Tag Archives: citadel

Sunday Routine | Cristián Samper: A Break From the Wildlife, With Family

On weekends, Cristián Samper, president of the Wildlife Conservation Society, relishes downtime with his wife and two children. Continued:   Sunday Routine | Cristián Samper: A Break From the Wildlife, With Family ; ;Related ArticlesVestas Joins With Mitsubishi for Offshore TurbinesThe Texas Tribune: It’s Not the Rare Birds They Mind So Much. It’s the Watchdogs.Dot Earth Blog: Climate Panel’s Fifth Report Clarifies Humanity’s Choices ;

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Sunday Routine | Cristián Samper: A Break From the Wildlife, With Family

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National Briefing | New England: Massachusetts: Fishery Group Limits Herring Catch

According to the rules, the Atlantic herring fleet can incidentally catch no more than 311.4 metric tons of river herring and shad. More here:   National Briefing | New England: Massachusetts: Fishery Group Limits Herring Catch ; ;Related ArticlesThe Texas Tribune: It’s Not the Rare Birds They Mind So Much. It’s the Watchdogs.Matter: In Fragmented Forests, Rapid Mammal ExtinctionsAfter the Floods, a Deluge of Worry about Oil ;

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National Briefing | New England: Massachusetts: Fishery Group Limits Herring Catch

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Matter: In Fragmented Forests, Rapid Mammal Extinctions

A man-made reservoir in Thailand has given biologists the opportunity to measure the speed of mammal extinctions and to watch them happen, quickly. Excerpt from:   Matter: In Fragmented Forests, Rapid Mammal Extinctions ; ;Related ArticlesAfter the Floods, a Deluge of Worry about OilFight Over Energy Finds a New Front in a Corner of IdahoOp-Ed Contributor: A Pause, Not an End, to Warming ;

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Matter: In Fragmented Forests, Rapid Mammal Extinctions

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Fight Over Energy Finds a New Front in a Corner of Idaho

The Nez Perce Indians were drawn into the national brawl over the future of energy last month when they tried to stop a load of oil-processing equipment from moving through their lands. Read article here –  Fight Over Energy Finds a New Front in a Corner of Idaho ; ;Related ArticlesOp-Ed Contributor: A Pause, Not an End, to WarmingWorld Briefing | Africa: Zimbabwe: 81 Elephants KilledU.K. Utility Shares Fall After Pledge to Freeze Rates ;

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Fight Over Energy Finds a New Front in a Corner of Idaho

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Study Sees a Higher Risk of Storms on the Horizon

Rising temperatures and the atmospheric changes they spawn are most likely to generate more severe-weather days in the eastern and central parts of the nation by midcentury, scientists concluded. Original link:  Study Sees a Higher Risk of Storms on the Horizon ; ;Related ArticlesE.P.A. Rules on Emissions at Existing Coal Plants Might Give States LeewayTowers of Steel? Look AgainAppeal of Timber High Rises Widens ;

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Study Sees a Higher Risk of Storms on the Horizon

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Brooklyn Botanic Garden Defends Decision to Suspend Science Program

The garden, which has faced criticism for temporarily closing its science center and laying off three employees last month, cited the disrepair of the building and a $750,000 budget gap. Original link –  Brooklyn Botanic Garden Defends Decision to Suspend Science Program ; ;Related ArticlesArctic Ice Makes Comeback From Record Low, but Long-Term Decline May ContinueIn the Shadow of ‘Old Smokey,’ a Toxic Legacy‘Old Smokey’ Is Long Gone From Miami, but Its Toxic Legacy Lingers ;

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Brooklyn Botanic Garden Defends Decision to Suspend Science Program

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Challenges Await Plan to Reduce Emissions

A proposal from the Obama administration to limit carbon emissions might be curtailed in a legal quagmire if the required technology does not meet current standards. View original post here: Challenges Await Plan to Reduce Emissions ; ;Related ArticlesU.S. Revives Aid Program for Clean EnergyAdministration to Press Ahead With Carbon LimitsThe Texas Tribune: Texas, Where Oil Rules, Turns Its Eye to Energy Efficiency ;

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Challenges Await Plan to Reduce Emissions

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Russia Seizes Greenpeace Ship and Crew for Investigation

The Federal Security Service said it would tow the ship, the Arctic Sunrise, to port in Murmansk and conduct an inquiry after Greenpeace activists scaled an offshore oil rig in the Arctic Ocean. Read this article –  Russia Seizes Greenpeace Ship and Crew for Investigation ; ;Related ArticlesWorld Briefing | Europe: Russia: Coast Guard Boards Greenpeace Ship in ArcticArctic Ice Makes Comeback From Record Low, but Long-Term Decline May ContinueTexas Monthly: With Lakes Drying Up, Businesses Are Parched ;

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Russia Seizes Greenpeace Ship and Crew for Investigation

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Dot Earth Blog: More on Population Growth and Planetary Prospects

Sustainability scholars challenge an ecologist’s conclusion that Earth’s limits don’t constrain human prospects. Originally from –  Dot Earth Blog: More on Population Growth and Planetary Prospects ; ;Related ArticlesAdministration to Press Ahead With Carbon LimitsThe Texas Tribune: Texas, Where Oil Rules, Turns Its Eye to Energy EfficiencyU.S. Revives Aid Program for Clean Energy ;

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Dot Earth Blog: More on Population Growth and Planetary Prospects

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Podcast: What It’s Like To Spend 55 Days in Space

On our new show, Inquiring Minds, astronaut Marsha Ivins talks about her 5 shuttle missions, NASA’s budget, and why the Borg cube makes a good space ship. Marsha Ivins on Space Shuttle Columbia, 1997. NASA Climate Desk has launched a new science podcast, Inquiring Minds, co-hosted by contributing writer Chris Mooney and neuroscientist and musician Indre Viskontas. To subscribe via iTunes, click here. You can also follow the show on Twitter at @inquiringshow, and like us on Facebook. There aren’t many people on Earth who have spent more of their life in space than Marsha Ivins. A veteran of five Space Shuttle missions—in 1990, 1992, 1994, 1997, and 2001—Ivins has spent a total of 55 days in orbit, on missions devoted to such diverse tasks as deploying satellites, conducting scientific research, and docking with Mir and the International Space Station. Her jobs? Flight engineer, load master, robot arm operator, and photography manager, among other things. In this interview (click above to stream audio or watch the video below) with Inquiring Minds co-host Indre Viskontas, Ivins relates what it’s like to live in orbit—for instance, how your body and brain slowly adapt to the fact that no single direction is up or down. She also discusses some things you might not have known about space: why astronauts tend to be type-A personalities, for instance, and why Canada is so proud of the International Space Station’s robotic arm. Plus, for the benefit of geeks across the universe, Ivins explains why the Borg cube from Star Trek can maneuver just as well as any starfighter that Hollywood has ever dreamed up. “In space, they’re one and the same,” says Ivins. Marsha Ivins aboard Space Shuttle Atlantis, 2001. NASA In the interview, Ivins reflects broadly on where human space endeavors now stand. She discusses why publicly supported space missions are still vital, what it will take to get us to Mars and beyond, and why solving advanced space travel problems (problems involving energy and propulsion) might simultaneously help us solve many of our problems on Earth—perhaps including global warming. The interview comes at a dismaying time for the US space program. Compared with the space race heyday of the 1960s, the percentage of the federal budget devoted to NASA has steadily dwindled. “We spent 4-and-a-half percent of the fiscal budget, and we went to the moon, from having never been to space, in nine years,” says Ivins on the show. “That’s astounding. And we did that, and the United States was the technological leader of the globe from that point on. Not so much any more.” Today the NASA budget is about half a percentof total federal expenditures. As Neil deGrasse Tyson has noted, that means that if you held up a US taxpayer’s dollar, and cut into it that much, “it doesn’t even get you into the ink.” Moreover, it’s not clear that private space initiatives are the answer to the problem. “Space exploration is not an immediate payback, fiscally or otherwise,” Ivins says. “It is a generational kind of investment. And the only group that can afford to make that kind of an investment is a government.” Aurora Australis, from the International Space Station. NASA Ivins believes there would be dramatic payoffs from large scale space exploration investments, of the sort that the US made in the 1960s. That might include developing new sources of renewable energy that would not only be vital for long-range space travel, but could also help solve problems, like global warming, here at home. “When you develop something, in order to enable something like a space mission to Mars, it’s got enormous payback on the Earth,” says Ivins. Marsha Ivins, smiling in space. NASA More generally, Ivins thinks our culture simply needs to fall back in love with space, and what it means that humanity can, if it chooses, go there. “You are off the planet. Think about those words. ‘I am off the planet.’ You don’t get to say that [much]. “And I think fifty years from now, I would hope 20 years from now, it’s not a big deal to be off the planet, any more than it is to be at 30,000 feet in an airplane.” The podcast interview with Marsha Ivins is available for audio livestream and also as video. The video is also embedded below. This episode of Inquiring Minds also features a discussion about new developments in science, including research suggesting that political biases are so pervasive that they can interfere with your ability to do math, and mounting evidence of the dangers of head injuries received from playing football. To subscribe to the Inquiring Minds podcast via iTunes, click here. You can also follow the show on Twitter at @inquiringshow and like us on Facebook. From –  Podcast: What It’s Like To Spend 55 Days in Space ; ;Related ArticlesWatch: Congressman Makes “Completely Wrong” Claim About TemperatureChart: Virgin America falls below the industry average on fuel performance standardsAdministration to Press Ahead With Carbon Limits ;

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Podcast: What It’s Like To Spend 55 Days in Space

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