Texas earthquakes, one reaching magnitude 4.8, were caused by injections of wastewater in drilling for oil and gas, scientists say.
Texas quakes caused by injection wells, scientists determine | Dallas Morning News
No shit, Dick Tracy????
What goes through my my mind when I read the news with my morning coffee. …Or for the Simon's Rockers in the group, this is my response journal.
Texas earthquakes, one reaching magnitude 4.8, were caused by injections of wastewater in drilling for oil and gas, scientists say.
Texas quakes caused by injection wells, scientists determine | Dallas Morning News
No shit, Dick Tracy????
“Using satellite imagery, the researchers found that a series of earthquakes that struck Texas between 2012 and 2013 were caused by the injection of large volumes of wastewater from oil and gas activities into deep underground wells.”
‘Groundbreaking’ Study Links Texas Earthquakes to Waterwater Injection From Fracking
For gawds sake people, money does not equal right. Why the fuck, is this groundbreaking? Other than the awesomeness of that pun of course…. It should be absolutely obvious the havoc fracking causes to anyone who isn’t in a coma. To look at it any other way is to prioritize money about the sanctity of human existence and the value of our fellow humans lives.
Or to put it another way, if you take the position that fracking does anything other than wreak havoc on our environment and endanger human lives then you have some money in fracking. Period. Oh, and your a scumbucket liar who needs to rot in hell for eternity.
New data backs up something the indigenous peoples already knew: Aboriginal people appear to be the oldest living civilization on the planet outside of Africa.
Aboriginal DNA points to an earlier human exodus from Africa – The Boston Globe
cool
Extending an old treaty that saved the ozone layer could improve cooling technology—and slow global warming
hmmm
Large families were used to scare off enemies, and to get even
For Vikings, Murder Was A Family Affair | Popular Science
hmmm
“Results showed that while LSD does not affect reaction times,” explains lead author Neiloufar Family, “people under LSD made more mistakes that were similar in meaning to the pictures they saw.” For example, when people saw a picture of a car, they would accidentally say ‘bus’ or ‘train’ more often under LSD than under placebo. This indicates that LSD seems to effect the mind’s semantic networks, or how words and concepts are stored in relation to each other. When LSD makes the network activation stronger, more words from the same family of meanings come to mind.
hmmm
The Great Dismal Swamp was once a thriving refuge for runaways…
“I’m hoping to find out what the people who lived here called this place.” As [historical archaeologist and chair of the anthropology department at American University in Washington, D.C., Dan Sayers] sifts the earth they trod, finding the soil footprints of their cabins and tiny fragments of their tools, weapons and white clay pipes, he feels a profound admiration for them, and this stems in part from his Marxism.
“These people performed a critique of a brutal capitalistic enslavement system, and they rejected it completely. They risked everything to live in a more just and equitable way, and they were successful for ten generations.”
…Wherever Africans were enslaved in the world, there were runaways who escaped permanently and lived in free independent settlements.
…Marronage, the process of extricating oneself from slavery, took place all over Latin America and the Caribbean, in the slave islands of the Indian Ocean, in Angola and other parts of Africa. But until recently, the idea that maroons also existed in North America has been rejected by most historians.
…“They thought in terms of runaways, who might hide in the woods or swamps for a while until they got caught, or who might make it to freedom on the Underground Railroad, with the help of Quakers and abolitionists.”
By downplaying American marronage, and valorizing white involvement in the Underground Railroad, historians have shown a racial bias, in Sayers’ opinion, a reluctance to acknowledge the strength of black resistance and initiative. They’ve also revealed the shortcomings of their methods: “Historians are limited to source documents. When it comes to maroons, there isn’t that much on paper. But that doesn’t mean their story should be ignored or overlooked. As archaeologists, we can read it in the ground.”
…[Sayers] started doing archival research on the Great Dismal Swamp. He found scattered references to maroons dating back to the early 1700s. The first accounts described runaway slaves and Native Americans raiding farms and plantations, and then disappearing back into the swamp with stolen livestock. In 1714, Alexander Spotswood, the colonial lieutenant governor of Virginia, described the Dismal Swamp as a “No-man’s-land,” to which “Loose and disorderly people daily flock.” Since Africans and African-Americans were not referred to as “people” in the records of 18th-century Virginia, this suggests that poor whites were also joining the swamp communities.
…From the 1760s until the Civil War, runaway slave ads in the Virginia and North Carolina newspapers often mentioned the Dismal Swamp as the likely destination, and there was persistent talk of permanent maroon settlements in the morass. British traveler J.F.D. Smyth, writing in 1784, gleaned this description: “Runaway negroes have resided in these places for twelve, twenty, or thirty years and upwards, subsisting themselves in the swamp upon corn, hogs, and fowls….[On higher ground] they have erected habitations, and cleared small fields around them.”
Wild!
When solving math problems, blind people rely on the same brain areas as sighted people. But blind people also pull in parts of the brain that others use only for vision, scientists reported September 16 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
….However, the blind participants also tapped other “visual” brain areas that the sighted participants did not activate while performing calculations. This ability to repurpose brain areas that otherwise would be used for vision suggests that these regions are shaped by experience.
Blind People Use ‘Visual’ Brain Regions For Math | Popular Science
wild!
Building work in a busy town centre has revealed a pristine section of a Roman road, dating back almost 2,000 years.
2,000-year-old Roman road revealed by building work in Rochester
cool!
Many think that train lines in London tunnel through bodies. But as a recent discovery shows, the truth is more complex – and odd
: BBC – Autos – The strange, gruesome truth about plague pits and the Tube
hmmm
We’ve said it before and we’ll say it again: Your brain loves to screw around with you.
5 Ways Your Brain Is Turning You into a Jerk | Cracked.com
hmmm
California will become a petri dish for international efforts to slow global warming under legislation signed by Gov. Jerry Brown on Thursday, forcing one of the world’s largest economies to squeeze into a dramatically smaller carbon footprint.
Gov. Brown signs sweeping legislation to combat climate change – LA Times
hmmmm
A giant petri dish exposes the evolutionary dynamics behind antibiotic resistance.
Scientists watch as bacteria evolve antibiotic resistance | Science News
12 days… wild!
The Department of Justice, the Department of the Army and the Department of the Interior issued the following statement regarding Standing Rock Sioux Tribe v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers:
“We appreciate the District Court’s opinion on the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ compliance with the National Historic Preservation Act. However, important issues raised by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and other tribal nations and their members regarding the Dakota Access pipeline specifically, and pipeline-related decision-making generally, remain. Therefore, the Department of the Army, the Department of Justice, and the Department of the Interior will take the following steps.
The Army will not authorize constructing the Dakota Access pipeline on Corps land bordering or under Lake Oahe until it can determine whether it will need to reconsider any of its previous decisions regarding the Lake Oahe site under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) or other federal laws. Therefore, construction of the pipeline on Army Corps land bordering or under Lake Oahe will not go forward at this time. The Army will move expeditiously to make this determination, as everyone involved — including the pipeline company and its workers — deserves a clear and timely resolution. In the interim, we request that the pipeline company voluntarily pause all construction activity within 20 miles east or west of Lake Oahe.
“Furthermore, this case has highlighted the need for a serious discussion on whether there should be nationwide reform with respect to considering tribes’ views on these types of infrastructure projects. Therefore, this fall, we will invite tribes to formal, government-to-government consultations on two questions: (1) within the existing statutory framework, what should the federal government do to better ensure meaningful tribal input into infrastructure-related reviews and decisions and the protection of tribal lands, resources, and treaty rights; and (2) should new legislation be proposed to Congress to alter that statutory framework and promote those goals.
Well, alright….
Well done, bureaucrats! Good on ya!!!!
DNA testing has for the first time confirmed the identity of the bacteria behind the Great Plague of London.
DNA confirms cause of 1665 London’s Great Plague – BBC News
hmmm
CANNON BALL, N.D. — Currently, there’s a standoff in the Great Plains. Two-hundred Native American tribes are fighting the construction of an oil pipeline. North Dakota’s governor has called in the National Guard.
The clashes near Cannon Ball, North Dakota, have at times been rowdy and physical, with protesters pepper-sprayed and construction equipment damaged.
The estimated 5,000 Native Americans and environmentalists now encamped on federal and private land, say the pipeline was approved by the Army Corps of engineers without proper permits, and without consulting the tribe, ignoring the land’s historical and cultural significance.
Source: Stand-off in the Great Plains as Native Americans fight oil pipeline construction – CBS News
The simmering showdown here between the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and the company building the Dakota Access crude-oil pipeline began as a legal battle.
Native American tribes sense a reawakening in fight over oil pipeline – Chicago Tribune
Sigh…
This week, thousands of Native Americans, from more than a hundred tribes, have camped out on the Standing Rock Sioux reservation, which straddles the border between the Dakotas, along the Missouri River. What began as a slow trickle of people a month ago is now an increasingly angry flood. They’re there to protest plans for a proposed oil pipeline that they say would contaminate the reservation’s water; in fact, they’re calling themselves protectors, not protesters.
…Originally, the pipeline was supposed to cross the Missouri near Bismarck, but authorities worried that an oil spill there would have wrecked the state capital’s drinking water. So they moved the crossing to half a mile from the reservation, across land that was taken from the tribe in 1958, without their consent. The tribe says the government hasn’t done the required consultation with them—if it had, it would have learned that building the pipeline there would require digging up sacred spots and old burial grounds.
…In fact, the blade of a bulldozer cut through some of those burial grounds on Saturday—during a holiday weekend, days before a federal judge is supposed to rule on an emergency petition filed by the tribe which would slow the project down, and immediately after the tribe identified the burial grounds’ locations in a filing to the court.
…Pictures from that confrontation recall pictures from Birmingham circa 1963. But the historical parallels here run much deeper—they run to the original sins of this nation. The reservation, of course, is where the Native Americans were told to live when the vast lands they ranged were taken by others. The Great Sioux Reservation, formed in the eighteen-sixties, shrunk again and again—in 1980, a federal court said, of the whole sad story, “a more ripe and rank case of dishonorable dealings will never, in all probability, be found in our history.” In the nineteen-fifties and early sixties, the Army Corps of Engineers—the same Army Corps now approving the pipeline—built five large dams along the Missouri, forcing Indian villages to relocate. More than two hundred thousand acres disappeared beneath the water.
A Pipeline Fight and America’s Dark Past – The New Yorker
Sigh…
America’s triumphs in space exploration were made possible by a hidden group of employees the country didn’t see reports CBS News correspondent Jan Crawford. They were called “human computers,” women — many of them African-American — hired by NASA to hand calculate propulsion, lift, thrust and trajectory.
The “human computers” behind NASA’s rocket launches – CBS News
cool
Patients with non-celiac gluten sensitivity (NCGS) do not have celiac disease buttheir symptoms improve when they are placed on gluten-free diets. We investigated the specific effects of gluten after dietary reduction of fermentable, poorly absorbed,short-chain carbohydrates (fermentable, oligo-, di-, monosaccharides, and polyols[FODMAPs]) in subjects believed to have NCGS.
No Effects of Gluten in Patients With Self-Reported Non-Celiac Gluten Sensitivity After Dietary Reduction of Fermentable, Poorly Absorbed, Short-Chain Carbohydrates – Gastroenterology
hmmmm
Pontiff says humans are turning planet into ‘wasteland full of debris, desolation and filth’ in call for urgent action on climate change
Pope Francis says destroying the environment is a sin | World news | The Guardian
hmmmmm
Ban includes soaps with any of 19 chemicals, including triclosan.
FDA bans antibacterial soaps; “No scientific evidence” they’re safe, effective | Ars Technica
hmmmm