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Global Warming!

our objective is to explain what is the global warming, causes, and what we can to do for repair. Is horrible how the people no realize of the problem that we have and that is so actual.

Is interesting how the companies are  adopting a new campaign for to make that the people know about this problem and act to solve problem the planet that is of everyone.

We can associate this problem with the biology for search of one solution to the "global warming", since would something so much easy for everywhere with the help to the science for strengthen the actions that we do.

Download power point presentation : global warming

 

A simple procedure to make recycled paper with a few craft ideas.

Things you will need :

Scrap paper
Blender
Wooden frame
Nylon fly screening
Water
Large plastic basin
Sponge
Iron
Newspapers
Kitchen cloth
Staples
Flowers, leaves, fruit peels (optional)

What to do

1. First make a mold by stapling the nylon screening tightly to the wooden frame

2. Create a drying pad by folding the newspapers and stacking them to about 2″ thick. Then cover with the kitchen cloth

3. Tear scrap paper into small pieces and soak in hot water for about 30 minutes.

4. Blend paper with warm water until it has a mushy consistency. At this time if you want to add colour you can add small amounts of flowers, leaves etc. and blend again. (If you want to whiten the paper, add a few drops of bleach.)

5. Using a mixture of about 80% water to 20% pulp fill the large plastic basin with water. Add the pulp while stirring. The particles should be floating in the water.

6. Dip the mold in the water from the back and bring it down so that it is under the water. With a scooping motion gently lift the mold out of the water.

7. Allow the water to drain and carefully turn the mold over unto the drying pad (screen on top). Use the sponge to absorb the excess water. The pulp should become dry enough to separate from the mold. Lift off the mold and allow the sheet of new paper to dry thoroughly.

8. Iron with low heat to create a smooth finish.

Craft Ideas

1. Use the paper to make post cards. Decorate with pressed flowers.

2. Use different colour sheets to make a scrapbook. Tie the sheets with decorative ribbon. Use scrapbook for recipes, travel photos, baby pictures etc.

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TAKEN FROM :

* Image: http://cuidandoelplanetatierra.blogspot.com/2009/07/papel-reciclado.html

* Article : http://www.allsands.com/howto/papermakingre_syu_gn.htm

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Disney’s Friends for Change, (also referred to as Friends for Change: Project Green) is a pro-social «green» initiative that started in the summer of 2009. Disney’s stars stress environmental issues in the campaign, encouraging fans to take action. The year-long campaign draws on how Disney stars connect with young fans. Miley Cyrus, The Jonas Brothers, Demi Lovato, and Selena Gomez are among the stars in the 30 second to 2 minute public service announcements currently airing on Disney Channel. As part of the initiative, kids will have the ability to choose how Disney will invest one million dollars in various environmental programs.[2] This was presented instead of the 2009 Disney Channel Games. The first Disney Friends for Change Games premiered June 24, 2011 on Disney Channel, replacing Disney Channel Games.

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TAKEN FROM :

* Article  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disney’s_Friends_for_Change

* Video  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AmCJopC_KE4

    • LYRICS

      «Ground is shaking, waves are breaking
      The wind has lost control
      The air is shifting
      While it’s lifting
      gravity

      A huge eruptions
      Fast explosions
      As it bursts the earth
      Water’s pounding
      Waves asounding
      Deadly and extreme

      But we are equally destructive

      Equally destructive as we are!
      Don’t you think we’ve all so gone too far?
      We are just a part of this machine
      In this endless stream

      Silence predicts the violence
      That is yet to come
      We are senseless
      Proud with us

      We must measure while the pressure
      false expense
      We feel minor, punished and
      Betrayed by

      We are a part of it
      We are equally destructive

      Equally destructive as we are!
      Don’t you think we’ve all so gone too far?
      We are just a part of this machine
      In this endless stream»
      _______________________________________

      Take from: «http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BRFpEYiuhyQ»
      «http://www.musica.com/letras.asp?letra=1120574«

If sea levels rose to where they were during the Last Interglacial Period, large parts of the Gulf of Mexico would be under water (red areas), including half of Florida and several Caribbean islands. Credit: Jeremy Weiss, Department of Geosciences, The University of Arizona.

 

Strong warning on climate threshold from University of Arizona researchers

SUMMIT COUNTY — Ice sheets in the Arctic and Antarctic will probably keep melting, and sea levels will keep rising for a long time — even if greenhouse gas emissions are curbed in the near future, according to a University of Arizona-led team of researchers who studied the history of rising sea levels during the last interglacial period.

“This study marks the strongest case yet made that humans, by warming the atmosphere and oceans, are pushing the Earth’s climate toward the threshold where we will likely be committed to four to six or even more meters of sea level rise in coming centuries,” said Jonathan Overpeck, co-director of the University of Arizona’s Institute of the Environment.

Most climate scientists agree that, as the world’s climate becomes warmer due to increased greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, sea levels will rise by up to three feet by the end of this century.

But researchers have grappled with the question of how much of that increase will be due to ice sheets melting as opposed to the oceans’ 332 million cubic miles of water increasing in volume as they warm up?

For the study, UA team members analyzed paleoceanic records of global distribution of sea surface temperatures of the warmest 5,000-year period during the Last Interglacial, a warm period that lasted from 130,000 to 120,000 years ago.

The researchers then compared the data to results of computer-based climate models simulating ocean temperatures during a 200-year snapshot, as if taken 125,000 years ago, and calculating the contributions from thermal expansion of sea water.

The team found that thermal expansion could have contributed no more than 40 centimeters – less than 1.5 feet – to the rising sea levels during that time, which exceeded today’s level up to eight meters or 26 feet.

At the same time, the paleoclimate data revealed average ocean temperatures that were only about 0.7 degrees Celsius, or 1.3 degrees Fahrenheit, above those of today.

“This means that even small amounts of warming may have committed us to more ice sheet melting than we previously thought. The temperature during that time of high sea levels wasn’t that much warmer than it is today,” said Nicholas McKay, a doctoral student at the UA’s department of geosciences and the paper’s lead author.

McKay pointed out that even if ocean levels rose to similar heights as during the Last Interglacial, they would do so at a rate of up to three feet per century.

“Even though the oceans are absorbing a good deal of the total global warming, the atmosphere is warming faster than the oceans,” McKay added. “Moreover, ocean warming is lagging behind the warming of the atmosphere. The melting of large polar ice sheets lags even farther behind.”

“As a result, even if we stopped greenhouse gas emissions right now, the Earth would keep warming, the oceans would keep warming, the ice sheets would keep shrinking, and sea levels would keep rising for a long time,” he explained.

They are absorbing most of that heat, but they lag behind. Especially the large ice sheets are not in equilibrium with global climate,” McKay added. “

“Unless we dramatically curb global warming, we are in for centuries of sea level rise at a rate of up to three feet per century, with the bulk of the water coming from the melting of the great polar ice sheets – both the Greenland and Antarctic Ice Sheets,” Overpeck said.

According to the authors, the new results imply that 4.1 to 5.8 meters, or 13.5 to 19 feet, of sea level rise during the Last Interglacial period was derived from the Antarctic Ice Sheet. That suggests that both the Antarctic and Greenland Ice Sheets may be more sensitive to warming temperatures than widely thought.

Evidence for elevated sea levels is scattered all around the globe, he added. On Barbados and the Bahamas, for example, notches cut by waves into the rock six or more meters above the present shoreline have been dated to being 125,000 years old.

“Based on previous studies, we know that the sea level during the Last Interglacial was up to 8.5 meters higher than today,” McKay explained.

“We already knew that the vast majority came from the melting of the large ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica, but how much could the expansion of seawater have added to that?”

Given that sea surface temperatures were about 0.7 degrees warmer than today, the team calculated that even if the warmer temperatures reached all the way down to 2,000 meters depth – more than 6,500 feet, which is highly unlikely – expansion would have accounted for no more than 40 centimeters, less than a foot and a half.

“That means almost all of the substantial sea level rise in the Last Interglacial must have come from the large ice sheets, with only a small contribution from melted mountain glaciers and small ice caps,” McKay said. “The message is that the last time glaciers and ice sheets melted, sea levels rose by more than eight meters. Much of the world’s population lives relatively close to sea level. This is going to have huge impacts, especially on poor countries,” he added.

“If you live a meter above sea level, it’s irrelevant what causes the rise. Whether sea levels are rising for natural reasons or for anthropogenic reasons, you’re still going to be under water sooner or later.”

If sea levels rose to where they were during the Last Interglacial Period, large parts of the Gulf of Mexico would be under water (red areas), including half of Florida and several Caribbean islands.
Credit: Jeremy Weiss, Department of Geosciences, The University of Arizona.

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TAKEN FROM : http://summitcountyvoice.com/2011/07/19/global-warming-sea-levels-could-rise-for-centuries-to-come/

TAKEN FROM : http://www.miswallpapers.net/paisajes-y-naturaleza/blazing-sun/

Natural solar cooling cycles could buy us enough time to switch away from fossil fuels. An expert explains how

During the summer months, it’s both difficult and remarkably easy to forget how dangerous the sun can be. Sometimes it takes a space weather event to reinforce the point. Last month, the Solar Dynamic Observatoryrecorded a massive eruption on the sun’s surface that produced a mushroom cloud of ionized particles. Had the resulting solar winds struck the Earth’s magnetic field directly, the damage to our electrical grids might have proven catastrophic. If you think our politicians have a tough time agreeing on debt ceilings, just imagine how much difficulty they’d have figuring out how to finance trillion-dollar repairs to our country’s infrastructure.

As astronomy author Bob Berman’s new book reveals, storms like these are actually a common byproduct of the Sun’s 11-year cycle of pulsing, dimming and brightening. «The Sun’s Heartbeat,» which takes its title from this phenomenon, offers a compelling and surprisingly playful history of the Milky Way’s most famous star — from the alternately brilliant and misguided theories of the ancient Greeks, to the modern-day discoveries that would make Arthur C. Clarke and Stanley Kubrick blush. Along the way, Berman, a columnist for Astronomy magazine and the science editor of the Old Farmer’s Almanac, examines how solar cycles can offset global warming and how mankind has, by its own ambitions and neuroses, devolved into a collection of sun-starved troglodytes.

Over the phone, we discussed what the sun’s cycles mean for global warning, what role it plays in our food shortages — and why its rays actually prevent cancer.

What kind of effect does the sun’s heartbeat have on our planet and its inhabitants?

The effects are myriad, but one of the things this pulsing is responsible for is «coronal mass ejections» — bursts of solar wind, light isotope plasma and magnetic fields that are known to wreak havoc on our electrical lines. In 2008, an all-star, U.S. government panel very frighteningly predicted that a strong storm like the ones we had in 1859 and 1921 could potentially destroy our power grid. Then, of course, you’ve got polar-orbiting satellites and GPS systems that are vulnerable along with a space station where astronauts could be subjected to high levels of radiation. Even commercial airline passengers flying polar routes could be at risk.

How concerned should we really be about solar wind storms? What is the likelihood of one hitting us directly?

It will definitely happen in the next century. Judging from the dates of the last big storms, we’re probably overdue.

There have been plans over the years to overhaul our power grid, but I haven’t heard nearly as much about initiatives to shield against a solar weather event. Given the potential financial ramifications, why do you think this issue gets so little attention from politicians? Are there any preventative measures we could even take?

Experts often refer to these kinds of storms as «low frequency-high impact» events, which don’t tend to call the public’s attention until they’re actually happening. The irony is that serious storms — ones that can cause cascading power failures, blackouts and, potentially, harm to airline passengers and astronauts — happen almost every solar cycle and people still remain oblivious. While they’ll never bring us to the brink of apocalypse, they’re certainly something that the public should take note of.

Another factor that might contribute to our general indifference toward these storms is that we’re almost powerless to protect ourselves from them. Even if we discovered that one was heading right for us, we couldn’t determine the threat it posed until a few hours before it hit. Every blast of material is like a swarm of bees carrying its own magnetic material, except these bees are traveling 500 miles per second, or a thousand times faster than a bullet. It won’t transfer its energy to us, though, unless its magnetic field is aligned opposite planet Earth. I suppose the power grid could be secured in anticipation of a storm, but probably only to an extent and shutdowns could prove costly.

News outlets indicate that we’re mired in the worst global food shortage of the past half-century. Man’s contributions to this crisis have been well-documented, but what kind of role does the sun’s erratic behavior play in all of this?

There are three major factors that affect the planet’s temperature and, by extension, its agricultural development: volcanic activity, the presence or absence of El Niño and, finally, the heartbeat of the sun. If the latter slows down for long periods of time, the Earth gets colder. During the Maunder Minimum from 1645 to 1715, the sun effectively lost its heartbeat entirely. The result was unbearably cold winters and incredible hardship around the world.

Carbon emissions have warmed the planet dramatically, but we happen to be entering a new sunspot [i.e., heartbeat] cycle — the 24th in our recorded history. Many experts believe that not only will it have weak maximum temperatures, but very deep minimums. If this is true, it’s the best thing that can possibly happen. The sun would effectively buy us time to switch over to non-fossil fuels. If we end up having strong or even normal maximums, temperatures in 2015 could be hotter than humans have ever seen before.

I’m guessing that skeptics of global warming have willfully ignored this research.

They have, and to our great peril. The fact that the sun has kept global warming down over the last 10 years has given some people an excuse to declare that it simply doesn’t exist.

Do we know how long this dimming period might last?

It’s impossible to predict. One of the origins of this phenomenon comes from a part of the sun that we didn’t even know existed until only a few years ago. Few people realize that there’s a sun inside the sun.

What function does it serve?

Actually, it’s the innermost 10 percent that generates all of its power. The equivalent of 96 million hydrogen bombs explode there every second, creating the fusion that produces all of the energy and neutrinos that hit us here on Earth. The sun’s core, which is shaped like a ball despite the fact that it’s not entirely solid, completes its rotation over the course of a 27-day period. Magnetic fields are generated approximately 70 percent of the solar radius’ distance away from the star’s center. For the remaining 30 percent, the sun’s latitudes are wildly irregular. The equator takes the same four weeks to spin, but the poles run closer to 32 days. The different layers of the sun brushing past each other creates an area of violent reactions. Everything we see on the solar surface — the flares and streaks — all have their origin in the zone between these two layers.

Why do we register the sun’s light as white?

The sun emits all of the spectral colors — the most important being red, blue and green. By observing these three colors in varying amounts, our eyes and brains enable us to perceive all the others. Green light is actually the sun’s peak emission. This tends to surprise people as many would believe that it gives off more heat, ultraviolet rays or X-rays. Our eyes are actually designed so that when we see green light together with the other colors of the sun, we’ll always perceive them as white. Any other color that we view around us means that that light source is being reflected. Grass and leaves look green, for example, because plant life prefers blue to green light.

In a chapter titled «The Sun Will Save Your Life,» you discuss the possible connection between autism and vitamin D deficiency. I was wondering if you could expand on that a little.

This is a fairly new study. There were two articles, one in Scientific American and the other in a Swedish journal, that presented compelling evidence that low vitamin D levels in pregnant mothers can be one of the triggers for this heartbreaking affliction. Unfortunately, a lot of autism groups still blame vaccinations even though this explanation really isn’t being borne out scientifically.

In what ways is the public misinformed about the dangers of sun exposure and how did we go astray?

Dr. John Canell, whom I interviewed for the book and is a council member for a nonprofit group of physicians studying the health effects of vitamin D, argues that we’re the first [modern] generation of cave people. Nature intended for man to take in a lot of sunlight. For proof, one need look no further than the statistic revealing that 10-15 minutes of sunbathing will provide us with the same amount of vitamin D as 200 glasses of milk. And this vitamin is one of our most potent anti-cancer agents. I think we started running into trouble when we shifted away from an outdoor, agricultural society to an indoor, manufacturing one.

The second blow was the invention of the air conditioner, which insured that everyone kept his or her windows closed. Window glass completely blocks out the ultraviolet rays that enable our bodies to manufacture vitamin D. Unfortunately for kids, I think the final straw has been the computer and video-game craze of the last 30 years. Unlike past generations, children today spend a lot more time indoors than they do playing around in the sun. Testing shows that our vitamin D levels are now a small fraction of what we think they were 100 years ago. These kinds of tests weren’t administered back then, so there’s no way for us to know for sure.

So does this mean the cast of «The Jersey Shore» is less likely to develop melanoma?

Ultimately, everybody knows how much sun they can safely take in. You really should try not to burn, especially if you have blue eyes, fair skin and red or blond hair. Melanoma claims approximately 9,000 lives in the U.S. per year, which is worrisome, but it’s also worth noting that upward of 250,000 lives could be saved from cancer-related illnesses if people had the proper amount of vitamin D in their bloodstreams. It’s better to get too much sun than too little.

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TAKEN FROM :

* » Article»    http://www.salon.com/news/science/?story=%2Fmwt%2Ffeature%2F2011%2F07%2F17%2Fsun_interview

* «Image»   : http://www.miswallpapers.net/paisajes-y-naturaleza/blazing-sun/