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Fool.com Headlines – One Lender Growing Faster Than Bank of America — and Why That’s a Bad Thing – 9 hours ago
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Wishing for a super-trawler-free 2015
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Managing director of Ebono Institute and major sponsor of The Generator, Geoff Ebbs, is running against Kevin Rudd in the seat of Griffith at the next Federal election. By the expression on their faces in this candid shot it looks like a pretty dull campaign. Read on
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Fool.com Headlines – One Lender Growing Faster Than Bank of America — and Why That’s a Bad Thing – 9 hours ago
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Wishing for a super-trawler-free 2015
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[New post] 2014 – It Was a Very Good Year
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Dec. 19, 2014: The first global maps of atmospheric carbon dioxide from NASA’s new Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 mission show elevated carbon dioxide concentrations across the Southern Hemisphere from springtime biomass burning and hint at potential surprises to come.
At a media briefing at the American Geophysical Union meeting in San Francisco, scientists from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California; Colorado State University (CSU), Fort Collins; and the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, presented the maps of carbon dioxide and a related phenomenon known as solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence and discussed their potential implications.
A global map covering Oct. 1 through Nov. 17 shows elevated carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere above northern Australia, southern Africa and eastern Brazil.
“Preliminary analysis shows these signals are largely driven by the seasonal burning of savannas and forests,” said OCO-2 Deputy Project Scientist Annmarie Eldering, of JPL. The team is comparing these measurements with data from other satellites to clarify how much of the observed concentration is likely due to biomass burning.
The time period covered by the new maps is spring in the Southern Hemisphere, when agricultural fires and land clearing are widespread. The impact of these activities on global carbon dioxide has not been well quantified. As OCO-2 acquires more data, Eldering said, its Southern Hemisphere measurements could lead to an improved understanding of the relative importance in these regions of photosynthesis in tropical plants, which removes carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and biomass burning, which releases carbon dioxide to the atmosphere.
The early OCO-2 data hint at some potential surprises to come. “The agreement between OCO-2 and models based on existing carbon dioxide data is remarkably good, but there are some interesting differences,” said Christopher O’Dell, an assistant professor at CSU and member of OCO-2’s science team. “Some of the differences may be due to systematic errors in our measurements, and we are currently in the process of nailing these down. But some of the differences are likely due to gaps in our current knowledge of carbon sources in certain regions — gaps that OCO-2 will help fill in.”
Carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has no distinguishing features to show what its source was. Elevated carbon dioxide over a region could have a natural cause — for example, a drought that reduces plant growth — or a human cause. At today’s briefing, JPL scientist Christian Frankenberg introduced a map using a new type of data analysis from OCO-2 that can help scientists distinguish the gas’s natural sources.
Through photosynthesis, plants remove carbon dioxide from the air and use sunlight to synthesize the carbon into food. Plants end up re-emitting about one percent of the sunlight at longer wavelengths. Using one of OCO-2’s three spectrometer instruments, scientists can measure the re-emitted light, known as solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF). This measurement complements OCO-2’s carbon dioxide data with information on when and where plants are drawing carbon from the atmosphere.
“Where OCO-2 really excels is the sheer amount of data being collected within a day, about one million measurements across a narrow swath,” Frankenberg said. “For fluorescence, this enables us, for the first time, to look at features on the five- to 10-kilometer scale on a daily basis.” SIF can be measured even through moderately thick clouds, so it will be especially useful in understanding regions like the Amazon where cloud cover thwarts most spaceborne observations.
The changes in atmospheric carbon dioxide that OCO-2 seeks to measure are so small that the mission must take unusual precautions to ensure the instrument is free of errors. For that reason, the spacecraft was designed so that it can make an extra maneuver. In addition to gathering a straight line of data like a lawnmower swath, the instrument can point at a single target on the ground for a total of seven minutes as it passes overhead. That requires the spacecraft to turn sideways and make a half cartwheel to keep the target in its sights.
The targets OCO-2 uses are stations in the Total Carbon Column Observing Network (TCCON), a collaborative effort of multiple international institutions. TCCON has been collecting carbon dioxide data for about five years, and its measurements are fully calibrated and extremely accurate. At the same time that OCO-2 targets a TCCON site, a ground-based instrument at the site makes the same measurement. The extent to which the two measurements agree indicates how well calibrated the OCO-2 sensors are.
Additional maps released today showed the results of these targeting maneuvers over two TCCON sites in California and one in Australia. “Early results are very promising,” said Paul Wennberg, a professor at Caltech and head of the TCCON network. “Over the next few months, the team will refine the OCO-2 data, and we anticipate that these comparisons will continue to improve.”
Production editor: Dr. Tony Phillips | Credit: Science@NASA
To learn more about OCO-2, visit: http://oco2.jpl.nasa.gov/
Caltech manages JPL for NASA.
NASA monitors Earth’s vital signs from land, air and space with a fleet of satellites and ambitious airborne and ground-based observation campaigns. NASA develops new ways to observe and study Earth’s interconnected natural systems with long-term data records and computer analysis tools to better see how our planet is changing. The agency shares this unique knowledge with the global community and works with institutions in the United States and around the world that contribute to understanding and protecting our home planet.
For more information about NASA’s Earth science activities this year, see: http://www.nasa.gov/earthrightnow
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101 Cookbooks – Winter Shandy Punch – 2 days ago |
The John James Newsletter 37
The John James Newsletter 37 20 December 2014. May your Christmas be happy and your friendships stronger to deal with the difficult times that lie ahead. The love that waits around us will sustain our hopes, if only we let it. Russian businessman: Naturally, the task is simple – we need to drop the ruble to the minimum and then buy all that we can, giving away the dollars that are no longer needed and not guaranteed by anything. This will help concentrate all the rubles inside the country where we can assign their price independently. There will be a short-term increase in prices and a reduction in living standards, but – like an incision by a surgeon – it will be a little painful at first, but then you will be healthy and strong for the rest of your life. Full scale of plastic in the world’s oceans revealed for first time Over five trillion pieces of plastic are floating in our oceans, largely deriving from food and drink packaging and clothing. While spread out around the globe, much of this rubbish accumulates in five large ocean gyres, which are circular currents that churn up plastics in a set area. Each of the major oceans have plastic-filled gyres, including the well-known ‘great Pacific garbage patch’ that covers an area roughly equivalent to Texas. Is Ukraine Preparing for a Nuclear False Flag to Frame Russia? Russia’s State Advisor, Director of The Institute of Problems of Globalization, Doctor of Economics, author Mikhail Delyagin tells Anton Chelyshev on Komsomolskaya Pravda radio that Ukraine is preparing a new large-scale anti-Russian provocation http://fortruss.blogspot.mx/2014/12/is-ukraine-preparing-for-nuclear-false.html The Peshawar School massacre: A failure to understand The problem with the public perception of the war in Pakistan is that we see only part of it: we see the heartrending images from Peshawar and elsewhere where terrorists have struck. But there is a war that we do not see in the tribal north. http://maryamsakeenah.blogspot.com.au/ The small and surprisingly dangerous detail the police track about you The crackdown on protestors in Ferguson, Missouri showed the extent to which advanced military weapons and equipment, designed for the battlefield, are making their way to small-town police departments across the US. The same thing is happening with surveillance equipment that is enabling the police to gather vast quantities of sensitive information about each and every one of us in a way that was never previously possible. Russia and Turkey’s Gas Deal This is a long but comprehensive analysis of the fluctuating politics and strategies of gas supply to Europe. it is worth every minute you spend reading it. Joaquin Flores is an American expat living in Belgrade, and a full-time analyst at the Center for Syncretic Studies, a public geostrategic think-tank. His expertise encompasses Eastern Europe, Eurasia with a proficiency in Middle East affairs. Flores is particularly adept at analyzing the psychology of the propaganda wars. http://syncreticstudies.com/2014/12/11/russia-and-turkeys-gas-deal-can-save-europe-and-the-world/ Did anyone notice that Australia now has a carbon trading scheme? Senator Nick Xenophon has brought back a carbon trading scheme to Australia by inserting a ‘Safeguard Mechanism’ into the Direct Action legislation. This creates the framework for a market based methods to arrive at a price for carbon. Conceptually any company who currently emits more than 100,000 tonnes of CO2 annually will be required from 1 July 2016 to keep their emissions below a predetermined baseline level or face penalties. http://reneweconomy.com.au/2014/anyone-notice-australia-now-carbon-trading-scheme-87832 The Media Is Focusing On the WRONG Senate Torture Report Torture is only good at one thing: eliciting false confessions. Bush-era torture techniques, we now know, were cold-bloodedly modeled after methods used by Chinese Communists to extract confessions from captured US servicemen that they could then use for propaganda during the Korean War. So the latest revelations actually makes sense: The White House started pushing the use of torture when officials in 2002 were desperately trying to tie Iraq to the 9/11 attacks in order to strengthen their public case for invading a country that had nothing to do with 9/11 at all. http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2014/12/doesnt-mainstream-media-discuss-torture-issue.html Guess which currency has stronger fundamentals— the dollar or… ruble? If you listen to conventional financial news, they’ll all tell you that you’d have to be insane to own anything in Russia right now—stocks, bonds, currency, etc. They’ll tell you that the ruble is in freefall, and that the dollar is the place to be. Going to the dogs Multi-billion dollar lending to Ukraine by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank has stopped amid growing doubts among country board directors at the two international organizations that the Ukrainian Government can meet repayment commitments and loan covenants for 2015, or deliver on reform promises and budget financing targets tabled in Kiev this week. http://johnhelmer.net/?p=12395 Your Ancestors, Your Fate To a striking extent, your overall life chances can be predicted not just from your parents’ status but also from your great-great-great-grandparents’. We estimate that 50 to 60 percent of variation in overall status is determined by lineage. The fortunes of high-status families inexorably fall, and those of low-status families rise, toward the average — what social scientists call “regression to the mean” — but the process can take 10 to 15 generations (300 to 450 years). This is longer than most social scientists have estimated in the past. http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/02/21/your-fate-thank-your-ancestors/?_r=0 A Tale of Two Girls: Malala and Nabeela Whilst Ms Yousafzai was receiving her Nobel Prize, my attention was drawn towards the case of another young girl from Pakistan: Nabeela Rahman. Much like Malala, Nabeela too recently travelled to the West with an altogether different purpose. http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article40492.htm The last great extinction a double-whammer Scientists have long believed that heavy dust from an asteroid impact blocked out the sun, setting off a disastrous chain of events that led to the extinction of the dinosaurs. But now researchers have found more evidence that major volcanic eruption began 250,000 years before the impact and continued afterwards. “We’re talking about something similar to what’s happening today: lots of carbon dioxide being emitted into the atmosphere very rapidly. Ultimately that leads to ocean acidification, killing a significant portion of plankton — the base of the food chain. If you wipe them out, then you’d have catastrophic effects.” |
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