Showing posts with label Our Waters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Our Waters. Show all posts
Underwater Volcanic Eruption
Whitecaps churn in the Atlantic off West Africa as an underwater volcano erupts off Spain's Canary Islands on Monday.


Whitecaps churn in the Atlantic off West Africa as an underwater volcano erupts off Spain's Canary Islands on Monday.
Since last week, the volcano has been spewing gas and fragments of smoking lava, staining the ocean surface green and brown, as seen above.

Spanish authorities have closed a port on Hierro island, ordered ships away from the island's village of La Restinga, and banned aircraft from flying over the island's southern tip, according to the AFP news service.

Six hundred residents living at the port were evacuated Tuesday.
Deepest and Most Explosive Underwater Eruption Ever Seen Happening Near Samoa Hotspot
Double magma bubble

Double magma bubble forms at Hades Vent at West Mata submarine volcano. An underwater volcano bursting with glowing lava bubbles - the deepest active submarine eruption seen to date - is shedding light on how volcanism can impact deep-sea life and reshape the face of the planet.

Submarine eruptions account for about three-quarters of all of Earth's volcanism, but the overlying ocean and the sheer vastness of the seafloor makes detecting and observing them difficult. The only active submarine eruptions that scientists had seen and analyzed until now were at the volcano NW Rota-1, near the island of Guam in the western Pacific.

Now researchers have witnessed the deepest active submarine eruption yet. The volcano in question, West Mata, lies near the islands of Fiji in the southwestern Pacific in the Lau Basin. Here, the rate of subduction - the process in which one massive tectonic plate dives under another, typically forming chains of volcanoes - is the highest on Earth, and the region hosts ample signs of recent submarine volcanism.

The End of the World as We Know It? An Internal or External Shift?

(Click link if embedded url does not work: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=kHHZkUiRP30)

The Quickening

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Pesticides Damaging Australia's Great Barrier Reef: Government Study

International Business Times
Mon, 15 Aug 2011



Agricultural pesticides are damaging Great Barrier Reef - one of the world's great natural wonders - according to a report by the Australian government on water quality.

The report stated that farmers are using to many toxic chemicals that are seeping into the water - in fact, almost 25 percent of horticulture producers and 12 percent of pastoral farmers are believed to using pesticides regarded as unacceptable.

Pesticides of toxic concentrations have been detected 38 miles inside the reef.

The severe flooding as well as cyclone Yasi that hit the region earlier this year are believed to have worsened the problem by sending pollutants into the ocean.

The report particularly blamed pesticides used by the sugar cane industry in northern Queensland province.

More Than 800 Tons of Fish Die and Rot on Fish Farms South of Philippine Capital

The Associated Press
Sun, 29 May 2011
 
A fish pond worker scoops up dead milkfish locally known as Bangus after thousands of them were found floating on Taal Lake in Batangas province, south of Manila, Philippines, Sunday May 29, 2011.
 
The Government Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources are still investigating the cause of the fish kill. The damage of the fish, the most in-demand fishes in the country, is estimated at least 50 tons.
 
More than 800 tons of fish have died and rotted on fish farms in a lake near Taal volcano south of Manila, with authorities blaming it on a sudden temperature drop.

The massive fish deaths started late last week but have eased. Officials have banned the sale of the rotting fish, which are being buried by the truckload in Talisay and four other towns in Batangas province, Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources official Rose del Mundo said Sunday.

The deaths are unrelated to recent signs of restiveness in Taal volcano, which is surrounded by the lake where many villagers have grown milkfish and tilapia - staple food for many Filipinos, officials said. The volcano and lake are a popular tourist draw.

Talisay agricultural officer Zenaida Mendoza said an initial investigation showed the deaths may have been caused by the temperature change as the rainy season set in last week after a scorching summer, which also depleted the lake's oxygen levels.

420 Whale Sharks Swarm Mexican Coastline


Up to 420 whale sharks gathered off the coast of the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico, forming the world's largest known assembly of this species, according to a press release issued by the Smithsonian National Zoological Park.

The discovery counters the widely held belief that whale sharks, which can weigh more than 79,000 pounds, are solitary filter feeders that prefer to be alone in the open ocean. The impressive shark assembly proves they will gather for the right reasons. Food now appears to be the draw.

"Whale sharks are the largest species of fish in the world, yet they mostly feed on the smallest organisms in the ocean, such as zooplankton," Mike Maslanka, biologist at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute and head of the Department of Nutrition Sciences, says in the press release. "Our research revealed that in this case, the hundreds of whale sharks had gathered to feed on dense patches of fish eggs."

Maslanka and his team identified the whale shark assembly using both surface and aerial surveys. Considering these sharks can grow to more than 40 feet long, the surface-level surveying must have been extraordinary.

Scotland: Fear For Mass Stranding of Whales on South Uist

BBC
Fri, 20 May 2011


Rescue team leader Alasdair Jack says some of the whales have serious head injuries.

Marine animal experts are preparing for a potential mass stranding by up to 100 pilot whales in South Uist in the Western Isles.

The whales were spotted in Loch Carnan on Thursday afternoon and about 20 were said to have had cuts to their heads.

It is thought the injuries may have been caused by the whales' attempts to strand themselves on the rocky foreshore of the sea loch.

Sick and injured whales are known to beach themselves to die.

However, at times, dying whales have been followed to shore by healthy animals.

Conservationists have also suggested the whales may have got lost, or entered the loch following prey.

Rescuers said inflatable pontoons for refloating whales were on the way.

The pod had been moving back and forth from the shore and rescuers said the animals were "very vocal", which may be a sign of distress.

The whales, a deep water species, have since moved from the loch back to a nearby bay, where they were seen earlier on Thursday.

Members of the British Divers Marine Life Rescue (BDMLR) fear the whales could die in a massive beaching - which could be Scotland's largest stranding.

BDMLR Scottish organiser Alasdair Jack said preventing the mammals from stranding would cause unnecessary suffering and the animals would only move on to another shoreline.

Sad But True

Fri, 13 May 2011
 
"Our entire food chain within the gulf of Mexico is affected, there's no denying that."

Arctic Ice Melt 'Alarming'

Al Jazeera
03 May 2011

Ocean could be ice-free in summers within 40 years and sea levels could rise by 1.6 metres by 2100, says new study.

Ice in Greenland and the rest of the Arctic is melting dramatically faster than was earlier projected and could raise global sea levels by as much as 1.6 metres by 2100, says a new study.

The study released on Tuesday by the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Program (AMAP) said there is a "need for greater urgency" in fighting global warming as record temperatures have led to the increased rate of melting.

The AMAP report said the correspondending rise in water levels will directly threaten low-lying coastal areas such as Florida and Bangladesh, but would also affect islands and cities from London to Shanghai. The report says it will also increase the cost of rebuilding tsunami barriers in Japan.

"The past six years (until 2010) have been the warmest period ever recorded in the Arctic," said the report.

"In the future, global sea level is projected to rise by 0.9 metres to 1.6 metres by 2100 and the loss of ice from Arctic glaciers, ice caps and the Greenland ice sheet will make a substantial contribution," it added.

The rises had been projected from levels recorded in 1990.

Dramatic rise from projections

In its last major study in 2007, the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said that sea levels were likely to rise by only between 18 and 59 centimetres by 2100, though those numbers did not include any possible acceleration due to a thaw in the polar regions.

The new AMAP assessment says that Greenland lost ice in the 2004-2009 period four times faster than it did between 1995-2000.

The AMAP is the scientific arm of the eight-nation Arctic Council.

Foreign ministers from council nations - the United States, Russia, Canada, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Norway and Iceland -- are due to meet in Greenland on May 12, and will discuss the AMAP report's findings.

The report will first be discussed by about 400 international scientists at a conference this week in Copenhagen, Denmark.

"The increase in annual average temperature since 1980 has been twice as high over the Arctic as it has been over the rest of the world," the report said. Temperatures were higher than at any time in the past 2,000 years."

In its report, the IPCC had said that it was at least 90 per cent probable that emissions of greenhouse gases by human beings, including the burning of fossil fuels, were to blame for most of the warming in recent decades.

"It is worrying that the most recent science points to much higher sea level rise than we have been expecting until now," Connie Hedegaard, the European Climate Commissioner, told the Reuters news agency.

"The study is yet another reminder of how pressing it has become to tackle climate change, although this urgency is not always evident neither in the public debate nor from the pace in the international negotiations," she said.

UN talks on a global accord to combat climate change have been making slow progress, and the organisation says national promises to limit greenhouse gas emissions are now insufficent to avoid possibly catastrophic consequences of global temperature rises.

Arctic could be ice-free

The AMAP study, which drew on the work of hundreds of experts, said that there were signs warming in the Arctic was accelerating, and that the Arctic Ocean could be nearly free of ice in the summers within 30 or 40 years. This, too, was higher than projected by the IPCC.

While the thaw would make the Arctic more accessible for oil exploration, mining and shipping, it would also disrupt the livelihoods of people who live there, as well as threaten the survival of creatures such as polar bears.

"There is evidence that two components of the Arctic cryosphere - snow and sea ice - are interacting with the climate system to accelerate warming," the report said.

The IPCC estimate was based largely on the expansion of ocean waters from warming and the runoff from
melting land glaciers elsewhere in the world.

The AMAP report says that Arctic temperatures in the past six years have been at their highest levels since measurements began in 1880, and the rises were being fed by "feedback" mechanisms in the far north.

One such mechanism involves the ocean absorbing more heat as a result of not being covered by ice, as ice reflects solar energy. While the effect had been predicted by scientists earlier, the AMAP report says that "clear evidence for it has only been observed in the past five years".

Temperature rises expected

It projected that average fall and winter temperatures in the Arctic will climb by roughly 2.8 to 6.1 degrees Celsius by 2080, even if greenhouse gas emissions are lower than in the past decade.

"The observed changes in sea ice on the Arctic Ocean, in the mass of the Greenland ice sheet and Arctic ice caps and glaciers over the past 10 years are dramatic and represent an obvious departure from the long-term
patterns," AMAP said.

"The changes that are emerging in the Arctic are very strong, dramatic even," said Mark Serreze, director of the US National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colorado, and a contributor to the report.

"But this is not entirely a surprise. We have known for decades that, as climate change takes hold, it is the Arctic where you are going to see it first, and where it is going to be pronounced," he said by phone.

Nearby Residents Say Alberta Oil Spill Making Them Ill

The Vancouver Sun
May 4, 2011

EDMONTON — While cleanup continues at the site of Alberta's worst oil spill in 35 years, some of those living in the nearby hamlet of Little Buffalo say they are being made sick by a noxious smell they believe has been caused by the spill.

The strong, propane-like odour was first noticed in the community Friday morning, not long after thousands of barrels of crude oil began spewing from a large crack in a 44-year-old pipeline about 30 kilometres away.

"I am thinking they should get us all out of here ASAP," Brian Alexander, principal of the Little Buffalo school, said Wednesday.

The oil leak was discovered early Friday morning after a drop in pressure was detected along the Rainbow pipeline, which runs about 770 kilometres from Zama to Edmonton. The leak was stopped later that day, but not before 4.5 million litres of oil, or 28,000 barrels, leaked into a wetland area near Little Buffalo, about 460 kilometres northwest of Edmonton.

The oil spill was contained by a beaver dam, which prevented it from spreading further, and an Alberta Environment spokesman said six beavers and 10 ducks died or had to be euthanized after the spill.

Most nearby residents are members of the Lubicon Cree Nation, a community that remains deeply divided after a 2009 election dispute.

Garrett Tomlinson, a spokesman for one of the men claiming to be the band's chief, said residents are worried.

"The biggest concern that's been identified is the aftermath that's going to be left behind by this environmental catastrophe. What the long-term environmental and health impacts are going to be for the people here . . . and how we're going to move forward to mitigate those negative impacts," Tomlinson said.

The pipeline is owned by Plains Midstream Canada, the Canadian arm of Rainbow All American Pipeline, a company that controls about three million barrels of crude oil a day around the continent. The Rainbow pipeline carried about 187,000 barrels of oil a day in Alberta last year. The same line leaked about 200,000 litres of oil near Slave Lake in 2006.

Company spokesman Roy Lamoreaux said monitoring at the site for hydrocarbons did not find any levels above Alberta ambient air quality guidelines. Air monitoring done at the school failed to find any hydrocarbon levels whatsoever, he said.

Energy Resources Conservation Board spokesman Davis Sheremata said the ERCB is "certain" the odour is not related to the oil spill, but added that its source remains under investigation.

Little Buffalo students were sent home from school Friday because of the smell and classes have not resumed.

Alexander said he believes the smell has to be coming from the spill site, especially since the odour began around the same time as the spill occurred.

"This has never happened before, and it only happens when the wind is from the east," he said. "The spill is in the east. How can it not be from that?"

Steve Noskey, the other man claiming leadership of the First Nation, said he is unhappy with the response from both the oil company and the ERCB, which he says has left residents with many unanswered questions about the impact of the spill on humans and wildlife in the area.

He said a community meeting had been planned for Tuesday but was cancelled by the ERCB, which instead sent a one-page "fact sheet" with information about the spill.

"There are a lot of questions that remain unanswered from Plains and the ERCB . . . and they should be more honest with our First Nation than they have been," he said.

Alberta Environment Minister Rob Renner told the media on Wednesday that he was "disappointed" by the oil spill. He described such leaks as "unfortunate" but rare, and said he stood by Alberta's rigorous process for inspecting and maintaining pipelines, and dealing with incidents when they do occur.

Villagers Oppose India’s Big Nuclear Reactor Plan

IOL
19 April 2011

As far as Taramati Vaghdhare is concerned, there is no question of accepting compensation to make way for the world’s largest nuclear power plant.

“If you want the land, make us stand on the land – shoot us – and then take the land,” said the feisty 53-year-old, gesturing with a spatula.

“Our land is our mother. We can’t sell her and take compensation,” said Vaghdhare, who was among villagers detained during recent protests against the plant at Jaitapur.

The stakes are high for chronically power-short India. The plant would eventually have six reactors capable of generating 9 900 megawatts – enough to power 10 million Indian homes.

Long-running opposition to the proposed plant has hardened amid the nuclear crisis in Japan, with village posters depicting scenes of the devastation at the Fukushima plant and warning of what could be in store.

Even if villagers and fishermen derail the plant, India is unlikely to back down from its broader nuclear ambitions given surging power demand and a lack of alternatives.

India suffers from a peak-hour power deficit of about 12 percent that hinders an economy growing at nearly 9 percent and causes blackouts in much of the country. About 40 percent of Indians lack electricity.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh staked his career on a 2008 deal with the US that ended India’s nuclear isolation dating to its 1974 test of a nuclear device, opening up a $150 billion (R1 trillion) civilian nuclear market.

India now operates 20 mostly small reactors at six sites with a capacity of 4 780MW, or 3 percent of the country’s total capacity. It hopes to lift its nuclear capacity to 63 000MW by 2032 by adding nearly 30 reactors.

Shortly after the earthquake and tsunami that crippled the plant at Fukushima and triggered a global rethink of nuclear power, Singh said India’s atomic energy programme was on track but regulators would review safety systems to ensure plants could withstand similar disasters.

“I do not believe that there is any panic reaction in terms of calling for a halt for the nuclear projects,” said MR Srinivasan, the former chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission of India, who selected the Jaitapur site.

A recent visit to the site saw little activity other than a group of policemen playing cricket. Defaced signs on the road to Jaitapur are evidence of the opposition to the plant. While the surrounding area is thinly populated, farmers in nearby villages grow cashews, jackfruit and mangoes.

About 120 of the 2 370 families eligible for compensation for their land have accepted it, according to Vivek Bhide, a doctor and mango farmer from the district. Community members say they are unified, and those who have accepted compensation are mostly absentee landowners.

Nearby, the fishing port of Sakhri Nate is home to 600 vessels that bring in about 50 tons a day. Residents fear the plant will disrupt access to fishing areas and raise water temperatures.

“The warm water which will come into the sea will drive away the fish,” said Majeed Latigowarkar, a 45-year-old fisherman. He said officials had offered electronic gear such as fish-finders and GPS systems in a failed effort to win support.

During a December visit to India by French President Nicolas Sarkozy, the two countries signed a framework agreement for state-owned Areva to build two of its next-generation 1 650MW EPR reactors at Jaitapur and supply reactor fuel for 25 years in a deal worth e7bn (R69bn).

The Areva reactors would be the first of as many as six at the site, with construction set to start this year and operation to begin by 2018. Final contracts have yet to be signed.

Russia’s state-owned Rosatom plans to build 18 reactors in India, while the General Electric/Hitachi joint venture and the Westinghouse Electric unit of Toshiba are also eyeing opportunities in India.

Opposition to the plant is based in part on worry about seismic activity and concern that India would not be prepared to manage a crisis. India suffered one of the world’s worst industrial accidents in 1984 when about 3 000 people were killed by gas leaks from a factory in Bhopal.

The Nuclear Power Corporation of India, which would own and run the plant, said no active geological fault was within 30km of the site.

Critics also say Areva’s EPR technology is untested and expensive. No EPR reactors are in operation but four are under construction. The power parastatal has said the price of power from Jaitapur would be competitive.

Whether the Jaitapur plant is built or not, India has little choice but to add a lot more nuclear power.

While numerous thermal power projects are in development, environmental and land use restrictions mean power producers are having difficulty securing coal, which accounts for 60 percent of India’s energy use.

Gas output from the KG basin, for which India has high hopes, has lagged expectations, while competition for imports is intensifying. Alternatives including wind and solar are relatively expensive and lack the capacity to provide base load supply.

While New Delhi is committed to nuclear power, India’s leaders are sensitive to public opinion.

Residents in Jaitapur are encouraged by India’s history of civil disobedience and say they are bolstered in their argument by the crisis in Japan.

Praveen Gavankar, a farmer and leader of opposition to the nuclear plant, said villagers planned to start farming on the site and if the government tried to block them, they were prepared to go to Delhi and stage their own hunger strike.

“We will have to change the government’s mind,” he said. “The government can’t do anything to change our minds.” – Reuters

Is Japan Sinking and Liquefying?

Post image for is Japan Sinking and Liquefying?By Troy CLE on April 17, 2011

I hope this is a problem that can be fixed because this looks very scary as if Japan could become another Atlantis. I know it sounds crazy but I hope this is:

1. Not what it looks like
2. Possibly a hoax
3. Just exaggerated.

Maybe Louis Proof can take some time off from fighting the eNoli and use his powers as a FAVORITE to fix this. Take a look for yourself and make sure you pay attention to how the large pieces of the street/sidewalk sway back and forth…



Japan Nuclear Disaster Put on Par With Chernobyl

The New York Times
12 April 2011

TOKYO — Japan has decided to raise its assessment of the accident at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant to the worst rating on an international scale, putting the disaster on par with the 1986 Chernobyl explosion, the Japanese nuclear regulatory agency said on Tuesday.

The decision to raise the alert level to 7 from 5 on the scale amounts to an admission that the accident at the nuclear facility, brought on by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, is likely to have substantial and long-lasting consequences for health and for the environment. Some in the nuclear industry have been saying for weeks that the accident released large amounts of radiation, but Japanese officials had played down this possibility.

The new estimates by Japanese authorities suggest that the total amount of radioactive materials released so far is equal to about 10 percent of that released in the Chernobyl accident, said Hidehiko Nishiyama, deputy director general of Japan’s nuclear regulator, the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency.

Mr. Nishiyama stressed that unlike at Chernobyl, where the reactor itself exploded and fire fanned the release of radioactive material, the containments at the four troubled reactors at Fukushima remained intact over all.

But at a separate news conference, an official from the plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric and Power, said, “The radiation leak has not stopped completely and our concern is that it could eventually exceed Chernobyl.”

On the International Nuclear Event Scale, a Level 7 nuclear accident involves “widespread health and environmental effects” and the “external release of a significant fraction of the reactor core inventory.”

The scale, which was developed by the International Atomic Energy Agency and countries that use nuclear energy, leaves it to the nuclear agency of the country where the accident occurs to calculate a rating based on complicated criteria.

Japan’s previous rating of 5 placed the Fukushima accident at the same level as the Three Mile Island accident in Pennsylvania in 1979. Level 7 has been applied only to the disaster at Chernobyl, in the former Soviet Union.

“This is an admission by the Japanese government that the amount of radiation released into the environment has reached a new order of magnitude,” said Tetsuo Iguchi, a professor in the department of quantum engineering at Nagoya University. “The fact that we have now confirmed the world’s second-ever level 7 accident will have huge consequences for the global nuclear industry. It shows that current safety standards are woefully inadequate.”

Mr. Nishiyama said “tens of thousands of terabecquerels” of radiation per hour have been released from the plant. (The measurement refers to how much radioactive material was emitted, not the dose absorbed by living things.) The scale of the radiation leak has since dropped to under one terabecquerel per hour, the Kyodo news agency said, citing government officials.

The announcement came as Japan was preparing to urge more residents around the crippled nuclear plant to evacuate, because of concerns over long-term exposure to radiation.

Also on Monday, tens of thousands of people bowed their heads in silence at 2:46 p.m., exactly one month since the 9.0-magnitude earthquake and ensuing tsunami brought widespread destruction to Japan’s northeast coast.

The mourning was punctuated by another strong aftershock near Japan’s Pacific coast, which briefly set off a tsunami warning, killed a 16-year-old girl and knocked out cooling at the severely damaged Fukushima Daiichi power station for almost an hour, underscoring the vulnerability of the plant’s reactors to continuing seismic activity.

On Tuesday morning, there was another strong aftershock, which shook Tokyo.

The authorities have already ordered people living within a 12-mile radius of the plant to evacuate, and recommended that people remain indoors or avoid an area within a radius of 18 miles.

The government’s decision to expand the zone came in response to radiation readings that would be worrisome over months in certain communities beyond those areas, underscoring how difficult it has been to predict the ways radiation spreads from the damaged plant.

Unlike the previous definitions of the areas to be evacuated, this time the government designated specific communities that should be evacuated, instead of a radius expressed in miles.

The radiation has not spread evenly from the reactors, but instead has been directed to some areas and not others by weather patterns and the terrain. Iitate, one of the communities told on Monday to prepare for evacuation, lies well beyond the 18-mile radius, but the winds over the last month have tended to blow northwest from the Fukushima plant toward Iitate, which may explain why high readings were detected there.

Yukio Edano, the government’s chief cabinet secretary, said that the government would order Iitate and four other towns to prepare to evacuate.

Officials are concerned that people in these communities are being exposed to radiation equivalent to at least 20 millisieverts a year, he said, which could be harmful to human health over the long term.

Evacuation orders will come within a month for Katsurao, Namie, Iitate and parts of Minamisoma and Kawamata, Mr. Edano said.

People in five other areas may also be told to evacuate if the conditions at the Fukushima Daiichi plant grow worse, Mr. Edano said. Those areas are Hirono, Naraha, Kawauchi, Tamura and other sections of Minamisoma.

“This measure is not an order for you to evacuate or take actions immediately,” he said. “We arrived at this decision by taking into account the risks of remaining in the area in the long term.” He appealed for calm and said that the chance of a large-scale radiation leak from the Fukushima Daiichi plant had, in fact, decreased.

Mr. Edano also said that pregnant women, children and hospital patients should stay out of the area within 19 miles of the reactors and that schools in that zone would remain closed.

Until now, the Japanese government had refused to expand the evacuation zone, despite urging from the International Atomic Energy Agency. The United States and Australia have advised their citizens to stay at least 50 miles away from the plant.

The international agency, which is based in Vienna, said Sunday that its team measured radiation on Saturday of 0.4 to 3.7 microsieverts per hour at distances of 20 to 40 miles from the damaged plant — well outside the initial evacuation zone. At that rate of accumulation, it would take 225 days to 5.7 years to reach the Japanese government’s threshold level for evacuations: radiation accumulating at a rate of at least 20 millisieverts per year.

In other words, only the areas with the highest readings would qualify for the new evacuation ordered by the government.

Masataka Shimizu, the president of Tokyo Electric, visited the tsunami-stricken area on Monday for the first time since the crisis began. He called on the governor of Fukushima Prefecture, Yuhei Sato, but was refused a meeting. He left his business card instead.

Japan's Ocean Radiation Hits 7.5 Million Times Legal Limit

Los Angeles Times
April 5, 2011

High readings in fish prompt the government to establish a maximum level for safe consumption.

The operator of Japan's stricken Fukushima nuclear plant said Tuesday that it had found radioactive iodine at 7.5 million times the legal limit in a seawater sample taken near the facility, and government officials imposed a new health limit for radioactivity in fish.

The reading of iodine-131 was recorded Saturday, Tokyo Electric Power Co. said. Another sample taken Monday found the level to be 5 million times the legal limit. The Monday samples also were found to contain radioactive cesium at 1.1 million times the legal limit.

The exact source of the radiation was not immediately clear, though Tepco has said that highly contaminated water has been leaking from a pit near the No. 2 reactor. The utility initially believed that the leak was coming from a crack, but several attempts to seal the crack failed.

On Tuesday the company said the leak instead might be coming from a faulty joint where the pit meets a duct, allowing radioactive water to seep into a layer of gravel underneath. The utility said it would inject "liquid glass" into gravel in an effort to stop further leakage.

Meanwhile, Tepco continued releasing what it described as water contaminated with low levels of radiation into the sea to make room in on-site storage tanks for more highly contaminated water. In all, the company said it planned to release 11,500 tons of the water, but by Tuesday morning it had released less than 25% of that amount.

Although the government authorized the release of the 11,500 tons and has said that any radiation would be quickly diluted and dispersed in the ocean, fish with high readings of iodine are being found.

On Monday, officials detected more than 4,000 bequerels of iodine-131 per kilogram in a type of fish called a sand lance caught less than three miles offshore of the town of Kita-Ibaraki. The young fish also contained 447 bequerels of cesium-137, which is considered more problematic than iodine-131 because it has a much longer half-life.

On Tuesday chief cabinet secretary Yukio Edano said the government was imposing a standard of 2,000 bequerels of iodine per kilogram of fish, the same level it allows in vegetables. Previously, the government did not have a specific level for fish. Another haul of sand lance with 526 bequerels of cesium was detected Tuesday, in excess of the standard of 500 bequerels per kilogram.

Fishing of sand lances has been suspended. Local fishermen called on Tepco to halt the release of radioactive water into the sea and demanded that the company compensate them for their losses.

Fishing has been banned near the plant, and the vast majority of fishing activity in the region has been halted because of damage to boats and ports by the March 11 tsunami and earthquake. Still, some fishermen are out making catches, only to find few buyers because of fears about radiation.

It was unclear what Tepco might offer the fishermen, but the company did say Tuesday that it had offered "condolence payments" totaling 180 million yen ($2 million) to local residents who had to evacuate their homes because of radiation from the Fukushima plant. One town, however, refused the payment.

The company has yet to decide how it will compensate residents near the plant for damages, though financial analysts say the claims could be in the tens of billions of dollars. Tepco's executive vice president Takashi Fujimoto said the company's decision on damages hinges on how much of the burden the government will share.

Edano urged the company to accelerate its decisions on compensation.

For now the company has offered to give 20 million yen ($240,000) to each of 10 villages, towns and cities within 12 miles of the plant, Fujimoto said.

"We hope they will find it of some use for now," he said.

Namie, a town of 20,600 located about 6 miles north of the plant, refused to take the money. Town official Kosei Negishi said that he and other government officials were working out of a makeshift office in Nihonmatsu city, elsewhere in Fukushima prefecture, and that they faced more pressing issues.

"The coastal areas of Namie were hit hard by the earthquake and the tsunami but because of the radiation and the evacuation order we haven't had a chance to conduct a search for the 200 people who are missing," said Negishi. "Why would we use our resources to hand out less than 1,000 yen ($12) to every resident?"

Tokyo Electric Power's Fujimoto acknowledged that there was a "gap" in the views of company and Namie officials.

Tepco's shares dropped to an all-time low Tuesday, falling by the maximum daily trading limit -- about 18% -- to 362 yen, below the previous record low of 393 yen reached in December 1951. The company's share price has lost 80% of its value -- nearly 1.1 trillion yen -- since the quake and tsunami, according to the Tokyo Stock Exchange.

"We take the stock price decline very seriously," Fujimoto told reporters.

Fujimoto said the company's annual earnings report, which was originally scheduled for April 28, would be postponed, but he declined to give any other details.

Millions of Fish Die After Oxygen Levels Plummet

Kansas City Star / Los Angeles Time
10 March, 2011
Redondo Beach awoke Tuesday to find a carpet of death atop the water. Thousands of silvery sardines floated in the King Harbor marina fin-to-fin. Hundreds of thousands more, perhaps millions, were piled on the coppery bottom, 18 inches deep in some spots.
If this was a natural event, as officials say it was, Mother Nature did not show her best face.

The Southern California coast, and Los Angeles County harbors in particular, have suffered from time to time from poor water quality and chemical intrusions. This, officials said, was not one of those instances. That didn't make it any less icky - and the cleanup could take days or even weeks, and could soon pack an odiferous punch.

"At some point, they will float up to the surface and it's not going to be pleasant," said Larry Derr, head of bait operations at the harbor.

Authorities said it appeared that a massive, churning "ball" of sardines was chased toward shore over the last few days, primarily from a spring storm that brought wind gusts of 45 miles per hour off the coast last weekend. A slew of hungry, migrating whales spotted offshore in recent days probably didn't help.

So the sardines did what anyone might - they headed for safe harbor, to a picturesque complex of four marinas home to 1,400 boats, mostly private fishing boats, sailboats and cruisers, a jewel of an easygoing town of surf shops, dive bars and tanning salons.

There, they suffocated.

Even at high tide, King Harbor is only 22 feet deep, and though it is home to mackerel and perch, there simply wasn't enough oxygen to support such a massive influx of fish, even of the 4-inch variety, officials said.

The "basin" of the marina complex the fish chose also happened to be a spot with very little water movement, critical for maintaining oxygen levels.

A strong tide, also caused by the storm, seemed to push the fish into two corners of the marina - one mass against the "M" and "L" docks, and another against the Redondo Beach break wall, which forms the border between Redondo and Hermosa Beach and is home to a popular surf break.

By Saturday night, the fish were struggling. Allen J. Duran, owner of a boat washing and detailing company, was barbecuing knockwurst on the stern of his 27-foot boat, the Bachelor, when he peered into the water to find scores of sardines gasping for breath above the surface - for oxygen from the air, since levels were already depleted in the marina.

"They were trying to breathe," Duran said.

Brent Scheiwe, program director of the L.A. Conservation Corps' Sea Lab, a local ecology, education and job skills organization, said oxygen levels in the harbor typically measure at 8 parts per million. Three parts per million is considered critically low, and by Tuesday morning, the water in the harbor was 0.72 parts per million - below lethal levels.

By then, it was over. A startling number of fish were dead, so many it seemed probably that one could stroll across the water. Occasionally, a plucky survivor could be seen picking its way among the dead. But for the most part, the harbor was lifeless, a sheen of flesh and scales shimmering in the sun and undulating en masse with the rise and fall of the sea.

"It looks like what happens to goldfish when you don't change the water in the tank, mouth open and belly up," said Redondo Beach City Manager Bill Workman.

State wildlife officials sent a batch of the fish to Sacramento, where they will undergo necropsies and chemical analyses. But they described that process as a formality; two independent water samples conducted Tuesday revealed no trace of toxins, nor any oil slick, nor any suggestion of an algae buildup that has caused problems in the past.

"It is a naturally occurring - but unusual - event," said Andrew Hughan, a spokesman for the California Department of Fish and Game. "It's just a mess."

Redondo Beach relies mightily on its waterfront and has reason to be sensitive about this sort of thing.

Massive, stinking fish kills have struck King Harbor before, in 2003 and 2005. Both times, algae blooms robbed the harbor waters of life-enriching oxygen, causing fish to suffocate and die. Scientists believe such "dead zones" will increase as ocean waters continue a warming trend in a changing climate. Warmer waters prompt faster biological growth, just like molds and bacteria quickly devour food left out of the refrigerator.

In those episodes, despite efforts by boat owners to scoop up the dead fish, the rafts of decomposing flesh unleashed a powerful stench that plagued the harbor for weeks. Some boat owners complained of feeling sick from the smell.

"The main issue here is a quick response," said Redondo Beach Mayor Mike Gin. "They're going to have this cleaned up as quickly as possible."

Even if the die-off is deemed a "natural" event, that doesn't mean humans didn't play a role.

Fish kills are almost always caused by decaying algae. Although oceans are awash in algae, these microscopic organisms bloom when fed by nutrients washing off the land. Tuesday's episode follows unusually heavy rainfall in Southern California, which washed all manner of foreign stuff, from dog droppings to fertilizer, into the sea. Algae have begun to bloom along the coast in recent weeks as the days have grown longer, providing needed sunlight.

Sardines are strong swimmers, and it is possible - even likely - that their exit from the harbor was blocked not just by a strong tide but by a suffocating curtain of low-oxygen water.

This episode, meanwhile, could get worse before it gets better.

Authorities and dozens of volunteers were skimming floaters from the water Tuesday - they will be recycled and turned into fertilizer - and dive teams were expected to begin assessing how to siphon fish from the bottom, potentially with a giant vacuum cleaner.

However, an enormous task lies ahead. In the meantime, the fish will begin to decompose. That will draw bacteria, which will, in turn, consume more oxygen, Scheiwe said. More mass deaths are possible, and could fell large numbers of the fish more commonly seen in the harbor, namely mackeral and perch.

"It kind of compounds itself," he said.

At least until the stench descends, the die-off has become a source of morbid fascination. Dozens of looky-loos and amateur photographers flocked to the marina, pointing to struggling survivors in the mass and gasping as sweaty workers hauled wheelbarrows overflowing with sardines to waiting trucks.

Glen Thompson, 51, a local business owner and a King Harbor Yacht Club member for 25 years, dropped by the marina to check on some work that was being done on his boats, a 27-foot fishing boat named Termite's Delight and a 30-foot sailboat called Magic Carpet. He wound up, he said, "rubbernecking like everybody else."

"Of course we're concerned," he said. "But it's just a fluke. They happened to be out there, and like any smart animal, they sought refuge. ... I'm a local boy. I've never seen anything like this."

Some Antarctic Ice Forms From the Bottom Up

Khaleej News (Reuters)
4 March 2011

OSLO - Some of Antarctica’s ice sheet is formed by water re-freezing from below not just by snow falling on top as was traditionally thought, findings showed on Thursday that will help scientists project effects of climate change.

Experts are seeking to understand the frozen continent since even a small thaw could swamp low-lying coastal areas and cities. Antarctica contains enough ice to raise world sea levels by about 57 metres (187 ft) if it ever all melted.
A six-nation study of the jagged mountain range as high as the Alps that is buried under ice in East Antarctica found that almost a quarter of the ice sheet in the area was formed by a thaw and re-freeze of water from underneath.
Deep below the surface, ice flowing into narrow, submerged valleys often melted because of high pressure and heat from the earth below and re-froze when it was forced up again.
The findings, published in the journal Science, confound a traditional view that ice sheets are almost solely formed by snow that lands on top, gets compressed into ice and flows slowly towards the oceans because of gravity.
“We usually think of ice sheets like cakes — one layer at a time added from the top. This is like someone injected a layer of frosting at the bottom — a really thick layer,” Robin Bell, lead author at Columbia University in New York, said in a statement.

Dome

The scientists said that about 24 percent of the ice in an area around Dome A, a 13,800 feet (4,206 metres) high plateau the size of California that forms the top of East Antarctica, was formed by re-frozen ice.
“In some places up to half the ice thickness has been added from below,” they wrote of ice above the invisible Gamburtsev Mountain range.
The finding could help understand flows of Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets, and possible responses to global warming.
The British Antarctic Survey (BAS), which took part, said it gave “new understanding about ice sheet growth and movement that is essential for predicting how the ice sheet may change as the Earth’s climate warms.”
Radars spotted unexpected bulges deep in the ice — one was 1 km (0.6 mile) high from the bottom of the ice sheet. “We almost thought the equipment was broken,” co-author Tom Jordan of BAS told Reuters.
The U.N. panel of climate scientists projected in a 2007 report that world sea levels may rise by 18-59 cm (7-24 inches) in the 21st century, or by more if a thaw of Greenland or Antarctica picks up.
The thaw and re-freeze might also affect chances of finding unknown life in sub-glacial lakes in Antarctica such as Vostok where Russian scientists have been drilling. These lakes may have been isolated for a shorter time than previously believed.
Antarctica’s ice sheet formed about 32 million years ago but Jordan said that experts now believed the oldest ice was only 1.4 million years old.

Oil Spill Link Suspected as Dead Dolphins Wash Ashore

The Independant
Tuesday, 1 March 2011


The discovery of more than 80 dead dolphins in the Gulf of Mexico is raising fresh concerns about the effect on sea life from last year's massive BP oil spill.

The dead dolphins began appearing in mid-January along the coasts of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama in the United States. Although none of the carcasses appeared to show outward signs of oil contamination, all were being examined as possible casualties of the petrochemicals that fouled the sea water and sea bed after BP's Deepwater Horizon drilling platform exploded last April, killing 11 men and rupturing a wellhead on the sea floor. The resulting "gusher" produced the largest marine oil spill in the history of the petroleum industry, releasing nearly five billion barrels of crude oil before it was capped in July.

The remains of 77 animals – nearly all bottlenose dolphins – have been discovered on islands, in marshes and on beaches along 200 miles of coastline. This figure is more than 10 times the number normally found washed up around this time of year, which is calving season for some 2,000 to 5,000 dolphins in the region. Another seven dead animals were reported yesterday, although the finds have not yet been confirmed by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

One of the more disturbing aspects of the deaths is that nearly half – 36 animals so far – have been newborn or stillborn dolphin calves. In January 2009 and 2010, there were no reports of stranded calves, and because this is the first calving season since the BP disaster, scientists are concerned that the spill may be a cause.

"The number of baby dolphins washing ashore now is new and something we are very concerned about," NOAA spokeswoman Blair Mase said. She said that the agency had declared the alarming cluster of deaths "an unusual mortality event", adding: "Because of this declaration, many resources are expected to be allocated to investigating this."

The Institute of Marine Mammal Studies in Gulfport, Mississippi, has been tasked with examining the dead animals. "We are on high alert here," said Moby Solangi, the institute's director. "When we see something strange like this happen to a large group of dolphins, which are at the top of the food chain, it tells us the rest of the food chain is affected."

Mr Solangi said that scientists from his organisation had performed full necropsies – the animal equivalent of autopsies – on about one-third of the dead calves. "The majority of the calves were too decomposed to conduct a full necropsy, but tissue samples were collected for analysis," he said. So far the examinations have been inconclusive.

The spill was the greatest ever in the US – 20 times as big as the Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska in 1989 – and initially it was thought it would prove the worst US environmental disaster, imperiling the rich wildlife of the gulf's semi-tropical waters.

By the end of last year about 7,000 dead creatures had been collected, including more than 6,000 birds and 600 sea turtles. But this compares with the figure of perhaps 250,000 seabirds killed as a result of the March 1989 Exxon disaster.

Survey to Probe Arctic Ice Melt

BBC News UK
January 26, 2011

Scientists and explorers will shortly set off on an expedition aiming to discover how Arctic sea ice melts.

This year's Catlin Arctic Survey will focus on the thin layer of water immediately under the floating ice.

Arctic ice is melting faster in summer than many computer models predict.

Survey data could improve forecasts of the region's future, and also show how likely it is that the flow of warm water in the North Atlantic, known as the Gulf Stream, will switch off.

This would bring colder weather to the UK and other parts of western Europe

"The Arctic is one of best barometers of climate change, where we see big changes taking place today," said Simon Boxall from the National Oceanography Centre (NOC) at the UK's University of Southampton.

"This is not just about polar bears - it's about our lives in the UK and in North America."

In early March, four explorers will set off on foot from the geographic North Pole, trekking across the ice and ending up 10 weeks later in Greenland.

They will make regular stops to drill holes through the floating ice and lower a package of instruments into the water on the end of a piece of rope - instruments that measure the water's temperature, salinity and flow.

This data will allow scientists to calculate the rate at which the water is sinking.

Salty Seas

"We're measuring the critical 200m layer of water between the ice and the deep ocean beneath," said Dr Boxall, who conceived the project.

"The hypothesis has been that the layer stays there, trapped, acting to insulate the cold ice from the warm salty water below.

"On the other hand, the water might be taken away more quickly - and that might accelerate the rate of Arctic melting."

Even in the era of Earth observation satellites and automonous ocean floats, the old-fashioned approach - sending people across the ice to take readings by hand - is really the only one available for this kind of work, he noted.

The findings could prove to be crucial in terms of projecting the future for Arctic sea ice.

Both the area and volume of summer sea ice are steadily shrinking; and the last four summers have seen ice extent fall to sizes that a few years ago were being projected for the latter half of this century.

If mixing in the crucial top ocean layer is happening more, that could help explain the trend and refine models, Dr Boxall said.

The project could also improve forecasts on the climate of western Europe, and much further afield.

The North Atlantic Drift (commonly called the Gulf Stream) brings warm water from the tropics into northern latitudes, where it gives up some of its heat to the air - keeping the UK and neighbouring countries warmer than their latitude alone would suggest.

In colder regions north and west of the UK, winds whip water molecules from the sea, cooling it and making it more saline.

In cold seasons, a layer of ice forms, which again adds to the water's salinity.

The cold salty water sinks, and eventually returns southward deep in the ocean, forming part of the global thermohaline circulation (THC).


The global thermohaline circulation takes
warm and cold water across the oceans

As it sinks, it draws the warm surface waters northwards.
Warmer and fresher water does not sink so readily; and this could could turn off the "ocean conveyor", a picture painted in heightened Hollywood colour in the movie The Day After Tomorrow.

"Overall, if these changes... contribute to a lowering of the salt content of the North Atlantic, it could have a major impact on the entire planet - from significant temperature drops in Europe to intensified monsoons in Asia," said Richard Zimmerman, a bio-optics specialist at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, US.

"It may also impact weather patterns throughout North America, including a dramatic increase in the frequency and intensity of severe storms, including hurricanes and tornadoes across the eastern US."

Recent work at NOC suggests it would be a quick change - if it happens.

It would be likely to cool the UK's climate, with the sort of winter seen in the last three years becoming the norm.

While the four explorers trek across the sea ice, scientists encamped on Ellef Ringnes Island off the north coast of Greenland will sample seawater and ice for coloured dissolved organic materials (CDOM), which affect the ocean's absorption of sunlight.

"We'll be taking ice core sections and melting them, filtering and measuring particulates and the CDOM fraction within melted ice, and measuring algae," said Victoria Hill, also from Old Dominion University.

Results from the season's work are expected to be ready for publication in science journals in the first half of next year.

This is the Catlin Arctic Survey's third season, with ongoing projects focussing on ocean acidification - another consequence of having more CO2 in the atmosphere.

The £1m project is directed by explorer Pen Hadow and sponsored by the Catlin insurance group.

Acid tanker capsizes on River Rhine

Tug boats secure a tanker carrying 2,400 tonnes
of sulphuric acid after the barge capsized on the Rhine
Belfast Telegraph
January 13, 2011

A tanker loaded with sulphuric acid has capsized on the Rhine in Germany and rescuers are trying to find two missing crew members. It was not know why the ship capsized near St Goarshausen. The other two crew members were rescued. The ship was carrying 2,400 tons of sulphuric acid. Initial measurements carried out downstream from the scene showed no abnormalities and there were no indications that the load was leaking, said shipping officials. Authorities closed the river to shipping. They were working to secure the tanker.The German-o wned ship was on its way from Ludwigshafen in south-western Germany to Antwerp, Belgium. The accident happened on a picturesque stretch of the Rhine near the famed Loreley cliff.