Monday, October 22, 2012

Mississippi river diversion helped build Louisiana wetlands, geologists find

ScienceDaily (Oct. 21, 2012) ? The extensive system of levees along the Mississippi River has done much to prevent devastating floods in riverside communities. But the levees have also contributed to the loss of Louisiana's wetlands. By holding in floodwaters, they prevent sediment from flowing into the watershed and rebuilding marshes, which are compacting under their own weight and losing ground to sea-level rise.

Reporting in Nature Geoscience, a team of University of Pennsylvania geologists and others used the Mississippi River flood of the spring of 2011 to observe how floodwaters deposited sediment in the Mississippi Delta. Their findings offer insight into how new diversions in the Mississippi River's levees may help restore Louisiana's wetlands.

While scientists and engineers have previously proposed ways of altering the levee system to restore some of the natural wetland-building ability of the Mississippi, this is among the only large-scale experiments to demonstrate how these modifications might function.

The study was headed by Douglas Jerolmack, an assistant professor in the Department of Earth and Environmental Science at Penn, and Federico Falcini, who at the time was a postdoctoral researcher in Jerolmack's lab and is now at the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche in Rome. Benjamin Horton, an associate professor in the Earth and Environmental Science Department; Nicole Khan, a doctoral student in Horton's lab; and Alessandro Salusti, a visiting undergraduate researcher also contributed to the work. The Penn researchers worked with Rosalia Santoleri, Simone Colella and Gianluca Volpe of the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche; Leonardo Macelloni, Carol B. Lutken and Marco D'Emidio of the University of Mississippi; Karen L. McKee of the U.S. Geological Survey; and Chunyan Li of Louisiana State University.

The 2011 floods broke records across several states, damaged homes and crops and took several lives. The destruction was reduced, however, because the Army Corps of Engineers opened the Morganza Spillway, a river-control structure, for the first time since 1973 to divert water off of the Mississippi into the Atchafalaya River Basin. This action involved the deliberate flooding of more than 12,000 square kilometers and alleviated pressures on downstream levees and spared Baton Rouge and New Orleans from the worst of the flood.

For the Penn researchers, the opening of the Morganza Spillway provided a rare look into how floods along the Mississippi may have occurred before engineered structures were put in place to control the river's flow.

"While this was catastrophic to the people living in the Atchafalaya Basin, it was also simulating -- accidentally -- the sort of natural flood that used to happen all the time," Jerolmack said. "We were interested in how this sort of natural flooding scenario would differ from the controlled floods contained within levees that we normally see in the Delta."

To capitalize on this opportunity, the team began examining satellite images showing the plume of sediment-laden water emerging from the mouths of the Atchafalaya and Mississippi rivers. They calculated the amount of sediment in the plumes for the duration of the flood based on the ocean color in the satellite images and calibrated these data to field samples taken from a boat in the Gulf of Mexico. Their boat sampling also allowed them to gather data on the speed of the plume and the extent to which river water mixed with ocean water.

From the satellite images, researchers observed that the Mississippi River unleashed a jet of water into the ocean. In contrast, the waters diverted into the Atchafalaya Basin spread out over 100 kilometers of coastline, the sediment lingering in a wide swampy area.

"You have this intentionally flooded Atchafalaya Basin and when those flood waters hit the coast they were trapped there for a month, where tides and waves could bring them back on shore," Jerolmack said. "Whereas in the Mississippi channel, where all the waters were totally leveed, you could see from satellite images this sort of fire hose of water that pushed the sediment from the river far off shore."

The researchers used a helicopter to travel to 45 sites across the two basins, where they sampled sediment cores. They observed that sediment deposited to a greater extent in the Atchafalaya Basin than in any area of the Mississippi Basin wetlands, even though the Mississippi River plume contained more total sediment.

The recently deposited sediments lacked plant roots and were different in color and consistency from the older sediments. Laboratory analyses of diatoms, or photosynthetic algae, also revealed another signature of newly deposited sediments: They contained a higher proportion of round diatoms to rod-shaped diatoms than did deeper layers of sediment.

"This diatom ratio can now serve as an indicator for freshwater floods," Horton said. "With longer sediment cores and analyses of the diatoms, we may be able to work out how many floods have occurred, how much sediment they deposited and what their recurrence intervals were."

Taken together, the researchers' findings offer a large-scale demonstration of how flooding over the Atchafalaya's wide basin built up sediment in wetland areas, compared to the more-focused plume of water from the Mississippi River. Jerolmack says this "natural experiment" provides a convincing and reliable way of gathering data and information about how changes in the Mississippi's levees and control structures could help restore marsh in other areas of the Delta.

"One of the things that we found here is that the Atchafalaya, which is this wide, slow plume, actually produced a lot of sedimentation over a broad area," Jerolmack said. "We think that what the Atchafalaya is showing us on a field scale is that this is the sort of diversion that you would need in order to create effective sedimentation and marsh building."

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Pennsylvania, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Federico Falcini, Nicole S. Khan, Leonardo Macelloni, Benjamin P. Horton, Carol B. Lutken, Karen L. McKee, Rosalia Santoleri, Simone Colella, Chunyan Li, Gianluca Volpe, Marco D?Emidio, Alessandro Salusti, Douglas J. Jerolmack. Linking the historic 2011 Mississippi River flood to coastal wetland sedimentation. Nature Geoscience, 2012; DOI: 10.1038/ngeo1615

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/PDvLGGz-e1M/121021133913.htm

kevin durant jazz fest zurich classic selena lamichael james lamichael james derrick rose

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Orionid meteor show reaches its climax

It has been 26 years since Halley's Comet last passed through the inner solar system ? but this weekend, skywatchers have a chance to see leftover bits of the comet light up the night sky in the Orionid meteor shower.

The Orionids can best be described as a junior version of the famous Perseid meteor shower and is scheduled to reach its maximum before sunrise on Sunday morning. Patient night sky observers with clear, dark skies could see dozens of meteors an hour, according to NASA.

This will be an excellent year to look for the Orionids, since the moon will set around 11 p.m. local time on Saturday night and will not be a hindrance at all; so the sky will be dark for prospective meteor watchers right on through the first light of dawn on Sunday. [Photos: Orionid Meteor Shower of 2012]

The orbit of Halley's Comet closely approaches the Earth's orbit at two places. One point is in the early part of May producing a meteor display known as the Eta Aquarids.

The other point comes in the middle to latter part of October, producing the Orionids.

How to watch
This weekend's meteor shower is known as ?Orionids? because the meteors seem to fan out from a region to the north of well-known Orion constellation's second brightest star: the ruddy Betelgeuse.

Currently, Orion appears ahead of us in our journey around the sun, and has not completely risen above the eastern horizon until after 11 p.m. local daylight time. At its best several hours later, at around 5 a.m. ? Orion will be highest in the sky toward the south ? Orionids typically produce around 20 to 25 meteors per hour under a clear, dark sky.

Typically, Orionid meteors are dim and not well seen from urban locations, so we suggest that you find a safe rural location to see the best Orionid activity. Actually, Orionid activity started to increase noticeably on Oct. 17, when they started appearing at roughly five per hour.

After peaking on the morning of Oct. 21, activity will slowly ease, dropping back to around five per hour around Oct. 25. The last few stragglers usually appear sometime in early to mid-November. [October's Best Night Sky Sights (Video)]

What to expect
The best time to see the Orionid meteor shower is anytime from about 1 or 2 a.m. local daylight time until around dawn, when the shower?s radiant (in Orion?s upraised club, just north of the bright red star, Betelgeuse) is highest above the southern horizon.

The higher the radiant, the more meteors appear all over the sky. The Orionids are one of just a handful of known meteor showers that can be observed equally well from both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres.

The Orionids are one of the better annual meteor shower displays, producing about 15 to 20 meteors per hour at their peak. Add the five to 10 sporadic meteors that always are plunging into our atmosphere and you get a maximum of about 20 to 30 meteors per hour for a dark sky location. Most of these meteors are relatively faint, however, so any light pollution will cut the total way down.

In recent years, this shower has been rather active for a few days before and after its Oct. 21 peak. Step outside before sunrise, for instance, on Saturday or Monday mornings and if you catch sight of a meteor, there?s about a 75 percent chance that it likely originated from the nucleus of Halley?s Comet.

  1. Space news from NBCNews.com

    1. Curiosity rover eats its first Martian dirt

      Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: NASA's Curiosity rover is analyzing its first Martian soil sample, a load of dirt that may well include some of the "bright shiny objects" spotted by the rover.

    2. Genetic pioneer to hunt for Martian DNA
    3. Stunning meteors light up California sky
    4. Alpha Centauri mission by 2100?

"They are easily identified ? from their speed," David Levy and Stephen Edberg write in "Observe: Meteors," an Astronomical League manual. "At 66 kilometers (41 miles) per second, they appear as fast streaks, faster by a hair than their sisters, the Eta Aquarids of May. And like the Eta Aquarids, the brightest of family tend to leave long-lasting trains. Fireballs are possible three days after maximum."

In fact, a dazzling fireball lit up the night sky over California on Wednesday night, creating a brilliant light show and starting many witness with a loud sonic boom.

Story: Stunning shooting stars light up California sky

Recent studies have shown that about half of all the Orionids that are seen leave trails that lasted longer than other meteors of equivalent brightness.

This is undoubtedly connected in some way to the makeup of Halley?s Comet. So it is that the shooting stars that we have come to call Orionids are really an encounter with the traces of a famous visitor from the depths of space and from the dawn of creation.

Halley?s legacy
Halley's Comet takes roughly 75 years to circle the sun. But if you?re 30 years old or younger, you either have little or no memory of this famous cosmic vagabond (your next chance will come in the summer of 2061). Or maybe, if you were around back then, you didn?t see Halley at all because of light pollution or the comet's low altitude above the horizon.

That's what makes the Orionid meteor shower, and its partner the Eta Aquarids, so special: They give Earth a glimpse of Halley twice a year.

Comets are the leftovers of the day of creation, the odd bits and pieces of simple gases ? methane, ammonia, carbon dioxide and water vapor ? that went unused when the sun and its attendant planets came into their present form. All comets eventually disintegrate into meteor swarms and Halley?s is well into that process at this time.

These tiny particles ? mostly ranging in size from dust to sand grains ? remain along the original comet?s orbit, creating a ?river of rubble? in space. In the case of Halley?s comet, which has likely circled the sun many hundreds, if not thousands of times, its dirty trail of debris has been distributed more or less uniformly all along its entire orbit.

When these tiny bits of comet collide with Earth, friction with our atmosphere raises them to white heat and produces the effect popularly referred to as "shooting stars."

Meteoroids that are released into space from this cometary debris are the remnants of a comet?s nucleus. When they hit Earth's atmosphere, they flare up in bright meteors. Any pieces that reach Earth are called meteorites.

Story: Show us your sky highlights

If you snapped any photos of the Orionid meteor shower and want to share them with Space.com, send the pictures, comments and location info to managing editor Tariq Malik at tmalik@space.com.

Joe Rao serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York's Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for The New York Times and other publications, and he is also an on-camera meteorologist for News 12 Westchester, New York.

? 2012 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49479429/ns/technology_and_science-space/

timothy leary jonathan frid pujols watchmen hitch justin beiber lamar odom

Thursday, October 18, 2012

On A Whim Home Boutique: PINK OCTOBER

Donna Troxler-Shop Owner/Sole Proprietor-Decorating Consultant ,Custom Painted Vintage White Furniture

Katelyn Troxler-Full Time Worker-Granddaughter

Dana Troxler-Part Time Worker-Daughter

Syd Figert-Custom Upholstery PLUS Awesome Furnishings.

Holly Chapple-Wedding Florals PLUS Primitive Style Decor

Jean Crunk-Painted Furniture Plus Unique Home Decor Items.

Jennifer Markoff-Jewelry-Framed Art

Karen Beiler-Hand Painted Stemware and Signs

Nancy Greenan-Unique Furniture-Estate Clean Out

Ruth Blackwell-Custom Oil Painting

Elaine Savona-Original Photography and Custom Made Jewelry and Painted Furniture

Nancy Brown-Custom Made Jewelry

Karey West-Stern - Unique Garden Items and home furnishings-Home Grown Dried Herb Designs

Lorelei Howard - Vintage Jewelry-Fine China Pieces-Thousands of Vintage Post Cards Collected for Years

Jackie Brannan-Romantic Style Funiture and Home Decor. Custom Made Silk Flower Arrangements. Stages Homes for Re-Sale. Part Time Worker.

Celeste Blumenauer-Worked On Extreme Makeover With Tye, Very Unique Painted+Refinished Furniture. Can Do Any Type Paint Finishes On Just About Anything. Annie Sloan Paint Stockest and Teacher Of Annie Sloan Paint Finishes.

Tinia Lively-Beautiful Unique Stained Vintage Furniture. Also Specializes In Elegant Glassware And China.

Carrie Beck-Auction Diva Specializing In Cool Funky Junk, Vintage Finds And Cottage Furnishings

Donna Rutkowski-Unique Cottage Style Furnishings. Specializing in Decorating Do-Overs With Style.

Michelle Wallace + Eliza Chinyaving-Repurposed, Re-Painted Highly Desired Furniture And Home Furnishings With A Flair. Custom Built Work Stations In Your Choice Of Colors.

Michelle Beiler + Karin Nicotra- Unique French Country Vintage Furnishings With A Pop Of Color. Furniture Painted With Annie Sloan Paints. A Real Eye For Color.

Karen Hutchison- Talented Eclectic Artist ,Stylish Home Furnishings, Custom Painted Reclaimed Furniture.

Danielle Reken-Painted Furniture, Home Decor of all styles. Personal Organizer For Your Home.

Jimmy Farula-Custom, Hand Crafted Farm Tables, Benches And Kitchen Islands Made To Any Size And Shape. You Give Your Measurments And The Style You Want And It will Be Made. Have A Picture Of What You Want, It Can Be Reproduces. Chech Out The Sample Table In The Shop.

Jacqueline Regueira-Transforms and Refurbishes Furniture and Decorator Items.

Debbie Coates-Custom Slipcovers, Upholstrey and Window Treatments. Owner of BE HAPPY ANTIQUES.

All of the ladies+men above have so many more talents than I have mentioned. Listed are some of their specialties and the services they do for our customers. Each of these ladies has their own beautifully decorated area in my shop with every type of decor and vintage/antique painted and unpainted furniture you could ever want. They are what makes ON A WHIM such a wonderful ONE-OF-A-KIND Decorating Boutique, and I am so THANKFUL for every one of them.....

Source: http://www.onawhimantiques.com/2012/10/pink-october_17.html

legend of korra lebron james magic mike trailer Alan Turing brave Stephanie Rice Meet the Pyro

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Linux Foundation proposes convoluted solution for UEFI Secure Boot

Linux Foundation proposes convoluted solution for UEFI Secure Boot

With Windows 8 Microsoft is pushing manufacturers away from a traditional BIOS to UEFI with Secure Boot. But that poses problems for alternative OSes like Linux, because UEFI requires any software have a signed certificate. The Linux Foundation has been looking for a solution and thinks that it may have one. The proposed work around is a little convoluted and surprisingly involves obtaining a Microsoft signature for a new barebones bootloader. This wouldn't actually boot Linux or any other OS actually. Instead, it would then start a second bootloader, the one associated with your OS of choice. It's a little messy, but it should mean that the signed bootloader will be a catch-all solution for any operating system. Of course, it could take a while for the Foundation to actually obtain a signature from Microsoft. So "Designed for Windows 8" systems might not be able to run Linux right away, but rest assured a solution is on the way.

Filed under: ,

Linux Foundation proposes convoluted solution for UEFI Secure Boot originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 13 Oct 2012 03:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Slashdot, Ars Technica  |  sourceLinux Foundation  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/13/linux-foundation-proposes-solution-for-uefi/

jesse ventura keri russell drew barrymore bill o brien portland trailblazers will kopelman casey anthony

Monday, October 8, 2012

Malawi army chief speaks tough on soldiers political involvement ...


By Nyasa Times Reporter

October 7, 2012 ????? 1 Comments

Email This Post?Email This Post

?>

Malawi Defence Force (MDF) Commander, General Henry Odillo has strongly spoken against soldiers? involvement into politics saying this does not mix with the profession.

Odillo said he was convinced that despite the challenges the Army encounters, officers, soldiers and members of the Malawi Defense Force should have a clear focus in their role in the Malawi society and ?never be involved in politics.?

He stressed army?s commitment in ensuring that peace which has been prevailing in this country for a long time is safeguarded emphasizing that it comes with huge, huge price and investment.

General Odillo: Army soldiers should be apolitical

Odillo, who recently inducted into the Hall of Fame by the United States military college, told Malawi?s?Sunday Times newspaper :?Peace in Malawi will be there and we can assure Malawians that they are safe it is critical that the country should remain peaceful and stable to move forward?the society and individuals should use combined effort to ensure that this is sustained?.

He urged Malawians not to leave the sustenance of peace to the military alone, but ensure that there is stability in the areas that they are living in by relaying information to Police and the Armywhen unusual things happen around them.

?This is why we have our police presence in all regions of the country; so, if people in that locality have noticed unusual issues happening around them, I think they should not sit down and pretend that there is nothing happening, they should be reporting these things to the Police.

?That is where issues start being exposed; you start understanding the picture of what is developing around you,? he said as quoted by the paper.

Odillo was inducted into the International Hall of Fame by the United States Army Command and General Staff College on September 24. He is among 250 officers who have been inducted to the Hall of Fame since 1973.

He was at this college in the USA for one year, ending in 1996.

Tags: General Henry Odillo, Malawi Defence Force

Source: http://www.nyasatimes.com/malawi/2012/10/07/malawi-army-chief-speaks-tough-on-soldiers-political-involvement-assures-malawians-of-peace/

texas a m insight bowl russell brand files for divorce bowl game schedule katy perry and russell brand katy perry divorce brock lesnar retires

Union: Border agents opened fire on each other

FILE - This undated photo provided by U.S. Customs and Border Protection shows slain Border Patrol agent Nicolas Ivie. The fatal shooting of Ivie and the wounding another U.S. Border Patrol agent near the Arizona-Mexico border may have been a case of friendly fire, a union chief for border agents and law enforcement officials said Friday, Oct. 5, 2012. (AP Photo/U.S. Customs and Border Protection, File)

FILE - This undated photo provided by U.S. Customs and Border Protection shows slain Border Patrol agent Nicolas Ivie. The fatal shooting of Ivie and the wounding another U.S. Border Patrol agent near the Arizona-Mexico border may have been a case of friendly fire, a union chief for border agents and law enforcement officials said Friday, Oct. 5, 2012. (AP Photo/U.S. Customs and Border Protection, File)

In this undated photo provided by the Ivie family, Border Patrol Agent Nicholas Ivie is seen. Ivie, a 30-year-old father of two, was shot and killed in the sparsely populated desert in southeastern Arizona early Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2012. (AP Photo/Ivie Family, Cole Kynaston)

PHOENIX (AP) ? The U.S. Border Patrol agent killed last week in a shooting in southern Arizona apparently opened fire on two fellow agents thinking they were armed smugglers and was killed when they returned fire, the head of the Border Patrol agents' union said Sunday.

The two sets of agents approached an area where a sensor had been activated early Tuesday from different directions early Tuesday and encountered each other in an area of heavy brush, National Border Patrol Council president George McCubbin said.

Agent Nicholas Ivie apparently opened fire first and wounded one of the other agents but was killed in the return fire.

"I don't know what it was he saw or heard that triggered this whole event," McCubbin said. "Unfortunately it resulted in his death and another agent injured."

Acting Cochise County Sheriff Rod Rothrock confirmed the scenario but would not say if Ivie was the first to shoot, saying that was up to the federal agencies involved.

The new details add to a FBI statement Friday that the shooting appeared to be a friendly fire incident that involved no one but the agents.

Sensors are set up in different areas along the U.S.-Mexico border to detect smugglers or illegal immigrants, with Border Patrol agents responding when they're set off. The shooting occurred in a rugged hilly area about five miles north of the border near Bisbee, Ariz., an area known for illegal trafficking.

McCubbin and Rothrock both said the two sets of agents knew the others were heading to the area on foot but apparently didn't know they were so close. McCubbin said he'd been briefed by the agency, while Rothrock's agency has been involved with the investigation.

"It was dark, very, very rugged terrain, and what they could see of each other was further obscured by the fact that there was brush and cacti and stuff like that between them," Rothrock said. "I have no doubt that these agents were in as heightened a state of alert as you can get due to the proximity to the border and the history of trafficking in that area."

Rothrock said that when the agents spotted each other in the dark, "they apparently took defensive postures, which was probably interpreted as aggressive postures. Like readying your weapons, for example."

Ivie, 30, died at the scene, and one of the other agents was wounded but has since been released from the hospital.

In the immediate aftermath of the shooting, the Border Patrol and other federal and local agencies flooded the area with personnel looking for who they believed were assailants who had attacked the agents.

"That was the initial reports from the beginning," McCubbin said. "That was the reason for the saturation manhunt there. They even had permission to fly into Mexico. They were seeking people out. What this was based on, we'd have to assume it was based on the initial statements given by the agents on the scene."

Two people suspected of being involved in the shooting were arrested by the Mexican government but were apparently not involved at all.

"They had a couple of people in custody but other than being in the area, there was no evidence putting them there at the scene," McCubbin said. "They could have been guides, they could have been scouts, and those type of folks typically go back and forth all the time anyway."

Rothrock said he believed the agents' actions were "appropriate and in accordance with their training had they, in fact, been engaging people involved in illegal activities. Unfortunately, they weren't engaging people involved in illegal activities, they were engaging each other."

Rothrock said a death investigation report will be sent to the Cochise County Attorney's Office for review as a matter of routine, but he doubted any legal action will be taken against the surviving agents.

A visitation was to be held in Sierra Vista, Ariz., on Sunday night for Ivie, who is survived by his wife and two young daughters. His funeral is set for Monday morning.

"It's happened and it's a horrible tragedy for the agents involved and their families and the agency," McCubbin said. "We can come up with some reasons as to how this happened but that doesn't fix anything. All we can send prayers to the families and all the agents involved that somehow they can find some peace with this someday."

Ivie's death marked the first fatal shooting of an agent since a deadly 2010 firefight with Mexican gunmen that killed U.S. Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry in December 2010 and spawned congressional probes of a botched government gun-smuggling investigation.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-07-Border%20Shooting/id-d612c75828564da89acd0b84f2bc73e4

project m rubio colts colts big ten tournament 2012 dennis quaid bruce weber fired

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

HTC One X+, One VX and 8X Are AT&T-Bound

HTC's One X is getting an update in the upcoming One X+, which features a longer-lasting battery, a faster processor and more internal storage. It will launch later this year on AT&T, as will the new One VX and 8X smartphones.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/9KvVDda096E/

pinterest attwireless taylor swift zac efron the scream stephen colbert new madrid fault rihanna and chris brown