Thursday, May 13, 2010

Size of Oil Spill Underestimated, Scientists Say

Two weeks ago, the government put out a round estimate of the size of the oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico: 5,000 barrels a day. Repeated endlessly in news reports, it has become conventional wisdom.


Jim Wilson/The New York Times
Corey Levy, a shrimp boat crew member, lay Thursday among booms used to collect oil. The crew was waiting for the waters to calm before putting out the booms.
But scientists and environmental groups are raising sharp questions about that estimate, declaring that the leak must be far larger. They also criticize BP for refusing to use well-known scientific techniques that would give a more precise figure.
The criticism escalated on Thursday, a day after the release of a video that showed a huge black plume of oil gushing from the broken well at a seemingly high rate. BP has repeatedly claimed that measuring the plume would be impossible.
The figure of 5,000 barrels a day was hastily produced by government scientists in Seattle. It appears to have been calculated using a method that is specifically not recommended for major oil spills.
Ian R. MacDonald, an oceanographer at Florida State University who is an expert in the analysis of oil slicks, said he had made his own rough calculations using satellite imagery. They suggested that the leak could “easily be four or five times” the government estimate, he said.
“The government has a responsibility to get good numbers,” Dr. MacDonald said. “If it’s beyond their technical capability, the whole world is ready to help them.”
Scientists said that the size of the spill was directly related to the amount of damage it would do in the ocean and onshore, and that calculating it accurately was important for that reason.
BP has repeatedly said that its highest priority is stopping the leak, not measuring it. “There’s just no way to measure it,” Kent Wells, a BP senior vice president, said in a recent briefing.
Yet for decades, specialists have used a technique that is almost tailor-made for the problem. With undersea gear that resembles the ultrasound machines in medical offices, they measure the flow rate from hot-water vents on the ocean floor. Scientists said that such equipment could be tuned to allow for accurate measurement of oil and gas flowing from the well.
Richard Camilli and Andy Bowen, of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts, who have routinely made such measurements, spoke extensively to BP last week, Mr. Bowen said. They were poised to fly to the gulf to conduct volume measurements.
But they were contacted late in the week and told not to come, at around the time BP decided to lower a large metal container to try to capture the leak. That maneuver failed. They have not been invited again.
“The government and BP are calling the shots, so I will have to respect their judgment,” Dr. Camilli said.
BP did not respond Thursday to a question about why Dr. Camilli and Mr. Bowen were told to stand down. Speaking more broadly about the company’s policy on measuring the leak, a spokesman, David H. Nicholas, said in an e-mail message that “the estimated rate of flow would not affect either the direction or scale of our response, which is the largest in history.”
Dr. MacDonald and other scientists said the government agency that monitors the oceans, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, had been slow to mount the research effort needed to analyze the leak and assess its effects. Sylvia Earle, a former chief scientist at NOAA and perhaps the country’s best-known oceanographer, said that she, too, was concerned by the pace of the scientific response.
But Jane Lubchenco, the NOAA administrator, said in an interview on Thursday: “Our response has been instantaneous and sustained. We would like to have more assets. We would like to be doing more. We are throwing everything at it that we physically can.”
The issue of how fast the well is leaking has been murky from the beginning. For several days after the April 20 explosion of the Deepwater Horizon rig, the government and BP claimed that the well on the ocean floor was leaking about 1,000 barrels a day.
A small organization called SkyTruth, which uses satellite images to monitor environmental problems, published an estimate on April 27 suggesting that the flow rate had to be at least 5,000 barrels a day, and probably several times that.
The following day, the government — over public objections from BP — raised its estimate to 5,000 barrels a day. A barrel is 42 gallons, so the estimate works out to 210,000 gallons per day.
BP later acknowledged to Congress that the worst case, if the leak accelerated, would be 60,000 barrels a day, a flow rate that would dump a plume the size of the Exxon Valdez spill into the gulf every four days. BP’s chief executive, Tony Hayward, has estimated that the reservoir tapped by the out-of-control well holds at least 50 million barrels of oil.
The 5,000-barrel-a-day estimate was produced in Seattle by a NOAA unit that responds to oil spills. It was calculated with a protocol known as the Bonn convention that calls for measuring the extent of an oil spill, using its color to judge the thickness of oil atop the water, and then multiplying.
However, Alun Lewis, a British oil-spill consultant who is an authority on the Bonn convention, said the method was specifically not recommended for analyzing large spills like the one in the Gulf of Mexico, since the thickness was too difficult to judge in such a case.
Even when used for smaller spills, he said, correct application of the technique would never produce a single point estimate, like the government’s figure of 5,000 barrels a day, but rather a range that would likely be quite wide.
NOAA declined to supply detailed information on the mathematics behind the estimate, nor would it address the points raised by Mr. Lewis.
Mr. Lewis cited a video of the gushing oil pipe that was released on Wednesday. He noted that the government’s estimate would equate to a flow rate of about 146 gallons a minute. (A garden hose flows at about 10 gallons per minute.)
“Just anybody looking at that video would probably come to the conclusion that there’s more,” Mr. Lewis said.
The government has made no attempt to update its estimate since releasing it on April 28.
“I think the estimate at the time was, and remains, a reasonable estimate,” said Dr. Lubchenco, the NOAA administrator. “Having greater precision about the flow rate would not really help in any way. We would be doing the same things.”
Environmental groups contend, however, that the flow rate is a vital question. Since this accident has shattered the illusion that deep-sea oil drilling is immune to spills, they said, this one is likely to become the touchstone in planning a future response.
“If we are systematically underestimating the rate that’s being spilled, and we design a response capability based on that underestimate, then the next time we have an event of this magnitude, we are doomed to fail again,” said John Amos, the president of SkyTruth. “So it’s really important to get this number right.”

10 Killed In Nashville From Historic Floods Floods Close 1st To 5th Avenues Downtown; Thousands Evacuated From Homes

10 Killed In Nashville From Historic Floods

Floods Close 1st To 5th Avenues Downtown; Thousands Evacuated From Homes


Below are the confirmed deaths that have occurred over the last two days in the following counties:
* Davidson County -- 10 water deaths
  • The body of an elderly man was recovered late Monday afternoon in a wooded area behind Kroger on Harding Road near Belle Meade. His 65-year-old wife's body was recovered several hundred yards away. The couple was reportedly driving to church Sunday morning when their car was swept away by flood waters on Harding Road.
  • Metro detectives were investigating Monday evening two additional suspected flood-related deaths. An unidentified man's body was recovered from standing water in the Indian Hills area of Bellevue. An elderly woman’s body was recovered from her River Plantation home.
  • Robert Woods, 74, was swept away Sunday by floodwater in his West Hamilton Avenue yard. His body was recovered Monday.
  • Joshua Lanotroop, 21, was swept away by floodwater Saturday in the area near Bell Road and Blue Hole Road. His body was recovered Sunday near the area.
  • Andrew J. England, 78, and Martha England, 80, are believed to be victims of a flash flood. Their bodies were found Sunday in their Delray Drive home.
  • Joseph Formosa, 88, and Bessie Formosa, 78, tried to drive across the flooded Sawyer Brown Road when their vehicle was swept away. Their bodies were found inside their flipped vehicle in standing water.
  • Two men are missing after three men tied inner tubes together to raft on Mill Creek. The inner tubes separated near the Mill Creek Bridge. A 19-year-old was able to swim ashore, but the other two men are missing.

  • Montgomery County -- 1 water death



    • A woman in her early 60s died Monday night after driving along Palmyra Road in Clarksville. Her car somehow ended up in the rising floodwaters.
  • Williamson County -- 1 water death



  • Stewart County -- 2 water deaths



  • Carroll County -- 1 water death



  • Hickman County -- 1 water death



  • Perry County -- 2 water deaths, father and daughter



  • Hardeman County -- 1 tornado death



  • The Cumberland River crested Monday night and is expected to recede by the end of the week, according to the Nashville mayor's office.The Cumberland flooded quickly after the weekend's storms dumped more than 13 inches of rain in Nashville over two days. That nearly doubled the previous record of 6.68 inches of rain that fell in the wake of Hurricane Fredrick in 1979.About 56 Nashville schools were damaged by either water or wind from the storms.The National Weather Service advised that major flooding is expected to continue along Cumberland River on Monday followed by a gradual decrease in water levels, and that homes in the area should be evacuated.Most of lower Broadway, including First and Second avenues, were closed by floodwater Monday. The Schermerhorn Symphony Center and numerous buildings downtown near the Cumberland River had lower-level flooding.Nashville's country music landmark The Grand Ole Opry House was also flooded.Heartland Christian Towers residents were moved to hotels or picked up by family members. The retirement home is on Fernbrook Lane off McGavock Pike in Nashville.Air 4 flew over a flooded home along Pennington Bend that was engulfed in flames Monday at 10:30 a.m."We are still in rescue mode at this time," said Kim Lawson, deputy chief of the Nashville Fire Department, during a Monday afternoon press conference.More than 7 inches of rain fell on Saturday and 13.53 inches had fallen by 8:30 p.m. Sunday, a new two-day record. Just two days into the month, May 2010 was declared already the wettest May in Nashville's recorded history and the fifth wettest month in city history. Tennessee Gov. Phil Bredesen called it an "unprecedented rain event."Mayor Karl Dean’s office has asked Nashville residents to conserve water.Parts of MetroCenter and residents and businesses near Mainstream Drive were evacuated.The guests at Opryland Hotel on Sunday were moved to McGavock High School and other hotels. Gaylord Entertainment, the owners of the hotel, confirmed that there was 6 feet of standing water inside the hotel.German tourists Gerdi and Kurt Bauerle, both 70, said resort staff suddenly started rushing people out of the area Sunday night."We had just finished eating and suddenly they said: 'Go! Go! Go!"' said Gerdi Bauerle, who was visiting from Munich. "And we said, 'Wait, we haven't even paid."'Officials in Tennessee said Sunday the flooding is as bad as they've seen since 1975 when water memorably inundated the old Opryland amusement park east of downtown Nashville. Even the state's own emergency operations center wasn't immune. It took up to a foot of water below a false floor, forcing officials to relocate to an auxiliary command center."I've never seen it this high," said emergency official Donnie Smith, who's lived in Nashville 45 years. "I'm sure that it's rained this hard at one time, but never for this much of an extended period."The Cumberland River had already reached record levels since an early 1960s flood control project was put in place.Authorities weren't taking any chances. They evacuated the downtown area and north Nashville where a leaky levee threatened residents and businesses."That is an astonishing amount of rain in a 24- or 36-hour period," Bredesen said Sunday.In Montgomery County, 71 people had been rescued as of 11:30 a.m. Monday. The two neighborhoods that have seen worst damage are North Woodstock and Kingsbury Drive. Those residents went to a shelter at Hilldale Baptist Church on Madison Street.County spokeswoman Elizabeth Black said the water supply is fine but that the county is asking people to limit water use. She also said Monday that there was no imminent concern about the Cheatham Dam, which has been releasing water since the weekend because of overflowing.Hickman County Sheriff Randal Ward said there were more than 200 rescues Monday. Most of the county still has no cell service, power or water. The western part of county, such as the Pleasantville area, was hit the worst, Ward said. The Duck River Bridge in Centerville is still blocked off.Hickman County is asking its residents to boil water before using it because its water system is shut down and the water could be contaminated. The county is working to get money from the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency for its shelters at Fairfield Church of Christ, Centerville Christ and Bon Aqua United Methodist.The Trousdale County Jail was evacuated, and people from that jail were transported to Wilson County.Kentucky Emergency Management officials said two deaths in Barren and Madison counties in central Kentucky were weather-related."This is going to go on for a while," Bredesen said. "It's going to take a while for the water to recede and us to get down into this. It's going to take several days for this to get back to anything near normal."The rain ended Sunday night but there will likely be weeks of cleanup for residents and public works employees alike. Though there was no official estimate, it was clear thousands of homes had been damaged or destroyed by flooding and tornadoes. Thousands of residents were displaced with some going to more than 20 shelters opened around Tennessee.Emily Petro, of the Red Cross in Nashville, said the agency was sheltering about 2,000 people across Tennessee -- about 1,200 of them in Nashville.The Red Cross has asked for people to donate nonperishable items.Hospitals, schools and state buildings also were flooded. Most universities in the Nashville area postponed final exams, though many state workers were expected to return to their jobs, if possible.The state's roads were in bad shape. The three major interstates in the Nashville area were closed over the weekend, though most reopened at the beginning of the week.Bredesen said more than 150 roads were closed in middle Tennessee alone with washouts and bridge damage destruction fairly common. Residents Rescued Sunday Night Lakeshore The Meadows nursing home residents were rescued Sunday evening along Coley Davis Road in west Nashville.Six hundred people had to be rescued from flood waters this weekend in Nashville.Both Lipscomb University and the Bellevue Jewish Community Center were opened to shelter flood victims but were soon at capacity.Bellevue Middle School opened to shelter victims, but they needed more cots, blankets and pillows. People slept in auditorium seats Sunday night.“We ended up having to go upstairs, probably got about 5 feet of water, 4 feet of water in the house,” said a man who was rescued Sunday afternoon by boat from his Bellevue home, where he’s lived for seven years. “And we were upstairs with seven grandchildren, took all our food up there, had lunch, played cards, read books and then came out that same window.”Mount Pleasant, Tenn., city manager Debbie McMullin said a water main broke somewhere in the city Sunday afternoon. Officials started looking for the problem at 4 p.m. but were unable to locate it. Residents are urged to boil water until future notice and conserve.About 12 to 15 inches of rain fell in Rutherford County over two days.LaVergne Mayor Ronnie Erwin took a Sunday morning tour of the most troublesome areas in the city. Several streets remain closed."There are a lot of other areas in bad shape, and we're trying to get people help quickly," said Erwin, who declared the city a disaster area.LaVergne resident James Hathcock saw water rushing toward his house and made a run for it."I had five grandkids here, and all of a sudden, it started coming up high, and I got all the kids, got in the car and got out of here," he said.A woman in Bellevue went into labor but couldn’t get out of her home, so a nearby nurse made her way through the water to get to the woman and safely deliver the baby.Amy Hubbuch, a child birth educator, helped deliver the girl. Baby Claire and the mother, who was due, are doing well."It was a house call. We haven’t done those in a long time," said Hubbuch, who delivered the baby by flashlight since there was no electricity. Click here for a full list of road closures in Nashville.Dean said Nashville has received the most rain Saturday and Sunday since rain amounts have been recorded.During his flood briefing Sunday afternoon, he also said that Frederick Douglass Head Start Center on North Seventh Street in Nashville was submerged in water up to its roof.Police Chief Ronal Serpas said that two police officers had to be rescued Saturday from a tree. A Belle Meade police officer was swept away in his patrol car at Harding Road and Lynnwood Boulevard Sunday, but he was rescued.Multiple major water line breaks Sunday in Brentwood have eliminated all water service to a large area in the southern part of the city. Neighborhoods that were affected included: Brenthaven, Mooreland Estates, Willowick, Brentwood South and Stonehenge subdivisions. Click here to read more of this story.The Metropolitan Transit Authority has suspended all bus service indefinitely because of flooding at its headquarters facility.All barge traffic was closed on the Cumberland River because the CSX drawbridge couldn't function.Emergency officials evacuated some flooded apartments along Murfreesboro Road near Mill Creek in southeast Nashville, forcing 300 residents out. However, many of those residents refused to leave their apartments.Bellevue neighborhoods near Beech Bend Drive and Foot Path Terrace and Bellevue Manor Road near Harpeth Valley Road were engulfed with water Sunday morning.Nashville residents can call 615-862-8574 if they need assistance finding a shelter. This number should be used for nonemergencies; use 911 for emergencies.Click here to find the emergency shelters opened by the American Red Cross in middle Tennessee. Flooding Closes I-24 In Antioch SaturdayInterstate 24 was closed at Bell Road Saturday night because of a massive amount of flooding on the roadway, killing one person.About 70 cars on the interstate were submerged by the floodwaters. A portable school room from nearby Lighthouse Christian school floated down I-24 and was destroyed.

    Thursday, January 21, 2010

    Anyone for some Arctic roll? Mystery as spiral blue light display hovers above Norway- Latest News

    Anyone for some Arctic roll? Mystery as spiral blue light display hovers above Norway- Latest News..

    What's blue and white, squiggly and suddenly appears in the sky?

    If you know the answer, pop it on a postcard and send it to the people of Norway, where this mysterious light display baffled residents yesterday.

    Speculation was increasing today that the display was the result of an embarrassing failed test launch of a jinxed new Russian missile.
    The Bulava missile was test-fired from the Dmitry Donskoi submarine in the White Sea early on Wednesday but failed at the third stage, say newspapers in Moscow today.
    Strange spiral: Residents in northern Norway were left stunned after the lightshow, which almost looked computer-generated, appeared in the skies above them
    Strange spiral: Residents in northern Norway were left stunned after the lightshow, which almost looked computer-generated, appeared in the skies above them

    Curious: A blue-green beam of light was reported to have come shooting out the centre of the spiral
    Curious: A blue-green beam of light was reported to have come shooting out the centre of the spiral
    This emerged despite earlier reports denying a missile launch yesterday. Even early today there was no formal confirmation from the Russian Defence Ministry.
    The light appears to be unconnected with the aurora borealis, or northern lights, the natural magnetic phenomena that can often be viewed in that part of the world.
    The mystery began when a blue light seemed to soar up from behind a mountain in the north of the country. It stopped mid-air, then began to move in circles. Within seconds a giant spiral had covered the entire sky.

    Then a green-blue beam of light shot out from its centre - lasting for ten to 12 minutes before disappearing completely.

    Onlookers describing it as 'like a big fireball that went around, with a great light around it' and 'a shooting star that spun around and around'.

    Yesterday a Norwegian defence spokesman said the display was most likely from a failed Russian test launch.
    Enlarge   The bizarre spiral looks almost computer-generated in the dark skies over Norway yesterday
    The bizarre spiral looks almost computer-generated in the dark skies over Norway yesterday
    Confusion: The Norwegian Meteorological Institute was flooded with calls after the light storm
    Confusion: The Norwegian Meteorological Institute was flooded with calls after the light storm
    Tromsō Geophysical Observatory researcher Truls Lynne Hansen agreed, saying the missile had likely veered out of control and exploded, and the spiral was light reflecting on the leaking fuel.

    But last night Russia denied it had been conducting missile tests in the area.
    A Moscow news outlet quoted the Russian Navy as denying any rocket launches from the White Sea area.

    Norway should be informed of such launches under international agreements, it was stressed.

    However this morning media reports claimed a missile had indeed been launched from the White Sea. Test firings are usually made from the White Sea, close to the Norwegian Arctic region.

    Kommersant newspaper reported today that a test-firing before dawn on Wednesday coincided with the light show in the northern sky.

    It also emerged today that Russia last week formally notified Norway of a window when a missile test might be carried out. 

    What could it be? Astrologists say the spectacle did not appear to have been connected to the aurora, or Northern Lights
    What could it be? Astronomers say the spectacle did not appear to be connected to the Northern Lights
    This included a seven hour period early on Wednesday at the time when the lights were seen.
    The submarine Dmitry Donskoy went to sea on Monday, ahead of the test, and some reports suggest the vessel is now back in port.

    A Russian military source said today that 'the third stage of the rocket did not work'.
    The Russian Defence Ministry, with characteristic secrecy, has so far been unavailable for comment.

    A Bulava missile is fired from a submarine in this undated file photo. Russia has yet to confirm if a similar test launch was behind the mystery lights seen over Norway yesterday
    A Bulava missile is fired from a submarine in this undated file photo. Russia has yet to confirm if a similar test launch was behind the mystery lights seen over Norway yesterday
    The Bulava, despite being crucial to Russia's plans to revamp its weaponry, is becoming an embarrassment after nine failed launches in 13 tests, prompting calls for it to be scrapped.

    In theory, it has a range of 5,000 miles and could carry up to ten nuclear weapons bound for separate targets.

    A previous failure in July  forced the resignation of Yury Solomonov, the director of the Moscow Institute of Thermal Technology which is responsible for developing the missile.

    However, he is now working as chief designer on the jinxed project.
    The Norwegian Meteorological Institute was flooded with telephone calls after the light storm yesterday morning.
    Totto Eriksen, from Tromsø, told VG Nett: 'It spun and exploded in the sky,'

    He spotted the lights as he walked his daughter Amalie to school.

    He said: 'We saw it from the Inner Harbor in Tromsø. It was absolutely fantastic.

    'It almost looked like a rocket that spun around and around and then went diagonally down the heavens.

    'It looked like the moon was coming over the mountain, but then came something completely different.'

    Celebrity astronomer Knut Jørgen Røed Ødegaard said he had never seen anything like the lights.

    He said: 'My first thought was that it was a fireball meteor, but it has lasted far too long.
    'It may have been a missile in Russia, but I can not guarantee that it is the answer.'
    Air traffic control in Tromsō claimed the light show lasted 'far too long to be an astronomical phenomenon'.


    Friday, January 1, 2010

    The Amazing Paintings : Beautiful Paintings by Vladimir Kush







    The Amazing Paintings : Beautiful Paintings by Vladimir Kush
    Amazing paintings, Beautiful paintings
    Amazing paintings, Beautiful paintings
    Amazing paintings, Beautiful paintings
    Amazing paintings, Beautiful paintings
    Amazing paintings, Beautiful paintings
    Amazing paintings, Beautiful paintings
    Amazing paintings, Beautiful paintings
    Amazing paintings, Beautiful paintings
    Amazing paintings, Beautiful paintings
    Amazing paintings, Beautiful paintings
    Amazing paintings, Beautiful paintings
    Amazing paintings, Beautiful paintings
    Amazing paintings, Beautiful paintings
    Amazing paintings, Beautiful paintings
    Posted by Pawan at 3:34 PM 8 comments Links to this post
    The Amazing Paintings
    Beautiful Paintings in the world
    Beautiful Paintings in the world

    Beautiful Paintings in the world


    Beautiful Paintings in the world



    Beautiful Paintings in the world




    Beautiful Paintings in the world





    Beautiful Paintings in the world






    Beautiful Paintings in the world







    Beautiful Paintings in the world








    Beautiful Paintings in the world









    Beautiful Paintings in the world










    Beautiful Paintings in the world











    Beautiful Paintings in the world












    Beautiful Paintings in the world













    Beautiful Paintings in the world














    Beautiful Paintings in the world















    Beautiful Paintings in the world
















    Beautiful Paintings in the world

















    Beautiful Paintings in the world


















    Beautiful Paintings in the world
    Posted by Pawan at 11:22 AM 2 comments Links to this post
    Labels: beautiful, beautiful paintings, paintings
    Sunday, December 28, 2008
    The Amazing pictures of Blue Whale : Whale Facts

    The Auckland Islands Marine Reserve protects an area 300 miles south of New Zealand’s South Island, where these two robust southern rights are part of a recovering population thought to include more than 1,000 whales.




    Scars on this adult in the Bay of Fundy likely resulted from entanglement in fishing gear that cut through the skin.




    Trawling with open mouth along the surface of Cape Cod Bay, a North Atlantic right whale feeds on the move. Water flowing into its mouth carries tens of thousands of copepods—crustaceans each about the size of a grain of rice—toward the sieve-like plates of baleen, which strain them out as the water flows back into the bay.




    Signature V-shaped plumes of spray shoot from a North Atlantic right whale in the Bay of Fundy. The whale exhales, clearing water from the opening of its dual blowholes, then draws in air.




    A calf's open jaws reveal a pink soft palate that releases excess body heat, and a hanging sieve of baleen that strains tiny prey from the sea. Unique to right whales, rough skin callosities develop in patterns that identify individuals as clearly as fingerprints.




    A female gets a playful bump from her new calf in warm shallows near Florida's Amelia Island. North Atlantic right whale mothers give birth and spend winters off the south Georgia–north Florida coast.



    Far from busy ship lanes, a 40-foot southern right whale swims in safety near the remote Auckland Islands.


    source: national geographic channel

    Posted by Pawan at 7:28 AM 0 comments Links to this post
    Labels: whale photos
    The Amazing Pictures of year 2008


    Man and right whale size each other up in the winner of the 2008 Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition's underwater category, announced on October 30.

    "The whales were highly curious of us. Many of these animals had never seen a human before," Skerry told National Geographic.

    Photographed off New Zealand for National Geographic magazine , the whales shared top honors with a comical, quizzical monkey, eagles in an air battle, and a battling lizard and snake, among others. (The National Geographic Society owns National Geographic News and National Geographicmagazine.)



    Under intense magnification, a long-fin squid's suckers--each no wider than a human hair--resemble the leafy star of Little Shop of Horrors.

    This electron-micrograph image may have only won an honorable mention in the 2008 International Science and Engineering Visualization Challenge, but thanks to enthusiastic bloggers, these suckers were the breakout stars of National Geographic News's gallery of the contest's highlights, posted on September 25. Among the other marquee attractions: a bugged-out take on the Mad Hatter's tea party and a "glass forest."



    Filled with forests, waterfalls, and fantastically shaped granite peaks and pillars, China's 56,710-acre (22,950 hectare) Mount Sanqingshan National Park was among the 174 wild sites--eight of them featured in this gallery--added to the UN World Heritage list in July 2008.

    Chosen by a committee of the UN's Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), World Heritage sites are natural and cultural areas recognized for their universal value to humanity.



    After 9,000 years of silence, Chile's Chaiten volcano erupted, generating on May 3 what may have been a "dirty thunderstorm." These little-understood storms may be caused when rock fragments, ash, and ice particles collide to produce static charges--just as ice particles collide to create charges in regular thunderstorms.

    The eruption, which continued off and on for months, forced the evacuation of thousands of residents and cattle from this corner of Patagonia.



    A mile and a half (two and a half kilometers) underwater, this alien-like, long-armed, and--strangest of all--"elbowed" Magnapinna squid is seen in a still from a video clip obtained by National Geographic News



    The carcass of a colossal squid floats in a tank at the Museum of New Zealand on April 30, giving scientists their first close look at the elusive deep-sea creature.
    The squid was frozen for months after being caught by fishers off Antarctica in 2007. A dissection of the thawed beast yielded astonishing discoveries, including the animal kingdom's largest eyes and light-emitting organs that may serve as cloaking devices, scientists said.



    Glowing-hot carbon nanotubes form an expanding orange ball in this winning image from the 2008 Small World photomicrography competition, sponsored by Nikon and featured in an October 15 National Geographic News gallery. In nine other masterworks of magnification, a beetle danced on a pin, and drugs yielded crystal rainbows.



    In a picture from National Geographic News's tenth most viewed photo gallery of 2008, Sylvia Renteria recoils as a wave churned by Hurricane Ike meets a seawall in Galveston, Texas, on September 12.
    Before landfall, the National Weather Service's chilling warnings of "certain death" spurred officials and residents of the coastal town to gird for the worst--and stoked fears of a replay of the devastating 1900 Galveston hurricane that killed 6,000.


    source: national geographic channel.

    Posted by Pawan at 7:00 AM 0 comments Links to this post
    Labels: amazing pictures, wildlife photos
    Monday, December 22, 2008
    Microsoft's Internet Explorer may be the new hacker's tool

    Microsoft has issued a warning on its browser, Internet Explorer.

    The company says that a flaw in the browser allows criminals to hack into computers, take control and use it however they wish.

    The problem, first revealed last week, allows criminals to hijack computers and steal passwords if the user visits an infected website. As many as 10,000 sites have already been compromised to take advantage of the flaw, according to anti-virus software producer Trend Micro.

    Microsoft says it will issue a security patch from Wednesday night onwards. Analysts suggest users switch browsers till the fault is rectified.

    "It's a very serious threat, it affects all versions of Internet Explorer on all versions of Microsoft Windows and as I say, because there is no patch available, there is no mitigation available from Microsoft for that. What people should do to protect themselves, if they can, they should avoid using Internet Explorer and switch to an alternative browser," says Trend Micro's Senior Security Adviser, Rik Ferguson.
    Posted by Pawan at 12:36 AM 0 comments Links to this post
    Labels: hacking tools, IE, Internet explorer
    Google Rolls Chrome Out of Beta Garage

    Google released the 15th update for its Chrome Web browser and officially ended the beta testing phase for the application Thursday.

    With some 10 million active users and 14 prior updates under its belt, the browser has improved its stability and performance in just 100 days, according to Google.

    "Google Chrome is a better browser today thanks to the many users who sent their feedback and the many more who enabled automatic crash reports, helping us rapidly diagnose and fix issues," wrote Sundar Pichai and Linus Upson in a Google blog post.

    Chrome spent a relatively short period of time in beta status, especially considering that Google is known for taking its time with beta projects, even in


    its most popular offerings. Launched in September, Chrome was in beta for just three months. By comparison, Google's Gmail began beta testing in April 2004, and more than four years later, the e-mail app is still there. "Google said that it applies a different time frame and standard to its client software than other offerings. Google also indicated that Chrome was fairly far along when it was released in beta, which compressed the interim period as well," Greg Sterling, principal analyst at Sterling Market Intelligence, told TechNewsWorld.

    Google has not simply taken the beta label off of Chrome and called it finished, he noted. There have been 14 separate updates during the beta period and a number of changes improving speed, security and stability, as well as bug fixes to address glitches with the audio and video in Chrome.

    "While there could be other potential justifications or reasons for making Chrome available for general release, Google indicated to me it was because they felt the browser had progressed to a point where that was possible. Chrome also sees itself as a platform for Web applications. Firefox has a similar vision of in its future," he said.

    Each product development team determines its own criteria for coming out of beta, according to Google. With Chrome, the company set standards for stability and performance and removed the beta when those standards were met.

    Chrome, according to Google, now offers users better stability and plug-in performance. Video and audio glitches -- among the most common bugs addressed during the beta period -- have been fixed.

    Speed has also been a focus. Since the first beta version rolled out, the V8 JavaScript engine runs 1.4 times faster on the SunSpider benchmark and 1.5 times faster on the V8 benchmark, said Google. The company plans to increase speed even more in future updates.

    The bookmark manager and privacy controls have also received a boost. It's now easier to switch between another browser and Chrome with bookmark import and export features. Google also worked to give users greater control of their data. To that end, all features in Chrome that affect user privacy are grouped in one place with an explanation regarding what each one actually does.

    "The browser is very fast, which is one of its core features. In addition, the tabs operate like separate browsers to prevent the entire browser from crashing if there's a problem with an individual site. The 'new tab' page offers a nice display of frequently used sites and recent bookmarks. Tabs can also be manipulated and moved around, unlike other browsers," Sterling said.

    source: technewsworld.com

    Posted by Pawan at 12:29 AM 0 comments Links to this post
    Labels: Beta release, Chrome browser, Google Chrome
    US to educate India in the art of dealing with terror

    US Ambassador David C Mulford on Monday met Home Minister P Chidambaram in the capital in the backdrop of Washington's offer to share information and collaborate with New Delhi following the Mumbai terror attacks.

    The meeting at North Block lasted about half-an-hour, official sources said.

    The officers from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) have already questioned Mohammad Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone surviving Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) militant involved in the November 26 strikes, to ascertain his role and those of his handlers in Pakistan.

    The US, which witnessed the deadly 9/11 attacks seven years ago, is working through a package for India on dealing with the situation arising out of the "horrific" Mumbai strikes by way of information sharing, collaboration and cooperation, according to a top Pentagon official.

    "We are working through the initial parts of a package. We would offer to India to help them understand some of the lessons that we very painfully learnt in the wake of our September 11 attacks, in information sharing, collaboration and cooperation," , Commander of the US Pacific Command, Admiral Timothy Keating, told reporters in Washington last week.

    Praising India for its "measured response" in the aftermath of the Mumbai attacks, Keating said that various agencies of the US government were working closely to keep a tab of developments in the region
    Posted by Pawan at 12:22 AM 0 comments Links to this post
    Labels: 26/11 attack, mumbai attack, Qasab
    Older Posts
    Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)
    Followers
    Spottt
    Spottt
    Add to Technorati Favorites
    Add to Technorati Favorites
    About Me
    My Photo

    Pawan Pawar

    View my complete profile
    Blog Archive

    * ▼ 2009 (2)
    o ▼ July (2)
    + The Amazing Paintings : Beautiful Paintings by Vla...
    + The Amazing Paintings

    * ► 2008 (50)
    o ► December (6)
    + The Amazing pictures of Blue Whale : Whale Facts
    + The Amazing Pictures of year 2008
    + Microsoft's Internet Explorer may be the new hacke...
    + Google Rolls Chrome Out of Beta Garage
    + US to educate India in the art of dealing with ter...
    + Big B impresses Madhavan with golfing skills
    o ► May (32)
    + Can plants really feel??
    + amazing water lily
    + Amazing facts about squirrels: Can squirrels reall...
    + Amazing Facts about Pangolin
    + Amazing facts about Whales : How do Whales breathe...
    + Amazing fact about Corn : Why does Corn have silk?...
    + Amazing fact about Fish : Can fish see in the dark...
    + Learn the Secrets of Good Writing : Few tips
    + Deepak Sadavarte : Pune's own Khali ready to fight...
    + World's oldest living tree, age 9,550
    + Skipping breakfast may mean your baby is a girl
    + Apple's Amazing iPhone to be launched in India by ...
    + Mallya takes potshots at Dravid for IPL debacle
    + Google earth outeach : Amazing tool from Google
    + The Great Khali Meets Sachin
    + Five things I want from Apple's amazing new 3G iPh...
    + Apple's amazing iPhone to launch in India soon.
    + Amazing WiKiScanner
    + Do not cross your eyes : They will stick that way
    + Harbhajan given long ban for slap
    + Microsoft without Yahoo
    + Cities packed with billionaires
    + Google: Amazing, innovative products to be reveale...
    + Amazing google TV: Let Us Buy You A TV Ad
    + Amazing house: Inside The World's First Billion-Do...
    + Why Does Microsoft Owe Jerry Yang $3,008.46?
    + Tech CEOs: Richer Than You Are
    + World's amazing largest bridge is in China
    + Ford's amazing Tri-Motor
    + Amazing dream philosophy: What do our dreams mean?...
    + Amazing dream philosophy
    + IPL is Sheer Entertainment
    o ► April (12)
    + Amazing Yaana Gupta: From Babuji to hip-hop
    + Amazing house having stairs leading nowhere
    + Bollywood loves IPL
    + Shoaib can play in IPL: PCB
    + Dhoni will also dance for the team’s album
    + Microsoft's Next Move : Walk or File Board Slate
    + A crorepati who lives in a hut!
    + IPL founder warns England stars
    + England bosses soften IPL stance
    + England close to Twenty20 revamp

    * ► 2007 (54)
    o ► December (30)
    o ► November (4)
    o ► July (20)

    Links
    The Facts
    Amazing information
    Amazing Live TV
    The Master
    World News
    G8t Cars n Bikes
    Onkar Deshpande

    Funny side of money
    Story of an AMD 6000+ computer with 8800
    Indian Cricket League
    News Bollywood
    Identity Theft
    The Chrome Boy
    PikZikk
    #
    #
    # Add to My AOL
    # Add to Google
    # Subscribe in podnova
    # Subscribe in NewsGator Online
    # Add to netvibes
    # addtomyyahoo4
    # Subscribe to My Odeo Channel
    #
    # Weblog Directory
    # blog search directory
    # X Web Directory - Submit Web Site

    # We Blog Alot
    # Blogoozle
    # Blog Directory
    # Blog Rankings
    # OnlineWide Web Directory
    #
    # Top Blogs
    Google PageRank Checker - Page Rank Calculator

    Obama sends you a Christmas card. Really. Cccard





    Obama sends you a Christmas card. Really.
    Cccard


    If you're the type to play keeping-up-with-the-Jones' with your Christmas cards, Comment Central is about to make your day.

    That's right - the picture above is of a card sent from President Obama to you, the Comment Central readers.

    It's part of a Christmas wishes video that the Obama team has put together specially for you. You can watch the whole thing on this link, and here are a few stills to whet your appetite:

    Pic1
    Pic2
    Pic3

    Oh, and while, of course, CC readers were number one priority on the presidential Christmas card list this year, the website also allows you to customise the video and send it, as Iain Dale suggests, to all your right wing friends.

    Posted by Hattie Garlick on December 23, 2009 at 12:04 PM in American Politics | Permalink | Post to Twitter

    Politics Brown promises to beef up UK airport security , UK thought Reagan would be a lazy president,





    PM orders review after 'wake-up call' of failed Christmas Day airline attack, and plans meeting on Yemen radicalisation

    * Double life of Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab

    * War, terrorism, football and an Oscar for aliens

    * Yemen the front line in conflict for US

    * Air passenger with chemicals held last month

    Straw: police like to be indoors with paperwork

    The Justice Secretary provokes fury after claiming some officers use bureaucracy as excuse for not walking beat
    Tories defy Cameron with plot to ditch Bercow

    Tory leader has been warned his backbenchers will try to oust Bercow immediately after the general election
    Edward Heath in 1974
    Heath's little secret

    Documents show PM discussed IMF loan during 1974 economic crisis
    More Politics
    Red tape 'driving teachers out of schools'

    Tories claim millions of pounds are wasted on training teachers who later leave the profession because of bureaucracy
    Politicians go without New Year's honours

    After year of scandal none of the 121 MPs stepping down next year are mentioned in list while Status Quo honoured
    Gummer quits Commons to lead climate body

    Former Conservative minister says industrial countries have grown rich on pollution and owe a debt to the rest of the world
    Half of new armoured vehicles out of service

    The Army’s Mastiff and Ridgeback armoured patrol vehicles appear to be unreliable, according to figures obtained by Lib Dems
    More Politics News
    Bitterness of old year spills over into new

    Britain’s assertion that it has ‘no evidence’ that the hostage Peter Moore was held for a time in Iran cut no ice in Tehran
    Cameron can learn from Thatcher in 1979

    The new Conservative Government agonised over cutting public spending. How it did so provides some clear lessons for today
    ‘A cheeky, bumptious, clever boy.’ Not much change then

    Alex Salmond’s biographer David Torrance considers the making of the man who became Scotland’s Nationalist First Minister
    Bruised and battered, but Salmond will bounce back

    Celebrating his 55th birthday today, Alex Salmond may reflect on one auld acquaintance gladly forgot — the year 2009
    UK thought Reagan would be a lazy president

    Archive papers reveal British diplomats’ verdict on Republican candidate in the early days of US election campaign
    Benn wanted BBC to take over The Times

    Energy Minister feared that the newspaper would not survive year-long strike that had stopped its publication
    Thatcher preferred 'whites' over Vietnamese

    Former Prime Minister tried to block 'boat people', preferring white immigrants from Rhodesia or Poland, secret papers reveal
    Britain rethinks strategy on China

    The Foreign and Commonwealth Office appears to have considerably overestimated its leverage with the emerging superpower
    Brown insists recession has ended

    Gordon Brown to launch fresh attack on the 'privileged few' while insisting he will protect those on middle incomes
    How Britain tactfully told the Shah to keep out

    National Archive papers show the extraordinary efforts made to avoid upsetting the new regime in Iran
    MP stands down due to mental illness

    Iris Robinson, wife of Northern Ireland’s First Minister, suggested homosexuals could be 'turned around' with help
    Mandelson: how to deal with your 'boomerang kids'

    Lord Mandelson, who has bounced back to the Cabinet three times, gives his advice about children moving back to the family home
    From rattling tins to a fundraising behemoth

    The explosion in NHS giving can be traced to Great Ormond Street’s Wishing Well Appeal in 1988, which raised £56 million
    Ministers ‘to control’ NHS charity cash

    Millions of pounds of charity donations to hospitals will be 'nationalised' — making it easier to cut budgets, critics say
    Donations could become part of NHS budget

    A change in accounting rules would effectively 'nationalise' public donations and fundraising, says the Charity Commission
    British Army ‘is becoming top heavy’

    Figures show the number of generals and brigadiers in a shrinking Army has risen since Labour came to power in 1997
    Plan to shut MPs' public-funded websites axed

    A Commons commission agrees to continue a controversial £10,000-a-year grant criticised as 'a gigantic waste of money'
    PM expected to avoid by-election after MP's death

    David Taylor, the North West Leicestershire MP, died after having a heart attack while on a Boxing Day walk with family
    Brown’s untimely sale cost UK billions

    Prime Minister sold the UK's gold when its price had reached rock-bottom - that sale today would have raised an extra $10bn
    We won’t fight a class war, says Balls

    The Schools Secretary said Labour must fight the general election as the party defending low and middle-income families

    The New Year Celeberated with the strike in pakistan after the Bomb blast attack in karachi on the Religious Rally of Ashura. it was the reaction


    Angry mob set ablaze vehicles to protest bomb blast that ripped through Karachi’s main religious procession, killing at least 20 people.


    Geo TV reports this morning that angry mob has burnt down Light House building situated at the MA Jinnah Road, Karachi's main corridor to business center. Another TV reports showed several burnt down vehicles parked around the city court.


    People are stranded in the building, which was set on fire. There are also reports of unrest at different parts of the city.

    Meanwhile, provincial Home Minister Dr Zulfikar Mirza early morningTuesday said yesterday's bomb blasts was aimed at triggering ethnic strife in the city but people foiled this conspiracy.

    Addressing a press conference Tuesday morning (it is early Tuesday morning in Karachi), the minister said that the blasts were carried out by helmet wearing terrorists riding on three motorcycles.

    The Sindh Home Minister said a team is investigating the cause of the blasts under the supervision of DIG Saud Mirza and four suspects have been apprehended and are being interrogated.

    Home Minister said that so far no police official has been suspended, but in case any evidence of negligence on the part of concerned police officials comes to the fore, action will be taken against them.


    Southern port city of Pakistan, Karachi has a long history of sectarian violence between Shias and Sunnis. There have been numerous attacks on such processions across the country over the last few days.

    On Sunday, eight people were killed when a suicide bomber targeted a Shia march in Pakistan-administered Kashmir.


    Interior Minister Rehman Malik blamed Monday's blast on extremists who wanted to destabilise Pakistan. "Whoever has done this, he cannot be a Muslim. He is worse than an infidel," he told reporters.

    Riots erupted in Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi yesterday after a suicide bomber attacked a Shia religious procession, killing at least 30 people in the latest sectarian atrocity.

    More than 50,000 Shias, 15 per cent of Pakistan’s population, marched through the city whipping themselves to mark the holy day of Ashura.

    The bomber managed to get into the procession despite the presence of more than 10,000 paramilitary troops. The attacker blew himself up at the front of the procession in the city centre.

    Witnesses and police said that the streets were strewn with body parts. Women and children were among the dead and about 60 people were injured in the attack.

    Related Links

    * US drones kill 15 militants in Pakistan

    * Pakistan in turmoil as Zardari faces charges

    * Pakistani Defence Minister banned from travel

    “The blast was so huge that I felt my hearing had gone but then I started hearing cries of injured people and saw pieces of human flesh and blood on the road,” said Abbas Ali, 35, one of the Shias thrown to the ground. “Some were crying and some were running here and there with panicked faces. My younger brother was with me. I looked for him and was told he was injured and was sent to hospital.”

    The procession, commemorating the death of the Prophet Muhammad’s grandson in the 7th century, is held every year on Ashura, the tenth day of the Islamic holy month of Muharram. Shias traditionally wear black, beat their torsos with chains and slice their skin with knives.

    A spokesman for the paramilitary Rangers said that one of their members was killed when he tried to stop the bomber. “Our soldier Abdul Razzaq spotted the suicide bomber and jumped on him. Both fell to the road after which the bomber exploded,” Major Muhammad Aurangzeb said.

    “If Razzaq had not captured the bomber, he could have caused more casualties,” Major Aurangzeb said, adding that the soldier was killed in the blast.

    Police later found the body of the suicide bomber on the third floor of a nearby office building, where it had crashed through a window. About 35lb (16kg) of high explosives were used, a bomb disposal officer said. The Karachi police chief, Waseem Ahmad, said that the force was investigating the possibility that a second suicide bomber was involved in the attack. Mourners set fire to dozens of vehicles and buildings and clashed with police. Gunfire was heard as riots spread into the outskirts of Karachi.

    Mustafa Kamal, the Mayor of Karachi, said that the attack was an attempt to disturb the peace in the country’s commercial and financial hub. No one claimed responsibility but police suspected Islamic militants.

    Yusuf Raza Gilani, the Pakistani Prime Minister, condemned the bombing and appealed for calm. It was the third attack on Ashura commemorations in the country this week. Seven people were killed in a suicide bombing in Kashmir on Sunday and 17 wounded in Karachi on the same day.

    Yesterday’s attack was the deadliest in Karachi since a suicide bomber targeted the homecoming of the former Prime Minister, Benazir Bhutto, who was assassinated two months later. At least 139 people were killed in the assassination attempt in October 2007.