понедельник, 31 января 2011 г.

NASA Finds Smallest Earthlike Planet Outside Solar System

The smallestplanetyet spied outside oursolar systemhas been found orbiting a sunlike star about 560 light-years away, astronomers announced today. Known as Kepler-10b, the planet is just 1.4 timesEarth's size and 4.6 times its mass.

The planet, found usingNASA's Kepler spacecraft, is the first of the more than 500 known exoplanets that's definitively rocky—much like Earth, Mars, Venus, or Mercury—the study team says. Launched in March 2009, Kepler was designed to hunt for potentially habitable Earthlike planets.

Astronomers have been studying Kepler-10b since its discovery in 2009, when the team detected a periodic dimming of the host star as the planet passed in front of the star.

Finding such a small planet this way was no easy feat—seen from a similar distance, Earth passing in front of the sun would cause a 0.01 percent reduction in the star's brightness, saidNatalie Batalhaof San Jose State University, lead author of an upcoming paper describing the find.

"Imagine you have 10,000 light bulbs and you take one away. That's the change in brightness we're looking for,"Batalha said today during a meeting of theAmerican Astronomical Societyin Seattle, Washington.

Still, after using Kepler and other instruments to precisely calculate the new planet's size, mass, and density, Batalha said,"we know without question that this is a rocky world."

Smallest Planet Has Density of Iron

Before figuring out the nature of Kepler-10b, the scientists looked at the host star's properties, as revealed by starquakes, acoustic disturbances that make the entire star ring like a bell.

"In the same way that we use a sonogram to probe an unborn fetus and earthquakes to probe the interior of the Earth, we use starquakes to probe the interior structure and properties of the star itself,"Batalha said.

"A tiny star would yield different {vibration} frequencies than a large one, just as when you strum a violin you're going to get a different sound than when you strum a cello."

Using starquakes, Batalha and colleagues were able to accurately determine the size, mass, and age of the star, which in turn allowed them to make very fine-tuned estimates of the new planet's characteristics.

Astronomers carefully studied the tiny variations in starlight to determine Kepler-10b's size. The observations also revealed that the planet is very close to the star, orbiting once every 20 hours.

(Related:"Five New Planets Found; Hotter Than Molten Lava.")

Using the W. M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii, the Kepler team made precise measurements of minute shifts in the wavelengths of the host star's light. This data showed how the star nodded back and forth in response to the planet's gravity, allowing the team to calculate the masses of both objects.

Based on this combined data, the team concludes that Kepler-10b must be a rocky world with an average density of 8.8 grams per cubic centimeter—about the same as a chunk of iron.

Rocky World is"Planetary Missing Link"

Being rocky, however, is no guarantee that a planet will be habitable. In the case of Kepler-10b, one side of the planet always faces the star, so that side would have a surface temperature of 2,500 degrees F (1,370 degrees C), Batalha estimates.

It's highly unlikely that such a world would retain an atmosphere, since the searing hot gases would rapidly escape into space.

Still, Kepler-10b is an enormously important find, saidGeoffrey Marcy, a planet hunter at the University of California, Berkeley. Marcy, who is involved in the Kepler mission, was not a core member of Batalha's team.

"In astronomy, we've been discovering giant gas planets for 15 years. But the ultimate goal is to discover habitable worlds, like Earth,"he said at the AAS meeting. (Related:"New Planet System Found—May Have Hidden 'Super Earth.'")

According to Marcy, Kepler-10b is the"planetary missing link."

"It's definitely not a gas giant like Jupiter. Nor is it habitable—it's too hot. This is a transitional planet somewhere between a gas giant and what we've been hoping to find."

One other possibly rocky planet, COROT-7b, might be even more Earthlike in size and mass, Batalha agreed. But its star is much more active with flares and other disturbances, making it difficult to nail down important parameters with the needed precision. (See"'Super Earth' May Really Be New Planet Type: Super-Io.")

"For Kepler-10, we were lucky,"she said."It's a very quiet star."

forNational Geographic News


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воскресенье, 30 января 2011 г.

PHOTOS: Six Long-Lost Haitian Frog Species Found

This gallery is part of aNational Geographic News serieson global water issues.

Scientists searching for long-lost frogs in Haiti’s forests came face to face with the critically endangered La Hotte glanded frog, which sees the world through unusual, sapphire-colored eyes.

The frog is among half a dozen newly rediscovered Haitian species, which had not been seen for nearly two decades and occur nowhere else in the world, found by researchers fromConservation International(CI) andIUCN’s Amphibian Specialist Group

“All we hear fromHaitiis bad news and we wanted to highlight something unique that Haiti has and really should be proud of,” said Conservation International’s Robin Moore, an amphibian conservation specialist and co-leader of the expedition. “It really is a symbol of what there is left to fight for and protect in Haiti.”

(Related:"Haiti Earthquake Pictures: Devastation on the Day After.")


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суббота, 29 января 2011 г.

Pictures:"Nasty" Little Predator From Dinosaur Dawn Found

Deadly and dog-size, the dinosaurEodromaeus(shown in reconstruction) lived inArgentina230 million years ago, a new study says. The new species is providing fresh insight into the era beforedinosaursovertook other reptiles and ruled the world, a new fossil study says. (Watch video.)

"This is the most complete picture we have of what a predatory dinosaur lineage– what it looked like at the very beginning,"said study co-authorPaul Sereno."It was small but nasty—this animal was fast."

One of the earliest known dinosaurs,Eodromaeuswas only about 4 feet (1.3 meters) long and would have barely reached the knees of an adult human. But this unassuming little dinosaur gave rise to the theropods, includingTyrannosaurus rexand the"terrible claw,"Deinonychus,the new study suggests.

Like those fearsome descendants,Eodromaeushad a long rigid tail, a unique pelvis shape, andair sacs in its neck bones that may have been related to breathing—and which add to evidence that theropod dinosaurs eventually evolved into today's birds.

(Take adinosaur quiz.)

—Ker Than


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пятница, 28 января 2011 г.

Pictures: Mount Etna Erupts Overnight

<>Streams of lava light upMount Etnaduring a two-hour eruption on Tuesday night—the peak of theItalianvolcano's fiery week (Mount Etna map).

 

 

Towering nearly 11,000 feet (3,350 meters) over the island of Sicily, Europe's tallest and most active volcano began trembling Tuesday afternoon, seismologists told the OurAmazingPlanet news site. Wednesday and Thursday saw flames and ash flung hundreds of yards into the sky, closing down area airports.


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четверг, 27 января 2011 г.

Space Pictures This Week: Ring of Fire, Rare Moon, More

The moon nearly blots out thesunon January 4 during an annular eclipse captured here by Japan'sHinode satellite. During an annular eclipse, the moon is slightly farther fromEarththan usual and so appears smaller than during a total eclipse—leaving the edges of the sun visible.

(See moreannular eclipse pictures.)


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среда, 26 января 2011 г.

Fastest Spinning Dust Found; Solves Cosmic"Fog" Puzzle

Small specks of dust found in ourMilky Way galaxyare the fastest twirlers yet—spinning more than ten billion times a second, astronomers announced today.

Scientists found the tiny grains—each just 10 to 50 atoms wide—using the recently launchedEuropean Space Agency's Planck spacecraft. The find helps solve the mystery of a diffuse microwave"fog"in our galaxy that's puzzled astronomers for decades.

(Related:"Mysterious 'Dragons' Make Universe's Gamma Ray Fog.")

The odd radiation has long been associated with dense, dusty clouds between stars, but its exact source was unclear.

According to the Planck team, the new data suggest that some dust particles in these interstellar clouds are constantly colliding with fast-moving atoms and ultraviolet light.

The nonstop bombardments set the grains spinning, and their ultrafast rotation causes the grains to glow at much higher microwave frequencies than dust found elsewhere in the universe.

Understanding the different behaviors of space dust could help astronomers figure out exactly howstarsandplanetsbegin to take shape, said Planck team memberPeter Martin.

"Most of the heavier elements that eventually go into building planets—and even you and me—spent most of their life in this universe as dust particles,"said Martin, a professor of astronomy at the University of Toronto.

"Planck is giving us some of the most detailed surveys of our galaxy's gas and dust structure and distribution, which we think can give us hints to the birthing process of stars and even the way galaxies like ours can form."

(Related:"Dust Older Than the Sun Found in Earth's Atmosphere.")

Scraping Bugs off the Cosmic Windshield

Finding the source of the microwave fog will ultimately help the Planck team refine its studies of the cosmic microwave background, or CMB, radiation that was emitted during thebig bang, more than 13 billion years ago.

Launched in early 2009, Planck's main mission is to study the CMB. But even though this radiation permeates the universe, the faint glow can be tricky to detect.

Similar wavelengths from sources closer to Earth need to be weeded out for scientists to be sure they're getting an accurate picture of the CMB.

"If we neglect their different emissions, then we get greater errors in our background measurements,"saidCharles Lawrence, Planck team member and a cosmologist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California.

"It's like having different bugs splattered on the windshield of your car and blocking your view outside of things in the distance,"Lawrence said.

"We need a clear window on the universe free of any foreground sources of emission so we can accurately measure the background radiation."

(Also see"Space Circles Are Proof of a Pre-Big Bang Universe?")

Coldest, Biggest Things in the Universe

In addition to the spinning dust, Planck's initial data on non-CMB sources—released today at a meeting of theAmerican Astronomical Societyin Seattle, Washington—revealed a menagerie of unusual structures.

For example, Planck found the largest population yet of cold cores, the coldest known objects in the universe.

These clouds of frigid dust and gas inside galaxies have average temperatures of just 7 Kelvin (-447 degrees F, or -266 degrees C). Such cold clouds are hotbeds of star formation, because dense dust helps keep gases cool, allowing the gases to collapse and begin forming stars.

(Related:"Supersonic 'Hail' Seeds Star Systems With Water.")

Inside cold cores, stars are at their very earliest stages of formation and are therefore barely detectable as heat sources.

"Each and every one of the over 900 cold cores in the newly released catalog are potentially the sites for the very youngest star formation,"saidDouglas Scott, a professor at the University of British Columbia in Canada and an investigator for the Planck mission.

"The very cool thing with this announcement is that we have an all-sky survey of these objects, which can now be followed up with other telescopes, where we can get intimate details of stellar birth."

Planck's supersensitivity to microwaves also allowed scientists to discover new examples of the biggest objects in the universe: The craft's initial data revealed nearly 190 galaxy clusters, including some that were previously unknown.

(Related:"New Proof Unknown 'Structures' Tug at Our Universe.")

When the CMB travels through hot gas surrounding a galaxy cluster, the gas shifts the radiation's energy level. This shift leaves a distinctive spectral signature known as the Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect.

With Planck able to track this effect, hopes are high that the telescope will discover thousands more galaxy clusters.

"We are talking about the biggest gravitationally bound objects in the universe,"JPL's Lawrence said."So by studying them we learn about how galaxies and structures on the large scale in the universe get together."

forNational Geographic News


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понедельник, 24 января 2011 г.

Oldest Domesticated Dog in Americas Found—Was Human Food

People inNorth Americawere breeding—and eating—domestic dogsas early as 9,400 years ago, according to new analysis of a bone fragment discovered in aTexascave.

Scientists were able to identify the bone—about the size of an adult's pinkie nail—as a piece of the right occipital condyle of a canine. Occiptal condyles are parts of vertebrate skulls where the skull meets the spine.

Genetic tests later proved that the bone comes from a dog and not awolf,coyote, orfox.

The bone is the earliest known evidence of dog domestication in the Americas, predating other claims by nearly 8,000 years, said study co-authorSamuel Belknap III, a graduate student at the University of Maine's Climate Change Institute.

"As a genetically identified domestic dog, it's significantly older than any other ones that we have from the New World,"Belknap said. (Related:"Where Did Dogs Become Our 'Best Friends'?")

What's more, the bone fragment was found inside ancient human feces, which suggests dogs were being domesticated in the Americas for more than chores and companionship.

"It's small enough to pass through the gut, but it's still larger than you would expect to find,"Belknap said of the bone piece."It's surprising the sizes of some of the bones that people were swallowing. They didn't chew their food quite as well as people do today."

Dog Eaten for Ancient Rite?

The dog bone sample was found in 2009 in Hinds Cave in southwestern Texas. Previous archaeological evidence suggests a group of unidentified hunter-gatherers occupied the cave more than 9,000 years ago.

(Related:"Oldest Human Hair Found in Hyena Poop Fossil?")

Working under Kristin Sobolik at the University of Maine, Belknap sent the newfound bone to the University of Oklahoma, where molecular anthropologist Cecil Lewis and his team conducted the genetic tests.

Based on previous DNA evidence, scientists think humans began breeding dogs from gray wolves sometime between 40,000 and 15,000 years ago.

From the size of the bone, Belknap and fellow grad student Robert Ingraham think the dog from the Texas cave weighed roughly 25 to 30 pounds (11.3 to 13.6 kilograms) and may have resembled some breeds of Mexican and Peruvian dogs.

Archaeological evidence suggests some Native Americans, such as the Sioux of the Great Plains, once used dogs to transport goods in much the same way that Inuit in Alaska use sled dogs.

Historical accounts from Spanish missionaries and early Europeans explorers starting in the 15th century also document some cultures across the Americas eating dogs in times of famine or for ceremonial purposes.

(Also see"Dogs First Tamed in China—To Be Food?")

Finding Ancient Dog Bones a Dirty Job

Although the dog bone was embedded in dried fecal remains, finding the sample was messy work: The bone was revealed only when Belknap rehydrated the feces and ran the resulting mixture through a sieve.

Despite its age, the rehydrated poop gave off an unmistakable odor, Belknap said.

"I tend to scare off people in the anthropology department when I'm decanting my samples,"he said.

Still, for Belknap, the results of these efforts highlight the possibility that more ancient-canine bone samples may turn out to belong to domesticated dogs.

"I think scientists should be open to utilizing the latest techniques to determine whether canid bones are dog, coyote, or wolf and not just rely on morphological identification alone as means of distinguishing the difference,"he said.

The oldest-dog research will be detailed in an upcoming issue of theAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology.

forNational Geographic News


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воскресенье, 23 января 2011 г.

Sharks Are Color-Blind, Retina Study Suggests

Sharksmay be able to smell blood from miles away, but they probably don't know how red it is: New research suggests sharks are color-blind.

Sharks have successfully prowled theoceansfor millions of years, in part because of an impressive suite of sensory systems, including well-developed eyes and a large area in the brain devoted to vision.

But over the past few decades conflicting data have sparked a debate about whether sharks can see colors. (Related:"Color-Blindness Cured by Gene Injection in Monkeys.")

In a new study, scientists looked at the retinas of 17 shark species caught off the coasts of eastern and westernAustralia, includingtiger sharksandbull sharks.

Retinas use two main types of light-sensitive cells to allow animals to see: Rod cells help measure brightness, while various types of cone cells help distinguish colors.

A technique known as microspectrophotometry had previously shown that rays and chimaeras, both close relatives of sharks, have color vision. (Relatedpictures:"Weird New Ghostshark Found; Male Has Sex Organ on Head.")

Using the same method,Nathan Scott Hartat the University of Western Australia and colleagues scanned shark retinas for pigments linked with rod and cone cells.

Rod cells were the most common types of photoreceptor found in all 17 shark species, which means the predators should be able to see within a wide range of light levels.

But no cone cells were observed in 10 of the 17 species, while only one type of cone cell appeared to be present in the other 7. This suggests that these sharks cannot tell different colors apart.

"We can't say hands down if sharks are color-blind yet, as there are over 400 different shark species,"said shark biologistMichelle McCombat Florida Atlantic University's Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute.

"But these findings are excellent, and a surprise, and definitely should spur more work,"said McComb, who did not take part in the new study.

Color-Blindness to Save Rare Sharks?

It makes sense that sharks might be color-blind, the study team noted. Many aquatic predators—such as whales, dolphins, and seals—also appear to be color-blind, which may be because color vision isn't much use in their mostly blue-green environments.

If the discovery holds true for more shark species, it could be used to help reduce the numbers of endangered sharks accidentally caught by fisheries, as well as prevent shark attacks on humans. (See"Eight Million Sharks Killed Accidentally off Africa Yearly.")

"Our study shows that contrast against the background, rather than color per se, may be more important for object detection by sharks,"study co-author Hart said in a statement.

"This may help us to design longline fishing lures that are less attractive to sharks, as well as to design swimming attire and surf craft that have a lower visual contrast to sharks and therefore are less attractive to them."

The shark-vision study was published online January 6 by the journalNaturwissenschaften.

forNational Geographic News


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суббота, 22 января 2011 г.

Mother Pterosaurs Laid Soft Eggs, New Fossil Hints

Pterosaur parents reproduced more like turtles thanbirds, according to a new study of a fossilized mother and her egg. The discovery is also the first to allow researchers to conclusively tell the sex of a pterosaur.

The fossils were found next to each other inChina's Liaoning Province, once the site of an ancient lake. They appear to belong to a species of pterosaur calledDarwinopterus(picture), which lived about 160 million years ago.

(Related:"Toothy Texas Pterosaur Discovered; Soared Over Dallas.")

Scientists think the adult was an expectant pterosaur mother that somehow broke her left wing, causing her to fall into the lake and drown. The body sank to the bottom and eventually expelled the egg.

"During the decay process, you get a buildup of gases and pressure inside the carcass, and that tends to expel things out,"said study co-authorDavid Unwin, a paleontologist at the University of Leicester in the U.K. The egg"didn't go very far. It just came out of the body and sat there."

In addition to the associated egg, the fossil has a larger pelvis than other knownDarwinopterusfossils, which is consistent with the animal being a female.

Chemical analysis of the egg suggests that, instead of laying hard-shell eggs and watching over the chicks, as most birds do, pterosaur mothers laid soft-shell eggs, which they buried in moist ground and abandoned.

"It's a very reptilian style of reproduction,"Unwin said."Fertilize the egg, lay the egg, and then go and do whatever you want, without having to worry about what's happening with your offspring."

Based on other fossils of juvenile pterosaurs, scientists think that, unlike birds, pterosaur hatchlings were capable of fending for themselves.

"They looked like tiny adults,"Unwin said."They were highly precocious and could almost certainly fly very soon after hatching."

Pterosaur Eggs Were Soft and Porous?

According to the study, published in this week's issue of the journalScience,the newfound egg contains no traces of calcium carbonate, the mineral responsible for making bird shells hard. By contrast, bird eggs show signs of this mineral throughout their development.

Using magnification, the team could also discern folds in the egg and pore-like holes that might have allowed water to pass through the shell. Taken together, these features suggest the pterosaur egg was relatively soft and had a"parchment like"texture that could expand.

By laying soft eggs that could grow in size, pterosaurs could"make a much smaller investment in terms of material effort,"Unwin said.

"As an analogy, imagine you're going on holiday and have to take everything with you, including your food and water. Birds, with their hard-shell eggs, have to pack everything into their eggs, including water.

"Pterosaurs could lay smaller eggs that could absorb water later. That means the environment is contributing to the egg rather than the parent."

Three other fossilized pterosaur eggs are known, and they all showed little or no evidence of calcium carbonate. (See"Fossil Egg Finds Yield Clues to How Pterosaurs Lived.")

What makes this find different is that the other eggs were discovered in isolation, saidMark Witton, a pterosaur researcher and illustrator at the University of Portsmouth in the U.K.

"We could identify in some cases what species the eggs belonged to, but we've never had a pterosaur egg in association with its mother before,"said Witton, who was not involved in the new study.

(Related:"Dinosaur Eggs Discovered Inside Mother—A First.")

In addition to showing the condition of a pterosaur egg shortly before being laid, the new discovery gives scientists an idea what the size ratio was between pterosaurs and their eggs, saidChatham Universitypaleontologist Michael Habib.

"They seem to be relatively smallish eggs,"said Habib, who was not involved in the study."That's consistent with most egg-laying animals, but they don't all do that. So that's good to know."

Pterosaur Crests Likely a Guy Thing

The new pterosaur fossil is also important because it could finally allow scientists to determine the sex of certain pterosaur species.

Darwinopterusfossils, for example, have been found with and without head crests. Until now, it was unclear whether crested individuals were male or female.

The new fossil, which is obviously a female, lacks a head crest.

Based on this, the team thinks onlyDarwinopterusmales sported head crests, which they may have used to communicate with other members of their species.

A crest could have been used to signal to other males"that 'I'm bigger than you,' or it could be used to tell females 'Here I am, carrying this enormous crest, and I'm a better pterosaur to mate with than the chap next door who's got a smaller crest,'"study co-author Unwin said.

(Related:"Crested Duck-Billed Dinosaurs Used 'Caller ID?'")

The University of Portsmouth's Witton thinks this interpretation of the head crest's function is"right on the money"—not just forDarwinopterus,but perhaps for most, or even all, pterosaurs.

"That's not to say that they're not going to have other effects,"Witton said of the crests. For example, one theory is that the features allowed pterosaurs to expell excess heat during flight.

"If you have a very thin bone sticking out of your head ... you're going to lose some heat out of it,"Witton said."But that's not its main goal. It's just a side effect of the structure."

forNational Geographic News


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пятница, 21 января 2011 г.

New Aurora Pictures: First Big Show of 2011

Part of the new year's first big display of northern lights, an aurora borealis appears to dip into the mountains near Tromsø in northernNorwayon January 7.

Theauroras, which continued into the second week of the year, were rooted in strong"gusts"of solar wind—actually charged particles—set in motion bysunactivity in the first week.

Auroras are created when such charged particles flow alongEarth's magnetic field lines. The particles hit the atmosphere at the Poles and excite air molecules, which release the extra energy as light.

(See moreaurora pictures.)


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четверг, 20 января 2011 г.

Smallest Farmers Found? Amoebas Carry, Plant"Seeds"

In the developed world, the small farmer may be going extinct. But among some amoebas, small farming—reallysmall farming—is still a viable survival strategy, a new study says.

Generally speaking, whenDictyosteliumdiscoideumamoebas run short of bacteria to eat in a patch of soil—presumably because the bacteria themselves are starving—the single-celled life-forms"start 'talking' to each other, and they gather together,"said lead study authorDebra Brock.

"When there're about a hundred thousand amoebas gathered together, then they form a fruiting body."

The resulting stalk sticks up into the wind and releases spores carrying the amoebas—and, it turns out, a few bacterial"seeds"too.

Brock and her colleagues found that, rather than eating all the food before leaving the previous location, the amoebas had encased the last morsels in shells for traveling.

When the spores landed, the amoebas emerged and released the bacteria seeds, planting them in hopefully greener pastures, much as human farmers move from exhausted fields to fertile ones.

(Also see"Human Waste Used by 200 Million Farmers, Study Says.")

"They bring their preferred bacteria, and this allows them to prosper and flourish in the new area,"said Brock, a biologist at Rice University in Houston, Texas. (See anaward-winning amoeba picture.)

Passive Farming

The amoebas don't seem to tend the bacteria while they're growing, so it's a passive kind of farming, Brock noted. By contrast, some ants termites, and other social insects are known to cultivate fungi or"milk"other insects for sugary meals.

Nonetheless, nothing like the amoeba farming has been seen before in single-celled organisms. (See"All Species Evolved From Single Cell, Study Finds.")

Brock said her team has since spotted this kind of primitive migrant farming in several other amoeba species—and they all share a trait with other known farming species, including us.

"We think they're able to do this because they're social,"she said. Solitary amoeba species, she explained, don't join to form the fruiting bodies that make travel possible forD.discoideum.

The new study appears today in the online edition of the journalNature.

forNational Geographic News


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среда, 19 января 2011 г.

Siberians Raided Rodent Caches for Food

To survive brutal winters, inhabitants of Siberia and theRussianFar East as recently as the late 19th century raided food stores—of rodents.

According to a new study, records by 18th-century Russian, Swedish, and German explorers describe people using sticks, hoes, or hooks to dig up caches of food gathered by voles and other small mammals.

At the time, most indigenous groups in the region lived nomadically, getting the bulk of their food from hunting, fishing, or herding sheep and horses. (Related:"Horse Taming, Milking Started in Kazakhstan.")

In the absence of agriculture, people living in the region got all their vegetables from the wild, said study leader Ingvar Svanberg, an ethnobiologist atUppsala University's Centre for Russian and Eurasian Studiesin Sweden.

"Instead of gathering themselves, by digging up roots in the fields, {people} let rodents do that for them,"Svanberg said.

Rodents Were"Poor Serfs"of Siberia

To locate the underground stores, gatherers looked for entryways to burrows or thumped the ground and listened for hollows. A few groups even trained dogs to sniff out the goods.

The nomads taught the trick to Russians and Europeans migrating into the area.

A single cache of roots, bulbs, seeds, and nuts could weigh nearly 30 pounds (13 kilograms), making the buried store an easily won cornucopia. (Related:"Oldest Rodent Cache Found—Filled With Fossil Nuts.")

One German naturalist dubbed the rodents the people's"poor serfs."

Some groups robbed the stores completely, occasionally killing and eating the rodents. Others spared the animals and even left behind a little food to ensure the animals' survival and continued service—or they left inedible gifts such as dried fish, needles, or textiles.

"It was a symbolic way, at least, to give them something back,"Svanberg said.

Some early Europeans and North Americans also traditionally exploited rodent caches, he added, and the practice continues today among indigenous groups such as some living near Mexico's Gulf of California.

(Related:"Siberian, Native American Languages Linked—A First.")

In Siberia the practice mostly died out in the late 19th century, when colonizing Russians brought potato and onion farming to the region and forced many nomadic groups to settle.

The rodent-cache raiding study appeared in the fall/winter 2010 issue of theJournal of Ethnobiology.

forNational Geographic News


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вторник, 18 января 2011 г.

Going"All the Way" With Renewable Energy?

This story is part of aspecial seriesthat explores energy issues. For more, visitThe Great Energy Challenge.

In a world where fossil fuel provides more than 80 percent of energy, what would it take to go completely green? Could the world switch over to power from only the wind, sun, waves, and heat from the Earth in only a few decades?

The question seems a fanciful one, when world leaders are stymied over proposals for far less dramatic cuts in the carbon dioxide emissions from global burning of coal, oil, and natural gas. But two U.S. researchers, a transportation expert and an atmospheric scientist, decided the time had come to apply blue-sky thinking to one of the world's greatest challenges.

"We wanted to show that wind, water, and solar power are available to meet demand, indefinitely,"says study co-author Mark Delucchi, of the Institute for Transportation Studies at the University of California Davis. He and Mark Jacobson of the civil and environmental engineering department at Stanford University began to tally the build-out that would be needed to supply renewable energy for all the world's factories, homes, and offices, as well as all transport—cars, planes, and ships.

Their argument that such a revolution was both possible and affordable by 2030, first explored as a thought piece published inScientific Americanbefore the 2009 Copenhagen climate talks, is detailed in a study published last month in the journalEnergy Policy.

Steel, Concrete, and Minerals

Delucchi and Jacobson estimate that a drive for 100 percent renewable energy would require a massive building binge. For instance, the world would need nearly 4 million wind turbines, and they'd be big ones—rated at 5 megawatts (MW). That's two or three times the capacity of the majority of turbines on the market; 5 MW turbines were an innovation introduced offshore in Germany in 2006, and China just built its first 5 MW wind turbine last year.

The pair estimate that the world would need 90,000 large-scale solar plants, each with a capacity of about 300 MW—both those that rely on photovoltaic panels that make electricity directly, and concentrated solar power plants that focus the sun's rays to boil water to drive electric generators. At present, fewer than three dozen such utility-scale solar plants are in operation worldwide; most are far smaller.

And the big solar systems wouldn't displace the need for rooftop power; the researchers estimate a need for 1.7 billion 3-kilowatt solar PV systems as well. Think of that as one rooftop PV system for every four people on the planet.

Building all these new turbines, solar panels, and other infrastructure would eat up plenty of steel, concrete, and other resources. However, Jacobson and Delucchi concluded there are no significant economic or environmental constraints on the production of bulk materials such as concrete and steel, so they examined more closely the needs for less common materials.

The main bottleneck, they argue, could be the production of rare earth metals such as neodymium, which is often used in making magnets.

To build all the electric generators to go into the millions of wind turbines they envision, worldwide production of neodymium would have to more than quintuple. But there should be enough neodymium available, the study argues, since current world reserves of the element are about six times larger than needed.

(Related:"Replacing Oil Addiction With Metals Dependence?"

There are also ways around this bottleneck, Delucchi and Jacobson argue. Other types of magnets could be used in turbines, and rare earth metals could be recycled. No such recycling program exists today.

The researchers insist that none of the obstacles is great enough to block a path to fully renewable power by 2030. They do allow that it would be more feasible to stop building new power plants and vehicles that burn fossil fuels by 2030, and then replace the existing plants gradually to reach 100 percent green energy by 2050.

(Related:"Warming Solution: Just Stop Cold?")

"Technically you can do it,"Jacobson says."It really depends on will power."

Leaving Out Biofuel

In forging their road map for a fossil-free future, the researchers make their job all the more difficult by leaving out biomass, the renewable that currently owns the greatest share of the world energy mix. Due to the undesirable air pollution and land-use impacts of ethanol and biodiesel, they built their vision for a 100 percent renewable future without them. And due to concerns about waste disposal and proliferation, they also left out carbon-free electricity generation by nuclear power, which currently provides about 6 percent of world energy.

The world is far from on track to a biomass-free renewable future. Today, all renewables provide just 13 percent of world energy supply, and that share slips to 3 percent if biomass is left out, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA) 2010 World Energy Outlook.

If nations live up to the broad policy commitments they have made to reduce greenhouse gases—and that is by no means a given—the IEA projects those non-biomass renewables will rise to just 7 percent by 2035. With more aggressive action on climate change and promotion of renewables, the IEA projects that share would increase to just 11 percent."Large-scale government support is needed to make renewables cost-competitive with other energy sources and technologies,"the IEA concluded.

But Delucchi and Jacobson maintain that with the expected decline in renewable technology costs, the cost of what they call a"100 percent WWS"system—wind, water and solar—would be similar to that of the energy-delivery system today.

Shifting Winds

"The real challenge is matching supply with demand,"Jacobson says. Heavy reliance on wind, which would provide half of world power in the researchers' scenario, and solar, which would contribute 40 percent, could risk reliability of the system, because of the variability of the winds and skies. But the authors say that can be largely addressed through interconnection of the system and by taking advantage of how the different renewables can work together.

"Wind and solar are very complementary,"Jacobson says."When the wind isn't blowing, you usually have a clear, sunny day. And vice versa—when there's less sunlight on a cloudy day, it's usually windy."

Geothermal systems that harness heat stored underground, and machines for harnessing energy in ocean waves and tides, would make a smaller contribution than wind and sun in the Delucchi-Jacobson scenario—about 6 percent of world energy. But because these forms are more consistent, they would help make the system more reliable.

(Related:"Can Geothermal Energy Pick Up Real Steam?"

Hydroelectric dams would also pitch in to provide about 4 percent of world energy—but because the authors believe that most of the best spots for dams are already taken, they don't envision anything nearly like the expansion they see for solar and wind.

Also aiding in the reliability of a system running completely on wind, water, and solar power, the authors say, is that it would need about a third less energy than a fossil-fired system."It's mostly because of the conversion from combustion engines,"like those in cars, Jacobson says,"to electric motors, which are much more efficient."

This study is far from the first to look at the tricky problem of integrating renewables. Sarah Barber, a mechanical engineer who specializes in wind turbines at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, says that because of the variability of renewables,"the energy peaks need to be balanced out, requiring a more modern {electrical} grid."

She notes that Delucchi and Jacobson included in their estimates an updated grid and various forms of energy storage.

"It's relieving to see some serious studies being done on the actual feasibility of installing renewable energy systems,"Barber says."Studies such as this one should help clear up some question marks."

Still, the nitty gritty of making it work can be complicated."Energy dips need to be quickly covered,"Barber says,"such as with hydro pumps, as in Switzerland,"which can store electricity by pumping it uphill, into reservoirs. Around the world, electric power systems that have added significant amounts of renewable energy to the grid require both costly and creative solutions. These run the gamut from batteries to far more complex electricity-management systems.

(Read about some of these efforts here:"Texas Pioneers Energy Storage in Giant Battery"and"Frozen Fish Help Reel in Germany's Wind Power")

Replacing the internal combustion engine as rapidly as the authors envision would require a sea change, with all-electric cars just hitting the market now, and current projections that even by 2020 they will make up well under 10 percent of global auto sales.

(Related:"Rev Up Your Motors, Electric Cars Zip into View")

Daniel Kammen, the World Bank's chief technical specialist for renewable energy and energy efficiency, says that works like the Delucchi-Jacobson paper are useful because they add to the growing literature of low- and no-carbon scenarios.

"This paper is one such study that highlights the potential of renewables, without dealing with the details of a realistic energy generation and delivery systems,"says Kammen, who is founding director of the Renewable and Appropriate Energy Laboratory at the University of California Berkeley."As in many things, the devil is in the details. At present, we far from having 100 percent of energy from renewables—or even a majority of energy from renewables. This paper provides a useful accounting of the renewable energy resources without getting into the workings of a realistic energy systems."

The world is in need of a more detailed transition document that lays out"how we are going to make a zero-carbon world function,"says Kammen, an adviser to National Geographic'sGreat Energy Challengeinitiative. He says much such work is now under way around the world.

ForNational Geographic News


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понедельник, 17 января 2011 г.

The Next Oil Spill: Five Needed Mandates to Head it Off

This story is part of aspecial seriesthat explores energy issues. For more, visitThe Great Energy Challenge.

As the oil industry forges deeper into riskier waters and other frontiers, both companies and government overseers need to radically overhaul their approach to safety, concluded the U.S. commission appointed by President Obama to examine the causes of BP's disastrous oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

(Related:Gulf Oil Spill News and Pictures)

The seven-member commission agreed unanimously that the spill was not caused by the actions of one rogue player, but by a systemic failure born of years of complacency.

"In the past 20 years, exploration moved into deeper and deeper and riskier and riskier areas of the Gulf of Mexico, resulting in abundant revenues for private companies and the federal Treasury,"said former Florida Senator Bob Graham, co-chairman of the panel.

Thanks to impressive technological advances, frequently compared to those of the U.S. space program,"we became lulled into a sense of inevitable success,"he said.

"On April 20, after a long period of rolling the dice, our luck ran out,"said Graham.

(FromNational Geographicmagazine:"Is Another Deepwater Disaster Inevitable?")

In its 400-page final report, presented as required within six months of the panel's first meeting in July, the commission made numerous recommendations for both the industry and the government. All go well beyond the safety measures taken so far.

The panel's other co-chairman, William Reilly, former administrator of theU.S. Environmental Protection Agency, noted that there are industry plans for drilling as deep as 10,000 feet below the surface of the water, twice the depth of BP's well. He said that current energy needs compel riskier exploration and development, because the world's remaining petroleum resources are in more difficult terrain."The reason we're in deepwater is that's where the oil is,"said Reilly."They are not only in deepwater, they are in deeper and deeper water."

(FromNational Geographicmagazine, seePictures of Disaster)

Marilyn Heiman, director ofPew Environment Group'soffshore energy reform project, praised the commission for compiling the evidence needed for more protective legislation and industry action.

"Deepwater and the ultra deepwater and the Arctic—we are talking about really pushing the edge of the envelope, and the risks really are increased,"she said."We need to increase safety measures and response to that same level. Technology has far outpaced our ability to respond and prevent an oil spill."

Many of the recommendations, including new appropriations and new fees on industry, are likely to face a tough road ahead in the new Congress, although commission members noted that there were a number of steps the Obama administration could take on its own without congressional approval.

TheAmerican Petroleum Institute(API), while praising the commission for recommending increased funding for regulatory agencies, said that the industry had already taken significant steps to improve offshore safety. It said it had already begun the process of developing a deepwater safety program that draws on the best practices of the nuclear and chemical industries. And the API, in a prepared statement, expressed concern that the commission"casts doubt on an entire industry based on its study of a single incident."

Among the key recommendations by the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling:

Serious, continuing safety research.The commission said Congress should require new oil and gas industry fees to pay for the government's environmental science and regulatory review of offshore oil and gas activities. Not only did the commission urge establishment of a new independent government safety agency, it said the industry needs to have its own safety organization to establish new norms for offshore operations—and it should be separate from the API or other advocacy or trade associations.

Commission member Terry Garcia, executive vice president for mission programs for the National Geographic Society, noted that after the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska's Prince William Sound, the industry did make significant efforts to improve tanker safety, which paid off.

"But like an army always preparing for the last war, industry and government failed to anticipate future risks,"Garcia said."It is stunning how primitive our ability to respond to spills remains and how undeveloped our ability to cap a deepwater blowout was prior to Macondo,"the well that took 87 days to control, spewing an estimated 4.9 million barrels of oil in the Gulf in theworst oil spill in U.S. history.

(Seesatellite pictures of the Gulf oil spill's early evolution.)

"We need a serious investment in response and containment technology by industry and government, and it shouldn't be just a one-shot investment,"said Garcia."It's going to have to be an ongoing commitment, and one that continually monitors new risks as they emerge, not just in the Gulf and high-risk areas, but everywhere we drill."

(See"Exxon Valdez Anniversary: 20 Years Later, Oil Remains.")

Substantial, clear financial responsibility.The commission called for Congress to"significantly increase the liability cap and financial responsibility requirements"for offshore drilling.

The seven members could not reach agreement on the new levels of financial responsibility that should be required, and they said they did not have sufficient time to consult with the insurance industry on what numbers made sense.

But the report noted that the current liability cap, set after the Exxon Valdez spill, of $75 million, was insufficient. BP, which has voluntarily waived that cap, already faces damages of tens of billions of dollars.

The commission noted there is no guarantee other companies in the future will agree to such a waiver.

Also, insufficient, the commission noted, were the current government requirements for companies to show they have financial wherewithal to address any accident. Currently the government requires evidence of financial resources ranging from $35 million to $150 million. The commission noted there are many smaller operators for whom higher thresholds would be an issue, and the government had to find a compromise that ensured financial responsibility while not driving independent operators out of the market.

Better understanding of chemicals and berms.Although the commission concluded that the federal government"made reasonable decisions"regarding the use of chemical dispersants in the Gulf of Mexico, the panel noted that officials did so with little information on the long-term effects of the chemicals or the dispersed oil.

The commission noted the tradeoffs involved in using dispersants, which spread oil through the water column to protect the shorelines and fragile marsh environments.

The commission did not make a strong statement on whether dispersants should or should not have been used in the Gulf, but said the federal government needed to update and periodically review its dispersant testing protocols and change the pre-approval process to take into account such factors as the volume and geographic reach of potential spills.

But the commission did take a strong stand against the kind of dredged barrier berm constructed by Louisiana in an effort to protect its coast in the wake of the spill."Offshore barrier berms and dredged barriers should not be authorized as an oil spill response,"the commission said, noting that the time and expense involved and the changing marine environment render such an approach ineffective. The commission noted the failure of the Louisiana berm project, which was only 6 percent complete by the time the well was capped and trapped 1,000 barrels or less of spilled oil.

(Read about hownature is fighting back against the oil spill.)

Taking special care in the Arctic.The commission noted that safety standards over and above those required to protect the Gulf of Mexico would be needed in the fragile and punishing environment in the offshore Arctic.

Currently, there is no U.S. drilling under way there, but the international oil giant Shell* had plans to embark on exploratory drilling in the Chukchi and Beaufort Sea areas off Alaska's north coast this spring, having paid $2.1 billion to the U.S. government to obtain leasing rights. Shell has said its Alaska project includesextraordinary measuresaimed at environmental protection. But the commission stressed the need for further regulation, and said that the U.S. Department of State should work with the other countries that border the Arctic seas—Canada, Russia, Norway and Denmark—to establish one international standard of protection for this area of extreme cold, extended seasons of darkness, hurricane-strength storms, and pervasive fog. The commission also said that Congress should allocate funds to establish a Coast Guard presence inthe area; currently, the nearest such station is 1,000 miles away, said Heiman of Pew Environment Group.

Although the water is more shallow and well pressures likely to be less than those of the deepwater Gulf of Mexico, the commission said the difficulties in responding to a spill and the increased environmental risks mandated further protection and study into risks.

But the commission stopped short of calling for a moratorium on Arctic drilling."We feel that research that has a specific timeline and that would help answer specific questions is what is required,"said commission member Fran Ulmer, chancellor of the University of Alaska Anchorage, who serves on the Alaska Nature Conservancy.

Reducing dependence on oil.Although the commission did not make a specific recommendation on the need to seek oil alternatives, it concluded with a chapter on the need for an U.S. energy policy that seeks less use of petroleum."The nation must begin a transition to a cleaner, more energy-efficient future,"the report said."Nonrenewable oil and gas resources are just that—nonrenewable,"and policy must focus on maximum energy efficiency and renewable substitutes. Graham expanded on the topic at the commission news conference when asked about the prospect of offshore drilling taking place closer to Florida, a long-running political battle in which he was embroiled during his years in the Senate."If America were to go with a‘Drill, baby, drill' philosophy, we would exhaust our resources by 2031,"said Graham.

Relying more heavily on imports, as the United States has been doing for decades, would stretch those resources as far as 2068."Those numbers indicate the imperative of having as part of our energy policy holding back some of these resources for future generations, and moving aggressively to reduce America's almost insatiable appetite for petroleum,"which is currently consuming nearly one-quarter of all the oil produced in the world."Those numbers are not sustainable,"Graham said.

(Read of National Geographic Explorer Sylvia Earle's journey:Return to the Gulf: Mission Blue)

*This report is produced as part of National Geographic’sGreat Energy Challengeinitiative, sponsored byShell. National Geographic maintains autonomy over content.

National Geographic News


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воскресенье, 16 января 2011 г.

Haiti Earthquake Anniversary: Pictures Show Slow Recovery

A ruined street in the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince appeared much the same on September 30, 2010, (bottom) as it did seven months earlier—shortly after the devastatingHaiti earthquakeon January 12, 2010, which the local government estimates killed more than 220,000 people.

The magnitude 7.0 temblor destroyed more than 97,000 homes and damaged more than 188,000 structures, displacing 1.3 million people.

(See relatedpictures taken the day after the Haiti earthquake.)

—Brian Handwerk


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суббота, 15 января 2011 г.

Dark-Matter Galaxy Detected: Hidden Dwarf Lurks Nearby?

An entiregalaxymay be lurking, unseen, just outside our own, scientists announced Thursday.

The invisibility of"Galaxy X"—as the purported body has been dubbed—may be due less to its apparent status as a dwarf galaxy than to its murky location and its overwhelming amount of dark matter, astronomerSukanya Chakrabartispeculates.

Detectable only by the effects of its gravitational pull, dark matter is an invisible material that scientists think makes up more than 80 percent of the mass in the universe. (See"Dark Matter Detected for First Time.")

Chakrabarti, of the University of California, Berkeley, devised a technique similar to that used 160 years ago to predict the existence of Neptune, which was given away by the wobbles its gravity induced in Uranus's orbit.

Based on gravitational perturbations of gases on the fringes of our Milky Way galaxy, Chakrabarti came to her conclusion that there's a heretofore unknown dwarf galaxy about 260,000 light-years away. (Related:"Huge Black Hole Found in Dwarf Galaxy.")

With an estimated mass equal to only one percent the mass of the Milky Way, Galaxy X is still the third largest of the Milky Way's satellite galaxies, Chakrabarti predicts. The two Magellanic are each about ten times larger.

If it exists, Galaxy X isn't likely to be composed entirely of dark matter.

It should also have a sprinkling of dim stars, Chakrabarti said."These should provide enough light for astronomers to see it, now that they know where to look,"she said.

The reason the dark matter galaxy hasn't yet been seen, she added, is because it lies in the same plane as the Milky Way disc. Clouds of gas and dust stand between us and Galaxy X, confounding telescopes.

(See"'Lost' Dark Matter Discovered in Space.")

Galaxy X Addresses Fundamental Problem

If Galaxy X's existence is confirmed, it would be a major step in verifying our understanding of how the universe condensed from primordial matter and energy after thebig bang, Chakrabarti said.

Current theory correctly predicts the distribution of distant galaxies, she said. But it also predicts hundreds of dwarf galaxies around the Milky Way, and to date only a few dozen have been found.

This"missing satellite problem"she said,"is a fundamental problem in cosmology."

More Dark Galaxies Out There?

Galaxy X could soon lead to Galaxies Y and Z, according to Chakrabarti.

"This is basically a new method to render dark galaxies visible,"she said, adding that her technique should be able to detect dim dwarf galaxies as small as a thousandth the mass of the Milky Way.

The new finding is a useful contribution to projects aiming to map the distribution of dark matter on the far edges of the universe, according to David Pooley, a Texas-based dark matter astronomer withEureka Scientific, a private corporation that helps scientists secure research funding.

"All of these dark matter studies are really starting to map out the distribution of dark matter,"said Pooley, who was not part of Chakrabarti's team."Any information we get is extremely valuable."

(Related:"Dark Matter Helped Early Galaxies Survive 'Massacre.'")

Galaxy X: The Search Begins

Now that astronomers know where to look for Galaxy X, they should be able to find it, especially if they conduct the search in dust-penetrating infrared light, Chakrabarti said.

"Say you're looking for a car with very dim headlights, in the fog,"she said."If you know approximately where to look, you would have a better chance of finding it."

Chakrabarti hopes to do some looking herself within the next few months and is seeking to secure time at a large infrared telescope.

Even if Galaxy X isn't confirmed, she said, her findings will still shed new light on a shady subject.

The absence of X would mean there's some other oddity out there throwing off the calculations—perhaps an unexpected distribution pattern of the halo of dark matter thought to surround the Milky Way.

"We still stand to learn something very fundamental,"she said.

The Galaxy X study is pending in theAstrophysical Journal.

forNational Geographic News


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пятница, 14 января 2011 г.

Cholera and Cooperation Play Into Haiti Reforestation

This story is part of aNational Geographic News serieson global water issues.

From the passenger seat of a truck rumbling along a rough and dusty road in rural Haiti, Drew Kutschenreuter points out trees planted to feed the country’s charcoal habit, patches of millet, and irrigation canals cut along the sides of rolling brown hills.

An agronomist from Wisconsin, Kutschenreuter has been working in Haiti for more than two decades, most recently on soil conservation and hillside terracing projects run by the International Organization for Migration. Kutschenreuter’s goals: to create jobs and reverse the country’s downward spiral into ecological degradation and extreme poverty—problems exacerbated by last year’s earthquake and the island’s history of hurricane damage.

(Related:“Haiti Earthquake Anniversary: Pictures Show Slow Recovery.”)

With only a fraction of its forest cover remaining, Haiti has become increasingly vulnerable to flash floods and mudslides. Without underground tree roots, only a quarter of the water that should permeates the soil. Storms often damage what water systems do exist, crippling access to clean drinking water supplies. The United Nations (UN) estimates some 36 million tons of rich topsoil are carried away each year by wind and rain, much ending up in rivers and lakes that become lifeless mudscapes during the rainy season. With the loss of soil fertility, crop yields drop, and farmers have increasingly turned to cutting trees for firewood and charcoal as a source of revenue.

With the recent outbreak of cholera in camps crowded with earthquake victims, and in mountainous rural areas where people take their drinking water from the river or underground wells, there may be an added stress on forest resources. According to Wesler Lambert of Partners in Health, when citizens are asked to boil water as a protection measure against cholera or other water-borne diseases, they use charcoal, leading to more deforestation and therefore more flooding.

(Read more in William Wheeler’s blog post: “Haiti’s Cycle of Calamity.”)

Rebuilding Hillsides, Futures

Kutschenreuter works in an area of northern Haiti called Gonaîves, which did not see earthquake devastation, overseeing planting and hillside terracing projects to slow down the flow of water and protect topsoil. While the project area is only a small patch of Haiti, it offers a glimpse of how an environmentally rehabilitated landscape could look.

Mending Haiti’s environment is the ambitious end game of a new program called the Haiti Regeneration Initiative, spearheaded by Columbia University’s Earth Institute and the UN Environmental Programme (UNEP). The effort started in 2008 with the ecological restoration of one of the country’s several dozen watersheds. Now, having secured $8 million in funding, the project’s leaders are expanding its scope along Haiti’s southern coast, and will couple environmental restoration with development efforts, such as building infrastructure for drinking water and sanitation, and efforts to improve the livelihoods of local Haitians.

Until now, much of the work has been focused on planning: using soil quality surveys, and satellite data that accounts for topography and water patterns, to create a map that determines which hillsides can support which crops. They’ve also installed an automated rain gauge, which communicates wind speed and precipitation data in real-time via satellite back to New York, and could be developed into a flood risk early warning system.

The program builds on practices the UN has developed in African villages."Haiti's are among the lowest crop yields in the world,” said Marc Levy, a Columbia University professor and Earth Institute program director. “By using fertilizer feeds and best management practices, they could double or triple their yields very quickly.” Fruit-bearing trees like banana and mango could be planted along hillsides, and walls builtto shore them up against erosion. By focusing on more efficient use of “good” land, like plateaus, farmers might be able abandon some of the steeper grades altogether. Reforestation programs could provide alternative jobs to cutting trees for firewood and charcoal production.

But the idea that choosing not to farm a particular slope because of its value for flood protection and water quality—an individual sacrifice for a collective benefit—challenges the coping strategies that poor farmers have relied on for centuries, said Levy. He argues that it will take a significant change, like the one the Haiti Regeneration Initiative promotes, to reverse the country’s ecological decline.

Many scientists and policymakers have long recognized the consequences of charcoal dependency. A better strategy for Haitian farmers, according to a 2008 economist's report commissioned by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, would be to plant high-value mango trees for export. A tree-cutting tax could be established to subsidize alternative jobs for charcoal producers—as tree-planters and park rangers. But poor farmers, who have been largely cut out of export profits, traditionally choose subsistence farming. Changing the incentives would require strong government leadership—and a lack of such leadership was an obstacle to the larger reconstruction effort even before elections in late November were marred by fraud and touched off unrest, according to analysts.

Without a strong government committed to addressing these problems in Haiti, environmental rehabilitation programs have had, at best, mixed results. Common failures among such projects, which have received a total of $391 million since 1990, according to the Haiti Regeneration Initiative, include a lack of coordination among international aid organizations and government ministries, a failure to provide alternative jobs and secure local participation, and a history of"short-term interventions applied to long-term issues."

Kutschenreuter’s project in Gonaîves was the first to incorporate advice from the UN Environmental Programme in its approach, according to UNEP’s Antonio Perera.

A major tenet of the Haiti Regeneration Initiative is the importance of cooperation between NGOs, the government, and the residents in project areas. Much of the work in the next year will build on partnerships with a committee of local leaders, according to Earth Institute’s Alex Fisher.

“We’re seeing the initial stages of a coalition of groups that together have the potential to reach a significant proportion of the population and have very strong relationships with all the major players,” Fisher said. “If we keep following this track, there’s definitely reason to be hopeful.”

William Wheeler’s ongoing reporting in Haiti is supported by a grant from thePulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.

forNational Geographic News


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четверг, 13 января 2011 г.

Pictures: Blackbeard's Ship Yields Ornamental Sword

Could this partly gilded hilt have held Blackbeard's sword? There's no way to know for sure, though it was found amid theNorth Carolinawreck of theQueen Anne's Revenge, the flagship of the infamous 18th-century pirate.

Since 1997, archaeologists have been excavating theQueen Anne's Revenge. The sword hilt—found in pieces but reassembled for this picture—is among their latest finds and was revealed to the public this month.

(Related: exclusivepictures of Blackbeard pirate relics and gold.)

After running aground on a sandbar in 1718 near the town ofBeaufort (map), the ship was abandoned but likely remained intact and partly above water for as long as a year before collapsing and disintegrating, according to archaeologist David Moore of theNorth Carolina Department of Cultural Resources.

"In any event,"he said,"the pirates would have had ample opportunity to take anything that they thought valuable."The newfound hilt may have been left behind because it was unwanted, or it may have been inaccessible, according to Moore's colleague Wendy Welsh, a conservator on the project.

Blackbeard’s brief career as a pirate lasted only about two years, but during that time he became one of  history's most feared outlaws. Operating in theWest Indies (map)and off the coast of colonial America, he struck terror into the hearts of commercial ships' captains and once held the entire city ofCharleston, South Carolina (map), hostage.

—Willie Drye


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среда, 12 января 2011 г.

Thunderstorms Shoot Antimatter Beams Into Space

Thunderstorms can shoot beams of antimatter into space—and the beams are so intense they can be spotted by spacecraft thousands of miles away, scientists have announced.

Most so-called normal matter is made of subatomic particles such as electrons and protons. Antimatter, on the other hand, is made of particles that have the same masses and spins as their counterparts but with opposite charges and magnetic properties.

Recently, radiation detectors onNASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescopelighted up for about 30 milliseconds with the distinctive signature of positrons, the antimatter counterparts of electrons.

Scientists were able to trace the concentrated burst of radiation to alightningflash overNamibia, at least 3,000 miles (5,000 kilometers) away from the Earth-orbiting telescope, which was passing above Egypt at the time. (See anAfrica map.)

"This is a fundamental new discovery about how our planet works,"saidSteven Cummer, a lightning researcher from Duke University who was not part of the study team.

"The idea that any planet has thunderstorms that can create antimatter and launch it into space is something out of science fiction. The fact that our own planet is doing it is truly amazing."

Intense Antimatter Beam a Shocker

Scientists already knew thatthunderstorms can emit gamma rays—the most energetic form of light—and that gamma rays in turn can create positrons through a process called pair formation.

When a gamma ray with the right amount of energy interacts with an air atom, energy from the gamma ray is converted into matter, one electron and one positron, lightning expertJoseph Dwyersaid yesterday during a meeting of theAmerican Astronomical Societyin Seattle, Washington.

(Related:"Lightning Creates Particle Accelerators Above Earth.")

Scientists wouldn't have been surprised to see a few positrons accompanying any intense gamma ray burst, added Dwyer, of the Florida Institute of Technology in Melbourne.

But the lightning flash detected by Fermi appeared to have produced about 100 trillion positrons:"That's a lot,"he said.

What seems to have happened is that positrons created by the lightning were herded into a tight beam by Earth's magnetic field, said study leaderMichael Briggsof the University of Alabama, Huntsville.

The beam funneled positrons from the Namibian storm to the Fermi spacecraft.

A few milliseconds after hitting the spacecraft, the beam struck a more northerly section of Earth's magnetic field, Briggs added. This caused some of the positrons to bounce back the way they had come, hitting the spacecraft with a second beam, like an echo.

Antimatter a Clue to Lightning

Earth is constantly being bombarded by radiation from the sun, as well as cosmic rays from distant but violent events, such as powerful supernovae. (Also see"Black Holes Belch Universe's Most Energetic Particles.")

Considering the amount of positrons in the beam Fermi detected, the thunderstorm was briefly creating more radiation—in the form of positrons and gamma rays—than what hits Earth's atmosphere from all other cosmic sources combined, Dwyer noted.

The researcher has previously said, however, that thedanger of thunderstorm radiation to airline travelers is extremely low.

Duke's Cummer added that nobody knows why some thunderstorms produce gamma rays while most do not.

"We really don't understand a lot of the details about how lighting works,"he said. But discovering the creation of positrons"gives us a very, very important clue as to what's happening."

A paper about the discovery of antimatter in thunderstorms has been accepted for publication in the journalGeophysical Research Letters.

forNational Geographic News


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вторник, 11 января 2011 г.

Sun Pictures: A Full Year in a Single Frame

Can a single picture sum up all of 2010? In a way, yes. The above multiple-exposure photo shows the figure-eight path of thesunover the course of the entire year, known as an analemma.

Analemma photographs are made by taking a picture of the sun from the same place at the same time of day once or twice a week, generating 30 to 50 frames. This picture, made in Veszprem,Hungary, combines 36 photos of the sun taken at 10 a.m. local time between January and December. A separate picture of the neighborhood taken from the same location but at a different time of day was digitally composited into the foreground.

The sun makes this shape over a year because Earth rotates on a slightly different axis than the sun, and our planet also travels on an elliptical orbit. As one hemisphere of Earth tilts farther from the sun, the arc of the sun's daily path seen from that location lowers toward the horizon. The sun's arc then gets higher in the sky as the tilt reverses. The sun's highest point in the sky, seen in this analemma, occurs during the summer solstice, while its lowest point is during winter solstice. (Find out about alunar eclipse that happened on the 2010 winter solstice.)

Because of the time and precision involved, photographs of analemmas can be very difficult to produce. So far, only about 20 people worldwide have released successful analemma photos, according to Babak Tafreshi, founder of the astrophotography websiteThe World at Night (TWAN).

—Victoria Jaggard


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