Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Yellowstone Park's Massive Underground Volcano is Bigger Than We Thought


 


First Posted: Apr 18, 2013 04:07 PM EDT

Yellowstone
When volcanoes erupt, silica-rich magma can burst through the Earth's crust, burning the surrounding area in a massive explosion. Now, it turns out that this magma can lurk in Earth's upper crust for hundreds of thousands of years without triggering an eruption. (Photo : Flickr/Don Graham)
Yellowstone has the world's largest collection of geysers, and it has the underground plumbing to prove it. Scientists have announced that the volcanic activity beneath the National Park's surface may be far bigger and better connected than once thought.

The National Park is home to hot springs, mudpots, fumaroles and geysers, so it's not surprising that it has quite a bit of volcanic activity under the ground. Known as a hotspot, a massive volume of molten magma is located beneath Yellowstone. This plume of superheated rock rises from Earth's mantle, punching through the continent's crust as North America has slowly drifted over it. The phenomenon has left a trail of calderas created by massive volcanic eruptions in its wake; the most recent occurred about 640,000 years ago.
Yellowstone is infamous for its potential for a "super eruption." When the Huckleberry Ridge eruption in Yellowstone occurred about 2 million years ago, it darkened the skies with ash from southern California to the Mississippi River. It was one of the largest eruptions to have occurred on our planet. Understanding the volcanic activity of this location is therefore crucial for predicting future eruptions.

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nature.com


Large magma reservoir gets bigger


But earthquakes, not eruptions, are Yellowstone's most serious geological risk.




 

The reservoir of molten rock underneath Yellowstone National Park in the United States is at least two and a half times larger than previously thought. Despite this, the scientists who came up with this latest estimate say that the highest risk in the iconic park is not a volcanic eruption but a huge earthquake.

Yellowstone is famous for having a ‘hot spot’ of molten rock that rises from deep within the planet, fuelling the park’s geysers and hot springs1. Most of the magma resides in a partially molten blob a few kilometres beneath Earth’s surface.

New pictures of this plumbing system show that the reservoir is about 80 kilometres long and 20 kilometres wide, says Robert Smith, a geophysicist at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. “I don’t know of any other magma body that’s been imaged that’s that big,” he says.

Smith reported the finding on 27 October at the annual meeting of the Geological Society of America in Denver, Colorado.

Yellowstone lies in the western United States, where the mountain states of Wyoming, Montana and Idaho converge. The heart of the park is a caldera — a giant collapsed pit left behind by the last of three huge volcanic eruptions in the past 2.1 million years.

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Monday, October 28, 2013

Fukushima News 10/28/13: NRA Urges "Bold" Fukushima Action; Nuclear Waste Disposal Challenged

MissingSky101 MissingSky101


   



Published on Oct 28, 2013
I apologize for the very brief news report today. I have been very busy but managed to pull together today's top news headlines.

NRA, TEPCO heads meet over problems at Fukushima
The head of Japan's nuclear regulating body has summoned the president of Tokyo Electric Power Company to hear how the utility intends to prevent additional trouble at the crippled Fukushima plant.
Nuclear Regulation Authority Chairman Shunichi Tanaka met Naomi Hirose, president of the operator of the Fukushima nuclear power plant on Monday.
Tanaka asked Hirose what TEPCO plans to do to prevent radioactive water leaks and other problems at the plant.
Hirose later said he told Tanaka that he plans to send workers from other parts of the utility firm, including the idled Kashiwazaki Kariwa nuclear plant, to the Fukushima Daiichi plant.
Hirose said he also told Tanaka that his firm will provide support to the workers to ensure that they can make full use of their skills.

Govt. reviewing underground nuclear disposal plan:
Japan's industry ministry has long planned to bury spent nuclear fuel and other radioactive waste from power plants deep underground. But the search for storage locations has been in vain so far, leaving the permanent disposal of high-level waste in limbo.
The ministry has now set up a panel to reexamine the safety of the underground storage plan. It is the first review in 14 years.
On Monday, experts from 8 academic societies specializing in earthquakes, seismic faults, groundwater and other fields, held their first meeting.
At the panel, officials from a body in charge of nuclear waste management said that underground disposal is still considered safe, even with knowledge acquired after the 2011 earthquake and tsunami disaster in Japan.

ALPS partially restarted in Fukushima plant:
The operator of the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant has resumed its trial run of a key water decontamination system. It was shut down due to malfunctions.
Tokyo Electric Power Company on Monday began test-running one of 3 channels of the Advanced Liquid Processing unit, or ALPS. ALPS is capable of removing 62 different kinds of radioactive substances, excluding tritium.
Operation of the channel was suspended in June following leaks of unprocessed radioactive water.
TEPCO engineers discovered holes in the tank storing the contaminated water. Corrosion is apparently to blame. Work to prevent corrosion has been ongoing in all 3 channels of the ALPS system.
A test-run of another ALPS channel began about a month ago. The remaining channel is scheduled for a trial-run mid November.

Former Leader of Japan: Fukushima disaster is "most severe accident in the history of mankind" — Top Regulator: Drastic steps needed due to growing problems at precarious plant
http://enenews.com/former-leader-of-j...

Fukushima nuclear plant operators prepare for dangerous procedure
Hundreds of radioactive rods must be removed at Fukushima without exposing them to air
http://www.scmp.com/news/asia/article...

Tepco can't yet be trusted to restart world's biggest nuclear plant: Governor
http://www.bnn.ca/News/2013/10/28/Tep...

Tens of thousands "Nuclear slaves" discovered at Fukushima
http://omoooduarere.blogspot.ca/2013/...

Nuclear regulators can't win
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/opinion/2...

Fukushima whistleblower exposes yakuza connections, exploitation of cleanup workers
http://rt.com/news/fukushima-workers-...

Fuk-'hush'-ima: Japan's new state secrets law gags whistleblowers, raises press freedom fears
http://rt.com/news/japan-state-secret...

Groundwater reached the surface of the ground on the seaside of reactor2
http://fukushima-diary.com/2013/10/gr...

Fuel removal of reactor4 will continue until December 2014
http://fukushima-diary.com/2013/10/fu...

Cs-134/137 density in marine soil of offshore Fukushima spiked up this September / Over 10 times much
http://fukushima-diary.com/2013/10/cs...

NRA "Contaminated rainwater doesn't only flow from the tank areas, but the entire Fukushima prefecture to the sea
http://fukushima-diary.com/2013/10/nr...


The News That Matters about the Nuclear Industry
http://nuclear-news.net/

http://enenews.com/




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Six dead in Germany as storm sweeps across Europe


Deaths in the Netherlands and Denmark, woman swept out to sea off France, and Sweden braces for storm's arrival
Storm damage in Rheibach
Rescue workers stand next to a car crushed by a falling tree near Rheibach, Germany. Photograph: Axel Vogel/Corbis
The death toll across Europe from storms that began sweeping the continent on Sunday has reached at least 12, with Britain, Germany and the Netherlands among the hardest hit.
Four people died in the south of England after winds gusting up to nearly 100mph felled trees, and another four were killed on Monday in Germany, adding to two deaths at sea off the German coast on Sunday.
In Amsterdam a woman was killed and another person injured when a tree by a canal was blown over. Other injuries were reported around the city from falling debris.
In Denmark a man died after he was hit by a flying brick north of Copenhagen. In France a woman was still missing on Monday night after being swept out to sea from a cliff at Belle-Ile, Brittany.
Transport infrastructure took a battering across the continent. Sustained winds of more than 75mph caused the cancellation of 50 flights at Amsterdam's Schiphol airport, Europe's fourth largest, and there were delays at Europe's busiest port in Rotterdam.


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Storm Sweeps Europe After Battering Britain

Hurricane-strength winds topple trees, cut power supplies and cause travel chaos across northern Europe.

Some 10 people have died in Germany, France, the Netherlands and Scandinavia after a fatal storm that struck Britain swept eastwards to northern Europe.
A Danish man was killed near Copenhagen by a collapsing wall, a woman was killed by falling trees in Amsterdam and a 47-year-old woman was found dead after being swept out to sea during a cliff walk on Belle Ile in France.
At least seven people died in Germany with falling trees killing several drivers. One man also drowned and a 66-year-old woman died when a wall collapsed on her, German media reported.
BELGIUM-EUROPE-WEATHER
Thirteen floor high scaffolding comes down in Merksem, Antwerpen
Hurricane-strength winds cut power supplies and forced the cancellation of hundreds of flights and train journeys across the continent.
Southern Sweden was hit by torrential rain, and winds up to 84mph (136kph) blew down trees, blocking roads and bringing down power lines, leaving around than 50,000 homes without electricity.
As evening fell there were no reports of injuries in Sweden but widespread reports of property damage.


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11 dead as storm lashes northern Europe



LONDON—At least 11 people were killed on Monday as a fierce storm tore across northern Europe, causing mass disruption to transport.
Four people were killed in Britain and three in Germany as heavy rain and high winds battered the region. The storm also claimed two victims in The Netherlands, one in France and one in Denmark.
Rough conditions at sea also forced rescuers to abandon the search for a 14-year-old boy who disappeared while playing in the surf on a southern English beach on Sunday.
British Prime Minister David Cameron described the loss of life as “hugely regrettable.”
Winds reached 99 miles (159 kilometers) per hour on the Isle of Wight off the southern English coast, according to Britain’s Met Office national weather center, while more than 500,000 homes in Britain and France were left without power.
Heavy rain and winds of 80 mph elsewhere brought down thousands of trees and left hundreds of passengers trapped in planes at Copenhagen airport.
In Britain, a 17-year-old girl died after a tree fell on the parked caravan where she was sleeping, while a 51-year-old father of three died when a tree hit his car, police said.
The bodies of a man and a woman were later found in the rubble of three houses in London that collapsed in an explosion thought to have been caused by a gas pipe being ruptured in the storm.

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South Dakota cattle ranchers struggle to recover after devastating snowstorm


State waits on Congress farm bill talks after October blizzard which killed up to a third of some ranchers' stocks
  • theguardian.com,
Rancher Joe Carley
Rancher Joe Carley works at the Philip Livestock Auction in Philip, South Dakota. Photograph: Chet Brokaw/AP
Joe Carley has nearly finished burying the cattle he lost in a freak early fall blizzard that killed tens of thousands of cattle in western South Dakota. Now, he is figuring out how to dig himself out of the financial hole left after about a quarter of his cows and maybe a third of his calves died in the storm.
"There's some sleepless nights. There's a lot of worry. My brain's always rolling. We're pulling ourselves out of it, you know. We're trying to figure things out and step forward," said Carley, 40, of Philip, during a break from herding cattle at the local livestock sale barn, where he works to help make ends meet.
Other ranchers in the area also don't plan to give up, despite what state officials have estimated as a loss of 15,000 to 30,000 cattle in the 4-5 October storm that dumped up to 4ft of snow in some parts. The financial loss is staggering, with each calf worth more than $1,000 and each pregnant cow worth $1,500 to $2,000. To make matters worse, most ranchers were only a few weeks away from selling the calves born last spring – their paycheck for the year.
Ranchers like Carley may get low-interest loans or loan guarantees from a US Agriculture Department program and could get some help from a relief fund set up by livestock organizations that have so far collected donations of $400,000 from people in nearly every state and some other countries. A Montana organization is asking ranchers in that state to donate heifers that can be given to help South Dakota ranchers rebuild their herds.
Ranchers also could get a big boost if a federal livestock disaster program that expired in 2011 is revived in a new farm bill. The House and Senate versions of the new farm bill include provisions to do so and to provide retroactive payments, but the two chambers have been unable to agree on a farm bill after passing different versions several months ago. Spurred partly by the disaster, the House and Senate now plan to restart negotiations.
"Anything will help, I guess," said Carley, who lost 51 cows and 70 calves. "We're not asking for handouts, either, but there are a lot of people in need around here."

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Saturday, October 26, 2013

AGreenRoad - The Nuclear Industry Transfers All Risks And Losses To Taxpayers

AGreen Road Project AGreen Road Project


 

Published on Oct 25, 2013
 
All Things Political host Steve Leal interviews chief engineer Arnie Gundersen of Fairewinds Energy Education and financial analyst Russell Lowe. The show discusses the recently released Fukushima Nuclear Accident Independent Investigation Commission report; the San Onofre steam generator modifications and ensuing complications in California; loan guarantees for the nuclear industry; radiation concerns worldwide; whistleblowers and domestic nuclear issues; and a future with energy alternatives.

 Arnie Gundersen / Fairewinds: http://www.fairewinds.com/


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