bloggggg

Home  |  Live  |  Science  |  Lifestyle  |  Entertainment  |  Broadcast  |  Games  |  eBooks  |  Astounds  |  Adbite  |  Cricbell  |  Cyber  |  Idea  |  Digital  |  Privacy  |  Publish  |  ePaper  |  Contact  .Subscribe.Subscribe.Subscribe.Subscribe.Subscribe.Subscribe.Subscribe.Subscribe.Subscribe
Subscribe

Sunday, 20 April 2025

Earth’s oceans once turned green – and they could change again

Nearly three fourths of Earth is covered by oceans, making the planet look like a pale blue dot from space. But Japanese researchers have made a compelling case that Earth’s oceans were once green, in a study published in Nature.

The reason Earth’s oceans may have looked different in the ancient past is to do with their chemistry and the evolution of photosynthesis. As a geology undergraduate student, I was taught about the importance of a type of rock deposit known as the banded iron formation in recording the planet’s history.

Banded iron formations were deposited in the Archean and Paleoproterozoic eons, roughly between 3.8 and 1.8 billion years ago. Life back then was confined to one cell organisms in the oceans. The continents were a barren landscape of grey, brown and black rocks and sediments.

Rain falling on continental rocks dissolved iron which was then carried to the oceans by rivers. Other sources of iron were volcanoes on the ocean floor. This iron will become important later.

Cross section of banded iron formation in Karijini National park, in the Hamersley Range, Western Australia. Hans Wismeijer/Shutterstock

The Archaean eon was a time when Earth’s atmosphere and ocean were devoid of gaseous oxygen, but also when the first organisms to generate energy from sunlight evolved. These organisms used anaerobic photosynthesis, meaning they can do photosynthesis in the absence of oxygen.

It triggered important changes as a byproduct of anaerobic photosynthesis is oxygen gas. Oxygen gas bound to iron in seawater. Oxygen only existed as a gas in the atmosphere once the seawater iron could neutralise no more oxygen.

Eventually, early photosynthesis led to the “great oxidation event”, a major ecological turning point that made complex life on Earth possible. It marked the transition from a largely oxygen free Earth to one with large amounts of oxygen in the ocean and atmosphere.

The “bands” of different colours in banded iron formations record this shift with an alternation between deposits of iron deposited in the absence of oxygen and red oxidised iron.

The case for green oceans

The recent paper’s case for green oceans in the Archaean eon starts with an observation: waters around the Japanese volcanic island of Iwo Jima have a greenish hue linked to a form of oxidised iron - Fe(III). Blue-green algae thrive in the green waters surrounding the island.

Despite their name, blue-green algae are primitive bacteria and not true algae. In the Archaean eon, the ancestors of modern blue-green algae evolved alongside other bacteria that use ferrous iron instead of water as the source of electrons for photosynthesis. This points to high levels of iron in the ocean.

The ocean around Iwo Jima has a greenish hue. Phan Lee McCaskill/US Navy

Photosynthetic organisms use pigments (mostly chlorophyll) in their cells to transform CO₂ into sugars using the energy of the sun. Chlorophyll gives plants their green colour. Blue-green algae are peculiar because they carry the common chlorophyll pigment, but also a second pigment called phycoerythrobilin (PEB).

In their paper, the researchers found that genetically engineered modern blue-green algae with PEB grow better in green waters. Although chlorophyll is great for photosynthesis in the spectra of light visible to us, PEB seems to be superior in green-light conditions.

Before the rise of photosynthesis and oxygen, Earth’s oceans contained dissolved reduced iron (iron deposited in the absence of oxygen). Oxygen released by the rise of photosynthesis in the Archean eon then led to oxidised iron in seawater. The paper’s computer simulations also found oxygen released by early photosynthesis led to a high enough concentration of oxidised iron particles to turn the surface water green.

Once all iron in the ocean was oxidised, free oxygen (0₂) existed in Earth’s oceans and atmosphere. So a major implication of the study is that pale-green dot worlds viewed from space are good candidates planets to harbour early photosynthetic life.

The changes in ocean chemistry were gradual. The Archaean period lasted 1.5 billion years. This is more than half of Earth’s history. By comparison, the entire history of the rise and evolution of complex life represents about an eighth of Earth’s history.

Almost certainly, the colour of the oceans changed gradually during this period and potentially oscillated. This could explain why blue-green algae evolved both forms of photosynthetic pigments. Chlorophyll is best for white light which is the type of sunlight we have today. Taking advantage of green and white light would have been an evolutionary advantage.

Could oceans change colour again?

The lesson from the recent Japanese paper is that the colour of our oceans are linked to water chemistry and the influence of life. We can imagine different ocean colours without borrowing too much from science fiction.

Purple oceans would be possible on Earth if the levels of sulphur were high. This could be linked to intense volcanic activity and low oxygen content in the atmosphere, which would lead to the dominance of purple sulphur bacteria.

Red oceans are also theoretically possible under intense tropical climates when red oxidised iron forms from the decay of rocks on the land and is carried to the oceans by rivers or winds. Or if a type of algae linked to “red tides” came to dominate the surface oceans.

These red algae are common in areas with intense concentration of fertiliser such as nitrogen. In the modern oceans, this tends to happen in coastline close to sewers.

As our sun ages, it will first become brighter leading to increased surface evaporation and intense UV light. This may favour purple sulphur bacteria living in deep waters without oxygen.

It will lead to more purple, brown, or green hues in coastal or stratified areas, with less deep blue colour in water as phytoplankton decline. Eventually, oceans will evaporate completely as the sun expands to encompass the orbit of Earth.

At geological timescales nothing is permanent and changes in the colour of our oceans are therefore inevitable.The Conversation

Cédric M. John, Professor and Head of Data Science for the Environment and Sustainability, Queen Mary University of London

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Friday, 29 March 2024

What is the worth of one human being?

By Surya Vishwa: What is the worth of one single human being? Can it be measured in gold or any other monetary assessment? In short, what is the price of life? We see around us how some people who spend their whole life being preoccupied by accumulating riches alone, at the cost of conscience, knowledge, love, freedom or happiness, spending it all in a day, especially at the mid or last stage of their life on a hospital bill; and that too one that would not change the health situation.

So, what is the price of one single human life? Answer could be that it is priceless. This answer is realised by most when it is too late.

A single human life, if appreciated, loved, respected and is in supreme bliss, can create the same situation and this feeling will be multiplied.

It is unfortunately not realised when all wrong policies are made and deathly results are realised, it is not realised when religion without its wisdom essence is pursued and the spirit (prana) within its core philosophy is not absorbed by the mind, it is not realised when information is mistaken for knowledge and it is not realised when one has lived an entire life merely implementing what others tells one to, whether it is appropriate to the self or not.

Each individual, like each country (a unique geographical location or earth with its own plant, animal and human species) and where this uniqueness created differently prioritised cities and knowledge structures. It is this difference that we have to thank for when we study how ancient Greek civilisation was different to ancient Egypt and how ancient Egypt was different to the Germanic or to the Indus people and the systems of knowledge they created.

One of the key drawbacks of modernity is that we have allowed globalisation to create a one-size-fits-all thinking that permeates all branches of life beginning with education. *Or else countries which never have apples growing in their soil, will not be teaching children that A is for apples!

The worth of one human life is linked to the worth of each and every resource which is in the land upon which that human life is birthed upon. When that land resource is not valued, or belittled or abandoned, the human life upon which it was birthed becomes equally abandoned.

However, some geographical locations (countries) which have learnt (often the hard way and after many atrocious mistakes) the value of maximising each life potential, making each human being feel loved, respected, cared for and appreciated, may benefit greatly by creating an opportunity or an atmosphere for any life to reach its full potential in a host soil (a foreign country).

Sometimes with well-meaning intention, these others, as neighbours sometimes do, for many diverse reasons, prescribe to other neighbour’s formulas and methodologies on how to care for the lives that are lived in, in other lands.

This is a most prevalent outcome of modern policy creation, where if a set of people disintegrate, feeling unhappy or sad about something in their own home or family where they feel their life potential is not maximised, they may ask the neighbours to tell their family members what they should do, or the neighbours will do in on their own, as they see fit. This may lead to new problems and most likely not be the solution.

A country is nothing but a large collective of individuals living in a setting of valuable resources and great potential.

We sometimes see a set of people pulling together to make countries which have very little naturally given resources, for example, like Singapore.

The value of one single human being cannot be priced because for better or worse, they can bring absolute prosperity or absolute disaster upon themselves or their surroundings. They do it by thinking uniquely, by thinking wisely and realising the importance of the mammoth and fragile task of preventing a feeling or hurt or resentment in a human being.

For example, one single human being such as Lee Kuan Yew, sat and thought deeply, and realised that whatever that is available (port resource) or the territory he and other people of that land lives, should be maximised and made successful enough to fill the gap of not having much other resources.

He did not get depressed that Sri Lanka was far more richer in natural resources and infrastructure at that time that Singapore, but carefully and methodically analysed the shortfalls that may occur if even a single person was hurt when setting forth the rules upon which to live each life in the particular land (policies of a nation).

Hence, we can say that Lee Kuan Yew and his life cannot ever be measured in monetary value because then it would have to be priced far more than what the country he created is worth because he maximised the potential of his mind to create this country upon which people are happy, healthy, thinking for itself and working hard. Of course, sometimes some may grumble as there will be critics of anything, this being earth of humans and not heaven of angels.

Why is this above reflection important today for Sri Lanka and Sri Lankans?

It is important because we have to start asking ourselves whether we are thinking or whether we are ‘thought for’ by our neighbours, irrespective of whether such a stance is taken in the best of intentions which is often the case. What good intentions is a family member who must put the house right. A solution given by an outsider often aggravates the situation.

Each individual will fail in the overall task of living a fulfilling life if they merely follow the framework a neighbour gives them. Likewise, a country will fail if they follow a framework that is merely given by others.

A country that is to maximise its potential is hinged on the thinking power of its people; beginning with each and every single human being. The power of one, is the power (or detriment) of all, as the lived in life of this world and its experiences show us.

We are now beginning to be caught in a storm brewing around the 13th Amendment to the Sri Lankan Constitution as introduced with Indian intervention in 1987.

Today there are different people holding different views on what a full implementation of such a policy would mean.

Leaving these debates aside, is it not useful to think anew at how all rural areas in all of the country could reach its fullest heights in wellbeing, education, creativity, innovation, invention, self-sufficiency, happiness and monetary as well as spiritual realisation and thus achieve true sustainable development as villages of this nation always had traditionally achieved?

Today all children learn about Colebrook and Cameron commissions which were initiatives of Colonial rule. The tradition of villages governing itself dates back to the earliest heritage accounts of Sri Lanka but today as with all knowledge of the policies of our ancient kings this knowledge is lost. We look to others before learning from our own monarchs.

The wisdom of our monarchs, of our physicians and the incredulous feats they achieved for our nation remains in the tombs of our minds. The village administrative models around the concept of village councils are very old in this civilisation. From the time of Kuweni, it is known for those who relentlessly search for this knowledge, that villages in all of the island were administered as suited to its particular human and land resource.

The greatest model of pluralism of the Buddhist philosophy as preached by the Enlightened Human Being the Buddha, remains unexplored by our minds.

Great sages such as the Buddha, Jesus, Mahavira, Mohammed and multitude of other saints of a Hindu and Sufi and other traditions spent their entire lives improving the value of their heart and mind, the two conjoined machines that power each single human life, by creating the attitudes and actions.

These were single human beings who thought for themselves and beyond the existing normality. They were social leaders while being spiritual masters. This country has much to learn from the individual actions of great Sinhala kings who created an incredulous hydraulic civilisation and stamped upon our consciousness the importance of sustainable policies.

Yet, today, unlike the gurukulam system of yesteryear, we are unaware of these great individuals. Likewise, the greater picture of why we are learning anything is lost upon us. In the same way, the fact that each of us can be a great vessel of unique productivity for our nation is not impressed upon us.

Thus, most of us and our countries in this modern world, copy and become photocopy versions of others, whether these versions are suited to us or not. Our education system gives us information but very little space to think, reflect and be wise in order to create the best version for each of our lives so that we do not create unhappy, frustrated, unkind, unempathetic lives for either ourselves, others or the land upon which our sustenance depends. Yet we are all books of knowledge. Each day of our lives such knowledge is written for us and this is called life experience. The challenges our country has faced is part of this experience we have lived through. As we see new challenges emerge, let us think for ourselves anew, how we can create solutions and those that last so that we are truly independent individuals and living is a country that creates its own solutions. Each thinking human being is a priceless treasure for this nation and as such able to move ahead of herd based thinking or emotion.

NOTE: This article is the first of a series of creating a possible platform to start a discourse on ancient village administrative systems of Sri Lanka, to glean what is useful for today’s context. What is the worth of one human being? | Daily FT

Thursday, 28 March 2024

Despite Faulty Metal Detector, Treasure Hunter Unearths Largest Gold Nugget Ever Found in England

Mullock Jones Auctioneers via SWNS
Despite having a faulty metal detector and having to use an old back-up, a treasure hunter discovered the largest gold nugget ever found in England.

Richard Brock traveled three-and-a-half hours from his home in Somerset to join an organized expedition on farmland in the Shropshire Hills.

Upon arrival, he found he had difficulty with his detecting device and had to resort to using a dodgy older machine that was not even working properly.


But minutes later, the 67-year-old, who has been metal detecting for 35 years, discovered the biggest find of his life—unearthing a golden nugget weighing 64.8 grams.

“I actually arrived about an hour late, thinking I’d missed the action,” said the father-of-four who’s been detecting since 1989.

“Everyone there had all this up-to-date kit and I bowled up with three old machines, and one of them broke down there and then.

“After only 20 minutes of scanning the ground with this back-up detector that had a fading screen display, I found this nugget buried about five of six inches down in the ground.
By Richard Brock via SWNS
“I was a perhaps bit too honest and started showing people, and then all of a sudden I had swarms of other detectorists scanning the same area.

“The machine I was using was pretty much kaput and only half working. It just goes to show that it doesn’t really matter what equipment you use.


“If you are walking over the find and are alert enough to what might be lurking underneath the soil, that makes all the difference.

“I couldn’t look for anything else as I had the land owner, the organizer of the dig and every other detectorist around me trying to get a look at this nugget.”

Just what a gold nugget was doing in the Shropshire Hills, near Much Wenlock, remains somewhat of a mystery, although the area is believed to have been an old track or road with railway lines running through, containing stone likely distributed from Wales, a country known to be rich in gold.

Richard Brock via SWNS
The only examples of gold nuggets bigger than Richard’s in Britain have been found in either Wales or Scotland.

“The last one which claimed to be bigger in England was 54 grams but mine is 64.8 grams, so we’re pretty confident its the biggest found on English soil.

“It is quite incredible really.”

Named ‘Hiro’s Nugget’, the metal lump is being sold by Mullock Jones Auctioneers in an online auction that runs until April 1, which they hope will fetch tens of thousands.In a generous gesture, Richard says he’s going to split the proceeds with the land owner. Despite Faulty Metal Detector, Treasure Hunter Unearths Largest Gold Nugget Ever Found in England

Friday, 29 March 2013

The Earth Day Carnival

Earth Day originally celebrated at Spring Equinox around March 20, is an annual  day on which events are held worldwide to increase awareness and appreciation of the Earth's natural environment. Now Earth Day is coordinated globally by the Earth Day Network,[1] and is celebrated in more than 175 countries every year.[2] In 2009, the United Nations designated April 22International Mother Earth Day.[3] Earth Day is planned for April 22 in all years at least through 2015.[4] The name and concept of Earth Day was pioneered by John McConnell in 1969 at a UNESCO Conference in San Francisco. He proposed March 21, 1970, the first day of spring in the northern hemisphere. This day of nature's equipoise was later sanctioned in a Proclamation signed by Secretary General U Thant at the United Nations. A month later a separate Earth Day was founded byUnited States Senator Gaylord Nelson as an environmental teach-in first held on April 22, 1970. While this April 22 Earth Day was focused on the United States, an organization launched byDenis Hayes, who was the original national coordinator in 1970, took it international in 1990 and organized events in 141 nations.[5][6] Numerous communities celebrate Earth Week, an entire week of activities focused on environmental issues. Source: WikipediaImage: flickr.com

Wednesday, 20 March 2013

ISS crew heads down to Earth

Soyuz TMA-06M manned spacecraft undocked from the International Space Station (ISS) early on Saturday, beginning its voyage to bring three ISS crew members back to Earth, the Mission Control said. Bad weather conditions forced the Russian space agency Roscosmos to postpone the undocking and landing of Expedition 34 members - Russian cosmonauts Oleg Novitsky, Yevgeny Tarelkin, and NASA astronaut Kevin Ford - by one day. The Soyuz spacecraft is due to land on Saturday at 7:06 a.m. Moscow time (3:06 a.m. GMT) 50 kilometers (30 miles) north of the town of Arkalyk, Kazakhstan. After the undocking, Russian cosmonaut Roman Romanenko, Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield, and US astronaut Thomas Marshburn will remain on the space station. Hadfield took over command of the ISS from Ford on Wednesday. In late March, three members of Expedition 35 - Russian cosmonauts Pavel Vinogradov, Alexander Misurkin and NASA astronaut Christopher Cassidy - are expected to arrive at the ISS on board a Soyuz TMA-08M spacecraft. Voice of Russia, RIA, Source: Voice of Russia

Tuesday, 2 October 2012

NASA captures Earth's 'song'


By Paul Harper : A NASA spacecraft has captured a beautiful song "sung" by our own planet. The noise - which sounds similar to whale song - is called a "chorus", Craig Kletzing of the University of Iowa explained. "This is one of the clearest examples we've ever heard," he told NASA Science. Chorus is an electromagnetic phenomenon caused by plasma waves in Earth's radiation belts. Ham radio operators have been able to listen to the sounds from Earth for years, but now NASA's two Radiation Belt Storm Probes have transmitted the sound back to Earth, from where it is emitted. Hear the chorus on the NASA website here. Kletzing's team built the Electric and Magnetic Field Instrument Suite and Integrated Science receiver which picked up the signal. "This is what the radiation belts would sound like to a human being if we had radio antennas for ears," Kletzing said. Chorus is made of radio waves that oscillate at acoustic frequencies, between 0 and 10 kHz, which can be picked up by magnetic search coil antennas on the Radiation Belt Storm Probes. "One of things we noticed right away is how clear the chorus sounds in the recording," Kletzing said. "That's because our data is sampled at 16 bits, the same as a CD, which has not been done before in the radiation belts. This makes the data very high quality and shows that our instrument is very, very healthy." As there are two spacecraft with two receivers, Kletzing hopes to eventually record the Earth's chorus in stereo. Chorus may be responsible for so-called killer electrons, high energy particles which can threaten satellites and astronauts. The Radiation Belt Storm Probes mission, which was launched in August and lasts two years, is to find out for sure what produces these electrons. Source: SAM Daily Times

Wednesday, 26 September 2012

Google Earth helps to find possibly largest Egyptian pyramid


Google Earth helps to find possibly largest Egyptian pyramid
The biggest pyramid has allegedly been found in Egypt, Russia Today reports.
This groundbreaking discovery has been made an American archeologist, Angela Micol from North Carolina, who spotted two unusual shaped mounds in the Nile basin via Google Earth. This programme gives computer images of the relief on the Earth’s surface. Ms. Micol noticed two unusually-shaped mounds in the Nile Valley. One is located 20 kilometers away from the city of Abu-Sidhum and the second 145 kilometers away from the first. Angela Micol has been searching the popular Google resource for years, before she came across two areas, one of which looks like a triangular plateau, the largest ever found. The American archeologist is now ready to hit the road in order to prove her assumptions. Russia Today, TASS, Source: Voice of Russia

Friday, 7 September 2012

Ancient Buddha idol, monastery unearthed in Jajpur

Buddha
An ancient statue of Gautama Buddha and remains of a Budhha Vihar (monastery) have been unearthed from Kesharaipur-Hatikhol village in the vicinity of world famous Lalitgiri Buddhist site in Odisha's Jajpur district. Workers came across the articles while digging the land for a drain there three days ago, said noted Buddhist researcher Harischandra Prusty. A meditating Buddha idol, made probably during post Gupta period, and earthen items like bowls, spout jars and broken potteries were found from the spot. "The unearthed stone image is called Bhurisapta Padmapani, an incarnation of Lord Buddha. The idol is made of Khondolite stone and its height and width is 3 feet 2 inches and 2 feet 1 inch respectively. While one of its hands is seen in blessings giving posture, another hand holds a lotus. Both the wrists bear bungles and armlets in the arms," said Prusty. In addition to the Buddha image, a monastery has been discovered on the foot of Kesharaipur-Hatikhol hill. "The monastery is 30 x 30 metres size. There are four rooms each measuring 10 feet x 9 feet each. It is made of good size stones. The Buddhist monastery has been probably built in the eighth century under the patronage and propagation of a king of the Bhaumakara dynasty that flourished between eighth and the 11th century in the state," said Prusty. "If proper excavation work is carried out, many historical findings may come out, he said. District Collector Anil Kumar Samal said the district administration would follow up necessary excavation and conservation works. The digging work was stopped after the discovery, he said. Source: Indian Express

Sunday, 2 September 2012

Miranda Kerr becomes Earth Hour ambassador

Victoria's Secret model Miranda Kerr has been named the Earth Hour global ambassador for the second year running. The 28-year-old Australian supermodel is famed for her views on environmental issues and has her own range of organic beauty products. She has joined the 2012 campaign, which encourages the public to switch off their lights for 60 minutes on March 31 to help save energy and highlight sustainability, reported Contactmusic. Kerr, who has a 14-month-old son, Flynn, with husband Orlando Bloom, also pledged to teach yoga to 500 fans if they get involved with the campaign. "I hope my first challenge inspires my friends, family and fans to make their own promise for the environment. This year I've made the commitment to reduce my footprint by offsetting all of my travel. "If we all adopt simple practices like recycling, switching to energy efficient lighting or paperless banking then we can make a difference together," Kerr said.The yoga class will take place in Sydney, Australia. Source: Screen India, ***

Friday, 27 July 2012

Moon has enough helium-3 to power Earth for five millenniums

Scientists think they know how to provide humanity with energy for 5,000 years ahead, using helium-3 from the Moon where it is aplenty. In the opinion of Vladislav Shevchenko, deputy head for lunar research of the Moscow State University’s Astronomy Institute, 25 tons of helium-3 per year will more than suffice to meet mankind’s energy needs.On Earth, helium-3 is measured in grams, while its reserves on the Moon are estimated at 500,000 tons. Tags: Moon, World, News, Sci-Tech, space, Читать далее, Source: Voice of Russia

Sunday, 1 July 2012

China's astronaut trio returns to Earth

Chinese female astronaut Liu YangAgencies : Beijing, China's first woman cosmonaut and two of her colleagues returned to Earth today after successfully accomplishing the country's first-ever manual space docking during a two-week mission, giving a boost to Beijing's efforts to build a space station by 2020. The spacecraft Shenzhou-9 carrying the three astronauts landed at the designated spot at Inner Mongolia region. The landing, which was shown live on the television was a bit bumpy as the module turned upside down as it hit the ground. Ground stations declared that the landing wassuccessful. The first Chinese woman astronaut Liu Yang, and her two male colleagues Mission commander Jing Haipeng and Liu Wang were safe. The return capsule of Shenzhou-9 spacecraft touched down this morning, after China fulfilled its first manned space docking, state run Xinhua news agency reported. The two-week space mission was a key step towards building a space station, which China aims to do by 2020. The touch down monitored by various ground stations took place at 10 AM Beijing time as was announced earlier. The module aided by a huge parachute was seen landing almost at the designated site in the grass lands of inner Mongolia. The ground search and rescue team moved toward the landing site as soon as the capsule landed.Source: Indian Express

Saturday, 30 June 2012

Vampires unearthed in Bulgaria

The bodies of two men believed to have been vampires by their medieval contemporaries were found in an archeological dig in Bulgaria, local media reported. Some 70 bodies were discovered in a necropolis in the town of Sozopol, dating to the 13th-14th century, but only two of them had iron stakes through the heart, Focus-news.net said, citing history professor Bozhidar Dimitrov.The find is not overly unusual, as more than 100 “vampires” have been found in Bulgarian medieval digs, the website reported Dimitrov as saying on Tuesday. Tags: Vampires, News, graves, World, Oddly enough, Читать далее, Source: Voice of Russia

Monday, 23 April 2012

World marks International Mother Earth Day

World marks International Mother Earth Day on Sunday, in a holiday that was established by the UN General Assembly in 2009. According to a General Assembly resolution, the term Mother Earth is used because it reflects the interdependence that exists among human beings, other living species and the planet we all inhabit. Tags: News, World, Society, Russia, ecology, Читать далее, Source: Voice of Russia

Monday, 16 April 2012

Massive Indonesia earthquake surprises scientists

Hindustan Times, AP, Los Angeles: The massive  earthquake  off  Indonesia
surprised scientists: Usually this type of jolt isn't this powerful. The biggest earthquakes tend to occur in subduction zones where one plate of the Earth's crust dives under another. This grind produced the 2004 magnitude-9.1 Indian Ocean disaster and the magnitude-9 Japan quake last year. Yesterday's magnitude-8.6 occurred along a strike-slip fault line similar to California's San Andreas Fault. Scientists say it's rare for strike-slip quakes, in which blocks of rocks
slide horizontally past each other, to be this large. "It's clearly a bit of an odd duck," said seismologist Susan Hough of the US Geological Survey in Pasadena, Calif. As one of the world's most seismically active places, Indonesia is located on the Pacific "Ring of Fire," an arc of volcanos and fault lines encircling the Pacific Basin. Pressure builds up in the rocks over time and is eventually released in an earthquake. Wednesday's quake was followed by a magnitude-8.2 aftershock. Both were strike-slip quakes. "A week ago, we wouldn't have thought we could have a strike-slip earthquake of this size. This is very, very large," said Kevin Furlong, a professor of geosciences at Penn State University. So large, in fact, that the main shock went into the history books. Record-keeping by the USGS National Earthquake Information Center ranks Wednesday's shaker as the 11th largest since 1900. It's probably the largest strike-slip event though there's debate about whether a similar-sized Tibet quake in 1950 was the same kind. A preliminary analysis indicates one side of the fault lurched 70 feet past the other a major reason for the quake's size. By contrast, during the 1906 magnitude-7.8 San Francisco earthquake along the San Andreas perhaps the best known strike-slip event the ground shifted 15 feet. The Sumatra coast has been rattled by three strong strike-slip quakes since 2004, but yesterday's was the largest. Source: Hindustan Times

Monday, 5 March 2012

Earthquake hits North India, major tremors felt in NCR

Epicentre of the quake. Courtesy: USGS
News Bullet, Press Trust of India and  STAR  News  Bureau,  New  Delhi:  An earthquake of medium intensity jolted Delhi and its satellite towns this afternoon, pulling panic-stricken people out of their homes and offices. The tremors, measuring 4.9 on the Richter scale with Haryana's Bahadurgarh as epicentre (35 kms from Delhi), were felt across Delhi and its adjoining satellite towns of Ghaziabad and Noida in Uttar Pradesh at a 1.11pm, the MeT office said. The quake took place 9km below the surface. The tremors were felt for less than ten seconds."The intensity  was 4.9 and the epicentre was Bahadurgarh, Delhi-Haryana Border," a senior MeT official said. There were no immediate reports of any casualty. The fire brigade and police said they have not received any immediate calls of casualty or damage. According to the Seismic Zone Mapping done by the Geological Survey of India (GSI), Delhi is among 30 cities in the country falling in zone IV, which is defined as a severe intensity seismic zone. This is the third tremor in Delhi, which is among the 30 cities which fall in the high risk seismic zone, since September last year. Tremors were felt in the capital on September 18 last year following an earthquake with an intensity of 6.8 on the Richter Scale having its epicentre near Sikkim-Nepal border. On September eight last year, an earthquake of 4.2 on Richter Scale with Haryana's Sonepat as epicentre, had rocked the capital. The tremors were felt in parts of Haryana, particularly those areas falling in the NCR region which are close to Bahadurgarh including Gurgaon, Rohtak, Jhajjar, Hisar, Bhiwani and other places. Some places in Punjab and Agra in Uttar Pradesh also experienced the tremors. Source: News Bullet

Sunday, 26 February 2012

Aliens hunting for gold on Earth?


ANI, Johannesburg,: The Earth has become the battleground for extra-terrestrials to further their own political agenda for the future of the planet, a researcher has claimed. In South Africa’s first UFO science and consciousness conference held recently in Johannesburg, the organiser said that the royal political bloodline was a small group of families whose origins could be traced to the first of mankind and who were inevitably in contact with the aliens. “There’s a battle for Earth by some interesting dark forces,” News24 quoted Michael Tellinger, the organiser as saying. “All the governments in the world are puppets and instruments to implement the will of a small group of individuals. The royal political bloodline goes back thousand of years,” he said. According to Tellinger, the South African government was one of the most important puppets of these extra-terrestrials because the country was rich in gold and diamonds. “We are at the heart of this global control because of our mineral resources,” he said. On the first day of the conference, all the speakers agreed that like humans who had the potential to be both good and bad, so too was the population of galactical beings. Extra-terrestrials were also not dissimilar to politicians, who pushed their own agenda for material gain. “They came to Earth looking for gold. We are all still obsessed with gold,” he said. The research, according to Tellinger, showed that the extra-terrestrial “Annunaki” came to Earth around 300,000 years ago to look for gold, and that they were also responsible for cloning their own genetic structures and creating mankind. Source: Hindustan Times ***

Friday, 24 February 2012

Kepler-22b is more of Earth’s “cousin”, astrophysicist says

.Subscribe
By:Jamila Bey, Astrophysicists and probably more than a few science writers are all abuzz about a new discovery. NASA has confirmed the first Earth-like planet outside of our solar system. And while Kepler-22b has been dubbed “Earth’s twin,” not everyone is ready to call for a family reunion. Tags: Commentary, World, planets, Sci-Tech, Читать далее, Source: Voice of Russia

Tuesday, 21 February 2012

Large asteroid to pass by earth

The 400-meter asteroid that is calculated to pass near earth on November 8 is in no danger of colliding with our planet, believe employees of NASA. The U.S. space agency is monitoring the target using radar and radio.According to their calculations, the asteroid will pass near our planet at a distance of more than 300 thousand kilometers. Tags: asteroidspaceNASASci-TechWorldNewsЧитать далее, Source: Voice of Russia

Wednesday, 4 January 2012

Sun will be nearest to Earth tomorrow

News Bullet, Press Trust of India, New Delhi: The Sun will be nearest to our planet tomorrow, giving an opportunity to astro-enthusiasts to carry out several experiments. "At 5:53 AM tomorrow (Perihelion Day), the Earth will be at its nearest point from the Sun. The distance at that time is 147 million km," Planetary Society of India General Secretary N Sri Raghunandan Kumar said today. Every January, the Earth is at perihelion, the closest from the Sun for the year and in July it is at aphelion,
the farthest to the Sun for the year,  he said. The word perihelion comes from the Greek words "peri" (meaning "near") and "helios" (meaning "sun"). All planets, comets and asteroids in our solar system have elliptical orbits. Thus, they all have a closest and a farthest point from the Sun-- a perihelion and an aphelion, he said. Explaining the reason why the temperature does not rise on Perihelion Day even when the sunlight is more, Kumar said, "There are many reasons for it. Blame it on the tilt of the Earth's axis. Actually, our seasons are determined by the tilt of the Earth and not by how close the Earth is to the Sun. Sunlight raises the temperature of continents more than it does of the oceans." Astro-ethusiasts are expected to gather at Jantar Mantar observatory and carry out experiments related to the distance between the Earth and the Sun Source: News Bullet

Friday, 9 December 2011

NASA Discover New Earth Like Planet "Kepler - 22b"

Screen Shot On Uploaded Video
Uploaded by keithypops, Share Link: DP World, on Dec 5, 2011, It may have a radius about 2.4 times that of our home planet, but NASA scientists have confirmed that Kepler-22b — depicted in the artist's conception up top — is the first planet we've ever confirmed orbits within the so-called "habitable zone" of a Sun-like star, making it the most Earth-like planet we've yet discovered. In astronomy, the habitable zone (also known as the Goldilocks zone") is the region surrounding a star in which an orbiting planet could maintain liquid water (and, by extension, life) on its surface. And as the "Goldilocks" moniker implies, whether or not a planet resides inside
a habitable zone has everything to do with whether the planet is a little too cold, a little too hot, or just right, temperature-wise. Take Kepler-21b, for example, whose discovery was announced last week by the National Optical Astronomy Observatory. Kepler-21b is even closer to the size of Earth than Kepler-22b, but it orbits far too close to its sun to sustain any form of life we're familiar with; as this conception of K-21b by artist Ron Miller clearly illustrates, surface temperatures on the planet are estimated to reach as much as 3000-degrees Fahrenheit — that's hot enough to melt iron, not to mention any hope of us ever calling K-21b "Earth 2.0." But Kepler-22b is a different story. Sure, the planet orbits about 15% closer to its star than Earth 
Screen Shot On Uploaded Video
does to the Sun, but its star is also significantly cooler, dimmer, and smaller than ours. And while scientists have yet to determine K-22b's composition — be it rocky, gaseous or liquid — they estimate that surface temperatures on K-22b average a very Earth-like 72-degrees Fahrenheit. "This is a major milestone on the road to finding Earth's twin," said Douglas Hudgins, Kepler program scientist at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "Kepler's results continue to demonstrate the importance of NASA's science missions, which aim to answer some of the biggest questions about our place in the universe."