Climate and Geysers

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” The new research paper, ‘Climate-Induced Variations of Geyser
Periodicity in Yellowstone National Park, USA,’ is published in the
June issue of the journal Geology.”
Get the abstract at:
http://www.gsajournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-abstract&doi=10.1130%2FG24723A.1
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News Release
National Park Service and US Geological survey
May 30, 2008
        Shaul Hurwitz, USGS
        703-648-4299
        shaulh@usgs.gov

        Leslie Gordon, USGS
        916-278-3016
        lgordon@usgs.gov

        Stacy Vallie, NPS
                   307-344-2015
                   yell_public_affairs@nps.gov

        Al Nash, NPS
        307-344-2015
        yell_public_affairs@nps.gov

What Makes an Old Geyser Faithful?

New research suggests that how often Old Faithful and other
Yellowstone geysers erupt may depend on annual rainfall patterns.

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Over 44 Million Acres Under Lease for Oil and Gas in US

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 29, 2008
4:33 PM

 CONTACT: The Wilderness Society
Dave Slater (202/429-8441); Dave Alberswerth (202/429-2695);
Nada Culver (303/650-5818, ext. 117); Eleanor Huffines (907-272-9453)
 
 
More Than 44 Million Acres Under Lease for Oil and Gas in US
New analyses shows unprecedented drilling boom, tremendous surplus of undrilled leases, and errors in recent BLM oil and gas assessment
 
WASHINGTON, DC – May 29 – More than 44 million acres of public lands are leased for oil and gas development, according to a new Wilderness Society analysis of Interior Department data. The analysis points to an explosion of drilling on federal lands, with 7,124 drilling permits (APDs) issued in 2007, a new record for the Bush Administration. Nationwide, the leasing is outstripping the oil and gas industry’s capacity to drill, as industry is drilling on only a quarter of the leases they hold. [view the detailed analysis here

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Isolated, Uncontacted Tribe Spotted From Aircraft Near Peru-Brazil Border

Isolated tribe spotted in Brazil 
 
The photos are being used to prove the tribe’s existence
Image: Gleison Miranda, Funai
 
One of South America’s few remaining uncontacted indigenous tribes has been spotted and photographed on the border between Brazil and Peru.

The Brazilian government says it took the images to prove the tribe exists and help protect its land.

The pictures, taken from an aeroplane, show red-painted tribe members brandishing bows and arrows.

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Plum Creek After Some of Maine’s Last Old-Growth

Plum Creek plans to cut down 200-year-old trees
North Woods logging
By BRIDGET HUBER
May 28, 2008 4:00:29 PM
 
FELLING THE GIANTS?

You would think the Plum Creek Timber Company would be doing all it could to avoid negative publicity right now.

The Seattle-based company’s proposal to build nearly 1000 homes and major resort destinations in the Moosehead Lake region has generated enormous controversy across the state, and still hasn’t been approved by the Maine Land Use Regulation Commission (LURC). Plum Creek has worked hard to put a green face on the plan, most notably by touting the benefits of the plan’s “conservation framework,” which would protect more than 400,000 acres from development, though the framework would not prevent logging, mining, or water extraction on much of the land. (For more on the project, see “Up Plum Creek Without a Paddle,” by Yanni Peary, November 28, 2007.)

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