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This Video of Michael Sam & His Boyfriend Finding Out He Has Been Drafted Is Amazing

Mother Jones

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Earlier today, Michael Sam received a really great phone call. He had become the first openly-gay player to be drafted in NFL history. Cameras were present as he and his boyfriend found out the news together. Watch them share a kiss and beautiful embrace as they learn of the historic decision by the St. Louis Rams:

Link – 

This Video of Michael Sam & His Boyfriend Finding Out He Has Been Drafted Is Amazing

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Dairy accidents spilled a million gallons of crap in Wisconsin this year

Dairy accidents spilled a million gallons of crap in Wisconsin this year

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More than a million gallons of crap were let loose following agricultural accidents in Wisconsin this year.

No, we aren’t talking bullshit. We’re talking about cow shit, the E. coli– and nutrient-laden fruits of the state’s dairy industry. This is the kind of pollution that causes green slime to grow over the Great Lakes and that leads to dead zones at the other end of the Mississippi River in the Gulf of Mexico.

The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel reports that already this year farming accidents have spilled 1 million gallons of livestock manure in the state. That’s more than five times the amount that was leaked during similar accidents last year. The figure only includes the most spectacular explosions of poo, not the cow pats that are washed off grazing lands into creeks and rivers during rains.

Wisconsin farms this year generated the largest volume of manure spills since 2007, including an accident by the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s flagship research farm in Columbia County that produced a mile-long trail of animal waste. …

Manure contains an array of contaminants, including E. coli, phosphorus and nitrogen, that can harm public waterways and drinking water. …

[M]anure handling is a volatile issue in Wisconsin as dairy farms grow larger.

Factory farms, aka concentrated animal feeding operations or CAFOs, have been responsible for about a third of manure spills in Wisconsin since 2007.

State officials say they’ve become more proactive in addressing spills in recent years, but apparently not proactive enough. The EPA hasn’t been proactive enough either; it was recently ordered by a federal judge to decide what to do about fertilizer contaminating waterways and worsening the Gulf of Mexico dead zone.


Source
Manure spills in 2013 the highest in seven years statewide, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel

John Upton is a science fan and green news boffin who tweets, posts articles to Facebook, and blogs about ecology. He welcomes reader questions, tips, and incoherent rants: johnupton@gmail.com.

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Dairy accidents spilled a million gallons of crap in Wisconsin this year

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Climate sneak attack: New report predicts sudden changes

Climate sneak attack: New report predicts sudden changes

Generally speaking, anthropogenic climate change doesn’t come at us like some Pacific Rim Kaiju monster, leaping suddenly into view from the watery depths. It’s slow and confusing and hard to observe on a day-to-day basis. But that doesn’t mean that we don’t have some nasty — and sudden — surprises in store. A new report by the National Research Council looks at the social and ecological dangers that could lie ahead.

The report has a Hollywood-friendly two-part title: “Abrupt Impacts of Climate Change: Anticipating Surprises.” And like Hunger Games: Catching Fire, this new release is also a sequel — to the NRC’s 2002 report of the same name, subtitle: “Inevitable Surprises.”

And what kinds of inevitable surprises should we be anticipating?

In the “Worry About It Later” column, we have some cinematic scenarios in which the Arctic belches up methane from the massive stores trapped beneath the ocean floor, or the heat circulation in the Atlantic stutters to a halt, soaking us in polar melt. The latter was the premise of the 2004 climatpocalyptic movie The Day After Tomorrow, but the report suggests these ones may be actually be for a few days after tomorrow — a more serious risk by 2100 — so we should probably focus on the problems nearer at hand.

Luckily, there is still lots of “Worry Now” to go around. One example of an abrupt change at hand is the biblical plague of mountain pine and spruce beetles ravaging North American forests, which has caused enough damage to no-longer-evergreens that swaths of dead trees can be seen from space. The beetles had previously been held in check by deadly cold snaps every few winters. Now, with just a small uptick in average temperatures, beetle populations are exploding. Bad news even if you’re not a conifer, since forests sequester about a quarter of global carbon emissions, making the atmosphere nice and cool and breathable for the rest of us.

Other woes of the near future may include: Polar sea ice, already decreasing at an alarming rate, could be taking summer vacation — as in, melted completely during the summer months — in just a few decades. Melted ice means higher sea levels, which is a tipping point of another kind. Andrew Revkin of the Times blog DotEarth points out that “Katrina’s high waters just made it over the levee, and the difference between ‘just over’ and ‘not quite over’ proved to be a lot of billions of dollars and human disruption.”

Extinctions are on the up and up as well, with biodiversity-rich ecosystems like coral reefs already under severe pressure from heat stress and acidification. The report adds deep-sea oxygen dead zones to the mix, a result of rising heat in the upper waters. If coral reefs and benthic ecosystems collapse, the toll on the rest of the ocean could be severe — as in, where did all our food go? The report warns that if extinction rates continue unchecked, even without climate change putting the pedal to the metal, we could be looking at the next dinosaur-scale mass extinction within a few centuries.

Since this sequel report is dedicated to anticipating surprises, the NRC recommends creating some kind of early warning system that could alert society BEFORE some of these drastic tipping points are broached. Well, that sounds good in theory, but if bleached coral, plant and animal extinctions, and space-visible pine plagues are any indicator, consider yourself warned.

Amelia Urry is Grist’s intern.Find this article interesting? Donate now to support our work.Read more: Climate & Energy

Originally posted here – 

Climate sneak attack: New report predicts sudden changes

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