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Friday, February 3, 2012

Marble Earth...Yeah, You Live There...

NASA's newest Earth-watching satellite is beaming back spectacular views of our home planet – huge mosaics of many images stitched together at the highest-resolution yet obtained. But there's a bit of science mojo at work to create the stunning photos.


Get more pics and info from clicking on the link below:
http://www.space.com/14466-earth-space-photos-blue-marble-suomi-npp.html

(Photo: Copyright Control).


-32F...Russia Has To Cut Europe Gas Supplies!

 "BRUSSELS—Russian natural gas supplies to Europe were curtailed for a third straight day Friday as particularly cold winter weather increased Russia's domestic demand, hitting flows to a number of European Union countries. "There has been a decrease in gas deliveries," Marlene Holzner, a spokeswoman for EU Energy Commissioner Guenther Oettinger told reporters. "Russia needs more gas itself, as they are having an extremely cold winter." (WSJ).
 Where's that friggin' global warmin' Gore fella! 
Ms. Holzner explained that the situation isn't causing an emergency because all member states affected are for now able to make up for the lower Russian supply by buying the gas from neighbors, using storage capacity.

I taut I tawe a woolly
mammoth...
I did, I did tawe a woolly!
Russia and Ukraine both took precautions on Friday to protect homeless people, scores of whom have frozen to death on the streets of Europe during its brutal cold snap. As the death toll from the week long tragedy rose to at least 169 on Friday, Russian Emergencies Minister Sergei Shoigu ordered the creation of feeding and medical-assistance facilities nationwide for the homeless. Russia has not reported casualty figures from the cold snap, which has gripped a large swath of the continent from Russia to Serbia. But Russian Deputy Health Minister Maxim Topilin was quoted by the ITAR-Tass news agency on Friday as saying that 64 people died from the cold in all of January. In Ukraine, the hardest hit country, health officials have told hospitals to stop discharging the hundreds of homeless patients after they are treated for hypothermia and frostbite. The goal is to prevent them from dying once they are released into temperatures as low as minus 32 Celsius (minus 26 Fahrenheit). Authorities also have set up nearly 3,000 heating and food shelters. Thirty-eight more fatalities were reported from frostbite and hypothermia in Ukraine on Friday, raising the nation's death toll to 101. Emergency officials have said many of the victims were homeless.  

(Photo/Illustration: Copyright Control).


Just William...


In an impassioned speech at the UN headquarters in New York, William Hague implored the security council to act and spare further bloodshed in Syria.
Street Demos in Syria...but how many are the Muslim
Brotherhood? Plenty if history is any measure.
"How long do Syrian families have to live in fear that their children will be killed or tortured, before the Security Council will act?" Mr Hague asked. "How many people need to die before the consciences of world capitals are stirred?"
Well William, you may be too young to remember this, but Assad's papa killed around 20,000 (mostly Muslim Brotherhood supporters) in the early '80's...so Son of Assad has a ways to go.
I can't remember the world of Islam being much concerned then, as even the Arab regimes at the time actually understood what the Muslim Brotherhood are about and had banned and imprisoned many of them for years.
Funny how Obama, NYT and the liberal media in the West think that the fuckers are somehow OK. Boy are they in for a full frontal surprise some day soon.
 Oh...and CAIR the whinging Muslim mouthpiece, has the ear of this Jimmy Carter Mark2 administration of Obama's!


Note: Please keep abreast of the Islamofascists whatever the topic of this blog. You can check out all or any of these important web sites below: Front Page, Anti-CAIR, Jihad Watch, Act for America, Word from Jerusalem, Baised-BBC and The Jamie Glazov Show (radio) are mainly current news and articles or discussion, while the Myths of Islam is just that. Tell the Children is a fantastic reference site full of historical documentation. The latter shows (among other things), the links between the Nazis and Islam; these connections carry through to the Jihadist movements of today.










Thursday, February 2, 2012

Oh...We Had Such A Good, Intensive, Jaw Flappin' Visit!


The United Nation's nuclear agency's chief inspector says he had a "good" visit to Iran and plans to make another trip in the "very near future" to discuss Iran's controversial nuclear program.

Speaking Wednesday in Vienna after returning from Tehran, Herman Nackaerts said his team of International Atomic Energy Agency experts had three days of "intensive discussions" with Iran about all of its nuclear aims.


Dear Mr Herman Nackaerts: 
Q1.Were you dropped on your head as a baby? 
Q2. Can you tell if someone has set your arse on fire? 
Your answers should read YES for Q1 and NO for Q2.
(Illustration: Copyright Control).

Egyptian Rules!

More than 74 people were killed and hundreds injured yesterday when fans of two Egyptian soccer teams clashed after a game in Port Said. The violence, the worst in the history of Egyptian soccer, reflects the breakdown of security after the political upheavals of the past year, which has seen repeated clashes between security forces and protesters demanding that the ruling generals hand over power. (Reuters)
Just a civil war rehearsal.
When the Muslim Bros scored a couple of goals, the Secular Sa'id fans went ape shit because they thought that at least one was off-side...  

Mossy and the Ice Agers...Playing On The Planet You're Standing On!


Never underestimate moss. When the simple plants first arrived on land, almost half a billion years ago, they triggered both an ice age and a mass extinction of ocean life. So...get out of the garden now and call Al 'Global Warming' Gore!

(New Scientist). The first land plants appeared around 470 million years ago, during the Ordovician period, when life was diversifying rapidly. They were non-vascular plants, like mosses and liverworts, that didn't have deep roots. About 35 million years later, ice sheets briefly covered much of the planet and a mass extinction ensued. Carbon dioxide levels probably fell sharply just before the ice arrived – but nobody knew why.
Now Tim Lenton of the University of Exeter, UK, and colleagues point the finger at mosses and liverworts as the culprits!
You see all you Save Planet Earthers: Planting more green things will
get you this!
It's not the first time that plants have been fingered as a cause of glaciation. Researchers already suspect that the rise of vascular plants in the Devonian period, some 100 million years later, triggered another ice age. The plants' roots extracted nutrients from bedrock, leaving behind vast quantities of chemically altered rock that could react with CO2 and so suck it out of the atmosphere. (Photo: Copyright Control).

Picture Yourself On A Sandboard On Titan...

Standing atop a huge mound of black, hydrocarbon sand, your sandboard tucked under your arm, you take in the view. Row after row of black dunes march into the distance as far as the eye can see, until everything disappears behind an orange curtain of smog.
A boy with kaleidoscope eyes...
This is no Earthly vista: you're on Saturn's largest moon, Titan. You strap your feet onto the board and slip off down the dune. Titan's low gravity means it takes a while to build up speed, but also keeps friction to a minimum, so it's a long glide down before you come to a halt.
Sandboarding on Titan still, sadly, only happens in our imagination, but the moon's amazing dunes are real – and lie in a trippy landscape worthy of  the Beatles "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds." They were discovered in 2006 in radar images from NASA's Cassini spacecraft (see photo) and could be key to unravelling the climatic history of this eerily Earth-like moon.
Though chilling at -179 °C, Titan has rain and lakes – albeit of liquid methane rather than water – along with mountains and river channels.
"Methane raining out and flowing across the surface leads to landscapes that are so much like Earth," says Jani Radebaugh, a planetary scientist at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah.

Plastic Sand.
Perhaps more like Earth than anywhere else in the solar system, in fact. Comparing and contrasting the two worlds could lead to a better understanding of climate and surface features on both, she says.
What makes the similarities so astonishing is the completely different materials of which Titan and Earth are made. Titan's crust and mountains are made of water ice. The sand grains comprising its dunes are thought to be hydrocarbons like benzene, which has been detected in the dunes by the Cassini spacecraft.
On Earth, hydrocarbons tend to exist as liquids or gases in oil deposits. On Titan, though, many are frozen solid. They are thought to form when ultraviolet light drives chemical reactions in Titan's atmosphere, and then to rain down onto the surface.
"The dunes may have a composition that's a little like plastic," says Radebaugh. To visualise standing on a dune on Titan, imagine "standing on huge volumes of plastic sand", she says.

Seasonal Sculptures.
Despite their unusual composition, Titan's dunes – typically 100 metres tall, a kilometre wide, and up to hundreds of kilometres long – are very similar in shape and size to long, skinny dunes in the Sahara desert called linear dunes. As on Earth, Titan's dunes can tell us about climate. Last year, simulations of the dunes suggested the winds on Titan change seasonally, reversing direction and getting much faster twice a year. This solved a mystery of why Titan's dunes look as though they have been sculpted by winds blowing from west to east, even though the moon's winds were thought to blow in the opposite direction.

Now Alice Le Gall of the Space Atmospheres, Environments and Observations Laboratory (LATMOS-UVSQ) in Paris, France and colleagues have discovered more tantalising climate clues from measurements of the dunes. They lie in a band 30 degrees both north and south of Titan's equator. Le Gall's team have shown that the dunes get smaller and more widely spaced towards the northern end of this range.

Egg-shaped Orbit.
The team conclude that this happens because the ground gets wetter with liquid methane towards the north, making the sand stick together and less prone to forming dunes.
This latitudinal variation in weather is likely to be due to Saturn's egg-shaped orbit, the team conclude, which produces more intense, drier summers in Titan's southern hemisphere compared with the north.
The discovery of dunes on Titan was a stroke of luck, says Radebaugh, who worked with Le Gall's team on the latest analysis. "We had no idea that these things would be there," she says. "We were surprised to find such a close analogue to Earth in something so far away."
And if there were only some way to hop over to Titan, she would love to try sandboarding there. "I think it would be possible and probably would be really fun," she says. (C) David Shiga
(Artists image:Simon Russell/Image Bank/Getty)