Wednesday 11 November 2009

Experts Predict Great Barrier Reef Could Be World's 1st Gobal Ecosystem to Collapse

Experts Predict Great Barrier Reef Could Be World's 1st Gobal Ecosystem to Collapse: "


Greatbarrierreef-pia03401The Great Barrier Reef will be so degraded by warming waters that it will be unrecognizable within 20 years, according Charlie Veron, former chief scientist of the Australian Institute of Marine Science, at a conference in London: “There is no way out, no loopholes. The Great Barrier Reef will be over within 20 years or so. They would be the world’s first global ecosystem to collapse. I have the backing of every coral reef scientist, every research organization. I’ve spoken to them all. This is critical. This is reality.”

After being a highly successful life form for 250 million years, disruptions in the biological and communication systems of coral reefs have been found to be  the underlying cause of the coral bleaching and collapse of reef ecosystems around the world.


Coral reefs form the world's biggest single structure made by living organisms, Australia's Great Barrier Reef, which is visible from outer space (image). The reef is composed of over 2,900 individual reefs and 900 islands stretching for over 3,000 kilometers over an area of approximately 344,400 square kilometers.

An explosion of knowledge is helping to explain why coral reefs around the world are collapsing and what it will take for them to survive. The problems facing coral reefs are still huge, and increasing. They are being pressured by changes in ocean temperature, pollution, overfishing, sedimentation, acidification, oxidative stress and disease, and the synergistic effect of some of these problems may destroy reefs even when one cause by itself would not. Some estimates have suggested 20 percent of the world's coral reefs are already dead and an additional 24 percent are gravely threatened.

Corals, it appears, have a genetic complexity that rivals that of humans, according to research funded in part by the National Science Foundation. Their sophisticated systems of biological communication are being stressed by global change, and are only able to survive based on proper function of an intricate symbiotic relationship with algae that live within their bodies.

'We've known for some time the general functioning of corals and the problems they are facing from climate change,' said Virginia Weis, a professor of zoology at Oregon State University. 'But until just recently, much less has been known about their fundamental biology, genome structure and internal communication. Only when we really understand how their physiology works will we know if they can adapt to climate changes, or ways that we might help.'

Corals are tiny animals, polyps that exist as genetically identical individuals, and can eat, defend themselves and kill plankton for food. In the process they also secrete calcium carbonate that becomes the basis for an external skeleton on which they sit. These calcified deposits can grow to enormous sizes over long periods of time and form coral reefs – one of the world's most productive ecosystems, which can harbor more than 4,000 species of fish and many other marine life forms.

But corals are not really self sufficient. Within their bodies they harbor highly productive algae – a form of marine plant life – that can 'fix' carbon, use the energy of the sun to conduct photosynthesis and produce sugars.

'Some of these algae that live within corals are amazingly productive, and in some cases give 95 percent of the sugars they produce to the coral to use for energy,' Weis said. 'In return the algae gain nitrogen, a limiting nutrient in the ocean, by feeding off the waste from the coral. It's a finely developed symbiotic relationship.'

What scientists are learning, however, is that this relationship is also based on a delicate communication process from the algae to the coral, telling it that the algae belong there, and that everything is fine. Otherwise the corals would treat the algae as a parasite or invader and attempt to kill it.

'Even though the coral depends on the algae for much of its food, it may be largely unaware of its presence,' Weis said. 'We now believe that this is what's happening when the water warms or something else stresses the coral – the communication from the algae to the coral breaks down, the all-is-well message doesn't get through, the algae essentially comes out of hiding and faces an immune response from the coral.'

This internal communication process, Weis said, is not unlike some of the biological processes found in humans and other animals. One of the revelations in recent research, she said, is the enormous complexity of coral biology, and even its similarity to other life forms. A gene that controls skeletal development in humans, for instance, is the identical gene in corals that helps it develop its external skeleton – conserved in the different species over hundreds of millions of years since they parted from a common ancestor on their separate evolutionary paths.

There's still much to learn about this process, researchers said, and tremendous variation in it. For one thing, there are 1,000 species of coral and perhaps thousands of species of algae all mixing and matching in this symbiotic dance. And that variation, experts say, provides at least some hope that combinations will be found which can better adapt to changing conditions of ocean temperature, acidity or other threats. The predicted acidification of the oceans in the next century is expected to decrease coral calcification rates by 50 percent and promote the dissolving of coral skeletons, the researchers noted in their report.

'With some of the new findings about coral symbiosis and calcification, and how it works, coral biologists are now starting to think more outside the box,' Weis said. 'Maybe there's something we could do to help identify and protect coral species that can survive in different conditions. Perhaps we won't have to just stand by as the coral reefs of the world die and disappear.'

Dr Veron’s comments came as the Zoological Society of London, the Royal Society and the International Programme on the State of the Ocean (IPSO) held a crucial meeting on the future of coral reefs in London yesterday. In a joint statement they warned that by mid-century extinctions of coral reefs around the world would be inevitable.

Posted by Casey Kazan.

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/view.php?id=38862&src=twitter-news

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/environment/article6652866.ece



"

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Ace News Service

Antimatter Lightning Discovered (On Earth!)

Antimatter Lightning Discovered (On Earth!): "

33627759.CPCVERTICALLIGHTNING2 Antimatter Lightning!  We're going to do our best, but nothing we could possibly write will be as awesome as the fact that's real and on Earth.  In fact, nothing you ever read for the rest of your life will be as awesome as that, and it's only the way human memory degrades with time that'll let you ever get excited about anything ever again.  

Like all the most awesome discoveries, it was unexpected.  The Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope was launched to examine the universe for the stupendously powerful processes that produce gamma ray bursts, from black hole jets to the effects of dark matter itself, only to find blasts coming from behind it. From Earth.


That large storms can produce gamma rays isn't news, but the surprise - and that's 'Surprise' with a capital 'Antimatter Annihilating Tiny Bits Of The Atmosphere In The Most Energetic Reaction Known To Science' - was that some of the Terrestrial Gamma Flashes (TGFs) were of the exact energy level which could only be produced by positron annihilation: anti-electrons appearing, meeting and electron, and exploding.  (And you'll never see a TGiFs without thinking of awesome science ever again).

How can this happen?  No-one knows.  Michael Briggs, research scientist at the University of Alabama, first announced the results at the 2009 Fermi Symposium and is currently preparing a paper on the subject.  After that it'll be an awesome race to see who can explain the events - if a slightly less explosive battle than you'd expect with antimatter and lightning bolts involved.

Luke McKinney.

Antimatter detected in lightning 



"

THIS IS AMAZING AND ALSO EXTREMELY WORRYING THAT LIGHTING CAN DO THIS AT ALL ANYONE UNDERSTAND THIS PLEASE LEAVE A COMMENT ON THIS BLOG AND EXPLAIN SO WE CAN SHARE AND SPREAD THE WORD. IAN

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Tuesday 10 November 2009

Parents Refusing the Flu Vaccine

Parents Refusing the Flu Vaccine: "Parents today are of two minds about the new flu vaccine. Some can't wait to get it for their kids, while others remain fearful, writes pediatrician Dr. Perri Klass."

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New Thoughts on Memory

New Thoughts on Memory: "

New Thoughts on MemoryTraditionally, scientists have believed long-term and short-term memories were formed by different processes within the brain.


This theory is now being challenged by researchers from University College London.


Historically, the position of a different process for memories was based on observation of patients with amnesia, a condition that severely disrupts the ability to form long-lasting memories.


Typically, amnesia is caused by injury to the hippocampi, a pair of brain structures located in the depth of the temporal lobes.


Amnesia, a common side effect of concussions, severely affects long-term memory — although individuals may be proficient in rehearsing a phone number over short periods of time, as long as their attention is not distracted. This led to a hypothesis that the hippocampus supports long-term but not short-term memory.


However, the UCL study, published in PNAS, shows that this distinction now needs to be reconsidered.


The team studied patients with a specific form of epilepsy called ‘temporal lobe epilepsy with bilateral hippocampal sclerosis’, which leads to marked dysfunction of the hippocampi.


They asked the patients to try to memorize photographic images depicting normal scenes, for example chairs and a table in a living-room. Their memory of the image was tested and brain activity recorded using MEG (magnetoencephalography) after a short interval of just five seconds, or a long interval of 60 minutes.


The researchers discovered that short-term memory about more detailed aspects of the scene, for example whether the table was located left or right of the chairs, required the coordinated activity of a network of visual and temporal brain areas, whereas standard short-term memory drew on a very different network. Critically, the coordinated activity of visual and temporal brain areas was disrupted in the patients with hippocampal sclerosis.


Professor Emrah Duzel, UCL Institute for Cognitive Neuroscience, said: “As we anticipated, the patients could not distinguish the studied images from new images after 60 minutes - but performed normally at five seconds. However, a striking deficit emerged even at five seconds when we asked them to recall the detailed arrangement of objects within the scenes.


“These findings identify two distinct short-term memory networks in the brain: one that functions independently of the hippocampus and remains intact in patients with long-term memory deficits and one that is dependent on the hippocampus and is impaired alongside long-term memory.”


Nathan Cashdollar, UCL Institute of Neurology and first author of the paper, added: “Recent behavioral observations had already begun challenging the classical distinction between long-term and short-term memory which has persisted for nearly half a century. However, this is the first functional and anatomical evidence showing which mechanisms are shared between short-term and long-term memory and which are independent.”


“They also highlight that patients with impaired long-term memory have a short-term memory burden to carry in their daily life as well.”


Source: University College London

"

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Depression Linked to Osteoporosis

Depression Linked to Osteoporosis: "

Depression Linked to Osteoporosis A new, comprehensive research study has found a strong connection between depression and a loss of bone mass, leading to osteoporosis and fractures.


In a research study consisting of thousands of subjects, Hebrew University of Jerusalem researchers, Prof. Raz Yirmiya, and Prof. Itai Bab, learned that the relationship between depression and bone loss is particularly strong among young women.


According to background information, osteoporosis is the most widespread degenerative disease in the developed world, afflicting 1 in 3 women and 1 in 5 men over 50. Individuals experience decrease in bone density, which often leads to bone fractures. In many cases, these fractures cause severe disability and even death.


Despite the accumulating evidence for a connection between depression and decreased bone density, official authorities, such as the US National Institutes of Health and the World Health Organization, have not yet acknowledged depression as a risk factor for osteoporosis, due to the lack of studies in large samples.


To remedy this situation, the Hebrew University researchers assembled the data from all studies on the subject conducted to date, and analyzed them using a special statistical approach called meta-analysis.


The results were recently reported in the journal Biological Psychiatry. In the article the Hebrew University scientists assessed data from 23 research projects conducted in eight countries, comparing bone density among 2,327 people suffering from depression against 21,141 non-depressed individuals.


The results, say the researchers, show clearly that depressed individuals have a substantially lower bone density than non-depressed people and that depression is associated with a markedly elevated activity of cells that break down bone (osteoclasts).


Yirmiya and Bab found that the association between depression and bone loss was stronger in women than men, especially young women before the end of their monthly period.


This connection was especially strong in women with clinical depression diagnosed by a psychiatrist, but not in community studies, in which women subjectively identified themselves as being depressed using self-rating questionnaires.


Based on the present findings, Profs. Yirmiya and Bab propose that “all individuals psychiatrically diagnosed with major depression are at risk for developing osteoporosis, with depressed young women showing the highest risk.


“These patients should be periodically evaluated for progression of bone loss and signs of osteoporosis, allowing the use of anti-osteoporotic prophylactic and therapeutic treatments.”


Source: Hebrew University of Jerusalem

"

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How Scents Evoke Memories

How Scents Evoke Memories: "

How Scents Evoke MemoriesHave you ever noticed that some smells bring back strong memories? Now, researchers using functional brain imaging techniques have uncovered the scientific basis of memory aromas.


Weizmann Institute scientists posited that the key might not necessarily lie in childhood, but rather in the first time a smell is encountered in the context of a particular object or event.


In other words, the initial association of a smell with an experience will somehow leave a unique and lasting impression in the brain.


To test this idea, the scientists devised an experiment: First, in a special smell laboratory, subjects viewed images of 60 visual objects, each presented simultaneously with either a pleasant or an unpleasant odor generated in a machine called an olfactometer.


Next, the subjects were put in an fMRI scanner to measure their brain activity as they reviewed the images they’d seen and attempted to remember which odor was associated with each. Then, the whole test was repeated – images, odors and fMRI – with the same images, but different odors accompanying each.


Finally, the subjects came back one week later, to be scanned in the fMRI again. They viewed the objects one more time and were asked to recall the odors they associated with them.


The scientists found that after one week, even if the subject recalled both odors equally, the first association revealed a distinctive pattern of brain activity. The effect was seen whether the smell was pleasant or unpleasant.


This unique representation showed up in the hippocampus, a brain structure involved in memory, and in the amygdala, a brain structure involved in emotion. The pattern was so profound, it enabled the scientists to predict which associations would be remembered just by looking at the brain activity within these regions following the initial exposure.


The scientists could look at the fMRI data on the first day of the experiment and predict which associations would come up a week later. To see if other sensory experiences might share this tendency, the scientists repeated the entire experiment using sounds rather than smells; they found that sounds did not arouse a similar distinctive first-time pattern of activity. In other words, these results were specific to the sense of smell.


“For some reason, the first association with smell gets etched into memory,” says Professor Noam Sobel, “and this phenomenon allowed us to predict what would be remembered one week later based on brain activity alone.”


Graduate student Yaara Yeshurun comments: “As far as we know, this phenomenon is unique to smell. Childhood olfactory memories may be special not because childhood is special, but simply because those years may be the first time we associate something with an odor.”


The study is published in the latest issue of Current Biology.


Source: Weizmann Institute of Science

"

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The Rules of Cancer

The Rules of Cancer: "After a cancer diagnosis, following a few basic rules will help you navigate the health care system."

READ THIS AT THE LINK TO GET THE FULL STORY IT IS QUITE REVEALING ? G

" The Roving Giraffe News Report " provided through Ace News Service

Monday 5 October 2009

2009 Sumatra earthquakes - The Big Picture - Boston.com

2009 Sumatra earthquakes - The Big Picture - Boston.com: "

About 5:00 pm on September 30th, a magnitude 7.6 earthquake struck just offshore of the town of Padang in Sumatra, Indonesia. The quake toppled buildings and started many landslides, smashing homes and swallowing up entire villages. The following day, As rescue workers arrived and residents tried their best to dig out and help the survivors, another unrelated quake with a magnitude of 6.6 struck...

0 comments Source: www.boston.com

"

The Giraffe says that the more we destroy the Eco-system the more the Eco-system will get its own back and earthquakes will be come more widespread and increase in magnitude, remember the days when it was 3.5 and now we see 6.6 and higher will man ever learn ?

" The Roving Giraffe News Report " provided through Ace News Service

Tuesday 29 September 2009

Senate Finance Committee to Vote on Public Option, Health Care Reform Fight Heats Up - ABC News

Senate Finance Committee to Vote on Public Option, Health Care Reform Fight Heats Up - ABC News

The Roving Giraffe - says that it appears that Obama has his work cut-out to get this through the senate, unless he can persuade the people wanting to keep the money from private healthcare rolling in, that people matter more than profit. G {Ian} " SHARE THIS AND SUPPORT THE BILL "

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Thursday 24 September 2009

Fwd: [OrganicJar.com] New Comment (5614)

I thought you readers would like to read the follow-up comments from my posting the other day about 5 steps to protecting you against swine flu, these are my letter follow-ups and l cannot confirm the comments written as my personal view, but you are welcome to check it out for yourself and leave me a comment on the blog.       

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: OrganicJar.com <insider@organicjar.com>
Date: Thu, Sep 24, 2009 at 6:50 PM
Subject: [OrganicJar.com] New Comment (5614)
To: idadamchristian96 <idadamchristian96@googlemail.com>


Having trouble reading this email? View it on our website.

Jason:

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on your article. It is refreshing to see you list Pro and Prebiotics as critical weapons to have in the fight against H1N1 aka Swine Flu.

When I speak to friends, family and customers about prebiotics I hear comments such as "oh yeah, I've heard of probiotics.." or "do you mean probiotics?." There is a difference.

Prebiotics are soluble fibers which pass through the stomach unchanged. They nourish the good bacteria in the colon and are beneficial whether you consume a probiotic or not.

Probiotics are living organisms that are susceptible to heat, cold and aging. There are over 2,000 bacterial species in the colon. In addition bacteria in the colon is in the many trillions.

To get the greatest health benefit from a prebiotic supplement it is important to consume a full spectrum oligofructose enriched inulin (OEI) product. There are several inulin products available. A full spectrum OEI product nourishes the entire colon, not just a portion.

I would encourage your readers interested in more information to visit http://www.prebiotin.com. There they can learn more about Prebiotin and the many benefits a full spectrum OEI offers.

Thanks again for a great topic.

Best regards,

Bill Duprey

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Saturday 19 September 2009

Fwd: Gold on the Move: Here's Your Chance to Profit!

I receive a number of these articles on a regular basis and usually l ignore them, but this time what seems so implausible could just come true. With borrowing comes debt and with debt comes the burden of debt, this brings a culture of increasing debt by borrowing. This is called the vicious circle of debt as the more you borrow the more you have to borrow to repay the indebtedness. 

So what happens to a country borrowing more to stay a float ,well simply that they drown in a sea of debt, as the more they print money the more it devalues the currency until one day it is worthless { The clue is in the word as in utilisation as such Worth Less} but what follows is Britain as they are so heavily linked to America. 

So l ask reading this article is this the end of the beginning or the " Beginning of the End " what do you all think ?             

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sean Brodrick <alerts@weissinc.com>
Date: Sat, Sep 19, 2009 at 2:04 PM
Subject: Gold on the Move: Here's Your Chance to Profit!
To: "idadamchristian96@googlemail.c" <idadamchristian96@googlemail.com>


Dear Subscriber,

Have you seen the big move in gold this week? One group that's making the most of it is The Secret Order of Jurojin. This group of elite traders is not just riding the gold rally, they're playing the big surge in other hard assets as well. I wanted to make sure you saw the latest update on their market outlook — see for yourself.

All the best,

Sean


— How You Can Protect Yourself AND Profit!

If you listened closely last week, you could almost hear an audible groan from central bankers as the long battle between gold and the dollar ended in a gold victory. The yellow metal broke out to the upside through a months-long downtrend. Now, the best-laid plans of Wall Street and the shadowy power players of the global economy may be coming unraveled.  Take a look at this chart ...

After such a breakout, another, shorter consolidation is likely. That could be your last chance to get onboard before the gold profit train leaves the station.

Gold isn't the only commodity that is looking like a good investment. The U.S. dollar is sliding lower, its once-solid support giving way like rotting timbers.  Anything that is priced in dollars — hard assets of all stripes — has the potential to outperform in the months ahead. The time has come for big gains in gold, silver, sugar, grains, energy and more as the big commodity bull market moves into its next phase.

And if you've got the guts to take YOUR shot at the brass ring, it could be time for you to start making some serious gains.

What's driving this next wave higher in commodity prices?

Fundamentals forces are lining up that should push the dollar lower and commodities — especially precious metals — much higher.

I believe we're headed for a currency crisis. It will be ugly and I hate it — I HATE what the chuckleheads in Washington are doing to our currency. But give me five minutes to make my case for the coming "dollar apocalypse." Being forewarned can A) preserve your wealth and B) potentially help you profit handsomely.

Here's what you need to know ...

Washington Is Debasing the U.S. Dollar. The U.S. Treasury is running its printing presses at warp speed. It's adding debt to the burden of every American man, woman and child at a frightening pace.

According to the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, "Our $56 trillion in unfunded obligations amount to $483,000 per household. That's 10 times the median household income — so it's as if everyone had a second or third mortgage on a house equal to 10 times their income but no house they can lay claim to."

The U.S. deficit for this year alone is $1.8 trillion. The Peterson Foundation points out that a deficit that large is adding debt at a clip of $3.4 million a minute, $200 million an hour or $5 billion a day.

All that debt has to be paid back eventually, and paid back with dollars. When you create more of something, you cheapen its value. In a nutshell, that's one reason why the U.S. dollar is breaking support and heading lower.

The Dollar Is Losing Its Status as Global Reserve Currency. With Uncle Sam spending money like his wallet is on fire, our trading partners in China, Russia, the Middle East, and around the world are getting steamed. Now, they're ready to do something about it. They're ready to dump the dollar.

The move away from the dollar won't be quick. There are trillions and trillions of dollars worth of investments that have to be reallocated. But once started, this juggernaut is hard to stop.

It's already started in China! Recently, Cheng Siwei, a leading Chinese policy maker, said that his country's leaders were "dismayed" by America flooding the banking system with money. "If they keep printing money to buy bonds, it will lead to inflation," Cheng said. "So we'll diversify incremental reserves into euros, yen and other currencies."

Russia jumped on the anti-dollar bandwagon. At a meeting in Yekaterinburg, Russia, the BRIC nations — Brazil, Russia, India and China — suggested shifting their currency holdings from the dollar into International Monetary Fund "Special Drawing Rights," or SDRs. The IMF recently announced that around $2 billion in SDRs recently transferred to Russia. But Russia is still behind China, which announced its intention to purchase up to $50 billion in SDRs from the IMF. India is going to purchase SDRs, too!

SDRs on their own can't function as a global reserve currency. But combined with a basket of hard assets — gold, silver, copper and oil, for example — they could be a BIG step in that direction.

The U.N. is the latest to get in on the act. The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development laid the blame for the financial crisis at the dollar's feet, and proposed replacing the dollar with an artificial currency.

This is the first time a major multinational institution has suggested dumping the U.S. dollar as the world's reserve currency.

Meanwhile, China, Russia and others are buying gold on every dip. This is probably part of their plan for a long-term shift away from the dollar. But it also puts a floor under the price of gold ... and means the easiest path for the yellow metal should be higher.

Demand Is Surging Again! After a lull this summer, investor demand is picking up again. Gold holdings in 10 monitored gold-backed exchange-traded funds increased by 4.871 metric tonnes (156,615 ounces) in the week from September 4 to September 11.

The amount of gold in ETFs globally has surged to more than 66.7 million ounces.  The World Gold Council reports that only about a half of 1 percent of total worldwide funds under management are currently invested in gold and, if that were to double to 1 percent, there would be insufficient gold in the vaults of central banks to accommodate the increase in demand.

Also, recent news reports reveal that China is exhorting its citizens to buy gold and silver bullion. This could have a dramatic effect on the markets!

The Time to Act Is Now!

Technically speaking, $1,035 is near-term overhead resistance in gold. If and when gold closes above that, we'll probably see a bunch of new cash flow into gold funds and short covering bidding prices even higher.

By the time gold closes above $1,035, you'll be chasing the yellow metal — a tough spot in such a fast and furious market. The smart thing to do is to get long BEFORE gold goes above that trigger level!

Now for the good news. You can protect yourself — and potentially pile up some hefty profits — with futures and futures options.

I'm talking about trades in the U.S. dollar ... gold ... silver ... wheat ... corn ... soybeans ... oil ... natural gas ... and more! A swooning dollar should send gold to $1,300, oil to $90, and wheat, soybeans and other commodities much, much higher.

So, by holding gold and other hard assets, you can potentially rack up gains — and protect your portfolio from the ravages of a declining dollar!

To be sure, commodities can be tricky markets to trade well. Now for the best part: An elite, secretive service has just cracked opened its doors to allow qualified investors a chance to even the playing the field.

This Group: The Secret Order of Jurojin

Until now, Jurojin has only offered recommendations to a select few. Now, they are offering YOU a specialized newsletter, packed with trading recommendations, designed to help you reap windfall profits from the historic swings in the U.S. dollar, gold, crude oil, agriculture, treasuries, and more.

And I believe we are at a crucial juncture in the markets — the next leg up of the great bull market in commodities. The thing about Jurojin is they give you ways to play this bull market that you can't get in other services.

Not all Jurojin picks win. Of course there are losses. But this elite group of traders has been riding the big bull market in grains for all it's worth.

The Hour of Real Assets Comes Round at Last

Gold isn't the only thing investors and funds are buying. Copper, zinc, cotton, oil and other hard assets are all becoming sought-after investments. That's because small and big investors alike are realizing the value of hard assets when governments can print as much paper money as they want.

And Jurojin fires out winning picks in all sorts of commodities. Just this week, subscribers to Jurojin's premium service, Jurojin Weekly, scooped up two helpings of gains in cotton. Cocoa and sugar are also fair game.

And the metals — oh, how Jurojin likes the metals. Gold and silver offer plenty of opportunities to get long and strong.

That's the great thing about commodities. They're real assets — hard assets. As more and more investors realize fiat currencies (like the U.S. dollar) are inferior to hard assets, the prices of metals, softs, grains and more should trend much higher.

But what about when the market goes in the other direction — like the brutal correction we had last year? That's fine with Jurojin — they'll play either side of the market. And after riding a downtrend, they'll jump right back on the big uptrend when it reasserts itself.

Jurojin is not affiliated with Weiss Research — it's a separate entity with a different trading philosophy. To be sure, you can lose money in any market. Some people will tell you if you want to play it safe, buy precious metals and stick them under your mattress ... and then you still might lose sleep if you don't have a really good mattress.

But if you want to run with the big dogs and invest with the pros ... if you have a stomach for risk and an appetite for outsized gains ... you owe it to yourself to find out more about the Secret Order of Jurojin's special offer.

To do that, CLICK HERE.

Find out more about Jurojin now — the big bull market in commodities is waiting for you, but it won't wait long.

Yours for trading profits,


Sean


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Thursday 17 September 2009

Vivisectors vs. Vivisectors in a New Lawsuit

Vivisectors vs. Vivisectors in a New Lawsuit: "


Wrap your mind around this one: InVivo Therapeutics Corp. is suing Oregon Health and Science University (notorious for its torturous animal experiments), but not as a group opposed to animal research -- rather as a business that hired OHSU to perform animal research. InVivo alleges that OHSU provided improper, substandard care to the monkeys in the study, but of course, InVivo is the company that happily ordered the monkeys paralyzed through the severing of their spinal cords in the first place, so there is no good guy in this lawsuit.



And really, let's be honest -- this isn't about the welfare of the animals for InVivo. It's about money lost. It's about business. The monkeys were and are merely tools, resources: 'The firm alleged in a recent lawsuit that it was forced to abandon its medical study earlier this year because more than a third of the monkeys provided by an Oregon research facility suffered illnesses or injuries early in the research period.' And those animals and the research on them had already cost InVivo a pretty penny. The Boston Globe article begins,


Some of the rhesus monkeys that served as laboratory animals for InVivo Therapeutics Corp.’s research into spinal cord injuries have to suffer in the name of medical science.


But the Cambridge company was not expecting the monkeys to suffer more than necessary.


This sort of language always makes me angry. The monkeys (who are a 'who,' not a 'that,' by the way) did not have to suffer -- because they did not have to be experimented on in the first place -- and none of their suffering was 'necessary,' not even the planned suffering. And it may make for good PR to pretend that this lawsuit is about InVivo's concern for animal suffering, but it isn't. InVivo is in the business of animal suffering. It paid OHSU for the express purpose of creating animal suffering. This is about money.


But whatever the primary motivations of InVivo, what does it say about OHSU that even fellow animal-research-happy institutions can convincingly argue that it's a cruel hellhole for animals?


You can read the details at the Boston Globe article here. While there, feel free to roll your eyes at all the talk of the Animal Welfare Act and what it requires and what the punishments are for violations -- what little it requires is a joke, what little it requires is almost never really provided, and the absence of what little it requires is hardly ever or substantially punished.


Please don't support the cruel and unnecessary institution of animal research; do support the alternatives.


And if the strong ethical arguments in cases such as these don't convince you, also consider the science, including, with relation to this specific story, for example, the following: 'Spinal Cord Injury Research Hampered by Animal Models, Says New Study: Scientists Say Difficulty Lies in Extrapolating Animal Data to Humans.'


---

Photo courtesy the Empty Cages Gallery and Animals Voice

"

The Roving Giraffe supports the law that will not allow any business to use the creations that God gave us for experimental research for making money, no wonder " The Root of all Evil is the Love of Money " just look at the word BUSINESS or is it buSINess not many will understand but that do are people that will follow me? G

" The Roving Giraffe News Report " provided through Ace News Service

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A great piece of kit for proving your own favicon.ico generator from my best websites trawl.G

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Sunday 13 September 2009

Solar Tree Keeps Gadgets Juiced | Solar Feeds News and Commentary Blog Network

Solar Tree Keeps Gadgets Juiced | Solar Feeds News and Commentary Blog Network

The Roving Giraffe says that this a great gadget making use of creation to provide in our everyday lives, will post more of the same soon. G

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HomeSunPower: Solar Power News: Buy, Sell, or Hold: First Solar and the Power Revolution http://bit.ly/28yjZF

HomeSunPower: Solar Power News: Buy, Sell, or Hold: First Solar and the Power Revolution http://bit.ly/28yjZF: "HomeSunPower: Solar Power News: Buy, Sell, or Hold: First Solar and the Power Revolution http://bit.ly/28yjZF"

The Roving Giraffe supports alternative energy sources and fellow bloggers who provide articles of this type and quality, thank you to Home Sun Power from G



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Eco Tech: Swedish scientists develop lightweight batteries from algae

Eco Tech: Swedish scientists develop lightweight batteries from algae: "

algae


Eco Factor: High-performance batteries made from algae.


Of all the materials that have been used to make batteries, algae seems the most uncommon, but scientists over at Uppsala University in Sweden have created a lightweight, flexible battery from algae that blooms globally.



Studying Caldophora algae’s potential use as a thickening agent for pharmaceutical uses, they accidentally discovered that the unique nanostructure made it ideal for energy storage. They coated algae cellulose with a conducting polymer to achieve a decent charge time and storage capacity.


The researchers believe that the work can revolutionize energy storage with inexpensive and environmentally friendly batteries.


Via: Discovery

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The Giraffe says this just shows that when looking at a preparation that is man-made that the creator provides us with the answer ,a little God moving in mysterious ways, don`t you think ? G

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Eco Tech: IAUS debuts dual-axis solar tracker for cost-effective renewable energy

Eco Tech: IAUS debuts dual-axis solar tracker for cost-effective renewable energy: "

sun tracking system_2


Eco Factor: Unique thin-film solar panels mounted on dual-axis trackers automatically align toward the sun.


Researchers predict that every hour the sun radiates more free energy than the entire human population uses in a year. Still, with all that technology at our disposal, less than 1% of the energy used worldwide comes from solar power.



sun tracking system_1


International Automated Systems (IAUS) has developed what could be a breakthrough in solar technology. The company has designed unique thin-film solar panels that can be manufactured at a fraction of the cost of today’s PV solar panels.


When mounted on a dual-axis automatic sun tracking system, the panels can be used to generate electricity at competitive prices.

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A great piece of technology extremely well thought out and pricing has been looked at as well to enable it to be available to the masses and not the few rich. G

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3 Important Ways Your Thoughts Can Help You Heal

3 Important Ways Your Thoughts Can Help You Heal

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Saturday 12 September 2009

New report shows China maintains momentum in its clean revolution

New report shows China maintains momentum in its clean revolution: "

Despite economic downturn, China’s domestic markets continue to scale-up low carbon technology



A new report by The Climate Group shows that in an incredibly short space of time China has taken the lead in the race to develop and commercialize a range of low carbon technologies.



On the back of ambitious government policies and a new breed of entrepreneurs, Chinese businesses are amongst the top producers of electric vehicles, wind turbines, solar panels and energy efficient appliances. Even with this growth, the opportunities for Chinese and foreign companies are huge. A successful agreement in Copenhagen later this year will open the door to further collaboration and growth.



Building on The Climate Group’s 2008 report, the new report, China’s Clean Revolution II: China’s opportunity for a low carbon future is a synthesis of the latest information on China’s progress towards a low carbon economy and aims to keep a-pace with a rapidly evolving green agenda in China, as well as expanding to cover new industries including geothermal power.



In the last year, the global economic turndown has hurt China’s exports of renewable and low-carbon technologies and created a new impetus to expand its domestic markets. The Chinese government’s 4 trillion Yuan (US$ 585 billion) stimulus package put a strong emphasis on clean development and is backed by many new laws and policies focused on increasing the uptake of low carbon technologies.



The report examines four key areas of China’s low carbon economy: low carbon vehicles, energy efficiency in industry, renewable energy and low carbon buildings and urban design. In each of these areas Chinese businesses, supported by the Chinese government, are demonstrating solid progress*:



• Thirteen Chinese cities have signed up to a government scheme to purchase 13,000 electric vehicles (EVs) this year in total. The aim is to manufacture half a million EVs in China in 2011;


• The energy intensity of the Chinese economy has fallen by over 60% since 1980, and the government has set a goal of reducing it by a further 20% between 2005 and 2010;


• Internationally, mainland China supplies 30% of the world’s solar PV technology (Greater China, including Taiwan, 40%); domestically, China is the largest wind power generator in Asia and fourth in the world;


• China’s energy conservation goals include a 50% energy conservation standard for all new buildings and a 65% standard for new buildings in some major cities by 2010.



Liu Yanhua, Vice Minister of China’s Ministry of Science and Technology of China says, “Along with the penetration of efforts on energy-saving and emissions reduction in addressing climate change, China has made remarkable progress: China’s installed wind power capacity is doubling annually; China has produced nearly 40% of the world’s solar PV products; China has the world’s largest raw material resource for bio-fuel; and China’s auto industry is working to lead the world’s new energy automotive industry.”



The report also acknowledges the barriers that exist to China realizing its low carbon economy. China is struggling hard to catch up with international peers and to move from lower-end to higher-end technology, but technological and political gaps still exist. Creative, market-based financing mechanisms are also required. It is estimated that China will need to invest 1.8 trillion Yuan (US$ 263 billion) a year to meet its energy conservation and emissions reduction goals.



Changhua Wu, Greater China Director at The Climate Group says, “It’s a 70-30 situation. We have 70% of the solutions today, but they are not all proven technologies and none are at the scale we need. 30% of the solutions will be found in the future. Therefore we still need foreign investment to drive the revolution.”



As both a major emitter and provider of the solutions to climate change, China’s role at the heart of the international climate negotiations is essential to their success and their ability to accelerate the transition to a prosperous low carbon global economy.





Speaking from the launch event in Beijing, former UK Prime Minister and partner of The Climate Group’s Breaking the Climate Deadlock initiative, Tony Blair says, “To beat climate change, we all can and must do more. As well as extending the technologies we already have, we need to speed up the development of important new ones, like carbon capture and storage, large scale solar power and smart grids that will all be essential after 2020. A new global climate agreement will set a route map for this to happen and for our journey to a prosperous low carbon 21st century. As one of the world’s major economic powers, China will have to be at the forefront of this journey. This report shows that it can be.”


[ENDS]



* China’s Clean Revolution II draws on a wide range of sources, including government reports, independent academic analysis, news reports, interviews and informal conversations. While every effort has been made to present a balanced account with information corroborated where possible, some evidence – in particular the most recent information – is inevitably circumstantial.

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The Roving Giraffe says that anything we can do to reduce China's impact on this worlds carbon use will be greatly received by all of us, l am sure G

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Australia: Eastern states’ emissions down 4 per cent this winter

Australia: Eastern states’ emissions down 4 per cent this winter: "

Greenhouse gas emissions from energy use fell by more than three million tonnes or 4 per cent across Australia’s eastern states this winter compared with the previous winter, according to a new report released today by The Climate Group. This is the equivalent of taking almost 3 million cars off the road over winter.





Total emissions for the season were 74.69 million tonnes. Emissions were down across all states included in the report with South Australia recording the largest relative fall in winter emissions of more than 8 per cent compared with 2008.





The Climate Group’s Greenhouse Indicator Winter Report tracks the main sources of greenhouse emissions (those produced by coal, natural gas and petroleum) in Victoria, New South Wales, Queensland and South Australia.





Emissions fell across all three major sources of energy in all four states: overall coal emissions were down 4.4 per cent, gas emissions were down 5.7 per cent and petroleum emissions dropped 2.7 per cent.





The drop in emissions was because of a fall in demand for both electricity and petroleum across the four states of 3.4 per cent and 2.7 per cent respectively compared with winter 2008, rather than from significant changes in the way states generated their electricity. On average across the four states the overall share of electricity generation from coal, gas and renewables remained the same as in winter 2008, although there were some differences in individual states.





“The extraordinarily warm winter is likely to be the major contributing factor to the drop in greenhouse emissions,” said Rupert Posner, Australia Director of The Climate Group.





This winter has been one of the warmest ever recorded in Australia with average temperatures at least one degree higher than the long-term average across all four states: Victoria was 1.0 degree higher, New South Wales 1.48 degrees higher, Queensland 1.52 degrees higher and South Australia 1.76 higher than the long term average. The average maximum daily temperatures were also the highest ever recorded in Australia in each of the four states during winter. Greenhouse emissions traditionally peak in winter and summer due to increased heating and air conditioning use. A milder weather means people did not use their heaters as much.





“While this winter’s reductions in greenhouse emissions are good news there is an unfortunate irony as this is because of unseasonably warm winter. Reducing demand is an important step in cutting our greenhouse emissions but we also need to change the way we produce energy.





“Significantly slowed economic growth rates are likely to have eased pressure on emissions growth,” said Posner.



"

The Roving Giraffe says a little bit of good news in the darkness of our everyday lives.

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Thursday 10 September 2009

How Many Solar Panels Would It Take to Power The Entire World? [Data]

How Many Solar Panels Would It Take to Power The Entire World? [Data]: "

After seeing how many nukes would it take to obliterate humanity instantly, I wanted some good news. Like, how many solar panels would it take to power the entire world? The entire surface of Africa, maybe? Actually, it's surprisingly less.

Click on the image to enlarge

Just 496,905 square kilometers. That's really nothing compared to the total world area: Less than the surface of Spain (504,030 square kilometers) covered with solar panels, distributed across deserts and areas with almost 24/7 sun, all year around.

The Roving Giraffe - says take a look and share this good news as the writer says great statistics G







"

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California Wildfires

California Wildfires: "

A wildfire in the mountains north of Los Angeles nearly doubled in size overnight and continues to threaten a broadcasting antenna complex and thousands of homes. Spokeswoman Dianne Cahir said the fire had burned 134 square miles of brush and trees by early Monday. At least 18 homes have burned and 12,000 are threatened in a 20-mile stretch from Pasadena to Acton. Two firefighters died when their vehicle rolled down a mountain.

In the Sierra foothills town of Auburn, more than 60 structures -- many of them homes -- were destroyed in a fast-moving fire, officials said. CalFire spokesman Daniel Berlant said Sunday it is unclear how many of the burned structures were homes and how many were industrial buildings, and it was likely to remain uncertain until daylight. The fire broke out at about 2:40 p.m. Sunday and had burned some 275 acres. (21 images)


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A United States Forest Service air tanker drops fire retardant next to a line of fire as the Station fire burns in the hills above a home in Acton, Calif. on Sunday, Aug. 30. AP / Dan Steinberg








cal_fires02.jpg

A helicopter drops water on hot spots while fighting the Station Fire Aug. 30, in Acton, Calif. The out of control Station Fire has burned more than 35,000 acres and is burning towards homes from Pasadena to the Antelope Valley. Getty Images / Justin Sullivan











cal_fires03.jpg

A Los Angeles County fire fighter sprays water on burning trees as he fights the Station Fire Aug. 30, in Acton, Calif. The out of control Station Fire has burned more than 35,000 acres and is burning towards homes from Pasadena to the Antelope Valley. Getty Images / Justin Sullivan











cal_fires04.jpg

Los Angeles County fire fighters mop up hot spots as they fight the Station Fire Aug. 30, in Acton, Calif.Getty Images / Justin Sullivan











cal_fires05.jpg

Los Angeles County fire fighters mop up hot spots as they fight the Station Fire Aug. 30, in Acton, Calif. Getty Images / Justin Sullivan











cal_fires06.jpg

A Los Angeles County fire fighter monitors hot spots as he fights the Station Fire Aug. 30, in Acton, Calif. Getty Images / Justin Sullivan











cal_fires07.jpg

Spot fires glow after the Station Fire burned through Aug. 30, in Acton, Calif. Getty Images / Justin Sullivan











cal_fires08.jpg

Los Angeles County fire fighters Kevin Klar, right, Eric Tucker, center, and homeowner Henrik Hairapetian, who stayed behind to protect his home, are illuminated by the glow of the Station Fire as it scorches a hillside on Bristow Drive in the La Canada Flintridge foothills on Aug. 29, above Los Angeles, Calif. Getty Images / Kevork Djansezian











cal_fires09.jpg

Los Angeles County Sheriff deputies and residents help evacuate horses as the Station fire burns in the hills above Acton, Calif. on Sunday, Aug. 30. AP / Dan Steinberg











cal_fires10.jpg

Residents help Roberto Bombalier evacuate a 2-year-old horse on foot as the Station fire burning in the Angeles National Forest above Acton, Calif. on Sunday, Aug. 30. The horse had not been trained for trailer travel yet. AP / Jason Redmond











cal_fires11.jpg

A woman carries personal belongings while evacuating her home as the Station Fire burns through the Angeles National Forest towards her home Aug. 30, in Acton, Calif. Getty Images / Justin Sullivan











cal_fires12.jpg

A Fire Chief from El Dorado County in Northern California waits as flames from the Station Fire blows over Aliso Canyon Road near Acton, Calif., Sunday, Aug. 30. AP / Mike Meadows











cal_fires13.jpg

The remains of burned cars and structures are seen after a fire hit the area on Friday, Aug. 28, in Soledad, Calif. Hundreds of residents near Soledad remain evacuated as firefighters battle a blaze that's also threatening Pinnacles National Monument. AP / The Californian / Richard Green











cal_fires14.jpg

In this photo taken from Monterey Park, smoke billows from a fire in the foothills above La Canada Flintridge, Calif. in the San Gabriel Valley Sunday Aug. 30. AP / Nick Ut











cal_fires15.jpg

Marla Gordon with her daughter Chaniah Gordon, 12, take a first look at their home which was destroyed in in the Auburn fire on Sunday, Aug. 30. The Sacramento Bee / Bryan Patrick











cal_fires16.jpg

A firefighter works on the blaze at the the Auburn fire on Cedar Mist Lane in Auburn, Calif. on Sunday, Aug. The Sacramento Bee / Bryan Patrick











cal_fires17.jpg

Ema Lujan carries a hose to help firefighters save what's left of her Harley Davidson business destroyed in the Auburn fire in Auburn, Calif. The Sacramento Bee / Bryan Patrick











cal_fires18.jpg

A resident walks along homes burned in the Auburn fire on Aug. 30 in Auburn, Calif. The Sacramento Bee / Bryan Patrick











cal_fires19.jpg

Rachel Varquez, left, who's house burned down on Creekside Place is comforted by neighbor Coleen Beldner in Auburn, Calif. on Sunday. The Sacramento Bee / Bryan Patrick











cal_fires20.jpg

Lyle Swesey sits in a lawn chair across the street from his burned down home on Creekside Place in Auburn, Calif., Sunday Aug. 30, as a helicopter drops water on hots spots. The Sacramento Bee / Bryan Patrick











cal_fires21.jpg

Marla Gordon holds her daughters as they looked at their burned down home on Oak Mist Lane in Auburn, Calif. The Sacramento Bee / Bryan Patrick








"What great images from my follower/followed member Jonathon Thank you G

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