Saturday, December 17, 2011

FOR KIDS: Eastern quakes can trigger big shakes

Scientists study the widespread impacts of tremors east of the Rockies

Web edition : 10:52 am

The most dangerous type of natural disaster, and also the most unpredictable, is the earthquake.?In the first week of November 2011, people in central Oklahoma experienced more than two dozen earthquakes. The largest, a magnitude 5.6 quake, shook thousands of fans in a college football stadium, caused cracks in a few buildings and rattled the nerves of many people who had never felt a quake before. Oklahoma is not an area of the country famous for its quakes.

Although less expected than quakes in California and Alaska, these ?mid-plate? tremors can do substantial damage. Some of the biggest known examples, centered over Missouri,?rattled the eastern half of the United States two centuries ago. Today, scientists are still puzzling over what triggered past quakes in these places?? and when similar ones might strike again.

Visit the new?Science News for Kids?website?and read the full story:?Eastern quakes can trigger big shakes


Found in: Science News For Kids

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/336842/title/FOR_KIDS_Eastern_quakes_can_trigger_big_shakes

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Friday, December 16, 2011

Oil near $96 amid Europe debt, economy concerns (AP)

SINGAPORE ? Oil prices rose to near $96 a barrel Thursday in Asia after plunging the previous session on investor pessimism that Europe's debt crisis will trigger a recession on the continent next year.

Benchmark crude for January delivery was up 59 cents to $95.54 a barrel in midday Singapore time in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell $5.19, or 5.2 percent, to settle at $94.95 on Wednesday.

In London, Brent crude was up 15 cents at $105.17 on the ICE futures exchange.

Crude dropped Wednesday amid growing concerns about slowing global oil demand. The International Energy Agency and the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries have recently forecast fuel consumption will grow slightly next year, but some analysts say even those modest expectations may be too optimistic.

Before Wednesday, crude had traded near $100 for the last month after jumping from $75 in October amid signs the U.S. economy is slowly improving.

"The latest demand forecasts from both OPEC and the IEA still look too high and oil prices have further to fall," Capital Economics said in a report. The consultancy expects Brent crude to fall to near $85 by the end of next year.

Investor fears that European leaders may not be able to contain the region's debt woes helped pull the euro down to its lowest level against the U.S. dollar in 11 months Wednesday. A stronger dollar makes crude more expensive for investors with other currencies.

In other energy trading on the Nymex, natural gas rose 0.4 cents at $3.14 per 1,000 cubic feet. Heating oil gained 2.5 cents to $2.86 a gallon and gasoline futures added 2.6 cents to $2.53 a gallon.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111215/ap_on_re_as/oil_prices

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Robert Powell on Mariah Yeater Baby Accusations: She Lied!


As the whole celebrity gossip world knows by now, Mariah Yeater has accused Justin Bieber of fathering her three-month old son.

And while the scandal has not made much news recently - Yeater's lawyer asked Bieber's camp for a new DNA test in late November, and there's been no movement on either side since - Robert Powell has come forward and said he knows why Yeater originally filed a paternity suit against the singer. It's simple:

"She lied."

Powell, who insists he's the proper baby daddy, recently spoke to Rumor Fix while serving time behind bars on charges of burglary and drug possession.

“We were both homeless and living in Oceanside and Mariah was trying to make some quick money," Powell claims. “She just picked him because she thought he was famous and all and thought she could get a lot of money by telling the magazine Justin was the father. She just saw him as an opportunity to make a lot of money."

$50,000, Powell says. That's the amount she was hoping Justin would settle for.

But Yeater underestimated Bieber, who fought against the allegations from day one and has done all he can to prove his innocence.

Powell adds that he still loves Yeater, and he has sympathy for the Biebs.

"All I want is to be with my son, that’s all I care about. She can take all her money, I just want my son. And man, on the real, I feel sorry for Justin Bieber. He’s just a little kid, man. He don’t need to be going through all this drama. He got a career and sh*t to focus on. I feel sorry for the dude.”

Thanks, Rob. But Justin doesn't need your pity. He's doing just fine on his own, thank you very much!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/12/robert-powell-on-mariah-yeater-baby-accusations-she-lied/

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

UK lawmakers urge extradition rules reform (AP)

LONDON ? British lawmakers are urging the government to reform extradition laws to improve safeguards for Britons wanted by authorities overseas.

The House of Commons agreed without a vote that ministers should attempt to change the U.K.-U.S. extradition treaty and the European Arrest Warrant regime. Critics have long argued that those regimes are sometimes unfair and unequal, and that justice would often be better served by a trial at home.

The most high-profile extradition case was that of British hacker Gary McKinnon, who has admitted breaking into U.S. military computers. Efforts to extradite him to the U.S. have stalled over questions about his mental health and the extradition request's fairness.

Monday's parliamentary motion was not binding on the government.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/britain/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111205/ap_on_re_eu/eu_britain_extraditions

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Milky Way's Galactic Gobbling Leaves Star 'Crumbs' (SPACE.com)

Our Milky Way galaxy is a messy eater, leaving streams of star "crumbs" spread across the sky after chomping its smaller neighbors, a new study reports.

Astronomers have found two such streams emanating from the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy, torn off by the Milky Way's huge gravitational pull. The two newfound star tails are in the southern galactic hemisphere, and they meet up with two others previously known from Sagittarius in the northern galactic hemisphere.

"Sagittarius is like a beast with four tails," study co-author Wyn Evans, of the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom, said in a statement.

Big, bad Milky Way

Sagittarius used to be one of the brightest of the Milky Way's satellite galaxies. But the Milky Way's immense gravity has torn it apart, dispersing half of Sagittarius' stars and virtually all of its gas over the last billion years or so, researchers said. [Video: Milky Way Shreds Dwarf Galaxy into Four Star Streams]

Before the new study, Sagittarius was known to have two tails, both in the northern galactic sky. In 2006, astronomers noticed that one of these tails was forked in two.

"That was an amazing discovery," said lead author Vasily Belokurov, also of the University of Cambridge. "But the remaining piece of the puzzle, the structure in the south, was missing until now."

To solve the puzzle, Belokuroz and his team analyzed data from the latest Sloan Digital Sky Survey (known as SDSS-III), which uses an 8.2-foot (2.5-meter) telescope in New Mexico to scan the heavens.

The researchers looked at maps of more than 13 million stars, eventually spotting the two new star streams branching off from Sagittarius. One stream is fatter and brighter than the other, and it's more enriched with iron and other metals than its dimmer companion, researchers said.

Because each succeeding generation of stars produces and distributes more metals than the last, the team concluded that the brighter stream is younger than the fainter one.

The team submitted its findings to the Astrophysical Journal, and posted its study on the physics and astronomy site arXiv Nov. 30.

Splitting of the star streams

The researchers aren't sure what caused the galaxy's star tails to split. One possibility, they said, is that Sagittarius was once part of a binary galactic system, like the present-day Small and Large Magellanic Clouds. Sagittarius and its putative partner could each have generated a leading and trailing tail upon falling into the Milky Way, yielding four streams in total.

A collision with a massive clump of dark matter or another satellite galaxy could also have split each of the streams into two, researchers said.

Finally, another theory posits that debris from the chomped-on Sagittarius may have simply spread into different streams at different points in time, the result of different epochs having different patterns of galactic wobble and movement.

However the streams took their final shape, researchers said, they provide further evidence that our Milky Way galaxy has devoured up a number of its smaller neighbors that strayed too close.

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

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/space/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/space/20111205/sc_space/milkywaysgalacticgobblingleavesstarcrumbs

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Monday, December 5, 2011

At least 23 dead in intensifying Syria violence (Reuters)

BEIRUT (Reuters) ? At least 23 people were reported killed in Syria Saturday as violence intensified in the eighth month of an uprising against President Bashar al-Assad, pushing the death toll close to 4,600, an activist group said.

The Arab League, which has deepened Assad's isolation by announcing economic sanctions against Damascus, gave Syria until Sunday to sign an initiative to end the crackdown, Qatar's foreign minister said.

He did not explicitly say when the sanctions would come into force, but said they would be imposed soon if Syria does not sign the deal, which includes Arab monitors to ensure that Damascus abides by a promise to end violence.

In a three-hour, night-time battle in the north-western city of Idlib near the Turkish border, seven members of the security forces, five army rebels and three civilians were killed, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said.

Five civilians were shot dead by security forces in central Homs province, and a man's body was returned to his family five days after he had been arrested.

The United Nations' top human rights forum has condemned Syria for "gross and systematic" violations by its forces, including executions and the imprisonment of some 14,000 people.

Syrian authorities say they are fighting foreign-backed "terrorist groups" trying to spark civil war who have killed some 1,100 soldiers and police since March.

An "Arab Spring" of revolts has reshaped the political landscape of the Middle East this year and toppled leaders in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya.

Syrian opposition groups say defectors from Syria's conscript army are increasing attacks on government forces trying to suppress the revolt.

Syria faces deepening international and regional isolation, with the Arab League, the European Union and the United States piling on tougher and tougher sanctions.

Qatar's Foreign Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani, who has played a lead role in organising Arab League sanctions, said the League gave Damascus one day to sign its initiative.

"If they want to come (and sign) tomorrow they can," he said after a meeting in Doha of an Arab foreign ministers committee tasked with following up the crisis.

He later told Al Jazeera television: "If the signing does not happen tomorrow, and I doubt it will, ... if the signing does not happen soon, then the Arab sanctions that have been approved will be in effect."

The Arab League's sanctions committee confirmed that it would freeze the assets of 19 top Syrian officials and Assad associates, and ban them from entering other Arab countries. The number of flights to Syria would be halved.

China and Russia oppose sanctions and last month scuppered Western efforts to pass a U.N. Security Council resolution condemning Assad's government.

SECURITY FORCES IN ACTION

The state news agency SANA gave a detailed account of operations by Syrian security forces, including clashes with "terrorists," arrests and detonating and defusing bombs.

It said special forces caught dozens of wanted men in the area of Tel Kalakh who had been smuggling weapons, drugs and armed men from Lebanon into Syria. Special forces also captured 14 gunmen who, SANA said, had been killing and kidnapping civilians and soldiers.

According to the British-based SOHR activist group, nearly a quarter of those killed in the uprising are from the Syrian security forces.

Special forces killed one gunman in a clash in a rural part of Deraa province, and another in a clash in Idlib, SANA said.

SANA said engineers disabled two bombs in Hama but two others exploded, one when a security patrol was passing near a sports stadium, injuring two. In Latakia, a bomb in front of an electrical workshop started a fire in which two people died.

NO STRATEGIC IRAN TIES POST-ASSAD

The head of the opposition Syrian National Council (SNC), said the isolation of Syria was accelerating and he was pushing for more international intervention against Damascus and seeking Russian support.

Burhan Ghalioun told the Wall Street Journal he envisioned a post-Assad Syria distanced from anti-Western Iran, and would move closer to the Arab League and Gulf Arab states - countries that are Sunni-led and wary of Shi'ite Iran.

Syria has fostered close ties with Tehran since Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution. The United States accuses Damascus of helping Iran funnel weapons to Lebanon's Hezbollah fighters.

"There will be no special relationship with Iran. This is the core issue - the military alliance," Ghalioun told the U.S. paper, though he said he did not oppose economic ties.

Ghalioun said the opposition was still trying to persuade Moscow that steps such creating a buffer zone, a humanitarian corridor or a no-fly zone to protect civilians would not lead inevitably to armed intervention.

"This is different than the organised military intervention that happened in Iraq for regime change," he said. "We count on Syrians to bring down the Syrian regime."

Western powers have shown little appetite for armed intervention in Syria because of the complexity of its sectarian divisions and its links to unstable neighbors.

(Additional reporting by Regan Doherty in Doha and Sami Aboudi in Dubai; Editing by Peter Graff)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111203/wl_nm/us_syria

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Sunday, December 4, 2011

FCC Fridays: December 2, 2011

We here at Engadget Mobile tend to spend a lot of way too much time poring over the latest FCC filings, be it on the net or directly on the ol' Federal Communications Commission's site. Since we couldn't possibly (want to) cover all the stuff that goes down there, we've gathered up an exhaustive listing of every phone and / or tablet getting the stamp of approval over the last week. Enjoy!

Continue reading FCC Fridays: December 2, 2011

FCC Fridays: December 2, 2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 02 Dec 2011 11:20:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/iDyiMb0Vt80/

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