понедельник, 23 мая 2011 г.

ISS astronauts land safely in Kazakhstan

MOSCOW (AFP)– A Soyuz space capsule carrying an Italian, a Russian and an American back from the International Space Station (ISS) has landed safely in Kazakhstan, Russian mission control said Tuesday.

"They have landed and all is well. They landed at approximately 0627 (02:27 GMT)," a spokesman for mission control told AFP.

Russia's Dmitry Kondratyev, Paolo Nespoli of the European Space Agency, and NASA's Catherine Coleman landed in the correct location to the east of the town of Jezkazgan after spending 159 days in space, mission control said in a statement.

"All the operations in leaving orbit and landing went according to plan," mission control said.

Live television footage showed the astronauts sitting wrapped in blankets on the sunny steppe after emerging from the capsule. Coleman was shown smiling and chatting to a cosmonaut retrieval worker while holding a bouquet of flowers.


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воскресенье, 22 мая 2011 г.

Tornado kills one, damages 200 houses in Kansas

KANSAS CITY (Reuters)– Tornadoes overnight in northeast Kansas killed one person and damaged some 200 homes, and resulted in a state of emergency being declared for 16 counties, state officials said on Sunday.

Elsewhere in the country, towns along the lower Mississippi River were coping with floodwaters, and parts of the Midwest and Southeast faced the threat of violent thunderstorms, hail and strong winds.

In Kansas the known tornado damage was centered around the town of Reading, said Kansas Division of Emergency Management spokeswoman Sharon Watson.

Initial reports"indicate there are 200 homes in the town and surrounding community that have some type of damage ranging from minor to severe ... Another 20 homes have been destroyed," she told Reuters by phone.

A separate statement from the Emergency Management Division said most of the destroyed homes were in the town.

Gail Lewis was on her way to Reading to visit friends when the tornado struck. She said she arrived in town before most responders and saw downed trees and damaged homes.

"Our church had one side completely blown out," said Lewis, whose father is pastor of the Reading First Baptist Church.

"People were in shock last night," Lewis said."It's a devastating blow for such a small community."

Reading residents were given access to town until 6 p.m. Sunday to check on property and then tentatively will be allowed to return at 9 a.m. Monday, said Tammy Vopat, spokeswoman for the Lyon County Emergency Management office.

A fatality had also been confirmed early on Sunday morning from the twister that struck at around 9:15 p.m. on Saturday night in the town of around 250 people and the surrounding area. There were reports of at least five injuries.

"Our thoughts and prayers are with the family of the victim and everyone impacted by this storm," Governor Sam Brownback was quoted as saying in the Emergency Management statement.

It said that earlier in the evening a tornado reportedly touched down in Jefferson County at a campground. A mobile home was destroyed and an elderly couple trapped inside until emergency responders could clear the debris. The couple was uninjured.

Damage from tornadoes and storms in other parts of the state was still being assessed, Watson said, but included broken windows in cars and buildings, mostly from hail and strong winds.

There was potential for more storms on Sunday, she said.

Elsewhere in the nation, AccuWeather.com meteorologists have forecast"violent" thunderstorms across the Mississippi River and Ohio River valleys on Sunday, with most of the strongest storms beginning in the afternoon.

Central Texas, central Arkansas, northern Mississippi and western Tennessee are also expected to experience severe weather.

Meteorologists said the main threats will be large hail and damaging wind gusts, but flash flooding and isolated tornadoes also could be problems.

"Cities under the gun include St. Louis, Springfield, Chicago, Dallas and Abilene," an AccuWeather.com report said.

"Fairly significant" rains are predicted to continue in the Ohio and Mississippi river valleys during the next five days, said National Weather Service meteorologist Larry Vannozzi.

But the rains won't be as widespread or intense as the weeks of heavy downpours that contributed to the Mississippi River rising to historic levels, said Vannozzi.

The river, which hit record crests in Mississippi at Vicksburg and Natchez, will slowly inch downward at those gauges in the next few days and is unlikely to rise again as a result of the additional rain, Vannozzi said.

"It's just going to prevent it from getting better sooner," he said.

(Writing by Jerry Norton; Editing by Colleen Jenkins)


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суббота, 21 мая 2011 г.

NASA Clears Shuttle Endeavour Heat Shield of Concerns

Space shuttle Endeavour's heat shield has been deemed safe for the ship's last landing thanks to imagery taken by its astronauts and sent down for study on Saturday.

"We're essentially clearing the vehicle for reentry at this point," said NASA's shuttle mission management team chair, LeRoy Cain.

Earlier this week, engineers and mission managers were able to clear six of seven areas of minor damage they had found dotting the right-side ofEndeavour's tile-covered underbelly. The damage was likely caused by debris, such as ice and insulating foam, that fell from the shuttle's external fuel tank during its launch May 16. {Photos of Space Endeavour's Final Launch}

Fuzzy photos of the seventh gouge, which straddled twothermal protection system(TPS) tiles, couldn't be analyzed to the same degree, so the shuttle astronauts were tasked with using cameras and sensors mounted at the end of a robotic arm inspection boom to get a close-up look at the site early on Saturday morning.

The ding is 2.43 inches (6.17 cm) by 2.95 inches (7.49 cm) wide, and 0.89 inches (2.26 cm) deep.

By Saturday afternoon, imagery and tile experts at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston had processed the newly-downlinked data, even creating a physical 3D model of the divot.

"With the data, to include the laser data that the team was able to acquire from the focused inspection, the analyses team went back and essentially what they did was verify how much tile was still in the cavity, because of course it is more important what remains than it is what is gone," said Cain."What we're interested in is protecting the structure underneath the tile and the associated systems."

The team found the damage was well within margins of safety, and advised that the shuttle was safe to return to Earth. Endeavour, flying its final spaceflight, is scheduled to make its last landing from space on June 1, weather permitting. The shuttle crew has been delivering a $2 billion astrophysics experiment and a shipment of spare supplies to the International Space Station. {Most Memorable Shuttle Missions}

"So with that we've cleared the TPS," said Cain."The vehicle is otherwise in great shape as well. It continues to perform outstanding."

You can follow Robert Pearlman @robertpearlman. Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter@Spacedotcomand onFacebook.


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пятница, 20 мая 2011 г.

Endeavour Shuttle Crew to Inspect Damaged Heat Shield Tile

Astronauts on the space shuttle Endeavour will take another look at their spacecraft's heat shield this weekend to inspect a damaged tile on the orbiter's vital heat shield, NASA managers said Friday (May 20).

Endeavour's crew will spend about two hours on Saturday inspecting a ding in the black heat-resistanttiles lining the shuttle's underbelly, said LeRoy Cain, chair of Endeavour's mission managiement team, in a briefing. The survey, known as a focused inspection, should give engineers on Earth the data they need to clear Endeavour's heat shield of any remaining concerns for its eventual landing on June 1.

The ding is one of seven damage sites spotted in photo surveys of Endeavour's heat shield following the shuttle's final launch on Monday (May 16). It is about 3.2 inches (8.1 centimeters) long and 2.5 inches (6.4 cm), and located slightly aft of the Endeavour's rear right-side landing gear door. {Photos of Space Endeavour's Final Launch}

Cain said engineers have already cleared the rest of Endeavour's heat shield of any concerns, including the six other tile damage sites and heat shield panels along the orbiter's wings and nose cap. They are confident this follow-up inspection will clear the remaining ding, too, he added.

"There's nothing alarming here, and we're really not concerned," Cain said.

NASA has kept a vigilant eye on shuttle heat shield damage since 2003, when wing damage caused by falling fuel tank insulation during launch led to the loss of the shuttle Columbia during its return to Earth. Seven astronauts were killed.

Since then, every shuttle mission has included meticulous heat shield surveys just after launch and just before landing, with some extra time scheduled in for a focused inspection in case one is needed. {Most Memorable Shuttle Missions}

For Saturday's survey, Endeavour pilot Gregory H. Box will control the shuttle's robotic arm to position a 50-foot (15-meter) inspection pole tipped with a camera laser sensor just beneath the damage site. A digital camera will snap three close-up images while the laser instrument records data that will help analysts build a three-dimensional map of the damage.

"This is one that we feel pretty confident that we're going to be able to clear once we get some additional data," Cain said. An answer could be ready within 24 hours of the survey, he added.

Endeavour's six-astronaut crew is currently in the midst of a 16-day mission to the International Space Station to deliver a major astrophysics experiment along with other supplies and equipment.

The astronauts were planning to take some time off late Friday (actually the crew's"morning" due to a skewed overnight schedule) to rest up from the busy mission. The astronauts are also expecting aphone call from Pope Benedict XVIin the Vatican early Saturday morning to mark the fact that two Italian astronauts— station crewmember Paolo Nespoli and shuttle astronaut Roberto Vittori— are in space at the same time.

Those events should not be affected by Endeavour's extra heat shield inspection, Cain said.

"We're not losing any activities by doing this," he added.

Endeavour's current mission is NASA's 134th shuttle flight and the second-to-last flight before the 30-year-old program ends later this year. After Endeavour lands, NASA will fly onefinal mission on the shuttle Atlantisbefore shutting down the program. That flight is currently slated to lift off July 8.

You can follow SPACE.com Managing Editor Tariq Malik on Twitter@tariqjmalik.Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter@Spacedotcomand onFacebook.


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четверг, 19 мая 2011 г.

NASA Studies Tile Damage on Shuttle Endeavour Heat Shield

HOUSTON— NASA engineers are taking a close look at several spots on the  space shuttle Endeavour's belly where its vital heat shield tiles were during the spacecraft's launch earlier this week.,

Endeavour blasted off Monday (May 16) to begin a 16-day trip to the International Space Station. It is the shuttle's last mission before the orbiter is retired to a museum. {Photos of Shuttle Endeavour's Final Launch}

The damaged spots are onEndeavour's heat shield, which protects the spaceship from the fiery temperatures it experiences when re-entering Earth's atmosphere.

Most likely, the damage will turn out to be of no consequence, NASA officials said, but for now they must continue to analyze the patches to make sure.

"I am not concerned about the damage that we're seeing here," LeRoy Cain, chair of Endeavour's mission management team, told reporters Thursday (May 19)."It's certainly not alarming, and the team is not concerned about it."

NASA has kept a close eye on the health of space shuttle heat shields during mission since the tragic 2003 loss of the shuttle Columbia. A piece of fuel tank debris damaged Columba's heat shield during launch, leading to the shuttle's destruction during re-entry. Seven astronauts were killed.

Since then, shuttle astronauts have conducted several in-space inspections of their spacecraft to make sure the vehicle is safe for re-entry. Several repair tools and techniques are also available, should they be needed.

The damage on Endeavour is not on the same scale as that during the Columbia accident.

Photos of Endeavour's heat shield taken during a routine inspection by shuttle astronauts after launch, as well as by the space station's crew before the shuttledocked at the orbiting labyesterday, revealed seven areas of damage, Cain said.

Of those seven spots, mission managers have already dismissed five of those since they pose no risk, Cain added. Mission managers are very close to clearing a sixth, he said.

But one area about 3.2 inches (8.1 centimeters) long and 2.5 inches (6.4 cm) wide may still pose a potential hazard, and requires further study to be sure.

It's possible NASA will need to have the Endeavour astronauts go forward with an extra heat shield inspection to gather better photos of the area for closer analysis. This activity, called a focused inspection, is relatively rare.

NASA has only had to conduct focused inspections four times since adding them as an optional activity to every shuttle mission following the Columbia shuttle accident.

"The team has not completed our assessments on this site, but the work we've done so far, we believe that we may need to do a focused inspection in order to get some fidelity," Cain said. The existing pictures of that area, he said"are kind of fuzzy."

Most likely, if such an inspection is necessary at all, it will be all that's needed to clear the last spot of any potential risk to the orbiter, Cain said.

"I feel pretty confident that if in fact were not able to clear it by the morning, when we get the focused inspection data that we'll be able to clear this problem and not have to do anything," he said.

If, however, it does turn out that the damaged area make the vehicle unsafe to fly back to Earth, NASA has options to fix it.

"We do have some repair capability," Cain said."Astronauts would go out with a gun-type applicator and we put some material in the cavity. We also have what's called tile overlay. We have a lot of confidence in both of those repair capabilities if we should need to use them."

You can follow SPACE.com senior writer Clara Moskowitz on Twitter @ClaraMoskowitz. Visit SPACE.com for complete coverage ofEndeavour's final mission STS-134or follow us@Spacedotcom and onFacebook.


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вторник, 17 мая 2011 г.

Senate stops move to repeal Big Oil tax breaks

WASHINGTON (Reuters)– The Senate blocked a move by Democrats to repeal billions of dollars in tax breaks enjoyed by the biggest oil companies operating in the United States, but Majority Leader Harry Reid said that paring back the incentives would be included in an upcoming budget deal.

Democratic sponsors of the bill, which would have used the savings from ending the tax breaks to pay down$21 billion of the deficit in ten years, got only 52 of the 60 votes needed to proceed on the measure on Tuesday. The bill would have cut back tax breaks enjoyed by Exxon Mobil Corp, Chevron ConocoPhillips, BP and Shell Oil, the U.S. unit of Royal Dutch Shell.

Before the widely expected outcome, Reid said the issue would be included in a budget deal."I am confident before we finish our budget negotiations here in anticipation of raising the debt ceiling that will be part of it," Reid told reporters earlier on Tuesday.

Vice President Joe Biden is steering a deal between Democrats and Republicans to increase the debt limit and pare back spending that lawmakers hope reach before August 2.

Reducing the tax breaks that the companies have enjoyed for decades has long been a goal of President Barack Obama and his fellow Democrats. The call to do so has gotten louder ahead of next year's elections and as the big five oil companies made about$36 billion in profits during the first quarter of the year as oil prices rose to about$100 a barrel.

"The administration believes that, at a time when it is working with the Congress on proposals to reduce federal deficits, the nation cannot afford to maintain these wasteful subsidies," the White House said earlier on Tuesday.

On Wednesday Republicans in the Senate are expected to push a bill to open up offshore oil drilling, which they say has been locked up by Obama regulations after last year's BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. But the measure faces an uphill battle in the Democratic-led Senate.

Environmentalists blasted Tuesday's outcome in the Senate.

"The Senate today had the chance to do right by American taxpayers," Frances Beinecke, the president of the Natural Resources Defense Council, said in a release.

"Instead, pressured by oil industry lobbyists and a misguided Republican leadership, it decided to continue to give tax breaks to highly profitable Big Oil companies that don't need any taxpayer incentives."

(Additional reporting by Richard Cowan and Ayesha Rascoe; Editing by John Picinich and Alden Bentley)


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понедельник, 16 мая 2011 г.

Student Balloon Photographs Shuttle Endeavour's Launch Into Orbit

A camera-toting balloon captured unique views of NASA's space shuttle Endeavour as it soared into space for the final time today (May 16), snapping pictures from the stratosphere as part of a student-led project.

The helium-filled balloon carrying the so-called"Senatobia-1" payload was launched near Gainesville, Fla. at 7:30 a.m. EDT (1130 GMT) this morning.Endeavour blasted offfrom NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla. at 8:56 a.m. EDT (1256 GMT). The shuttle is now en route to the International Space Station on its 25th and final mission before it is retired. {See the Student Balloon Photo of Endeavour Launch}

"Senatobia-1 has multiple video and still cameras to catch Endeavour's climb into space," Quest for Stars officials said via Twitter.

The balloon's earlier launch time allowed the payload to be in position at an altitude of approximately 100,000 feet (almost 30,500 meters) to witness Endeavour's supersonic streak beyond the stratosphere. {Shuttle Endeavour Launch Photos: Mission STS-134}

The balloon was built and flown by students as part of a venture conducted by Quest for Stars, a non-profit educational organization, in coordination with the Challenger Center for Space Science Education and the Coalition for Space Exploration.

The intent of the balloon flight is to bring together students and citizens from across a broad range of backgrounds who would not normally have contact with a mission to the edge of space, organization officials said in a statement. {Video: Endeavour's Lift-0ff into History}

Endeavour's flight was the second shuttle launch a Quest for Stars balloon has observed. The group's"Robonaut-1" balloon snapped picturesof the space shuttle Discovery's launch from the edge of space in February 2011.

The payload of this balloon, Senatobia-1, takes its name from the city of Senatobia, Miss., which has long shared a special connection with Endeavour. Senatobia was one of two communities that originally suggested the name"Endeavour" as a possible name forNASA's youngest space shuttle, which was built as a replacement after Challenger was tragically lost in 1986.

In addition to carrying a still and video camera, a GPS and radio tracking devices, the balloon also toted signatures gathered from a large number of students in Senatobia wishing a speedy recovery for wounded Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, wife of Endeavour's STS-134 commander Mark Kelly. Giffords (D-Ariz.) suffered a gunshot wound to the head in a failed assassination attempt at a January constituent meeting in Tucson.

The balloon burst at high altitude and drifted back down to Earth as planned today, its mission complete. Recovery personnel grabbed it and reported that everything had apparently worked well.

"Recovery team reports Senatobia-1 Balloon payload recovered in'pristine' condition w/ all cameras still operating after mission to 95K+ ft," Quest for Stars officials tweeted today.

Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter@Spacedotcomand onFacebook.


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воскресенье, 15 мая 2011 г.

NASA to Launch Next-to-Last Shuttle Flight Monday

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.— When six astronauts launch into orbit on NASA's space shuttle Endeavour Monday (May 16), it will be the last liftoff for the well-traveled orbiter.

Endeavour is scheduled to blast off from Launch Pad 39A here at NASA's Kennedy Space Center at 8:56 a.m. EDT (1256 GMT). Weather forecasters predict a 70 percent chance of good launch conditions.

This will be the second launch try for Endeavour's STS-134 mission, after a broken set of heaters thwarted an attempt on April 29.

The shuttle will be making its 25th and last flight before retiring to the California Museum of Science in Los Angeles. Its fellow orbiters will also retire to other museums after shuttle Atlantis makes NASA's last-ever space shuttle flight in July. {Photos: Shuttle Endeavour's Final Mission}

"The space shuttle program, I think, will definitely be remembered for the amazing things that it has done," said mission specialist Michael Fincke in a NASA interview."Everything that we’ve learned along the way, all the technology, all of the science that we’ve been able to bring in in these past years with the space shuttle, I think, is going to be remembered very nicely in the history books."

For Endeavour's mission, commander Mark Kelly will lead aseasoned crew of sixon a 16-day trip to the International Space Station. Kelly and Fincke's fellow astronauts include pilot Gregory H. Johnson and mission specialists Greg Chamitoff, Andrew Feustel, and European Space Agency astronaut Roberto Vittori.

Cosmic mysteries

Shuttle Endeavour's main payload is a $2 billion astrophysics experiment called the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS). The bus-sized device contains a magnet that will search for space particles that could explain cosmic mysteries like dark matter and antimatter. {Q&A With AMS Leader Samuel Ting}

"We’re taking up a very important experiment, the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, a science experiment that could change the course of physics," Johnson said in a NASA interview."It's one of those rare kinds of experiments, that it really might just open some new doors that we never even knew existed."

Endeavour is also carrying up 14,000 pounds (6,350 kilograms) of hardware backups to keep the space station running through at least 2020. The supplies include a new tank of ammonia coolant, equipment for the station's Dextre robot, and spare parts for the laboratory's antenna communications system. {Infographic: How the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer Will Work}

The astronauts plan four busy spacewalks during the mission to install the new supplies and do maintenance on the exterior of the orbiting outpost.

Take two

Endeavour was originally scheduled to blast off April 29, but NASA called off the countdown because of two failed heaters designed to prevent a critical power unit from freezing on orbit. Without functioning heaters, the orbiter's hydraulic systems would have been at risk, officials said.

Engineers worked around the clock to troubleshoot the issue. Ultimately, NASA traced the problem back to a broken switchbox feeding power to the heaters. Workers removed the box and replaced it, and about 20 feet of wiring leading to and from it, with new hardware. Tests have shown the issue to be resolved.

"We have extremely high confidence that the problem is no longer on the ship," Mike Moses, chair of the shuttle's mission management team, said during a press conference last week. {Video: Endeavour's Final Mission}

Large crowds

NASA is expecting large crowds to come out to Florida's Space Coast for the final launch of its youngest orbiter. Around 500,000 spectators are expected, somewhat less than the roughly 750,000 who turned out for the first launch attempt.

NASA officials said the drop was due to the fact that Monday morning is not quite as attractive a time as Friday afternoon for some launch viewers.

President Obama was also on hand for Endeavour's last try at liftoff. When the shuttle didn't launch after all, the president and his family took a tour of the NASA facility. Obama has not announced any plans to come again for take two.

Another high-profile guest will be in attendance, though: Commander Kelly's wife, Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, is expected to travel from Houston to Florida to see her husband launch. Giffords has not been seen in public often since she survived a mass shooting in Tucson in January. She has reportedly made great strides in recovering from a bullet wound to the head, and is expected to watch the shuttle lift off with the other astronauts' family members.

You can follow SPACE.com senior writer Clara Moskowitz on Twitter @ClaraMoskowitz.Visit SPACE.com for complete coverage ofEndeavour's final mission STS-134or follow us@Spacedotcom and onFacebook.


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суббота, 14 мая 2011 г.

Live Long and Prosper? Endeavour Shuttle Crew Recreates'Star Trek'Film Poster

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.— The six astronauts flying on NASA's final flight of the space shuttle Endeavour are a serious bunch, but they've got a fun streak too. Case in point: The astronauts apparently like the science fiction franchise"Star Trek" enough to re-enact its most recent movie poster.

Creating custom mission posters based on popular movies has long been a tradition for NASA shuttle and space station crews. {Gallery: NASA's Most Offbeat Mission Posters}

But while past mission posters have recreated the film versions of"Ocean's Eleven" or the Matrix and Harry Potter movies, the six-man STS-134 crew of Endeavour chose something a bit more space-y: the2009 reboot of"Star Trek,"directed by J.J. Abrams.

"That was my idea!" Endeavour mission specialist Drew Feustel told SPACE.com.

Feustel said he had seen the movie during a previous spaceflight, when he launched on Atlantis in May 2009 to upgrade the Hubble Space Telescope.

"That movie came out basically the day we launched and we were fortunate to have that movie uplinked to us on orbit," Feustel said."I really liked the movie. I thought it was pretty neat."

Endeavour's STS-134 astronauts are slated to launch aboard shuttle Endeavour from here at Kennedy Space Center on Monday at 8:56 a.m. EDT (1256 GMT). It will be the last voyage for Endeavour before the orbiter is retired. {Photos: Endeavour's Final Mission}

Space, the real final frontier

Feustel said he suggested the latest"Star Trek" film as the theme for the STS-134 poster, and the rest of the crew agreed.

But Feustel's crewmate Greg Chamitoff remembered it differently.

"I kept trying to remember whose idea that was, and I think it might have been mine," Chamitoff said in an interview.

Regardless of the origin of the poster idea, the crew seemed to unite behind the concept.

"A lot of us are {"Star Trek" fans}," Chamitoff said of the Endeavour astronauts.

The poster features the six astronauts looking stoically ahead, their faces each in half shadow, with a dark background and"STS-134" inStar Trekfont underneath. Leading the crew, in the James T. Kirk position, is Endeavour commander Mark Kelly.

"It's a pretty close approximation," Feustel said of the finished product."It looks pretty cool; we like it."

NASA and"Star Trek"

The poster is not the STS-134 crew's only connection to the famous science fiction TV and movie franchise.

In May 2005, mission specialistMike Fincke appeared as an extraduring the final episode of the show"Star Trek: Enterprise." He visited the set during vacation, along with fellow astronaut Terry Virts, who also appeared in the episode. Fincke played an NX-01 engineer on the fictional starship.

The International Space Station's Expedition 21 crew (the current crew is Expedition 27) also donned Star Trek uniforms for their mission poster in 2009.

On Endeavour's last mission before the orbiter is retired, the space shuttle will visit the International Space Station to deliver spare hardware and a new $2 billion astrophysics experiment to search for exotic particles.

In an odd side-note, Kelly and Chamitoff also have another movie-themed poster under their belt. Both astronauts were on the crew of NASA's STS-124 flight to the space station in 2008. That crew's choice of a film to emulate:"Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix." Kelly commanded that mission on the shuttle Discovery.

The mission's new name, according to the poster?"STS-124 and the Order of Discovery."

You can follow SPACE.com Senior Writer Clara Moskowitz on Twitter @ClaraMoskowitz. Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.


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пятница, 13 мая 2011 г.

Newt Gingrich questions Pakistan aid

MACON, Georgia (Reuters)– Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich on Friday called for more oil drilling in the United States and questioned American aid to Pakistan as he took his young campaign to his home state of Georgia.

Gingrich, a former speaker of the House of Representatives during the 1990s, declared himself a candidate in the 2012 presidential election on Wednesday in what many analysts say will be an uphill battle to win the presidency.

In a speech to members of the Georgia Republican Party, Gingrich said the United States needs to reassess the billions of dollars in aid it gives to Pakistan following the killing of Osama bin Laden by U.S. special forces in a daring May 2 raid.

Authorities are now trying to piece together how the al Qaeda leader came to live in the northern Pakistan garrison town of Abbottabad for apparently years before his death.

"When I learned that after paying$20 billion since 9/11, they had been housing him in Pakistan, I kind of forgot what the world'ally' meant," he said.

"There is a point when you have to say to people around the world,'How stupid do you think we are?"

Gingrich also derided President Barack over his energy policy, arguing opening up more U.S. drilling areas could help bring gas prices down.

Gingrich, 67, is a conservative famed for budget battles with President Bill Clinton after he led the"Republican revolution" in 1994 elections that brought his party to power.

Gingrich has laid out a pro-business economic agenda as the centerpiece of his campaign, pledging to shrink the size of government and cut taxes to help the ailing U.S. economy.

On Friday, he repeated his proposal to reduce the U.S. corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 12.5 percent and eliminate the capital gains tax on stock profits.

Gingrich said the current corporate tax rate is so high that companies hire lawyers and accountants to find every possible loophole.

"We currently have the highest corporate tax rate in the world, which means, guess what? Corporations don't pay it," he said."We have a tax code that is so destructive, that it rewards the behavior of not paying the tax. I want to find a corporate tax rate in which they will lay off the lawyers and pay the government."

Gingrich also praised the presidency of Ronald Reagan as a model for cutting government regulations, lowering taxes and creating incentives for companies to create jobs.

He has repeatedly criticized Obama's policies as too liberal. On Friday, Gingrich said Obama's economic plan was not putting Americans back to work fast enough and called him"the most successful food stamp president in history."

"We stand at a crossroads," he said."If we lose this fight and have four more years of radical left wing values imposed from Washington, this country will be dramatically weakened, the fabric of our society will be weakened, our economy will be weakened."

(Editing by Kevin Gray and Peter Bohan)


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среда, 11 мая 2011 г.

How Big Is the Mississippi River Flood?

The deadly tornadoes and rainstorms that tore across the Midwest last month combined with melting snow have left the Mississippi River bursting at the seams. Amidst the evacuations and extensive flooding along the river, experts know records are being broken, but they say they won't know the full extent of the flood— such as how much water has actually breached the riverbanks— until things quiet down.

"We get rain across the {Mississippi River} basin all the time, and if it is spread out in time it will not cause a problem," said Tom Salem, science and operations officer at the National Weather Service in Memphis, Tenn."It is when it comes at the same time and multiple rivers add to the total of the entire system that we have problems," Salemtold Life's Little Mysteries.

Some areas along the Mississippi River have seen 10 to 20 inches (25.4 to 50.8 centimeters) of rain during April, said Royce Fontenot, a hydrologist at the National Weather Service.

While the river levels are currently reaching record levels, the extent of the damage won't be known until after the flooding stops, which could be well into June, Fontenot said. {Before and After: Images of the Mississippi River Floods}

"We don't know how much water has overflowed onto land from the Mississippi River," Fontenot told Life's Little Mysteries."This is not something we can get in real time; we'll need to survey the area after the fact."

What we know

Although the size of the flooding is unknown, there are several indications of its severity.
The Mississippi River is currently flowing at 2 million cubic feet per second (609,600 cubic meters per second) in Memphis, which is comparable to a football field of water at a height of 44 ft (13.4 m) per second. Another way to look at it: If you were to stand at one point in the river, it would be as though 2 million basketballs of water were moving past you every second. {What Is to Blame for Mississippi River Floods?}

Before discharging into the Gulf of Mexico, the Mississippi River joins with the Atchafalaya River in south central Louisiana. On an average day in May, these two rivers collectively flow into the Gulf at a rate of 750,000 cubic feet per second (228,600 cubic meters per second).

Right now, flow rates of the Mississippi River in New Orleans (before joining the Atchafalaya River) are about 1.1 million cubic feet per second (335,280 cubic meters per second).

Water levels are also indicative of theseverity of the flooding. For example, in Memphis, the average height of the river is 25.9 ft (7.90 m), according to data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) for the month of May. Today, this height has increased to 47.69 ft (14.23 m) and is expected to rise to about 48 feet (14.6 m).

 

River background

About 2,350 miles (3,782 kilometers) long, the Mississippi river flows south from Lake Itasca in Minnesota and empties into the Gulf of Mexico. The river passes along the eastern border of Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas and Louisiana, and the western borders of Wisconsin, Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee and Mississippi.

The entire Mississippi River basin drains 41 percent of the United States— parts of 30 states and also a small part of Canada. About 20 rivers feed into the Mississippi, including the Ohio, Illinois and Missouri rivers.

The Mississippi River is the fifth largest U.S. river by volume and on average holds 1.5 million to 5.2 million gallons of water. The water level of the river varies by location.

Follow Life's Little Mysteries on Twitter @LLMysteries.

This story was provided byLife's Little Mysteries, a sister site to LiveScience.


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вторник, 10 мая 2011 г.

Superwomen: Moms of Twins May Live Longer

Having two babies at a time is associated with a longer life, according to a new study. But that's not because doubling up on dirty diapers increases life span; instead, moms of twins are physically stronger in the first place.

One catch: The research, published today (May 10) in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, focused on a"natural fertility" population of women in 1800s Utah, so the results may not apply in today'sin vitro fertilization (IVF) world.

However, the findings do suggest that rather than being a reproductive accident that drains mom of energy and nutrients, twins could be an evolutionary adaption in which healthy moms take the chance to pass on double their genes at once.

"We expected the exact opposite," study researcher Shannen Robson of the University of Utah told LiveScience."We expected that since most humans have one baby at a time, having two would be really burdensome… {Twins} are an identifier of these women who are remarkable,physically exceptional people."

Natural fertility

Identical twins, created when one embryo splits into two during development, appear more or less at random. But fraternal twins, who develop from two separate eggs released and fertilized at the same time, show some patterns of both heritability— they run in families— and environmental influence. Not including twins conceived from IVF, twins account for 6 out of every 1,000 births in Asia, 10 to 20 out of every 1,000 births in the U.S. and Europe, and 40 out of every 1,000 births in Africa.

To look at twinning before reproductive technology and reliable birth control, the team used the Utah Population Database, an enormous genealogical record of Utah residents dating back to the early 1800s. From the database, they pulled family records of women who were born between 1807 and 1899 and who lived to be at least 50, so they experienced their full range of reproductive years. They excluded widows and wives in polygamous families to ensure they were comparing similar women. {The History and Future of Birth Control}

The result was a database of 58,786 women, 4,603 of whom had at least one set of twins. The researchers compared the moms of twins with the moms of singletons, looking for differences in life span, number of children, time between pregnancies and length of fertility, all measures of health.

Double the fun

Flying in the face of the assumption that a double pregnancy would sap a woman's strength, the researchers found thatmoms of twinsbeat moms of only singletons on every measure. They lived longer, had longer reproductive life spans, needed less time to recover between pregnancies, and had more children overall. The moms of twins born before 1870 had on average 1.9 more children than moms of singletons in their age group, and the moms in the post-1870 group each had 2.3 kids more than their singleton mom counterparts.

Because twins have a higher likelihood of death than singletons, the researchers adjusted that finding by infant mortality, assuming that a mom of twins might have more babies faster after a child died. After that adjustment, moms of twins still came out ahead, having 1.24 to 1.56 more babies than singleton-only moms. That exceeds the"plus one" effect you get from having twins, Robson said.

The results didn't differ as time went by, even though pioneer women in pre-1870s Utah had worse medical care than women born later. It's hard to compare the 1800s data to today, however, Robson said. IVF has increased the number of twins born. And other factors have changed as well: women have fewer pregnancies overall now than 1800s women in Utah, so their overall chances of having a spontaneous twin pregnancy are lower. One 2001 study of women in rural Gambia, however, did find that mothers of twins had better reproductive health than mothers of only singletons. {Read:5 Myths of Fertility Treatments}

Robson and her colleagues now hope to look at the Utah women's twins, to see how they fared given the fact that twins are more likely to be premature and have health problems. They also hope to take a closer look at the supermoms who birth twins.

"By identifying them, we can then look at other aspects of what it is about them that makes them more healthy, live longer and have babies at a faster rate than everyone else in the population," Robson said.

You can followLiveScience senior writer Stephanie Pappas on Twitter@sipappas.Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter@livescience and onFacebook.


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понедельник, 9 мая 2011 г.

Conservationists question Columbia Basin dam plan

PORTLAND, Ore.– In what is likely the final major hearing before a federal judge decides what must be done to make Columbia River dams safe for salmon, lawyers argued Monday over just how many salmon have to come back and whether that satisfies the Endangered Species Act.

The answer is difficult, because the numbers fluctuate widely from year to year based on how much food is available in the ocean, no matter how many billions of dollars are spent making dams less lethal to fish.

The hearing in an overflowing Portland, Ore., courtroom was perhaps the final argument in a fight that has raged since 2001 over what is called a biological opinion— a formal review required by the Endangered Species Act as part of the effort to reduce the harm federal projects such as dams cause protected wildlife such as salmon.

U.S. District Court Judge James Redden previously shot down two Bush administration plans for restoring salmon runs and is now considering whether minor improvements offered by the Obama administration giving biologists more flexibility to react to problems are enough to make the plan work.

The battle comes down to a choice between cheap and abundant power provided by hydroelectric dams on the Columbia and Snake rivers in Oregon, Washington and Idaho, and the many salmon the dams kill as the young fish migrate to the ocean and swim upstream as adults to spawn.

The more water that goes through the dam turbines, the cheaper the electricity to farmers and electric ratepayers. When more water is allowed to spill over the tops of the dams, more salmon survive.

The central argument by conservationists is that the current plan sets too low a bar for salmon survival.

"The government tries to work its way around the problem,"said attorney Todd True of the conservation group Earthjustice."But there is a fatal disconnect in the argument"that growing salmon population numbers equals recovery.

Government attorneys countered that the plan is enough to assure salmon survive, and conservationists are missing the point.

The numbers of salmon fluctuate year to year, said U.S. Justice Department lawyer Colby Howell, and it's impossible to know whether the numbers the court is using represent a valid picture of what salmon populations should look like. He said ocean conditions and river management play a large role in salmon runs.

The plaintiffs are"playing a game of back-and-forth where they're making up the rules,"Howell said.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration deputy regional administrator Barry Thom said outside court that the government might never make the conservationists happy.

"I'm not sure we can,"Thom said."They're willing to do anything to push for dam breaching. That seems to be the heart of their argument."

Conservation groups and some Indian tribes have long argued that restoring a free-flowing Snake River by breaking through four dams in Eastern Washington is the only way to bring struggling salmon runs back to thriving instead of just surviving.

One biological opinion by the Clinton administration put that prospect on the table, but the Bush administration took it off. The Obama administration has said it might study dam breaching as a last resort if other steps fail.

Conservationists argue the government's projections for improving salmon populations have failed before. Habitat improvements planned from 2007 to 2009 were often delayed or proved infeasible, and there was no effort to relate the habitat improvements that were made to increased salmon survival.

Salmon advocates say the latest revised plan from the Obama administration is little different than the Bush administration's 2008 plan and has little scientific evidence to back it up.

"If the fish are not replacing themselves, there's only one thing they can do,"True said."And that's go extinct."


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воскресенье, 8 мая 2011 г.

Omaha Zoo's tiger Shasta to head west

OMAHA, Neb (Reuters)– A tiger that would rather play than mate is taking her heart to San Francisco.

Shasta, a 10-year-old Siberian tiger at Omaha's Henry Doorly Zoo for the last seven years, is moving in June to the San Francisco Zoo to be a display animal.

The Omaha zoo has an internationally recognized big-cat breeding and genetics program but it didn't work for Shasta, said Dan Cassidy, the zoo's general curator.

The 295-pound Shasta rejected all attempts by male tigers at romance. She never had a litter.

"She'd want to play when he would want to breed," Cassidy said."Things didn't work out."

Shasta's move to California will be her third. She was born in 2000 at the Indianapolis Zoo, sent to the Como Zoo in St. Paul, Minnesota, in September 2002, and moved to Omaha in December 2003.

Shasta will replace Tatiana, a Siberian tiger that was shot to death after it attacked and killed a teenage visitor at the San Francisco Zoo on Christmas Day 2007.

Cassidy said it's not unusual for animals to move around the country, based on the breeding and display needs of zoos and goals for an animal.

Coincidentally, the Omaha zoo this week was hosting about 150 big-cat reproductive physiologists, behaviorialists, geneticists, veterinarians, keepers and curators from across the United States. They are discussing all cat species held in zoos, including possible future moves.

Cassidy said the group is a sort of dating service.

Shasta's move west doesn't mean the Omaha zoo is downsizing its big-cat exhibits or research, Cassidy said. The zoo plans to breed more of its big cats this year.

The Omaha zoo's new development plan calls for replacing its cat house, which hosts eight to 10 species, with sprawling displays that better reflect their native habitat.

For example, lions would be in an Africa area, near zebras and giraffes. An Asian highlands area would include Siberian tigers and snow leopards.

Shasta will be renamed Martha at her new home in honor of a San Francisco Zoo donor, Cassidy said.

"That will be her'house' name," he said,"but the name on her permanent record will be Shasta."

(Reporting by David Hendee. Editing by Peter Bohan)


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суббота, 7 мая 2011 г.

Volunteers flood tornado-tossed Tuscaloosa, Ala.

TUSCALOOSA, Ala.– Thousands of volunteers flooded the hard-hit home of the University of Alabama with chainsaws, wrecking bars and food Saturday, offering help and hugs to tornado victims and causing traffic tie-ups reminiscent of a fall football weekend.

A long line of vehicles piled into a volunteer registration center where officials waived plans to make workers register because they couldn't keep up with the large number of people showing up to work.

Groups have had time since the storms struck April 27 to organize trips, and the turnout appeared far heavier than the first weekend after the twisters. With sunny weather and light winds, the governor's office asked volunteers to be patient with the heavy traffic.

Many volunteers wore Crimson Tide football gear, but Debra Wilson came more than 80 miles to help in an orange T-shirt, celebrating the national championship won by 'Bama archrival Auburn University.

Wilson said team allegiances don't matter at a time like this.

"I live in Alabama,"said Wilson, of Dixon's Mills in southwest Alabama."We just saw the destruction and felt the need and we wanted to be here to help."

Christian organizations including the Salvation Army and Samaritan's Purse set up operations to coordinate volunteers, along with numerous churches, but many people simply drove through hard-hit neighborhoods and got out where they saw a need.

With volunteers swarming her property, single mother Sylvia Hannah watched as a group of strangers cut up hardwood trees that fell during the twister, crisscrossing her yard and knocking a hole in her roof. Hannah was overwhelmed by the aid, hugging sweaty men covered with sawdust.

"It's been a Godsend,"she said, wiping away tears.

In another area, members of a church from Columbus, Miss., hugged and commiserated with Marilyn Latham, 75, after she finished talking with an insurance adjuster about her home, which was leveled to the foundation except for two small rooms in the back.

Not quite ready to begin cleaning up, Latham showed the group the remains of the house where she and her husband survived by lying down on the floor as winds up to 190 mph ripped apart the wood-frame structure.

"We're just trying to get ourselves together,"she said.

The city said more than 2,600 volunteers registered to help with the cleanup by midday, and trucks, church buses and cars filled with workers clogged some roads in Tuscaloosa, a city of 94,000 where a tornado hit some of the most densely populated areas. Birmingham-area residents who loaded on to church buses and vans posted photos of volunteer work going on in towns including Pleasant Grove and Hackleburg; at least 18 died there.

Coordinating volunteers at an aid center in the parking lot of a small trip mall, Bell Gandy she didn't know how many people she'd helped or how many people had turned out to assist.

"We don't count. We just help,"she said.


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пятница, 6 мая 2011 г.

Japan insurance losses slash Berkshire profits

NEW YORK (AFP)– US investment king Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway reported a sharp plunge in first-quarter earnings Friday, hit heavily by insurance losses on Japan's earthquake-tsunami disaster.

Net earnings fell 56 percent to $1.51 billion from $3.63 billion a year earlier for the diversified investment house, long a favorite with small investors.

Earnings per the company's"A" shares -- which closed at $120,280.00 a share on Friday before the report was released -- was $917, compared to $2,272 a year earlier, the company said.

For the more commonly traded"B" shares, the per-share figure calculated to 61 cents.

At the company's annual shareholders' meeting in Omaha, Nebraska last week Buffet said that floods in Australia, an earthquake in New Zealand and Japan's massive earthquake-tsunami disaster, hit the company's re-insurance arm, which was expected to take a loss from underwriting for the first time in nine years.

But he also reported that Berkshire's companies, which span the clothing and insurance sectors -- and much more in between -- were starting to feel more optimistic about the US economic recovery.


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четверг, 5 мая 2011 г.

Brisk sales of permits for planned Idaho wolf hunts

SALMON, Idaho (Reuters)– Permits for planned wolf hunts sold briskly in Idaho on Thursday, as most wolves in the Northern Rockies were officially removed from the endangered species list and conservationists sued over the unprecedented removal of protection by Congress.

The end of federal protection means that the roughly 1,200 wolves in Idaho and Montana will be managed by state wildlife agencies. The two states are seeking to kill hundreds of wolves, mostly through public hunting to begin in the fall.

Hunters were lining up in Idaho to purchase"tags" priced at$11.95 to help fill a hunting quota expected to be set at 220 of the state's 700 wolves. Montana is likely to set the same quota for its 550 wolves.

Dozens sought tags at a sporting goods store near a hunting area in north central Idaho where wildlife agents in coming days intend to conduct aerial hunting campaigns against wolves preying on elk herds.

Rhonda Stockton, bookkeeper for Rae Brothers in Grangeville, said the outdoor sports retailer expects a rush on wolf tags.

"We're going to be selling quite a few; most people want wolves out of here," she said.

The federal government on Thursday delisted wolves in Idaho and Montana as well as fledging populations in Oregon, Washington and Utah.

The move came after Congress ordered the delisting -- and banned intervention by courts -- in a provision tucked into a federal budget bill approved on April 14.

'TERRIBLE PRECEDENT'

It was the first time in the decades-long history of the Endangered Species Act that an animal was delisted by legislation rather than by scientific review.

That followed a federal court ruling in August that upheld conservationists' legal challenges to the government's 2009 delisting of wolves in Idaho and Montana and returned those populations to the endangered species list.

On Thursday, conservation groups filed lawsuits in U.S. District Court in Montana, seeking to restore federal safeguards to wolves.

The groups claim Congress overstepped its bounds and violated the constitutional separation of powers by intervening in the ongoing legal case and by exempting the delisting provision from judicial review.

Noah Greenwald, endangered species director for the Center for Biological Diversity, called the congressional provision a"terrible precedent."

"It opens the door for any political who doesn't like an endangered species asking Congress to delist it," he said.

Wolves in the West have been blamed for preying on livestock and big game animals, provoking outcries from the region's powerful ranching and sporting constituencies.

Environmentalists say that wolves will be subject to wholesale killing in the absence of federal protections.

Speaking to reporters by telephone on Wednesday, Virgil Moore, head of the Idaho Department of Fish and Game, sought to dispel fears that Idaho would decimate the wolves.

"Whether you agree with how they got here or why they got here, they are now wards of the state," he said.

Moore said a plan is under way to use aerial gunners, trapping or snaring to kill off 60 of 80 wolves blamed for excess elk deaths in a popular hunting area near Grangeville.

Wolves were reintroduced to the wilds of Idaho and Yellowstone National Park in the mid-1990s after systematic hunting, trapping and poisoning pushed them to near extinction.

(Editing by Dan Whitcomb and Greg McCune)


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среда, 4 мая 2011 г.

Climate activists target states with lawsuits

BILLINGS, Mont.– A group of attorneys representing children and young adults began to file legal actions Wednesday in every state and the District of Columbia in an effort to force government intervention on climate change.

The courtroom ploy was backed by activists looking for a legal soft spot to advance a cause that has stumbled in the face of stiff congressional opposition and a skeptical U.S. Supreme Court.

The goal is to have the atmosphere declared for the first time as a"public trust"deserving special protection. That's a concept previously used to clean up polluted rivers and coastlines, although legal experts said they were uncertain it could be applied successfully to climate change.

The spate of lawsuits, led by an Oregon-based nonprofit called Our Children's Trust, were based on"common law"theories, not statutes adopted by state or federal lawmakers. Documents in the cases were provided in advance to The Associated Press.

State-level lawsuits were filed in California, Colorado, Minnesota, Montana, New Mexico, Oregon and Washington, and a federal lawsuit was filed in California, said Julia Olson with Our Children's Trust.

Suits were planned in Alaska, Arizona, Massachusetts and New Jersey. In all other states, regulatory petitions were filed or pending to ask state environmental agencies to tighten restrictions on vehicle and industrial plant emissions, Olson said.

Conservative opponents warned the effort could overload the judicial system and paralyze the economy with over-regulation.

Attorneys involved in the lawsuits said a victory in even one or two cases would give environmentalists leverage, leading to new regulations to rein in greenhouse gas emissions that scientists say are driving global temperatures higher.

A 16-year-old climate activist listed as a plaintiff in one of the cases, Alec Loorz of Ventura, California, said he latched onto the effort because he thought"it would give us teeth, give us a bigger voice than just yelling and marching."

"People have tried pushing legislation and that hasn't worked. Obama hasn't been able to push anything through. The only option we have is the judicial system— taking this to the courts,"said Loorz.

Loorz said he began giving public presentations on climate change when he was 13, soon after seeing former Vice President Al Gore's movie,"Inconvenient Truth."

Another case that relied on unconventional legal tactics to address climate change got a tepid reception during arguments last month before the U.S. Supreme Court. That matter involved several states that sought to rein in power plant emissions by declaring them a public nuisance.

A ruling is pending, but Harvard Law School professor Jody Freeman said justices had questioned whether courts were the appropriate forum for the issue.

"I am generally skeptical the plaintiffs will succeed in the courts pressing for common-law remedies from judges,"Freeman said.

Columbia University law professor Michael Gerrard described the public trust suits as a"bold move"by activists looking to use all available options to impose greenhouse gas restrictions. Still, he joined Freeman in saying the pending decision in the public nuisance case would heavily influence the outcome of the state-level lawsuits.

A more optimistic view came from Gus Speth, chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality under President Jimmy Carter.

Speth, now at the Vermont Law School, said public trust litigation over climate change could work if its backers can find a judge willing to innovate a new area of law.

Yet that outcome could only result if a judge is willing to buy into what conservative analyst Hans von Spakovsky called"a creative, made-up legal theory."

"This is a complete violation of our whole constitutional system. These kinds of public policy issues are up to either the state legislatures or Congress to determine, not judges,"said von Spakovsky, a senior legal fellow at the Heritage Foundation.

Eddy and others involved in Wednesday's lawsuits credited University of Oregon law professor Mary Christina Wood as laying the legal groundwork for their litigation.

Wood told the AP that mainstream environmental groups had approached climate change with the same tactics used to combat industrial developments or protect endangered species. But she said lawsuits based on existing environmental laws had come up short.

What is needed, Wood said, is a sweeping challenge to the government's failure to address climate change. And having young people as plaintiffs in the cases gives added moral authority, she added.

The plaintiffs include college students, high school activists, and children of conservationists and attorneys, along with at least one environmental group WildEarth Guardians.

"We should be getting youths in front of the courts, not polar bears,"Wood said, referring to widely publicized attempts to have courts declare polar bears endangered as rising temperatures melt Arctic ice.


Source

вторник, 3 мая 2011 г.

Levee detonation lowers river, triggers new lawsuit

CHARLESTON, Missouri (Reuters)– The effort to protect river towns in Illinois and Kentucky from rising floodwaters by blowing open a levee and inundating more than 100,000 acres of Missouri farmland appeared to be slowly working on Tuesday.

The controversy surrounding the extraordinary demolition continued, with farmers affected by it filing suit.

Dick Durbin, a Democratic Senator from Illinois, also cautioned that the endangered river towns, including Cairo at the southern-most tip of Illinois, were"not out of the woods yet."

The National Weather Service said the river gauge at Cairo, Illinois, where the Mississippi and Ohio rivers meet, showed water levels had dropped more than a foot-and-a-half since 10 p.m. last night, when the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers blasted a hole in a protective embankment downriver from the historic town.

"The plan performed as expected," Jim Pogue, a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers spokesman, said in a telephone interview.

By 4 p.m. local time on Tuesday, the gauge at Cairo had dropped to 60.08 feet and was expected to continue dropping through the weekend.

The Cairo gauge topped out at 61.72 feet, its highest level since 1937, on Monday night before the Corps detonated the levee to allow the Mississippi River to cope with the rising waters of the Ohio River.

Both rivers have been rising as a result of days of rain and the melt and runoff of heavy winter snowstorms.

Carlin Bennett, a commissioner in the rural Missouri county that is bearing the brunt of the flooding, said it was a little early to make the call, but was afraid the operation would not drop the river the three to four feet the government wants.

"It's looking like all of our worst fears here," said Bennett, who has 80 acres himself that are being flooded."Our land got flooded and they are not getting the flooding relief they expected."

NO CHOICE

Missouri farmers who returned Tuesday to survey the land they work found it beneath 8 to 10 feet of brown water.

Many, like Kevin Nally, 40, who farms 250 acres here, seemed resigned to the necessity of the extraordinary move, which continues to generate lawsuits against the Corp.

"They didn't have a choice," he said."It was coming over the levee anyway."

Nally had already planted 80 acres of wheat, which was washed away when the waters poured in last night.

His losses will be covered by insurance. But he said he was worried about the long-term damage that might result if too much sand is left behind.

Legal efforts by the state of Missouri to stop the Corps from blasting the levee at Birds Point-New Madrid failed.

But on Tuesday attorneys filed a new private class-action complaint in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims on behalf of farmers whose land was flooded.

"In the process of breaching the levee, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers also destroyed or is in the process of destroying 90 households and more than 100,000 acres of the country's richest farmland," said J. Michael Ponder, the attorney from Cape Girardeau, Missouri, who filed the suit.

"What these property owners and farmers are seeking is just compensation for the land and livelihood they have lost -- possibly forever or for decades."

The government blew a two mile hole in a 56-mile levee that holds back the Mississippi to relieve pressure and expects later on Tuesday to blow two smaller holes in the same levee downstream to allow the water to flow back into the river.

The effort was designed to save a number of towns along the Ohio River, first among them Cairo.

Located at the southern tip of Illinois between two states, Missouri and Kentucky, that still permitted slavery prior to abolition in the 19th century, Cairo was an important destination for runaway slaves during the Civil War.

Its population of around 3,000 is more than 60 percent African-American and a third of its residents have incomes below the poverty level.

Durbin said that while the levee breach had lowered water levels, the Corps was continuing to monitor"dangerous sand boils and weakened levees."

(Writing by James B. Kelleher; editing by Jerry Norton and Peter Bohan)


Source

понедельник, 2 мая 2011 г.

U.S. will blow up levee to save Illinois town

BIRDS POINT, Mo (Reuters)– The government said on Monday it will proceed to blow up a levee on the Mississippi River to relieve flood pressure on other levees along the critical commercial navigation route and save the historic town of Cairo, Illinois.

Carlin Bennett, a commissioner in the rural Missouri county that will bear the brunt of the flooding, estimated the operation will cause$1 billion in property damage."It's going to be like a mini tsunami through here," he said."We can't really imagine it right now."

The actual detonation of the protective embankment at Birds Point-New Madrid in Missouri will come between 9 p.m. and midnight local time, the Army Corps of Engineers said.

Major General Michael Walsh, the army officer in charge of the operation, said he would have preferred to breach the levee in the daylight on Tuesday with the water rising, the agency could no longer wait.

"The system is under tremendous stress," Walsh said."This is the right time to operate."

By blowing up the levee, the Corps hopes to increase the Mississippi's ability to accommodate the rising waters of the Ohio River, sparing Cairo and other towns.

Both rivers have been rising as a result of days of rain and the melt and runoff of heavy winter snowstorms.

But the move will flood more than 100,000 acres of farmland in southeast Missouri and that state's attorney general tried unsuccessfully to get several courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court, to block the move.

Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon warned on Monday that the action would unleash"a tremendous amount of water" and local residents should cooperate with law enforcement officials.

The Corps moved explosives to the levee at Birds Point-New Madrid overnight and officials said the process of detonation would take about three hours.

Cairo, an historic town of 2,800 people located at the confluence of the Ohio and Mississippi, was largely empty after a mandatory evacuation as the Ohio, swollen by overnight rains, continued to rise to dangerously high record levels.

As of 5 p.m., the gauge on the Ohio River at Cairo showed the waters at 61.4 feet and the forecast was that they would crest at 61.5 feet -- 21.5 feet over flood stage and their highest level since 1937.

The Corps, the primary flood-fighting agency in the region, had said it would detonate explosives in the levee if the river at Cairo reached 61 feet and was rising.

Late Sunday, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to halt the plan, saying the Corps had the right to breach the levee, as permitted by a 1928 federal flood control law.

"I don't have to like it," Walsh said."But we must use everything we have in our possession to prevent a more catastrophic event."

Deborah Byrne, a minister in Charleston, Missouri who owns 550 acres of the farmland that will be flooded as a result of the intentional breach, worried it would take years for the county to recover from the controversial operation.

"It's not just 130,000 acres and rich landowners. There are many families connected with these farms. This land has come down through many generations."

Cairo, located at the southern tip of Illinois between two states, Missouri and Kentucky, that permitted slavery prior to abolition, was an important destination for runaway slaves during the Civil War.

Its population is more than 60 percent African-American and a third of its residents have incomes below the poverty level.

(Additional reporting by Miriam Moynihan; writing by James B. Kelleher)


Source

воскресенье, 1 мая 2011 г.

Scientists investigate twisters like detectives

TUSCALOOSA, Ala.– Weather scientists are retracing the footprints of this week's monstrous tornadoes the way detectives would investigate a crime scene: talking to witnesses, watching surveillance video and even taking the measurements of the trees ripped from the ground.

The result will be a meteorological autopsy report on the disaster, revealing once and for all how many twisters developed and how powerful they were.

"First priority is finding the dead and taking care of the injured and getting utilities back up,"said John Snow, dean emeritus of the College of Atmospheric and Geographic Sciences at the University of Oklahoma."But in parallel to that, we want to get as much data and find as much data as we can."

Researchers have to be on the scene fast— usually within days— to keep the scientific evidence as fresh as possible, Snow said.

In one of its first official assessments of the tornadoes' strength, the National Weather Service on Friday gave the worst possible rating to the one that raked Mississippi and said it was the strongest to hit the state since 1966.

With at least 318 confirmed dead, Wednesday's outbreak surpassed a series of tornadoes in 1974 to become the deadliest day for twisters since 1932. The storm eight decades ago was also in Alabama.

As they survey damage from the ground and air, researchers from the weather service and the national Storm Prediction Center are asking questions about the buildings that were destroyed. Were they brick or wood or a combination? Were they secured to a slab or set on concrete blocks? What type of roofs did they have?

Answers to those questions will help explain how the strong the twisters were. For example, a mobile home will be completely demolished by winds of 110 to 135 mph. But a well-built home can withstand much stronger winds.

Scientists might even ask families if they left the garage door open. An open door lets wind inside, where it can push on walls and the roof with tremendous pressure.

Walt Zaleski, a warning coordination meteorologist for the weather service's southern regional headquarters in Fort Worth, Texas, likened a roof with a large overhang to a baseball cap with a brim: Wind blowing in your face will press on the brim and lift the hat off. The same can happen with a house.

In Tuscaloosa's ruined Cedar Crest neighborhood, the storm uprooted massive oaks and Scotch pines, exposing root systems the size of small swimming pools. A refrigerator landed in the crook of a broken tree, 10 feet off the ground.

Justin Johnson, a college student at the University of Alabama, was showering when he heard the twister approaching. He ran out of the shower and yelled to a housemate,"What do we do? What do we do?"

But there wasn't enough time to do anything except lie down on the living room floor as the tornado ripped off part of the back end of the house. Three people who lived next door perished. All that remained of their house was a foundation.

Like others here, Johnson was not surprised to hear scientists saying it could be one of the most powerful tornadoes on record, possibly an EF-5, the highest category on a scale for measuring wind intensity.

"If this isn't an EF-5 tornado,"he said Friday,"I would hate to see what an EF-5 tornado looks like."

As of Friday, weather service teams had not found any tornado paths that were rated less than an EF-3, with winds of 140 to 150 mph.

Jim Stefkovich, the meteorologist in charge of the agency's Birmingham office, said he believes there are pockets of greater damage yet to be examined.

Zaleski compared the scientific investigation of the storms to assembling a million-piece puzzle.

"It's very complex,"said Zaleski, who has been participating in such analyses since the 1970s."We will try to reconstruct and determine the intensity of the tornedoes,"along with their width, path and other details.

The task is so big, he said, that he is calling fellow meteorologists out of retirement to help, hoping their 30 or 40 years of experience will provide an extra level of expertise.

Assessing damage becomes more complicated as investigators move along the track of a tornado. Once structures start to break apart, the wind collects debris"and you have a moving grinder that impacts all downstream structures,"he said.

Investigators will also try to determine whether the storms that hit Tuscaloosa and other places were a single tornado crisscrossing the entire state of Alabama or more than one.

If it was a single twister, it would be one of the longest on record, rivaling a 1925 tornado that raged for 219 miles.

Sometimes one tornado follows into areas where an earlier twister has already passed, making it hard to determine which damage was caused by which tornado.

In addition, a large disaster tends to produce duplicate reports of the same twisters, which can be further complicated by tornadoes with multiple funnels.

People associate the most severe damage with tornados, but thunderstorms can generate two kinds of damaging winds, the straight-line downburst and the more sensational twisting tornado, Zaleski explained.

A downburst will often cause the same damage as a tornado, he said, with winds of 100 to 120 mph.

When their assessment is complete, scientists will combine on-the-ground data with the atmospheric conditions to build databases that connect individual tornado reports with the storms that may have produced them. Then they look at how the storms were affected by environmental conditions such as moisture levels.

The picture that emerges will help forecasters better understand how killer systems develop. The final report on the disaster will become a part of the National Climate Database— a vast historical record of the nation's most severe weather.

The last time a storm of this magnitude happened— in 1974— researchers had much cruder technology. Now they are equipped with Doppler radar, sophisticated computer models and weather satellites taking pictures from above.

"To have an event of this magnitude with a modern integrated observing system like we have now is unique in the history of meteorology for a tornado forecaster,"said Russell Schneider, director of the Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla., which is run by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Snow said researchers would be studying this storm for a long time. Scientists studied the 1974 disaster for 15 years.

"More than one Ph.D. thesis will come out of this,"he said.

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Associated Press writers Randolph E. Schmid in Washington and John Christoffersen in Birmingham, Ala., contributed to this report.


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