Archive for June 6, 2012


Earthquakes

RSOE EDIS

Date/Time (UTC) Magnitude Area Country State/Prov./Gov. Location Risk Source Details
06.06.2012 22:05:24 2.6 Europe Greece Kalomoiraiika VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 22:05:49 2.8 Asia Turkey Karaca VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 22:05:50 2.9 Asia Turkey Karaca VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 22:06:11 2.6 Europe Greece Douvia VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 21:10:41 2.0 North America United States Alaska Birches VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 22:06:33 2.6 Europe Italy Palata Pepoli VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 21:02:30 2.5 North America United States Hawaii Volcano There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 21:00:33 2.4 Asia Turkey Gulpinar VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 21:00:57 4.9 Indonesian Archipelago Indonesia Hinako VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 21:01:15 2.4 Asia Turkey Sagur VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 20:25:48 2.4 North America United States Alaska Port William There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 21:01:33 3.0 Asia Turkey Cerdin VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 20:00:29 2.6 Asia Turkey Taslik There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 20:00:49 2.6 Asia Turkey Cukurgol Yaylasi There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 20:01:10 2.2 Asia Turkey Alakilise There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 21:01:54 4.4 Europe Portugal Corvo VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 20:01:36 4.8 Indonesian Archipelago Indonesia Pasirputih VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 20:03:39 5.0 Indonesian archipelago Indonesia Pasirputih VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 20:01:57 2.0 Europe Greece Monoxilitai VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 20:02:19 2.4 Europe Greece Ampelos VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 19:15:32 2.8 Caribbean British Virgin Islands The Settlement VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 20:02:40 4.8 Europe Russia Karaus VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 19:35:32 4.7 Asia Russia Respublika Tyva Kagzhirba VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 19:55:47 2.8 Caribbean Puerto Rico Arenas VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 22:06:55 5.1 Pacific Ocean – East Tonga Haatua VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 19:00:32 3.2 Asia Turkey Bahcelikisla There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 21:15:59 2.3 North America United States Alaska Atka There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 18:05:40 2.4 North America United States California Paicines VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 18:00:48 2.6 North America United States Alaska Ugashik There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 19:00:53 4.8 Africa Democratic Republic of the Congo Alombi VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 18:55:33 4.8 Africa Democratic Republic of the Congo Alombi VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 19:01:13 2.5 Europe Greece Ayios Evstratios VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 17:15:37 2.3 North America United States Alaska Iniskin There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 17:30:35 2.7 Asia Turkey Camarasi There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 16:30:32 2.3 Asia Turkey Ciftlikkoy There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 16:31:47 5.2 Asia Russia Respublika Tyva Karaus VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 16:30:53 5.2 Europe Russia Karaus VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 16:31:12 3.4 Europe Romania Plostina VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 15:25:45 2.0 North America United States Alaska Chulitna VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 15:30:34 2.0 Asia Turkey Cinarli VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 14:27:23 2.4 North America United States Alaska Toklat VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 19:50:51 2.7 Middle America Mexico Estado de Baja California Jesus Gonzalez Ortega There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 14:10:35 2.0 North America United States California Pinnacles VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 14:25:28 2.4 Asia Turkey Kayakoy VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 14:25:54 3.2 Asia Georgia Zhdanovi There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 14:35:43 4.5 Pacific Ocean Fiji Vatoa VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 15:30:56 4.5 Pacific Ocean – East Fiji Vatoa VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 14:26:16 2.4 Europe Italy La Collevata VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 14:26:36 2.2 Asia Turkey Inlice VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 14:26:55 2.5 Europe Greece Varyiani VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 13:50:52 2.7 Caribbean Puerto Rico Aceitunas VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 13:25:33 2.0 Europe Italy Resega VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 13:25:53 3.1 Europe Greece Monoxilitai VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 12:23:58 2.7 North America United States Alaska Chickaloon VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 12:20:37 2.6 Asia Turkey Rindali VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 12:20:55 2.1 Europe Italy Riva Verde VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 12:21:14 2.4 Europe Italy Bosellina VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 12:21:36 2.0 Asia Turkey Karaca VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 12:21:55 2.7 Asia Turkey Bayir VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 12:22:18 2.5 Europe Greece Velotoula VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 12:36:12 4.4 Atlantic Ocean Argentina Provincia de Santiago del Estero El Negrito VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 13:26:17 4.4 South-America Argentina El Negrito VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 11:20:33 2.2 Europe Portugal Sagres VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 12:22:39 2.5 Asia Turkey Naldoken VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 13:26:35 2.7 Europe Cyprus Ayia Marina VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 10:45:44 2.6 Middle America Mexico Estado de Baja California Canon de Guadalupe There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 10:40:46 4.3 Middle America Mexico Guerrero Ujerita VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 11:20:55 4.3 Middle-America Mexico Ujerita VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 10:10:45 2.2 North America United States California Caldwell Pines There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 10:15:34 2.5 Europe Greece Dhimaina There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 13:26:57 4.0 Europe Ireland Aghleam VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 15:55:31 4.0 Europe Ireland County Mayo Aghleam VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 10:15:55 4.6 Pacific Ocean – East Northern Mariana Islands Marasu There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 10:17:54 4.6 Pacific Ocean Northern Mariana Islands Marasu There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 10:16:17 2.5 Europe Greece Ampelos VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 10:16:36 4.5 Asia Kazakhstan Keytyn VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 10:16:57 2.3 Asia Turkey Kavustuk There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 10:17:16 3.4 Europe Greece Kontaiika VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 09:00:46 2.3 North America United States Alaska Beluga There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 09:15:30 2.2 Europe Italy San Biagio VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 21:11:09 2.2 North America United States Alaska Amchitka VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 09:15:48 2.7 Asia Turkey Kargalik There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 08:20:40 2.2 North America United States California Templeton VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 There are nuclear facilities nearby the epicenter. USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 07:50:36 2.5 Middle America Mexico Estado de Baja California Tule Check There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 08:15:34 2.5 Europe Italy La Campa VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 08:15:55 2.2 Europe Italy Casa Nuova VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 08:16:17 2.5 Europe Greece Agridhion VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 11:21:16 4.7 Indonesian Archipelago Indonesia Garunggarung There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 07:15:28 4.9 Indonesian Archipelago Indonesia Garunggarung VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 06:15:24 4.3 Europe Italy Ca Vecchia VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 06:25:35 2.9 Caribean Puerto Rico Aguacate VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 06:15:45 2.8 Asia Turkey Taskoy VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 06:16:04 2.1 Europe Italy Casa Alta VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 05:10:48 2.3 Europe Italy Vallacquosa VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 05:11:09 2.4 Europe Italy Vigarano Mainarda VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 04:45:31 5.0 Solomon Islands Western Province Apaora VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 05:11:33 5.1 Pacific Ocean – Middle Solomon Islands Apaora VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 05:11:54 2.2 Europe Italy Alberica VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 04:10:28 3.4 Europe France Loubert VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. There are nuclear facilities nearby the epicenter. EMSC Details
06.06.2012 03:35:31 3.0 North America United States California Sperry VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 06:16:29 2.3 Asia Turkey Karaca VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 06:16:55 2.2 Asia Turkey Ovacik VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 04:10:52 5.7 Asia Taiwan Shan-fu-ts’un There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 03:25:59 5.7 Asia Taiwan T’ai-wan Sheng Shan-fu-ts’un There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 03:10:33 2.9 Europe Italy Castello del Lago There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 06:35:28 2.3 North America Canada British Columbia Princeton VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 02:10:30 2.1 Europe Switzerland Visse VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. There are nuclear facilities nearby the epicenter. EMSC Details
06.06.2012 03:10:54 2.0 Europe Italy La Collevata VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 03:11:15 2.4 Asia Turkey Bektasli VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 02:13:24 2.7 North America United States California Lonoak VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 02:00:30 2.2 North America United States California Glenbrook There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 02:00:51 3.1 North America United States Alaska Jakolof Bay VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 02:10:51 2.2 Europe Italy San Biagio VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 02:11:11 3.5 Europe Greece Ydroussa VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 01:45:27 5.0 Pacific Ocean – West Vanuatu Tafea Province Navolou There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 02:11:32 5.0 Pacific Ocean – West Vanuatu Navolou There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 01:36:13 4.7 Atlantic Ocean South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands Grytviken There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 02:11:53 4.7 Atlantic Ocean – North South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands Grytviken There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 02:12:16 2.5 Europe Italy La Pettenella VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 01:30:56 4.5 Asia Russia Sakhalinskaya Oblast’ Sarychevo There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 02:12:36 4.5 Europe Russia Sarychevo There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 01:10:37 2.2 North America United States Nevada Sloan VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 02:12:57 3.2 Europe Greece Agioi Theodori VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 01:00:32 2.4 North America United States California Toomey There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 01:05:31 2.6 Europe Italy Casa Castellana VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 00:55:29 2.0 North America United States Alaska Usibelli There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
06.06.2012 01:05:51 2.4 Asia Turkey Kucukkagdaric VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 01:06:13 2.2 Europe Italy Il Motto VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 01:06:34 2.8 Asia Turkey Marmaraereglisi VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 00:05:24 2.7 Europe Italy Casa Castellana VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 00:05:45 2.5 Europe Italy Ravarino VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 00:06:12 2.6 Europe Greece Ano Kotsanopoulon VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 00:06:32 3.6 Middle-East Iran Tang-e Kur VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 00:06:50 2.4 Europe Italy Melara VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 01:06:53 2.6 Europe Greece Ampelos VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 00:07:09 2.1 Europe Italy Il Motto VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 00:07:30 3.9 Europe Greece Kato Kotsanopoulon VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 00:07:50 2.3 Europe Greece Vrysai VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 00:08:16 2.8 Europe Greece Sourides VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 00:08:37 2.7 Europe Greece Kontaiika VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
05.06.2012 22:51:00 2.3 North America United States Hawaii Volcano There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
05.06.2012 22:51:22 2.7 North America United States Hawaii Volcano There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
05.06.2012 22:45:40 2.4 North America United States Hawaii Volcano There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
05.06.2012 23:05:23 2.7 Europe Greece Neon Karlovasion VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
05.06.2012 22:46:00 2.5 North America United States California Hacketsville VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
05.06.2012 22:35:40 2.0 North America United States Alaska Skwentna There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
05.06.2012 23:11:01 2.9 Middle America Mexico Estado de Baja California Canon de Guadalupe There are volcano(s) nearby the epicenter. There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details
05.06.2012 23:05:49 2.0 Asia Turkey Rahimler VulkĂĄn 0 There are airport(s) nearby the epicenter. VulkĂĄn 0 EMSC Details
06.06.2012 00:30:43 2.6 North America United States California Capetown VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 VulkĂĄn 0 USGS-RSOE Details

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Earthquake sways tall buildings in Indonesia’s capital but causes no damage or tsunami

  • THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

JAKARTA, Indonesia — A strong earthquake swayed tall buildings in Indonesia’s capital Monday afternoon but caused no tsunami or apparent damage.

Office workers said the swaying was felt for about 10 seconds in high-rise buildings around the city of 9 million people. Even two-story homes shook strongly.

No damage or casualties have been reported. Earthquakes occur frequently across the sprawling archipelago nation, but it is uncommon for tremors to be felt in Jakarta.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the 5.9-magnitude quake hit in the Indian Ocean 100 kilometers (62 miles) southwest of Sukabumi, a town in West Java province. It was about 171 kilometers (106 miles) from Jakarta and 67 kilometers (41 miles) beneath the ocean floor.

Indonesia’s Meteorology and Geophysics Agency had the magnitude at 6.1. Slight discrepancies are common in the initial measurements.

Indonesia is located on the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” an arc of volcanos and seismic faults encircling the Pacific Basin.

A giant 9.1-magnitude quake off the country on Dec. 26, 2004, triggered a tsunami in the Indian Ocean that killed 230,000 people, half of them in Indonesia’s westernmost province of Aceh.

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Volcanic Activity

Manum Island’s volcano erupting

A new series of eruptions have begun on Manam Island off Madang in Papua New Guinea, with warnings to residents to take precautions.

Manum Island’s volcano erupting

The volcano is one of the most active in PNG claiming several lives over the last decade.

Vents on the volcano are glowing at nights and explosions in the craters can be heard more than 15 kilometres away.

Ima Itakarai, the assistant director of the Rabaul Volcanology Observatory says it’s possibility of a major explosion cannot be ruled out, but it’s not imminent.

Presenter: Brian Abbott

Speaker:Ima Itakarai, the assistant director of the Rabaul Volcanology Observatory in PNG

  Volcano Activity Report [Last 30 days]
Log date Location Name of Volcano Status Volcano Number Volcano type Last erupt. Upd. Details
05.06.2012 08:21 AM Bismarck Sea, Papua New Guinea Manam Volcano Volcano Activity 0501-04= Submarine volcano ? No. 0 Details

Volcano Activity in Papua New Guinea on Tuesday, 05 June, 2012 at 08:21 (08:21 AM) UTC.

Base data
EDIS Number: VA-20120605-35330-PNG
Event type: Volcano Activity
Date/Time: Tuesday, 05 June, 2012 at 08:21 (08:21 AM) UTC
Last update:
Cause of event:
Damage level: Minor Damage level
Geographic information
Continent: Indonesian Archipelago
Country: Papua New Guinea
County / State: Bismarck Sea
Area: Manam Volcano
City:
Coordinate: S 4° 4.761, E 145° 2.305
Number of affected people / Humanities loss
Foreign people: Affected is unknown.
Dead person(s):
Injured person(s):
Missing person(s):
Evacuated person(s):
Affected person(s):

Volcano Activity in Papua New Guinea on Tuesday, 05 June, 2012 at 08:21 (08:21 AM) UTC.

Description
Residents living around Manam Island off Madang in Papua New Guinea have been warned to take precautions after volcanic eruptions on the island. Manam is one of PNG’s most active volcanos and recent explosions in the craters have been heard 15 kilometres away. Ima Itakarai from Rabaul’s Volcanology Observatory says he doesn’t believe a major eruption is imminent, but it cannot be ruled out. “There has been an ongoing mild eruptive activity happening at one of the craters on the side of Manam,” he said. “That activity has consisted of occasional plumes, coming up every now and then, with a bright glow at night.”

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Epidemic Hazards / Diseases

Six people in intensive care after outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease

STV 

Six people are in hospital and a further four are receiving medical attention after an outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease in Edinburgh.

NHS Lothian is investigating four confirmed and four suspected cases of the Legionella bacteria in the Gorgie, Dalry, and Saughton areas of the capital.

Six men are being treated in hospitals throughout Lothian. Five of the men are in intensive care units while the sixth is in a high dependency unit.

A further four cases, as yet unconfirmed, are also being probed.

All ten cases are linked geographically to the Dalry, Gorgie and Saughton areas of Edinburgh.

The source of the outbreak is being investigated by officials from Edinburgh Council’s Environmental Health Department and the Health and Safety Executive who are concentrating on the south-west Edinburgh area.

Steps are being taken to treat cooling towers in the area as a precaution until the source is located.

Dona Milne, acting director of Public Health and Health Policy for NHS Lothian, said: “We have four confirmed cases of Legionnaires’ disease which all seem to come from the same point source in the South West of Edinburgh.

“Anybody who develops symptoms of Legionnaires’ disease should contact NHS 24 immediately or go to their GP.

“The safety of the public is our number one priority and we would urge people to look out for the symptoms of this disease.”

Duncan McCormick, consultant in public health for NHS Lothian said: “Investigations into the possible source of this outbreak are on-going and we continue to urge anyone who develops symptoms of Legionnaires disease to contact NHS 24 or go to their GP.”

The cases currently under investigation arose between May 28 and Monday, June 4. All GP surgeries in Lothian are open on Monday but some will be closed on Tuesday for the Jubilee holiday.

Legionella bacteria is commonly found in sources of water, such as rivers and lakes but can also enter artificial supply systems such as air conditioning devices, hot and cold water facilities, and cooling towers. The bacteria have the potential to spread rapidly once they have entered a water system.

Legionnaires’ disease is contracted by breathing in small droplets of contaminated water. The condition is not contagious and cannot be spread directly from person to person.

Symptoms usually begin within three to six days of contraction. They often originate as mild headaches and muscular pain before escalating to more severe symptoms including high fever, intense muscle pain, and chills. Once the bacteria infect the lungs, the sufferer will experience a persistent cough – dry at first but later bringing up mucus and even blood – shortness of breath, and chest pains.

There is also a risk of nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, and loss of appetite, while around half of those who contract Legionnaires’ disease will also suffer changes to their mental state, such as confusion.

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Nuclear

Climate change expert: Australia will go nuclear by 2030

 

Climate change expert: Australia will go nuclear by 2030

Enlarge

A nuclear power plant in Germany. Photo by iStock.

A University of Adelaide scientist believes it is inevitable that Australia will become a user of the world’s most advanced nuclear power technology, if the country is serious about cutting carbon emissions.

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Professor Barry Brook, Director of at the University of Adelaide’s Environment Institute, says Australia will eventually turn to nuclear power to meet our sustainable needs – and when we do, we will choose to focus on next-generation nuclear technology that provides major safety, waste and cost benefits.

Speaking on the eve of World Environment Day (5 June), Professor Brook says: “Coal, oil, and natural gas are the main cause of recent global warming, and these fossil fuels must be completely replaced with clean in the coming decades if serious are to be avoided.

“One particularly attractive sustainable nuclear technology for Australia is the Integral Fast Reactor (IFR). Although the scientific community has known about the benefits of IFR-type designs for many years, there are currently none in commercial operation because the energy utilities are typically too risk averse to ‘bet on’ new technologies. This is a wasted opportunity for Australia and for the rest of the world.

“Integral Fast Reactors are much more efficient at extracting energy from uranium, can use existing nuclear waste for fuel, produce far smaller volumes of waste that does not require long-term geological isolation, and can be operated at low cost and high reliability. They are also inherently safer than past nuclear reactors due to passive systems based on the laws of physics,” Professor Brook says.

“In order to re-start the nuclear power debate in Australia, it is best to have a solution that overcomes as many public objections as possible: safety, constraints on uranium supplies, long-lived waste, cost, and proliferation. The IFR technology offers a vast improvement in all of these areas.”

Professor Brook’s forecast timeline for nuclear power in Australia:

2020 – Public and political debate heightens as need for reliable low-carbon electricity mounts
2025 – First reactor contracts issued, Small Modular Reactors (SMR) built in outback mining sites
2030 – 3 GWe (gigawatt electrical) of connects to national electricity grid
2040 – Up to 5 GWe of new capacity being installed per year
2050 – A total of 30-50 GWe installed, located at a dozen ‘energy park’ sites and various remote areas
2100 – >100 GWe installed for total energy displacement, including replacing oil and gas needs

Professor Brook, a professional ecologist and conservation biologist, has also built an international reputation as a commentator on and the potential benefit of nuclear fission in curbing climate change.

He was the first Australian appointed to the international selection committee of the Global Energy Prize. This month he will be a guest at the prize ceremony in Saint Petersburg, where Russian President Vladimir Putin will present the $1.2 million prize to the 2012 laureates.

Provided by University of Adelaide

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Climate Change

Geoengineering: A whiter sky

by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX)


There are several larger environmental implications to the group’s findings, too. Because plants grow more efficiently under diffuse light conditions such as this, global photosynthetic activity could increase, pulling more of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere.

One idea for fighting global warming is to increase the amount of aerosols in the atmosphere, scattering incoming solar energy away from the Earth’s surface. But scientists theorize that this solar geoengineering could have a side effect of whitening the sky during the day.

New research from Carnegie’s Ben Kravitz and Ken Caldeira indicates that blocking 2% of the sun’s light would make the sky three-to-five times brighter, as well as whiter. Their work is published in Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union.

Carbon dioxide emissions from the burning of coal, oil, and gas have been increasing over the past decades, causing the Earth to get hotter and hotter. Large volcanic eruptions cool the planet by creating lots of small particles in the stratosphere, but the particles fall out within a couple of years, and the planet heats back up.

The idea behind solar geoengineering is to constantly replenish a layer of small particles in the stratosphere, mimicking this volcanic aftermath and scattering sunlight back to space.

Using advanced models, Kravitz and Caldeira-along with Douglas MacMartin from the California Institute of Technology-examined changes to sky color and brightness from using sulfate-based aerosols in this way. They found that, depending on the size of the particles, the sky would whiten during the day and sunsets would have afterglows.

Their models predict that the sky would still be blue, but it would be a lighter shade than what most people are used to looking at now. The research team’s work shows that skies everywhere could look like those over urban areas in a world with this type of geoengineering taking place. In urban areas, the sky often looks hazy and white.

“These results give people one more thing to consider before deciding whether we really want to go down this road,” Kravitz said. “Although our study did not address the potential psychological impact of these changes to the sky, they are important to consider as well.”

There are several larger environmental implications to the group’s findings, too. Because plants grow more efficiently under diffuse light conditions such as this, global photosynthetic activity could increase, pulling more of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere.

On the other hand, the effectiveness of solar power could be diminished, as less sunlight would reach solar-power generators.

“I hope that we never get to the point where people feel the need to spray aerosols in the sky to offset rampant global warming,” Caldeira said. “This is one study where I am not eager to have our predictions proven right by a global stratospheric aerosol layer in the real world.”

Related Links
Carnegie Institution
Climate Science News – Modeling, Mitigation Adaptation
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Solar Activity

2MIN News June5: NASA Sats, Disaster Update, Spaceweather

Published on Jun 5, 2012 by

TODAYS LINKS
Botswana Flooding: http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=78166
G7: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/g7-hold-emergency-eurozone-talks-172150504.html
NASA Satellites: http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/nasa-gets-two-military-…
Sweden Cold: http://phys.org/news/2012-06-stockholm-braves-coldest-june-weather.html

REPEAT LINKS
Spaceweather: http://spaceweather.com/ [Look on the left at the X-ray Flux and Solar Wind Speed/Density]

HAARP: http://www.haarp.alaska.edu/haarp/data.html [Click online data, and have a little fun]

SDO: http://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/data/ [Place to find Solar Images and Videos - as seen from earth]

SOHO: http://sohodata.nascom.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/soho_movie_theater [SOHO; Lasco and EIT - as seen from earth]

Stereo: http://stereo.gsfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/images [Stereo; Cor, EUVI, HI - as seen from the side]

SunAEON:http://www.sunaeon.com/#/solarsystem/ [Just click it... trust me]

SOLARIMG: http://solarimg.org/artis/ [All purpose data viewing site]

iSWA: http://iswa.gsfc.nasa.gov/iswa/iSWA.html [Free Application; for advanced sun watchers]

NOAA ENLIL SPIRAL: http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/wsa-enlil/cme-based/ [CME Evolution]

RSOE: http://hisz.rsoe.hu/alertmap/index2.php [That cool alert map I use]

LISS: http://earthquake.usgs.gov/monitoring/operations/heliplots_gsn.php

Gamma Ray Bursts: http://grb.sonoma.edu/ [Really? You can't figure out what this one is for?]

BARTOL Cosmic Rays: http://neutronm.bartol.udel.edu//spaceweather/welcome.html [Top left box, look for BIG blue circles]

TORCON: http://www.weather.com/news/tornado-torcon-index [Tornado Forecast for the day]

GOES Weather: http://rsd.gsfc.nasa.gov/goes/ [Clouds over America]

INTELLICAST: http://www.intellicast.com/ [Weather site used by many youtubers]

NASA News: http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/

PHYSORG: http://phys.org/ [GREAT News Site!]

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Space

Spooky glowing asteroid spotted in our solar system

Eddie Wrenn
The Daily Mail, UK

The asteroid – the co-ordinates of which are available below – was spotted by user planetkrejci in a video posted three days ago

A user has found a ‘huge asteroid’ while scanning the virtual heavens using Googly Sky.

Youtube user planetkrejci, who has investigated other anomalies on NASA pictures, claims the object – found using the Google website which transports the heavens to desktop computers and smartphones – is an asteroid which is heading towards Earth.

He says the asteroid – which, if real, has not been spotted by other scientists or astronomers – has only appeared recently on Google Sky, which receives updated images every few months.

Close-up: The object certainly looks like an asteroid – which seems to be spotted with green flecks

Announcing his find on YouTube, he says the black object, mottled with green spots, is so clear that it must be within the solar system.

The user had been exploring the region a few months earlier, and had ‘bookmarked’ a spot just to the left of the asteroid – so he is certain the object was not there previously.

There are other explanations – this could be a simple technical glitch, either on Google Sky’s end or within the original photograph.

The earthbound Google Maps regularly has glitches where pictures have been incorrectly sewn together.

In context: The apparent clarity of the ‘asteroid’ implies it is close, certainly within our solar system

One thing that planekrejci does not substantiate is his claim that the object is moving towards the Earth, as it is not apparent how this calculation could be obtained without more information than the image provides.

However, if planetkrejci has found a new object, it will be quite an achievement for an earth-bound Internet user to discover a new object in our solar system before NASA or other observatories.

The object is easy to find on Google Sky, by typing in the co-ordinates 5h 11m 33.74s -12 50′ 30.09″ – although conspiracy theorists might read something into the fact that the search function on Google Sky is currently down…

Team Setting Up Strategy For Hazardous NEOs

Lee Rannals
RedOrbit

NEOs

© ESA/Space Situational Awareness – Near Earth Objects, P. Carrill
To deal with potentially hazardous Near Earth Objects (NEOs) that could strike the Earth, there is need to establish an effective international communications strategy. The Near Earth Object Media/Risk Communications Working Group Report has been issued by Secure World Foundation.

Scientists have gathered with other experts to create a strategy for potentially hazardous Near earth Objects (NEOs).Nearly 40 scientists, reporters, risk communications specialists, and Secure World Foundation staff participated in a meeting in November last year to come up with a strategy for dealing with hazardous NEOs.

The report created by the team will be presented at the United Nations Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS) and its Action Team-14 on NEOs during the 55th session of the UN COPUOS being held in Vienna, Austria.

During the meeting, the group explored in detail the views of risk communication experts and experienced science journalists on the development of a successful communications strategy.

“A lot of attention is focused on the catastrophic damage a large asteroid could do if it collided with Earth,” Dr. Michael Simpson, Executive Director of Secure World Foundation, said in a press release. “This report focuses on how to prevent the even greater damage we could cause ourselves by mis-communicating or failing to work together on a common response to the threat.”

He said the threat of an impact of a large asteroid could be what shows us that our future depends on working together.

“In technical organizations, communications with the public are often treated more as an afterthought than a critical mission element,” Dr. Ray Williamson, SWF Senior Advisor, said in a press release. “This report emphasizes how important clear, effective, and accurate assessments to the public of the danger posed by a threatening Near Earth Object are to the ultimate goal of protecting human life and property.”

The group determined that there is a need to establish an effective international communications strategy for potentially hazardous NEOs by using anything from the television to the Internet.

They said that general education should include information about NEOs and their place in our solar system, the nature of the potential threat, and specific information related to warnings of potentially hazardous NEO.

The experts determined that a support group should be created for hazardous NEOs, complete with analysts, planners, scientists, psychologists, emergency management experts and other functional experts.

Historic Venus Transit – Next Transit 2117

Space Weather

No one reading this will still be alive the next time Venus crosses the sun in 2117. That makes today special. On June 5th at 3:09 pm PDT, the second planet begins its historic 7-hour transit of the solar disk. Observers on parts of all seven continents (map) will witness something like this:

© David Finlay of Sydney, Australia (June 8, 2004)

The timing favors observers in the mid-Pacific where the sun is high overhead during the crossing. In the USA, the transit will be at its best around sunset. Creative photographers will have a field day imaging the swollen red sun “punctured” by the circular disk of Venus.

Stay tuned to Spaceweather.com’s realtime gallery for constantly updated images of the transit. Another photo-stream of interest comes from the International Space Station where Don Pettit will be the first man in history to photograph a Venus transit from space. There are also many live webcasts of the transit from locations around the world: #1, #2, #3, #4. (Submit more webcast links here.)

Observing Tip: Do not stare at the sun. Venus covers too little of the solar disk to block the blinding glare. Instead, use some type of projection technique or a solar filter. A #14 welder’s glass is a good choice. Many astronomy clubs will have solar telescopes set up to observe the event; contact your local club for details.

Transit of Venus Web Links:

BEFORE THE TRANSIT: As Venus approaches the sun, it turns its nightside toward Earth. This turning transforms Venus into a rarely-seen thin ring of light. Lorenzo Comolli photographed the phenomenon from Tradate, Italy, on June 4th:

© Lorenzo Comolli

The effect is caused by particles in upper layers of Venus’s atmosphere which scatter sunlight around the circumference of the planet. The ring is very difficult to observe, and often only black-belt astrophotographers are able to record the phenomenon.

“This picture was taken while Venus was a scant 2°17′ from the sun’s center, and it was very difficult to obtain due to the extreme proximity of the solar limb,” says Comolli. “Extreme care was due to avoid the sun light entering the telescope. The extension of the crescent to form a nearly complete ring was remarkable on June 4, while nearly invisible on June 2. Another interesting observation is the limb brightening in Venus’s southern hemisphere between 50° to 70° latitude. For confirmation, I obtained a second image using a W25 filter (red) that shows the presence of the brightening in the same way.”

More images: from Tobias Kampschulte of Gennadi, Rhodes, Greece; from Steve Miller of Lake Havasu City, Arizona: from Antonios Pantelidis of Florina, Greece; from Rob of Liverpool, UK; from Elias Chasiotis of Markopoulo, Greece; from Pavol Rapavy of Observatory Rimavska Sobota, Slovakia; from Ernie Mastroianni of Milwaukee, Wisconsin; from Joe Mcbride of Grand Rapids, Michigan

  Earth approaching objects (objects that are known in the next 30 days)

Object Name Apporach Date Left AU Distance LD Distance Estimated Diameter* Relative Velocity
(2009 LE) 06th June 2012 0 day(s) 0.1150 44.8 50 m – 110 m 13.61 km/s 48996 km/h
(2006 SG7) 06th June 2012 0 day(s) 0.0857 33.4 71 m – 160 m 16.47 km/s 59292 km/h
(2001 LB) 07th June 2012 1 day(s) 0.0729 28.4 200 m – 450 m 11.56 km/s 41616 km/h
(2012 JU11) 09th June 2012 3 day(s) 0.0736 28.6 27 m – 60 m 3.80 km/s 13680 km/h
(2012 GX11) 10th June 2012 4 day(s) 0.1556 60.5 170 m – 380 m 6.38 km/s 22968 km/h
(2012 KM11) 14th June 2012 8 day(s) 0.0942 36.7 30 m – 67 m 5.92 km/s 21312 km/h
(2012 HN40) 15th June 2012 9 day(s) 0.1182 46.0 230 m – 510 m 13.79 km/s 49644 km/h
(2002 AC) 16th June 2012 10 day(s) 0.1598 62.2 740 m – 1.7 km 26.71 km/s 96156 km/h
137120 (1999 BJ8) 16th June 2012 10 day(s) 0.1769 68.8 670 m – 1.5 km 14.88 km/s 53568 km/h
(2011 KR12) 19th June 2012 13 day(s) 0.1318 51.3 140 m – 310 m 10.10 km/s 36360 km/h
(2004 HB39) 20th June 2012 14 day(s) 0.1605 62.5 77 m – 170 m 8.88 km/s 31968 km/h
(2008 CE119) 21st June 2012 15 day(s) 0.1811 70.5 21 m – 46 m 3.22 km/s 11592 km/h
308242 (2005 GO21) 21st June 2012 15 day(s) 0.0440 17.1 1.4 km – 3.1 km 13.27 km/s 47772 km/h
(2011 AH5) 25th June 2012 19 day(s) 0.1670 65.0 17 m – 39 m 5.84 km/s 21024 km/h
(2012 FA14) 25th June 2012 19 day(s) 0.0322 12.5 75 m – 170 m 5.28 km/s 19008 km/h
(2004 YG1) 25th June 2012 19 day(s) 0.0890 34.7 140 m – 310 m 11.34 km/s 40824 km/h
(2010 AF3) 25th June 2012 19 day(s) 0.1190 46.3 16 m – 36 m 6.54 km/s 23544 km/h
(2008 YT30) 26th June 2012 20 day(s) 0.0715 27.8 370 m – 820 m 10.70 km/s 38520 km/h
(2010 NY65) 27th June 2012 21 day(s) 0.1023 39.8 120 m – 270 m 15.09 km/s 54324 km/h
(2008 WM64) 28th June 2012 22 day(s) 0.1449 56.4 200 m – 440 m 17.31 km/s 62316 km/h
(2010 CD55) 28th June 2012 22 day(s) 0.1975 76.8 64 m – 140 m 6.33 km/s 22788 km/h
(2004 CL) 30th June 2012 24 day(s) 0.1113 43.3 220 m – 480 m 20.75 km/s 74700 km/h
(2008 YQ2) 03rd July 2012 27 day(s) 0.1057 41.1 29 m – 65 m 15.60 km/s 56160 km/h
1 AU = ~150 million kilometers,1 LD = Lunar Distance = ~384,000 kilometers Source: NASA-NEO

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Biological Hazards / Wildlife

Authorities move to spray area in India with insecticides to allay spider panic

1 of 500 photos

Professor Ratul Rajkhowa holds a dead spider that was the alleged species that killed two people in north-eastern India

  1. Professor Ratul Rajkhowa of the Department of Zoology of Cotton College, holds a dead spider that was the alleged species that killed two people in the north-eastern Indian state of Assam, in the department’s laboratory in Guwahati. Panicked villagers in a remote Indian state complained of an invasion of giant venomous spiders that resemble tarantulas but are unknown to local specialists. (AFP Photo/)

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Articles of Interest

Stay or go? Some towns are eyeing retreat from sea

Associated Press
Alicia Chang

parking lot at Ocean Beach is shown in San Francisco

© AP Photo/Jeff Chiu
In this photo from Thursday, May 24, 2012, the parking lot at Ocean Beach is shown in San Francisco. In San Francisco, officials are mulling a significant retreat on its western flank, where the Great Highway is under assault from the Pacific Ocean. Right now, a beach parking lot that abuts the highway is crumbing into the sea just across the highway from the San Francisco Zoo.

Los Angeles, California – Years of ferocious storms have threatened to gnaw away the western tip of a popular beachfront park two hours drive north of Los Angeles. Instead of building a 500-foot-long wooden defense next to the pier to tame the tide, the latest thinking is to flee.

Work is under way to gauge the toll of ripping up parking lots on the highly eroded west end of Goleta Beach County Park and moving a scenic bike path and buried utility lines inland away from lapping waves.

Up and down the California coast, some communities are deciding it’s not worth trying to wall off the encroaching ocean. Until recently, the thought of bowing to nature was almost unheard of.

But after futile attempts to curb coastal erosion – a problem expected to grow worse with rising seas fueled by global warming – there is growing acknowledgment that the sea is relentless and any line drawn in the sand is likely to eventually wash over.

“I like to think of it as getting out of the way gracefully,” said David Revell, a senior coastal scientist at ESA PWA, a San Francisco-based environmental consulting firm involved in Goleta and other planned retreat projects.

The issue of whether to stay or flee is being confronted around the globe. Places experimenting with retreat have adopted various strategies. In Britain, for example, several sites along the Essex coast have deliberately breached seawalls to create salt marshes, which act as a natural barrier to flooding.

In the U.S., the starkest example can be found in Alaska, where entire villages have been forced to move to higher ground or are thinking about it in the face of melting sea ice. Hawaii’s famous beaches are slowly shrinking and some scientists think it’s a matter of time before the state has to explore whether to move back development.

Several states along the Atlantic coast have adopted policies meant to keep a distance from the ocean. They include no-build zones, setbacks or rolling easements that allow development but with a caveat. As the sea advances, homeowners promise not to build seawalls and must either shift inland or let go.

Over the past half-century, the weapon of choice against a shrinking shoreline has been building a seawall or other defense. Roughly 10 percent of California’s 1,100-mile coast is armored. In Southern California, where development is sometimes built steps from the ocean, a third of the shore is dotted with man-made barriers.

While such buffers may protect the base of cliffs, and the land and property behind them, they often exacerbate the problem by scouring beaches, making them narrower or even causing them to disappear.

This is one reason state coastal regulators in 2009 turned down a proposal by Santa Barbara County to fortify an eroding section of Goleta Beach park lashed by periodic storms. A rock wall was built as a temporary stopgap, but a long-term solution was needed. After the state rejected the construction of another hard structure, park officials, working with environmentalists, came up with a Plan B: Move gas, water and sewer lines out of the risk zone. Relocate a bike path to higher ground. Demolish 150 parking spaces and allow the acre of asphalt to be reclaimed by the beach.

Last month, the county Board of Supervisors gave the go-ahead for an environmental review. Work could begin next year if the $4 million plan passes other regulatory hurdles.

Around California, relocation of coastal infrastructure and development is being pushed by the Surfrider Foundation and other environmental groups. But the efforts also are being driven by increased awareness of climate change. Sea level has risen by 7 inches over the last century in California. By 2050, it’s projected to rise between 12 to 18 inches.

San Francisco is mulling a significant retreat on its western flank where the scenic Great Highway is under assault from the Pacific. Erosion has inched closer to the roadway each year, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers continues girding segments with broken-up rock, a costly temporary fix that has had limited success.

The San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association favors mixing retreat with coastal armoring. City, state and federal agencies are considering the group’s plan, which calls for moving segments of the Great Highway inland and allowing sand dunes to reclaim some of the paved-over space. The group also wants a temporary seawall to protect a sewer tunnel that’s part of a multi-billion dollar sewage and storm water system expected to be affected by sea level rise while money is raised to relocate it in about 50 years.

South of San Francisco, the beach town of Pacifica has been an early adopter of planned retreat as it battles constant erosion. The city in 2002 purchased some homes that were at risk of falling into the sea and demolished them.

This summer, the city of Ventura is pressing ahead with its $4.5 million retreat. Last year, crews removed a disintegrating oceanfront bike path at Surfer’s Point, a popular surfing spot, and built a new one farther inland. The beach was widened and cobblestone was put down.

Mark Gold, associate director at UCLA’s Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, commended local efforts but thinks a large-scale approach is needed.

“It’s definitely something that needs to be taken a lot more seriously,” Gold said.

So far, most of the scaling back in California has occurred on public land. It’s a harder sell for private property owners to take the same action unless beachfront homes are on the verge of being submerged. The state, however, has a built-in retreat: People who want to build new oceanside construction agree not to build a seawall if their homes become threatened in the future.

Charles Lester, executive director of the California Coastal Commission, said planned retreat is an attractive option in theory, but it’s hard to execute in densely populated coastlines where there may not be room to move back. Still, he said it’s a tool worth using where possible.

Just don’t call it surrender.

“I don’t think it’s giving up. It’s about making a smart, sustainable decision,” said Gary Griggs, who studies coastal erosion at University of California, Santa Cruz.

1 06.06.2012 Explosion Bulgaria Obshtina Sliven, Sliven [Unnamed ammunition depot] Damage level Details

Explosion in Bulgaria on Tuesday, 05 June, 2012 at 19:16 (07:16 PM) UTC.

Description
All residents of the Bulgarian village of Gorno Alexandrovo have been urged to leave their homes over the incident in which an ammunition depot exploded near the city of Sliven in Southeastern Bulgaria Tuesday afternoon. The blasts at the ammo site near the Petolachkata road junction close to Sliven occurred at 2:40 pm on Tuesday, injuring at least 7 people, two of them critically. The facility in question is the property of a Sofia-based firm, Bereta Trading, which uses it to dismantle munitions – including shells from the Chelopechene military depot near Sofia that exploded in July 2008. As the explosions at the Bereta Trading depot continued into the evening, the authorities moved to evacuate the 630 residents of Gorno Alexandrovo, while also considering the evacuation of another nearby village, Lozenets. Sliven Mayor Kolyo Milev, who is a former military officer, has announced that the Sliven Municipality has immediately activated its plan for reaction in disaster situations. He has promised the villagers’ homes are already guarded by local police to protect them from looters. “Danger could grow greater if there are larger-scale secondary explosions but for the time being this is unlikely,” the Sliven Mayor said, as cited by Focus. According to Prof. Nikolay Miloshev, Director of the Geophysics Institute at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, the blasts near Sliven caused an earthquake with a magnitude of 1.5 on the Richter Scale. His statement came early Tuesday night, after earlier the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences announced it had registered no earthquake that might have caused the blasts. Meanwhile, the blasts did cause panic among the local population, with the people mistaking the explosions for an earthquake in the wake of the 5.8-6.0-magnitude earthquake that jolted Sofia and Western Bulgaria on May 22, 2012.

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[In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit, for research and/or educational purposes. This constitutes 'FAIR USE' of any such copyrighted material.]

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Food Safety

Garden Visitor Can Be Deadly If Eaten

Poison hemlock is easily mistaken for edible plants

In the form of a beguiling tall stranger, death lurked in my garden last year.
This spring, it reappeared, but this time much closer to the house.  I only discovered its identity when, by chance, I bumped into a photo of this stranger while reading some news about the Pacific Northwest on the Internet. Accompanying the photo was a story about how in Washington State it was the suspect in one death and the known culprit in a near-death incident that sent another victim to the emergency room.
The photo was of a fernlike plant with features that could be mistaken for a wild carrot, parsnip, or even parsley.  But this was none other than poison hemlock, a cousin to the water hemlock, which was served in a tea to political prisoners in Greece as an earlier form of capital punishment. Socrates himself, suffered the same fate in 399 BC, when he was tried and convicted of corrupting youth and failing to acknowledge the gods that the city of Athens had deemed to be deities. Some say his death was a suicide because he could have fled.
Closer to home, in an incident this spring that sent a Bellingham man to the emergency room,  35-year-old David Westerlund found a poison hemlock plant growing in his garden. Not knowing what it was but feeling confident that it must be something good — a carrot, perhaps — he picked it and chopped it up, adding it to some garlic, onions, cabbage, ginger, onions, sea salt and whey to ferment. Six days later, he ate it for lunch.

ARS Highlights Alternatives to Antibiotics for Animal Agriculture

As concerns grow about antibiotic-resistant pathogens in our food, environment, and hospitals, the Agricultural Research Service is trying to figure out the best alternatives for food animal producers, who have long relied on these miracle drugs for combating diseases and boosting feed efficiency.

Though antibiotic resistance is a known consequence of antibiotic use in both humans and animals, agricultural use has come under greater scrutiny in recent years as more consumers take an interest in how their food is produced. According to the most recent estimates, around 80 percent of all antibiotics sold in the United States each year are used in food animal production.

Vitamins, phytonutrients, and probiotics are all being explored as viable alternatives, according to this month’s Agricultural Research magazine. Some of the findings will be presented by ARS researchers at an World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) conference in Paris in September.

“A number of the new technologies have direct applications as medical interventions for human health, but the focus of the symposium is animal production, animal health, and food safety,” said Cyril Gay, the national program leader for animal health at ARS, which is a U.S. Department of Agriculture program based in Beltsville, MD. “The result of this symposium will be an assessment of new technologies for treating and preventing diseases of animals and recommendations that will advance strategies for growth promotion and health in livestock, poultry, and aquaculture.”

At the BARC Animal Parasitic Diseases Laboratory, an ARS lab in Beltsville, avian immunologist Hyun Lillehoj has found that certain food supplements, probiotics, and phytonutrients can be effective in fighting off diseases like coccidiosis, a common parasitic disease. The USDA estimates that coccidiosis costs the domestic industry $600 million annually.

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Lillhoj is now working to apply the same technology to develop ways to treat intestinal bacterial infections caused by Clostridium without using antibiotics, according to ARS. As part of her research, Lillhoj is working on gaining a better understanding of poultry genetics.”My work over the last 27 years at ARS has involved trying to figure out how to grow poultry without using drugs and enhance their innate immunity,” Lillehoj told Agricultural Research. “One of those strategies is genetic improvement. We’ve been working to identify genetic markers associated with enhanced innate immunity to enteric pathogens.”

Groups Ask FDA for Decision on GE Fish

The groups Earthjustice, the Ocean Conservancy, Friends of the Earth, the Center for Food Safety, and Food & Water Watch have sent a letter to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) asking for a response to a petition they filed a year ago. The petition asked the FDA to complete an environmental impact statement on the risks associated with genetically engineered (GE) fish.

The petition was sent to the agency a year ago in response to an application filed in 2010 by AquaBounty Technologies, which wants to sell GE salmon. The FDA received more than 400,000 comments in opposition to this plan. The groups want the FDA to reach a decision on GE fish and to be more transparent in their decision-making process.

Last month, Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) proposed an amendment to the United States Senate asking that the FDA conduct “environment and economic impact studies of the first genetically engineered animal in the human food supply.” It failed by a vote of 46 to 50.

Many genetically engineered or genetically modified plants have been approved since 1996, including canola (rapeseed), corn, sugar beets, rice, tomatoes, squash, and bell peppers. Many of these plants are modified to increase resistance to insecticides and herbicides.

Critics of these organisms say that there are several issues about genetic engineering that are not being addressed:

Read Full Article Here

 

 

DeCoster Knew About Contamination for Months Before Recall

Iowa State University’s government-funded Veterinary Diagnostics Laboratory knew that laying eggs produced by DeCoster Farms were likely contaminated with Salmonella months before more than half a billion eggs from its facility were recalled two years ago.
ISU’s lab, employing 125 people with a $3.2 million budget funded annually by Iowa taxpayers, provided “third-party quality assured diagnostic services” for Austin “Jack” DeCoster’s egg empire and discovered the problem long before the August 2010 recall.

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This disclosure is the latest information to fall out of the NuCal Foods lawsuit against DeCoster.   The California cooperative purchased millions of the contaminated eggs from DeCoster Farms, causing it to be subject to lawsuits from its customers.
It was the NuCal litigation that brought to light the fact that DeCoster is the likely target of a federal criminal investigation.  And now the NuCal litigation has brought out the ISU lab results.
ISU did the lab work for DeCoster, finding Salmonella in the manure at several of his Iowa egg-laying barns and in the internal organs of dead hens. The egg producer sought out ISU’s diagnostic services because hens were dying at an unusually high rate.

Reaction Mixed as USDA’s Non-O157 Policy Kicks In

As the U.S. Department of Agriculture began testing for six additional strains of Shiga toxin-producing E. coli beyond E. coli O157:H7 on Monday, Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro (D-CT) praised the move and the American Meat Institute reaffirmed its opposition.

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“The science is clear on the risk that these pathogens present to the health of American
consumers and
today’s implementation is a critical step forward for our food safety system,” DeLauro said in a statement Monday. “I am glad that, because of this expanded testing, Americans will finally be better protected from these deadly pathogens.”
DeLauro, a longtime advocate for stronger food safety regulations, is Ranking Member on the House Labor, Education, Health and Human Services Appropriations Subcommittee.

The American Meat Institute, on the other hand, again voiced opposition to the new policy on Friday. On the AMI’s new blog, Meat Case, executive vice president Jim Hodges questioned whether testing for non-O157 STEC would benefit public health.

FDA Ordered to Reconsider Petitions on Antibiotics

A federal judge ruled this week that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration must reconsider previously denied petitions to ban certain medically important antibiotics used in animal agriculture.

The order comes just a few days after the FDA issued a notice that it will appeal a magistrate judge’s March ruling, which found that the agency unlawfully failed to act on its own 1977 proposal to ban penicillin and two types of tetracycline from animal feed despite evidence of a public health risk.

As part of its defense, the FDA has pointed to its new voluntary guidance promoting the judicious use of antibiotics in food animal production — an approach the agency prefers because it requires less time and fewer resources than withdrawing individual animal drugs — but the court ruled that this approach does not excuse the agency from its duty to review the safety of the drugs and carefully consider the merits of the petitions.

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 ”[T]he Agency has all but made a finding that the subtherapeutic use of antibiotics in food producing animals has not been shown to be safe,” reads the ruling by New York federal judge Theodore Katz. “In the course of this litigation, the Agency has conceded that ‘the phenomenon of antimicrobial resistance exists, [that] antimicrobial resistance poses a threat to public health, [and that] the overuse of antimicrobial drugs in food-producing animals can contribute to the development of antimicrobial resistance.’”
According to the most recent estimates, around 80 percent of all antibiotics sold in the United States – approximately 29 million pounds – are used to promote growth and control disease in food animal production each year.

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Recalls

FDA Revokes Taylor Farms Salad Recall

Initial test results showing E. coli on product were incorrect

Taylor Farms of Salinas, California received welcome news Friday when the U.S. Food and Drug Administration informed the company that the bagged salad it had been asked to recall for potential E. coli contamination was in the clear after all.

On May 30th, a sample of the salad product taken from a restaurant in Florida and analyzed by the Rhode Island Department of Health tested positive for E. coli O157:H7, prompting a recall of bagged salads bearing codes STF137A3, STF137A4, STF138B3 and STF138B4.
But by the middle of the next day, FDA informed the company that the test had returned a false positive result, meaning that E. coli O157:H7 was actually not detected in the product despite initial test results showing the presence of the bacteria.

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“We took the appropriate action based on FDA information, and now we are rescinding [the recall],” said Taylor Farms’ president Alec Leach, according to The Packer.

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Articles of Interest

Before Salmonella Outbreak, Diamond Pet Foods Had History Of Trouble

Before it manufactured tainted dog food that caused a Salmonella outbreak this year that has so far sickened 15 people in the U.S. and one person in Canada,  Diamond Pet Foods, had a history of trouble.

The company is based in Meta, MO and  has operations in Lathrop, CA and  Gaston, SC where most of its problems, including 10 current recalls and the Salmonella outbreak, have originated. However, last week, the  U. S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced that a sample of Diamond Naturals Small Breed Adult Lamb and Rice formula collected from the Meta facility yielded a positive for Salmonella Liverpool, a bacterial strain that is different than the one that caused the outbreak, Salmonella Infantis. FDA officials say further investigations are underway to determine if the outbreak and recall need to be expanded to included illnesses caused by the the second strain.

At the plant in Gaston, trouble dates back to 2005 when pet food manufactured there was tainted with toxic mold that killed at least 76 dogs and prompted one of the largest pet food recalls in U.S. history: 700,000 bags of 31 brands of pet food shipped to 24 states and 30 countries.

Read Full Article Here

 

 

Knowledge is Power

I’m often asked to speak at programs about food safety. A frequently asked audience question involves what foods I avoid eating (sprouts, raw oysters, undercooked meats, etc.). It occurs to me, however, that from a food safety standpoint, that’s really not the right question. After all, there are many foods not on my or anyone else’s “unsafe” list that are regularly implicated in foodborne illness outbreaks.

There are foods that are inherently more dangerous than other foods and justifiably deserve greater scrutiny and caution.

However, less inherently dangerous food products can cause the same injuries and deaths if not produced in compliance with standards and regulations applicable to the industry of which they are a part. Put another way, hamburger produced in insanitary conditions is every bit as dangerous as eating a raw oyster harvested in a month with the letter “r.”

Unfortunately, most consumers have no idea and little way to find out whether the hamburger they order at a restaurant or the ground beef they purchase at a supermarket was processed by a company regularly implicated in foodborne illness outbreaks.

Wouldn’t you want to know if the producer of the food product you purchase is a frequent food safety offender? Wouldn’t you avoid the products of a meat packer that poisoned or killed scores of people in previous outbreaks?

Read Full Article Here

 

 

 

Survey: Consumers Want Widespread Calorie Labeling on Menus

Some restaurants say calorie labeling impractical for their venues

The majority of Americans would like to see calories listed next to many menu offerings that are set to be exempt from new labeling regulations, according to a recent survey of approximately 1,000 adults.
The poll, commissioned by consumer advocacy group Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI), found that 70 percent of respondents would like to see calorie information on movie theater menus; 68 percent favor calorie labeling for alcoholic beverages and 77 percent want labeling next to pizza slices, hot dogs and burritos served at convenience stores.
All of these food items and venues are currently not affected by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s preliminary version of calorie labeling requirements for chain restaurants, mandated by the Affordable Care Act of 2010.
The proposed rule, published last year, obliges food establishments with 20 or more locations to post calorie information next to menu items, but does not apply to movie theaters, airplanes, bowling alleys, sports arenas or any other whose primary purpose is not food service, according to FDA. It also exempts alcoholic beverages sold at chain restaurants.
These survey results, released Monday, suggest that consumers may disagree with the exceptions.

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“We’re very concerned about the industry not applying menu labeling as broadly as the law requires,” said Margot Wootan, nutrition director at CSPI, in an interview with Food Safety News. “We’re hoping that this helps to show that they can and should apply menu labeling to as many venues as possible and to all menu items, as the law requires.”
“If McDonald’s is providing calorie counts for its sodas, why shouldn’t 7-11 or Regal Cinemas?,” asked Wootan in a press release Monday.  ”If Cracker Barrel has to list calories for its salad bar items, why shouldn’t Whole Foods or Safeway?”
The consumer opinions in this poll echo those in a letter from health organization officials written last month asking FDA to extend calorie labeling rules to cover all retail food establishments.
“Unfortunately, the definition of similar retail food establishments used in the proposed
regulations would significantly limit the ability of consumers to make informed choices
by reducing the number of venues providing calorie labeling,” read the letter, signed by the executive directors of the American Diabetes Association and the American Heart Association, along with 19 others.

 

Jensen Farms Likely to Settle in Listeria Cantaloupe Cases

Jensen Farms – the Colorado company whose cantaloupes were linked to last year’s Listeria outbreak that sickened 146 people and killed 36 – has indicated that it is likely to settle cases brought against it by 39 victims and their families.
After filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy last week, the grower says it is likely to opt for settlements with the 39 plaintiffs – represented by food safety attorney Bill Marler, publisher of Food Safety News – once its assets are freed up.
CantaloupeBody.jpg ”I would say we are very close,” said Jim Markus, an attorney for Jensens, according to the Denver Post.

“Crypto” Outbreak Strikes Four Areas of England

Just in time for the Queen’s Jubilee, four regions of England are reporting outbreaks of cryptosporidiosis.
The counties of North East, Yorkshire, West Midlands and East Midlands together have reported 267 cases since May 11, 2012, compared to 73 cases across the four counties during all of 2011.
Britain’s Health Protection Agency (HPA) reported the outbreak on the eve of the four-day

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celebration to celebrate Queen Elizabeth’s 60 years on the British throne.
The illnesses, for which there is no specific treatment, is caused by the Cryptosporidium parasite, a tiny organism found in soil, food, water, or on surfaces contaminated with infected human or animal droppings.
People are often infected with “Crypto” by swallowing water while swimming in pools, rivers or lakes. It is often associated with hot weather when pool treatment systems can be strained.
The Queen’s Jubilee included the first river pageant in 350 years, but participants in that even were mostly drinking champagne.
HPA said a multi-agency investigation into the Crypto outbreak is underway to see if the cases in the four regions are in some way linked. So far, investigators have not identified a possible source of infection and the distribution of the cases suggests it is unlikely that public water supplies are implicated.
The illnesses in the four regions of England primarily involved adults, most of whom are women. Mild to moderate illnesses have marked most of the cases, although some victims were admitted to hospitals for short stays.

 

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[In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit, for research and/or educational purposes. This constitutes 'FAIR USE' of any such copyrighted material.]

 

Health

5 juicy facts about spit

Stress triggers and antibodies are just some of the ways spit keeps us ticking.

By Natalie Wolchover, Life’s Little

A patient opens wide for a saliva swab test for swine flu
ALL IN THE SPIT: A patient opens wide for a saliva swab test for swine flu. Saliva offers insight into a range of the body’s functions. (Photo: ZUMA Press)
An underappreciated body fluid is emerging as a powerful tool for research, medical diagnosis and health. Spit, as it turns out, contains all sorts of juicy information.
According to researchers at Johns Hopkins University’s Center for Interdisciplinary Salivary Bioscience Research — yes, a research center dedicated to spit — saliva holds a “treasure trove” of data that is easily collected and inexpensively analyzed. It has the potential to expose secrets of human biology and genetics, as well as helping combat disease. “There’s lots of potential in exploring what’s in saliva,” said Doug Granger, the center’s director.
But what can spit do for you?
Spit screening
One-third of heart attack victims drop dead without ever knowing they had high cholesterol, hypertension or the other factors that increased their risk of cardiac arrest. That’s partly because the blood test currently used to diagnose a person’s heart disease risk is quite the ordeal — it’s painful, requires a clinic visit, and takes weeks to be processed — and so most people don’t take it as often as they should.
Now, in a new study, Granger and his colleagues have proposed a saliva test to replace the standard blood test. According to the researchers, spit contains the same protein, called C-reactive protein, that indicates a risk of heart disease when found in blood at elevated levels, and spit can therefore give a rough proxy of a patients’ heart health. Once a saliva test is available, “more people would be willing to have the test done. It could be done on a more regular basis, even in their homes,” Granger said in a press release.

Teflon Report part 1


 

Teflon Report part 2

 

 

 

Flu shots to be pushed onto all children in public schools

By D Holt,
(NaturalNews) Experts have advised the government that all children should be given annual flu vaccine shots in schools. The advice, given as part of a consultation on preventable disease, said that is would raise immunity in the crowded environment of schools, and therefore in the wider community. It was claimed that the expense of undertaking such a massive vaccination program, would be balanced by the savings from not having to treat cases of flu. The treatment of seasonal flu is often rest, fluids…

Read Full Article Here

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Holistic Health

 

 

 

DIY Home remedies and old wives cures using baking soda

By JB Bardot,
(NaturalNews) In a world awash with pharmaceutical drugs for everything from dandruff to toenail fungus, it’s refreshing to have do-it-yourself home remedies and trusted old wives cures to heal a wide range of ailments. Baking soda is a staple in most homes and is useful for cooking, cleaning and in many home remedies. Although it’s safe when used as directed, baking soda can cause side effects. Read the warning section below and check with your healthcare practitioner before using baking soda home…

Infographic unveiled: Top Ten GMO Foods to Avoid Eating

By J. D. Heyes, 

(NaturalNews) We here at NaturalNews.com pride ourselves in providing our readers with the most valuable, up-to-date news and information on a wide range of health-related issues, but we especially like to discuss nutrition because so much of our health depends on what we put in our bodies – and what we don’t put in them. See the NaturalNews infographic at: http://www.naturalnews.com/Infographic-Top-10-GMO-Foods-to-Avoid-Eating.html Be aware and beware With that latter thought in mind…

Rawesome bombshell: Lab test evidence against Sharon Palmer (Healthy Family Farms) found invalid; allegations unsupportable

By Mike Adams, 
(NaturalNews) Following our coverage of Sharon Palmer, owner of Healthy Family Farms, and James Stewart, the “raw milk man” and founder of Rawesome Foods in California, I received a tip from an anonymous source. The tip said that I was defending the wrong parties. The source stated that Sharon Palmer was a fraud who had been knowingly selling chicken contaminated with arsenic and eggs contaminated with mercury; that James Stewart was an accomplice who knowingly resold Sharon’s contaminated chicken…


Starbucks opens chain of raw vegan juice bars

By Raw Michelle,

(NaturalNews) Starbucks, the coffee shop renowned for its seemingly limitless coffee varieties, is opening a new chain of juice bars in response to the growing health trend towards unprocessed and whole foods. In late 2011, the coffee giant also brought out Evolution Fresh, a juice company. Health foods now represent a $50 billion industry, and Starbucks has been very public about their intent to expand into the market and establish themselves as a major player. Getting down and rawThe juice bars…

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Pet Health

 

Feline IBD: The Most Common Cause of Vomiting and Diarrhea in Cats

 

 

By Dr. Becker

Inflammatory bowel disease or IBD is actually a group of diseases involving uncontrolled intestinal inflammation.

IBD in kitties (and other susceptible animals) is thought to be caused by a combination of factors including diet, gut bacteria, environment, and an abnormal immune system response.

 

  • Feline inflammatory bowel disease, like IBD in other susceptible animals, is thought to be caused by a variety of factors including diet, gut flora, abnormal immune response, and environment.
  • Cats with IBD undergo changes in the structure of the small intestine that set the stage for chronic diarrhea and/or vomiting, malabsorption, and leaky gut syndrome.
  • When toxins are able to “leak” through the walls of the intestine into the bloodstream, an immune response is triggered that can ultimately result in allergies and other, more serious autoimmune disorders.
  • Secondary infections are also common in kitties with IBD, along with organ failure and nutritional deficiencies. A link has also been established between chronic IBD and GI lymphoma in cats.
  • Diagnosis and treatment of feline IBD involves functional GI testing followed by a healing protocol that addresses all potential contributing factors to the inflammation, starting with diet.

Read Full Article Here

 

 

 

More Dry Pet Food Recalled

 

 

By Dr. Becker

I’m sure by now most of you are aware of the recent Diamond Pet Food recalls involving several lines of dry dog and cat food.

The cause of the recalls is potential salmonella contamination that has made a handful of people (not pets, according to reports) ill with Salmonella Infantis infections.

The list of brands issuing recalls seems to grow daily. At the time of this writing, the following foods were involved in the recall:

 

  • Hopefully there’s an end in sight to the latest dry pet food recalls involving a manufacturing facility in North Carolina operated by Diamond Pet Foods.
  • Thanks to this latest recall involving a wide variety of labels and brands, many pet owners have had their eyes opened to the fact that even higher quality commercial pet foods can be contaminated during processing.
  • The best way to avoid tainted dry pet food is to leave it on the store shelf. There are other options for safely feeding your dog or cat that also provide the species-appropriate nutrition dry pet food lacks.

Read Full Article Here

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Articles of Interest

University of Tennessee anthropologists find American heads are getting larger

by Staff Writers
Knoxville TN (SPX)


File image.

White Americans’ heads are getting bigger. That’s according to research by forensic anthropologists at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Lee Jantz, coordinator of UT’s Forensic Anthropology Center (FAC); Richard Jantz, professor emeritus and former director of the FAC; and Joanne Devlin, adjunct assistant professor, examined 1,500 skulls dating back to the mid-1800s through the mid-1980s.

They noticed U.S. skulls have become larger, taller and narrower as seen from the front and faces have become significantly narrower and higher.

The researchers cannot pinpoint a reason as to why American head shapes are changing and whether it is primarily due to evolution or lifestyle changes.

“The varieties of changes that have swept American life make determining an exact cause an endlessly complicated proposition,” said Lee Jantz. “It likely results from modified growth patterns because of better nutrition, lower infant and maternal mortality, less physical work, and a breakdown of former ethnic barriers to marriage. Which of these is paramount we do not know.”

The researchers found that the average height from the base to the top of the skull in men has increased by eight millimeters (0.3 inches). The skull size has grown by 200 cubic centimeters, a space equivalent to a tennis ball. In women, the corresponding increases are seven millimeters and 180 cubic centimeters.

Skull height has increased 6.8 percent since the late 1800s, while body height has increased 5.6 percent and femur length has only increased about 2 percent. Also, skull-height has continued to change whereas the overall heightening has recently slowed or stopped.

The scientists also noted changes that illustrate our population is maturing sooner. This is reflected in the earlier closing of a separation in the bone structure of the skull called the spheno-occipital synchondrosis, which in the past was thought to fuse at about age twenty. Richard Jantz and Natalie Shirley, an adjunct assistant professor in the FAC, have found the bone is fusing much earlier – 14 for girls and 16 for boys.

America’s obesity epidemic is the latest development that could affect skeletal shape but its precise effects are unclear.

“This might affect skull shape by changing the hormonal environment, which in turn could affect timing of growth and maturation,” said Richard Jantz. “We know it has an effect on the long bones by increasing muscle attachment areas, increasing arthritis at certain joints, especially the knee, and increasing the weight bearing capacity.”

The research only assessed Americans of European ancestry because they provided the largest sample sizes to work with. Richard Jantz said changes in skeletal structure are taking place in many parts of the world, but tend to be less studied. He said research has uncovered shifts in skull shape in Europe though it is not as dramatic as seen in the U.S.

The findings were presented on April 14 in Portland, Ore. at the annual meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists.

Related Links
University of Tennessee at Knoxville
All About Human Beings and How We Got To Be Here

 

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[In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit, for research and/or educational purposes. This constitutes 'FAIR USE' of any such copyrighted material.]

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