Splash! NASA moon crash struck lots of water

Splash! NASA moon crash struck lots of water By ALICIA CHANG (AP) – 44 minutes ago LOS ANGELES — The lunar dud for space enthusiasts has become a watershed event for NASA. Spacecraft that crashed into the moon last month kicked up a relatively small plume. But scientists have confirmed the debris contained water — 25 gallons of it — making lunar exploration exciting again. Experts have long suspected there was water on the moon. So the thrilling discovery announced Friday sent a ripple of hope for a future astronaut outpost in a place that has always seemed barren and inhospitable. “We found water. And we didn’t find just a little bit. We found a significant amount,” Anthony Colaprete, lead scientist for the mission, told reporters as he held up a white water bucket for emphasis. He said the 25 gallons of water the lunar crash kicked up was only what scientists could see from the plumes of the impact. Some space policy experts say that makes the moon attractive for exploration again. Having an abundance of water would make it easier to set up a base camp for astronauts, supplying drinking water and a key ingredient for rocket fuel. “Having definitive evidence that there is substantial water is a significant step forward in making the moon an interesting place to go,” said George Washington University space policy scholar John Logsdon. The October mission involved two strikes into a permanently shadowed crater near the south pole. First, an empty rocket hull slammed into the Cabeus crater. Then, a trailing spacecraft recorded the drama live before it also crashed into the same spot four minutes later. Though scientists were overjoyed with the plethora of data beamed back to Earth, the mission was a public relations dud. Space enthusiasts who stayed up all night to watch the spectacle did not see the promised giant plume of debris. NASA scientists had predicted the twin impacts would spew six miles of dust into the sunlight. Instead, images revealed only a mile-high plume, and it was not visible to many amateur astronomers peering through telescopes. Members of the blue-ribbon panel reviewing NASA’s future plans said the discovery doesn’t change their conclusion that the program needs more money to get beyond near-Earth orbit. The panel wants NASA to look at other potential destinations like asteroids and Mars. “This new and terrific result reassures us about lunar resources, but … the challenges currently facing the human spaceflight program remain,” Chris Chyba, a Princeton astrophysicist who is on the panel, said in an e-mail. President George W. Bush had proposed a more than $100 billion plan to return astronauts to the moon, then go on to Mars; a test flight of an early version of a new rocket was a success last month. President Barack Obama appointed the special panel to look at the entire moon exploration program. The decision is now up to the White House, and NASA’s lunar plans are somewhat on hold until then. As for unmanned exploration, previous missions had detected the presence of hydrogen in lunar craters near the moon’s poles, possible evidence of ice. In September, scientists reported finding tiny amounts of water in the lunar soil all over the moon’s surface. But it was NASA’s Oct. 9 mission involving the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite, LCROSS, that provided the stunning confirmation announced Friday — water, in the forms of ice and vapor. “Rather than a dead and unchanging world, it could in fact be a very dynamic and interesting one,” said Greg Delory of the University of California, Berkeley, who was not involved in the mission, led by NASA’s Ames Research Center in Mountain View, Calif. The LCROSS spacecraft only hit one spot on the moon and it’s unclear how much water there is across the entire moon. Scientists spent a month analyzing data from the spacecraft’s spectrometers, instruments that can detect strong signals of water molecules in the plume. “We’ve had hints that there is water. This was almost like tasting it,” said Peter Schultz, professor of geological sciences at Brown University and a co-investigator on the LCROSS mission. Astronaut Buzz Aldrin, who in 1969 made his historic Apollo 11 moonwalk with Neil Armstrong, was pleased to hear the latest discovery, but still believes the U.S. should focus on colonizing Mars. “People will overreact to this news and say, `Let’s have a water rush to the moon,’” Aldrin said. “It doesn’t justify that.” Mission scientists said it would take more time to tease out what else was kicked up in the moon dust. AP Science Writer Seth Borenstein contributed to this report.

Add comment November 14, 2009

Thousands of star fish washed up on Lissadell beach

Thousands of star fish washed up on Lissadell beach

Thousands of dead star fish have washed up on Lissadell beach in Co. Sligo.

The Department of the Environment, Heritage and local Government confirmed that between 20 and 50,000 of the fish were washed up.

The huge number of adult star fish are estimated to measure between 3 and 8 inches in diameters.

The Department said that investigations are continuing into the circumstances surrounding the events but at this initial stage it’s believed that it’s as a result of a a storm or freak wave

Add comment November 5, 2009

Crazy Foam Experiment

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November 5, 2009

Crisis for the world’s amphibians

Crisis for the world’s amphibians

 

Helen Meredith
VIEWPOINT
Helen Meredith

It is a time of crisis for the world’s amphibians, says Helen Meredith. In this week’s Green Room she says we may be facing our last chance to save this important group of animals.

 

Glass tree frog
They consume huge quantities of invertebrates, including humanity’s most vilified pests and their crucial role in global ecosystems helps maintain healthy functioning environments

A third of all species of amphibian are threatened with extinction; nearly half are in decline, and they are the most threatened of all the vertebrate groups.

If allowed to continue, the projected losses would constitute the largest mass extinction since the disappearance of the dinosaurs.

But first things first; what are amphibians and why should we care about their decline?

Amphibians are one of nature’s less familiar groups – an issue that presents major challenges to establishing the conservation action they so urgently require.

They have been around on the planet for about 360 million years, arising over 100 million years before the first mammal and 200 million years before the first bird.

Great survivors

Modern amphibians comprise frogs, toads, salamanders, newts and caecilians (limbless amphibians), and number in excess of 6,000 species to date.

More than 20% are not understood well enough to be assigned any conservation status and it is estimated that up to 10,000 species may exist in total.

WHAT ARE AMPHIBIANS?
First true amphibians evolved about 250m years ago
There are three orders: frogs (including toads), salamanders (including newts) and caecilians, which are limbless
Adapted to many different aquatic and terrestrial habitats
Present today on every continent except Antarctica
Many undergo metamorphosis, from larvae to adults

They are found on every continent except Antarctica, ranging from the Arctic Circle to the tropical deserts.

Of all the vertebrates, amphibians lead some of the strangest lives. Various species can survive partial freezing, 10 years without food, long droughts and temperatures of up to 40C (104F).

They are among life’s great survivors, enduring mass extinction events that have wiped out the dinosaurs and whole swathes of mammals and birds. In this light, their current extinction crisis seems all the more troubling.

Although they may not seem to have an impact upon the daily lives of many cultures, they provide numerous essential services to mankind.

They consume huge quantities of invertebrates, including humanity’s most vilified pests.

Their crucial role in global ecosystems, both as predator and prey, helps maintain healthy functioning environments. Frogs are an important protein source in many subsistence cultures and are traded in their millions as food and pets.

The skin secretions that protect amphibians against predation and infection have been found to contain important pharmaceutical compounds that show potential in treating a variety of illnesses from HIV to cancer.

The most famous case is that of the phantasmal poison frog (Epipedobates tricolor). Skin secretions from this frog yielded the compound epibatidine, which is a painkiller 200 times more effective than morphine.

The fight to save the world’s amphibians shouts into a howling gale of climate change, war, overpopulation, economic crises, and countless other global disasters

Amphibians are repositories of potentially life-saving chemicals and are key model organisms in scientific research.

Witnessing the precipitous decline of the amphibians is sobering. Why now, after hundreds of millions of years of survival, are they bowing out?

As always, the reasons are diverse and complex. The usual suspects of habitat destruction, climate change, invasive species, environmental contaminants and overexploitation represent key interrelated factors.

Additionally, a disease called chytridiomycosis or “chytrid” (caused by the fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis) infects a wide range of amphibians globally and is capable of driving species to extinction.

Exacerbated by the other issues impacting amphibians, chytrid has emerged as one of the major threats to their survival. This disease can kill amphibians in otherwise pristine habitats or provide the final nail in the coffin for species already pushed to the brink of extinction.

The fight to save the world’s amphibians shouts into a howling gale of climate change, war, overpopulation, economic crises, and countless other global disasters, rendering their plight (just like many other aspects of biodiversity) somewhat low on the agenda of global priorities; they are slipping away almost unnoticed.

Add comment November 3, 2009

RED DEER AT LAKE HOTEL KILLARNEY

RED DEER AT LAKE HOTEL KILLARNEY.

The only native herd of Red! Deer remaining in the Ireland roam the upland areas of the Killarney National Park, especially on the slopes of Torc and Mangerton.

Now numbering over 850, this herd has had a continuous existence since the return of Red Deer into Ireland at the end of the last Ice Age, 10,000 years ago.

We saw the red deer  from the bedroom window of our hotel in Killarney 29 thOctober 2009 at 11 pm.

The hotel is on the shores of the lake and adjoins the National Park.

The native Kerry red deer roam freely through the grounds  … brilliant!

1 comment October 30, 2009

STARLING FLOCK

STARLING FLOCK FORMATIONS

 DENMARK 

 

 Click on image above to view full size.

Stunning image taken from Mason White’s flickr page. He is an editor @ Archinect and part of lateral architecture in Toronto, On, Canada

 

During spring in Denmark, at approximately one half an hour before sunset, flocks of more than a million European starlings (sturnus vulgaris) gather from all corners to join in the incredible formations shown above.

 This phenomenon is called Black Sun (in Denmark), and can be witnessed in early spring throughout the marshlands of western Denmark, from March through to the middle of April.

The starlings migrate from the south and spend the day in the meadows gathering food, sleeping in the reeds during the night.

The best place to view this amazing aerial dance is in the place called “Tøndermarsken,” where these pictures were taken (on April 5 from 19.30 to 20.30 local time

                                                                                                                                 

Add comment October 30, 2009

Curry and Cancer

Curry spice kills oesophageal

cancer cells  28 October

 2009 09:42

Researchers at University College Cork have found that molecules found in a spice used to prepare curries have killed oesophageal cancer cells in the laboratory.

The results of the study have been published in the British Journal of Cancer.

Scientists at the Cork Cancer Research Centre treated oesophageal cancer cells with curcumin – a chemical found in the spice, turmeric.

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Among the findings were that curcumin started to kill cancer cells within 24 hours.

Each year around 350 people are diagnosed with oesophageal cancer in Ireland, with a further 7,800 in the UK.

According to Professor Gerald O’Sullivan, Director of the Cork Cancer Research Centre at UCC, the research opens up the possibility that natural chemicals found in turmeric could be developed into new treatments for oesophageal cancer.

 

Periodic Table of the Elements Game

Click here for the game.

Add comment October 26, 2009

In Cinemas Now: Creation

 The freedom to speak of religion’s incompatibility with science is nowadays a given. Back in Charles Darwin’s day, things were a little trickier, and the publication of a book that explained mankind’s creation without recourse to God would earn you some stern looks over the dinner table.

creation

Especially if the missus was a devout Unitarian. Charles and Emma Darwin (played by real-life couple Paul Bettany and Jennifer Connelly) have just such a dilemma.

 Creation plays on this difficulty in their loving relationship, as well as their attempts to come to terms with the death of their 10-year-old daughter Anne.

Bettany is as good as ever, despite side-whiskers that would shame a wildebeest, and Connelly manages to engage our sympathies well, considering she’s basically playing a roadblock to progress. Movies about ideas are a rare thing. This one is about the greatest idea of all, and deserves to be a great success.

Review: BBC Focus Magazine Issue 208 Oct’09

Add comment October 22, 2009

Books: The Greatest Show on Earth – The Evidence for Evolution by Richard Dawkins

Publisher: Bantam

The Greatest Show on Earth

The Greatest Show on Earth

Biology teachers increasingly find themselves buttonholed by students seeking to embarrass them on topics as diverse as carbon dating and the second law of thermodynamics, as a prelude to an assault on evolution itself.

 This book should be required reading for anyone with any doubt about the evidence for evolution.

The Greatest Show On Earth lays it all out. It’s a book about evidence, and when the evidence is weak, Dawkins says so, and explains why. It contains a couple of mistakes, there are too many footnotes, and it could use another edit.

And in place of his usual aggression, Dawkins adopts an avuncular style that grates somewhat. But no matter. This book is designed, intelligently, to do exactly what it says on the tin.
Even some of Dawkins’s admirers felt that The God Delusion was an embarrassment. The Greatest Show On Earth is “not intended as an anti-religious book. I’ve done that, it’s another T-shirt, this is not the place to wear it again,” he says. And so he moves on, with disarming lucidity.

The evidence for evolution is so overwhelming that one can only wonder why so many people try so hard to dismiss it. What, exactly, are they afraid of? On this issue, The Greatest Show On Earth, rightly, keeps its own counsel.

Review: Dr. Henry Gee

Dr Henry Gee is a senior editor of the journal Nature

 

Add comment October 22, 2009

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