.

A b-24 that he believes had been shot down in Palau's western reef. With the oceanographers'help he hopes Bentprop could find it.

The U s. began with a furious air campaign that was designed to knock out Japanese vessels clustered in Palau's western lagoon

Bentprop calculates that eight American planes including A b-24 bomber remain hidden in Palau's western lagoon.

Mission photographs from WORLD WAR II show the fourth a Consolidated B-24 Liberator on a path toward the western lagoon.

and the western lagoon seemed the most likely location for them to have ended up. The identification number painted on the plane's exterior would have degraded by now;

Guided by GPS coordinates from the AUV Pat Colin director of the Coral reef Research Foundation pilots the vessel across the lagoon to the approximate location of the mystery plane.

The next day Bentprop compares the aircraft in the western lagoon with a hundred different vintage planes.

and made for the island's western reef. Then he tightened his seat belt locked the canopy back and turned off the plane's engine switch.

and swam across the reef where a rescue aircraft swept down to pick him up.

Today Mccullah's plane rests intact on the seabed with its nose up against the edge of the reef like a car driven up onto a curb and abandoned.

and the reef has crept into the propellers and the engine; a large bulbous coral head has taken up occupancy in the cockpit.

3-D models would enable them to detect how ocean acidification and events like typhoons alter reefs over time.

And of course Scannon hopes that one day AUVS will lead him to his biggest find the final B-24

For now it still lies somewhere in the lagoons surrounding Palau concealed by water and time.

They have amazing sub-sea devices! Great article!!The final Youtube video at the end was chilling!


popsci_2013 00980.txt

Hopefully people will realize that a shrimp isn't any thing more than a sea roach


popsci_2013 01054.txt

It now washes down a river into the sea settles to the bottom and compresses for centuries.

One day it was dirt on the bottom of the ocean the next day dirt on the bottom of the ocean next day next day then Poof!


popsci_2013 01087.txt

A cascade of communication ensues eventually reaching the nucleus and triggering a change in gene expression.


popsci_2013 01126.txt

the Roman Colosseum and aqueducts the Great Walls of China which I have on good account can be seen from space (one of a few really) Stonehenge the Hagia Sophia Petra Taj Mahal the Panama canal Machu Picchu

--and the other tools of survey (for the ancients were more than anything else manically obsessed with the measurement of the land especially the ancient Egyptians who were worried forever about the River Nile flooding its banks


popsci_2013 01137.txt

Forests full of trees that consume carbon dioxide are a great bulwark against the gas most responsible for global climate change.

The paper suggests planting Jatropha curcas in the desert along the coast of the Arabian peninsula setting up a desalination plant to provide the water needed for irrigation


popsci_2013 01144.txt

The waters rivers lakes. For the environment. For..the dodo. Does not have to memorable so stop waiting for the approval of your peers.


popsci_2013 01270.txt

and blocking up waterways it's not just altering the lay of the land; it's out there combating climate change a few carbon emissions at a time.

When beavers build a dam impeding the natural flow of water the river begins to overflow more often creating a sediment-rich wetland area known as a beaver meadow.

I suppose the new plant growth in the area previously covered by the river could offset that

and other wetland creatures and live longer healthier lives just by adopting a vegetarian diet.

And do we even have the room for them on our rivers and streams? And could that land be used instead in better more efficient ways?


popsci_2013 01277.txt

and sea lice devoured them. Then in 2006 Anderson began conducting research with Venus a cabled ocean observatory that broadcasts underwater views of offshore British columbia live over the Internet.

The researchers used a remotely operated vehicle to plunk a pig in view of a camera

which recorded the action as sea life destroyed it. Twenty-two pigs later and with more scheduled for this fall Anderson's team is learning how to tell

The work is already paying off After several human feet clad in athletic shoes started washing up on Vancouver's shores in 2007 Anderson quashed speculation that a serial killer was lopping them off.

but we now know that sea life snipped away enough tissue that the feet fell off on their own.

Two pigs are tethered to an instrument platform to keep sea critters from dragging them out of camera range.

The deep-sea vehicle Ropos (remotely operated platform for ocean sciences) delivers the pigs and their instrument platform to a node and plugs in a webcam and sensors with dexterous arms.

Sea lice mob devours pig from the inside out Sandrine Ceurstemont editor New Scientist TVTHIS article originally appeared in the July 2013 issue of Popular Science.


popsci_2013 01299.txt

°The top layers of the oceans would freeze over but in an apocalyptic irony that ice would insulate the deep water below

and prevent the oceans from freezing solid for hundreds of thousands of years. Millions of years after that our planet would reach a stable âÂ#Â00°the temperature at which the heat radiating from the planet's core would equal the heat that the Earth radiates into space explains David Stevenson a professor of planetary science at the California Institute of technology.

Humans could live in submarines in the deepest and warmest parts of the ocean but a more attractive option might be nuclear-or geothermal-powered habitats.

because the oceans tides are managed no longer by the gravitational pull of the Moon. There will also likely be massive tsunami's as a result of the earthquakes.

I found the following summary the most elegant and concise w/o sacrificing accuracy courtesy of UC Riverside:

since the food chain in rivers/oceans would be disrupted by the end of photosynthesis so even canned tuna/salmon would be used up within a few weeks.


popsci_2013 01396.txt

Maui Space Surveillance Site Complex (MSSSC) Or from any of the hills or beaches in the Hawaii islands at night if you look long enough you will see one and some nights many of Shooting stars.

Krakatoa was a great mountain till it erupted with fire and a blast heard thousands of miles away that cast that Great Mountain into the sea.

The sea was full of Bodies from the Tsunamis more than 35000 of them the sea stayed red for weeks. 1884 was a year without a summer as the year 1816 was

For all that lived there it was WORMWOOD Rev 8: 11 the wood became full of worms and the rivers water no longer sweet and undrinkable.

Robert H. Mcnaught discovery of this comet was made with one of the more then 10 telescopes on Siding Spring Mountain Top at 3822 ft above sea level Schmidt telescope at Siding Spring Observatory it is in New south wales Australia.


popsci_2013 01484.txt

I really hope you have a beach housethe main tenant of the new plan involves setting federal standards limiting carbon pollution from both new and existing power plants


popsci_2013 01508.txt

It was crowded with people going to the floating-pavilion beaches over lower Manhattan with all its crafts hologram entertainments musicians specialty cooks sex workers and VR parlors.


popsci_2013 01554.txt

Fields on the East Coast and others that are surrounded by some native plants however may be pollinated partly or mostly by native bees.


popsci_2013 01600.txt

THREATEN ANTHRAX OF GENERAL GULF OF TONKIN OF COLIN POWELL AND JOHN KERRY CON'S!

FOR ARAYAN HITLER FJORDS! SO HITLER YOUTHEN BOEHNERTOM FRIEDMAN JESSIE HOLDER! UGANDA BARAC OBAMA PICK fiat& facist.

THREATEN ANTHRAX OF GENERAL GULF OF TONKIN OF COLIN POWELL AND JOHN KERRY CON'S!

FOR ARAYAN HITLER FJORDS! SO HITLER YOUTHEN BOEHNERTOM FRIEDMAN JESSIE HOLDER! UGANDA BARAC OBAMA PICK fiat& facist.


popsci_2013 01607.txt

When bloodletting Europeans stumbled on Turtle Island North america shores the Landowner North american Amerindians had a complete Pharmacopea inferiorly chemically immitated

When bloodletting Europeans stumbled on Turtle Island North america shores the Landowner North american Amerindians had a complete Pharmacopea inferiorly chemically immitated


popsci_2013 01638.txt

THREATEN ANTHRAX OF GENERAL GULF OF TONKIN OF COLIN POWELL AND JOHN KERRY CON'S!

FOR ARAYAN HITLER FJORDS! SO HITLER YOUTHEN BOEHNERTOM FRIEDMAN JESSIE HOLDER! UGANDA BARAC OBAMA PICK fiat& facist.

THREATEN ANTHRAX OF GENERAL GULF OF TONKIN OF COLIN POWELL AND JOHN KERRY CON'S!

FOR ARAYAN HITLER FJORDS! SO HITLER YOUTHEN BOEHNERTOM FRIEDMAN JESSIE HOLDER! UGANDA BARAC OBAMA PICK fiat& facist.


popsci_2013 01660.txt

#In Ancient Ice, Clues That Scientists Are Underestimating Future Sea Levelsthe skies do strange things at the NEEM camp a remote ice-drilling

Based on the study of the paleoclimate record in ice cores as well as the former locations of beaches and coral reefs researchers believe that the Eemian temperature increase likely pushed global sea levels as high as eight meters (26

Even if you stabilize temperature by 2100 sea levels will keep rising for many centuries after that says Gavin Schmidt a NASA climate modeler at the Goddard Institute for Space Studies who specializes in paleoclimate data.

The ice sheets will take hundreds of years to fully react to warmer ocean temperatures he says

That meltwater would account for only about two meters of global sea rise according to Dorthe Dahl-Jensen a paleoclimate researcher at the University of Copenhagen who led the NEEM project.

and policy for the years to come it projected that sea levels would rise anywhere between 18 and 59 centimeters by 2100 a range that many scientists saw as a poor estimate based on inadequate data.

The last report kind of punting on the whole sea level thing has been the driver of an enormous amount of effort in ice-sheet modeling says Schmidt.

and cooling and oceans rise and fall as water gets locked up in ice sheets then melts.

Most of the interior of Africa would flood. 25 foot can't be calculated correctly based on coastline simple equation.

and the sea level rise gets a move on I would like to have a beach front property.

Same article and photos here: climatestate-dot-com/magazine/2013/06/in-ancient-ice-clues-that-scientists-are-underestimating-future-sea-levels/laurenra7 Feeding 9 billion is an achievable yes of course.


popsci_2013 01666.txt

Lol and I am definitely planning on ending it with a massive sicilian meat lovers pizza on the beach.


popsci_2013 01676.txt

and all the other cities surrounding the Great lakes. If you cut down trees and sequester the wood (carbon) there will be NO release of CO2.

The ocean is accumulating it at a faster rate than the land. Btw we've seen these stretches of cooling in the past as well

And the suggestion that the oceans are still trapping more heat and warming while the surface hasn't warmed for the last 15 years doesn't hold water pardon the pun.

There is no evidence that the oceans are trapping any heat in fact it appears they are losing heat:

http://wattsupwiththat. com/2011/01/06/new-paper-on-argo-data-trenberths-ocean-heat-still-missing/@Frosttty:

and ocean temps from 1880 to present and the temperature has lined flat (and slightly declined) since just before 2000.

because this is not the hottest the Earth has ever been. www. ncdc. noaa. gov/sotc/service/global/global-land-ocean-mntp-anom/201201-201212. pngpicking out 2005


popsci_2013 01700.txt

The lack of oxygen at the bottom of the lake means that this specimen is remarkably complete and well-preserved.

Recovered from sedimentary rock strata deposited in an ancient lake roughly 55 million years ago this fossil is the oldest primate fossil beating the previous record-holders--including Darwinius from Messel in Germany and Notharctus from the Bridger Basin in Wyoming

Recovered from sedimentary rock strata deposited in an ancient lake roughly 55 million years agoi'm really curious to know how they ascertained the beady-eyed and roughly 55 million years ago parts.


popsci_2013 01852.txt

The greenhouse effect) means once the planet gets warmer and warmer then the oceans begin to evaporate...

You can get to a situation where the oceans begin to boil and the planet becomes so hot that the ocean ends up in the atmosphere.

And that happened to Venus...Hansen's research at NASA focused initially on studying the atmosphere of Venus

No runaway greenhouse effect no massive increase in sea levels. You see based on observations of the relationship of CO2

http://www. ncdc. noaa. gov/sotc/service/global/global-land-ocean-mntp-anom/201101-201112. png2000 years 10 proxy reconstructions:


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