Disaster Struck the Planet Again: Chile Quake

A deadly 8.8-magnitude on Richter Scale earthquake struck central Chile early Saturday, ripping apart buildings, highways and bridges and leaving a path of smoky rubble across a long swath of this earthquake-tested country before sending waves rumbling across the Pacific Basin.

At least 300 people died, according to local news services that quoted the director of Chile’s emergency management office, and more than 1.5 million people were displaced. The death toll was expected to rise, particularly around Concepción, Chile’s second-largest metropolitan area, which is roughly 70 miles from the quake’s center.

Quake halts refineries, copper mines

Quake  halted production at two oil refineries and two major mines in the world’s top copper supplier, but exports of the metal will not be affected, officials said.

The 8.8-magnitude quake forced state mining company Codelco to halt operations at its El Teniente and Andina mines, and Mining Minister Santiago Gonzalez said it could take two days for production to resume. Other Codelco operations were unaffected.

Japan issues tsunami alert

The Japan Meteorological Agency on  issued a major tsunami alert for its Pacific coast .The tsunami alert is issued for the pacific coast of Aomori, Miyagi and Iwate prefectures in northeast Japan. Waves of up to three meters high are expected in the areas and “everyone near the coast must evacuate to higher ground”, it said.

US group launches text message aid drive for Chile quake

A US group that harnesses mobile phone technology to raise money for charities on Saturday launched text message campaigns to raise money for victims of the powerful quake in Chile.

By texting the word “Chile” to a five-digit number, Americans and Canadians can make micro-donations of five or 10 dollars to non-profit groups including Habitat for Humanity, the Salvation Army or World Vision to help Chileans recover from the 8.8-magnitude quake that rattled their country early Saturday.


Sources:

New York Times

The Hindu

Reuters

Hindustan Times

AFP

External Links:

2010 Chile Earthquake on Wikipedia

Richter Scale


Scientists spot aliens in Milky Way

Scientists have spotted ‘alien’ invaders in Milky Way, comprising as many as a quarter of the star clusters in our galaxy, many more than previously thought, says a new study.The report also suggests that there may be as many as six dwarf galaxies yet to be discovered within the Milky Way, besides the two that were previously found.

Previously, astronomers had suspected that some star clusters, each of which contains between 100,000 and a million stars, were foreign to our galaxy, but it was difficult to identify which ones.

The researchers’ work also suggests that the Milky Way may have swallowed up more dwarf galaxies than was previously thought.

They found that many of the foreign clusters originally existed within dwarf galaxies — ‘mini’ galaxies of up to 100 million stars that sit within our larger Milky Way.

The study is slated for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

read at source


Earth is not as warm today as during the last interglacial!

Paleoclimate records suggest that during the last interglacial (so-called Eemian period, a mere 125 thousand years back) .Earth was substantially warmer than present (close to 2C ) despite the fact that GHG concentrations were within the historical range of variability of glacial-interglacial cycles (180-280 ppm).

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Massive Planet WASP-12b Is Torn Apart by Its Own Tides

An international group of astrophysicists has determined that a massive planet outside our Solar System is being distorted and destroyed by its host star — a finding that helps explain the unexpectedly large size of the planet, WASP-12b.

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Bees Can Say ‘Stop’

Honeybees don’t only waggle dance to tell hive-mates the whereabouts of good eats, they also bump and beep to warn others when big trouble awaits at some of those floral diners.
Bees can tell others in their colony to avoid troublesome places.
This is the first time a “negative” bee signal has been identified.
The bees doing the warning can target the bees who are “dancing” directions.

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New Initiative:Website to track endangered koalas

A Website from Australia, koaladiaries.com.au, that lets everyone from school children to senior citizens track koalas in live time has become the latest weapon in the fight to save the furry creatures from extinction.It introduces the latest GIS technology to plot koala sightings by the public in Queensland and could eventually be extended to include all of Australia and other endangered animals.The advanced technology allows anyone sighting a koala – whether alive, injured or dead – to register its location to the exact tree, field or road where the animal was located in three easy Internet steps.

source


Digitalisation of land records gathers pace in Punjab,India

Punjab’s ambitious project of digitalisation of land records being implemented under public-private partnership paradigm and under Build, Operate, Own and Transfer (BOOT) basis has gathered pace.

By the end of this year, there will be online access to the land records which will benefit NRI population of the state. Besides, all 153 tehsils of the state would be computerised and the project will cost Rs 115 crore.

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Urban Repurcussions in Dhaka

Dhaka has been experiencing rapid urbanisation since independence of the country. The degree of urbanisation is one of the fastest in the world, having a moderate level of inequality in terms of Gini coefficient, according to a recent report by the UN-Habitat. The environmental condition of the city is rapidly deteriorating. Most of the wetlands have been encroached on, rivers have become terribly polluted. Increasing air, water and noise pollution is a significant threat to public health.

In a study by Dr. Ashraf Dewan , Associate Professor, Dept. of Geography & Environment, University of Dhaka, Historical maps, multi-temporal remotely sensed data, and socio-economic information from field surveys were used to quantify urban growth in Dhaka. GIS  was used to elucidate urbanisation and its driving factors. Multiple regression technique was also used to depict the factors responsible for massive growth of the city. A rectangle covering 42,000 Hectare (ha) of area was extracted from satellite images to study the urbanisation trend. The rectangle covers the Dhaka City Corporation area and adjacent zones in all directions.

Losses from floods and water logging have increased due to rapid growth of impervious surfaces, and there are limited facilities to minimise huge flood flows during wet season. In addition, slums are increasing at an alarming rate. Since the urbanisation is mostly unplanned, the city is said to be extremely vulnerable to probable climate change.

Spatial pattern of urbanisation shows that the growth of Dhaka was mainly confined to elevated lands in the 1960s and ’70s. Only 4,625 ha of lands were urbanised in 1960. This shot up to 5,550 in 1975, signifying 20 percent growth in 15 years. Since then, urbanisation increased dramatically. A 95 percent increase of urban built-up area was estimated between 1975 and 1988. Analysis revealed that urban land of Dhaka reached to about 20,549 and 24, 889 ha in 2005 and 2008, respectively. The analysis further shows that urban land increased by about 344 percent compared to 1960.

Inadequate housing, haphazard development, ubiquitous urban poverty, absence of proper land use policy, inequity of lands, pitiable coordination among responsible agencies and absence of reliable information on current land use practices are contributing to urban sprawling, which is leading to unconceivable emergence of slums and squatters. A recent study by CUS showed that the slum population in Dhaka had risen to 3.4 million in 2006 from 1.5 million in 1996.

Apart from population growth, increasing rural-urban migration, industrial growth, and economic development of Dhaka are believed to be the major factors contributing to rapid urbanisation. Hence, selected physical (e.g. elevation and slope) and socio-economic variables were used to identify the factors stimulating urbanisation. A multiple regression model was used for this purpose. The model result exhibits that population growth and economic development of Dhaka contributed to urban expansion more than other factors.

Dhaka’s expansion cannot be explained by the traditional growth theories such as concentric, leapfrog, linear and multi-nuclei expansion, or by their hybrids. Urban land expansion on isolated tracts separated from other areas by open space is known as leapfrog expansion. It is clearly observed on fringe zones or peripheral rural areas rather than in the city centre. Expansion of a city in all directions is called concentric expansion. When a city expands along the main transportation axis such as highway, expressway or river, the expansion can be termed linear expansion. When a city expands on the basis of more than one nuclei apart from the central business district (CBD), it is called multi-nuclei expansion. In this expansion, the cities act as nodes of activity at the junction of major crossroads in the outer parts of urban areas. Dhaka’s expansion may be described as a hybrid.

Probable climate change may intensify the flooding condition of the city if necessary steps are not taken to stop urbanisation on precious wetlands and cultivated lands. Lack of coordination among responsible organisations is also hindering the dynamics of urban growth, which should be taking into account. The government has to introduce land-use zoning so that natural lands can be saved, otherwise environmental degradation would make the city inhabitable at the end of the day.

source


Red Dwarf-Red Giant Binary Pair of Stars Found

A binary pair of red stars, one giant one dwarf, has been discovered by a collaboration of astrophysicists from the University of Hertfordshire and The Chinese Academy of Sciences.

Ultra-cool dwarfs are star-like objects, but with surface temperatures much cooler than normal stars — less than 2000 degrees (compare this to the Sun’s temperature of about 6000 degrees). Exotic dusty clouds condense out at such ultra-cool temperatures, leading to objects that are hybrid in nature — with characteristics of both stars and giant planets like Jupiter.

Red giant stars are much bigger and more massive, and are evolving towards the end of their life (our Sun will become a red giant in about 5 billion years). But as they evolve towards their demise they can reveal information about their age and chemical composition.

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Arctic Glacial Dust May Affect Climate and Health in North America and Europe

Residents of the southern United States and the Caribbean have seen it many times during the summer months — a whitish haze in the sky that seems to hang around for days. The resulting thin film of dust on their homes and cars actually is soil from the deserts of Africa, blown across the Atlantic Ocean.similar dust storms in the arctic, possibly caused by receding glaciers, may be making similar deposits in northern Europe and North America…

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