Monday, October 15, 2007

                        Antarctica: Fact Sheet

Map of Antarctica. Having problems contact our National Energy Information Center on 202-586-8800 for help.

Introduction
The continent of Antarctica is home to a uniquely beautiful and harsh environment that has changed little in the last 30 million years. The continent, approximately twice the size of Australia, lies mainly within the Antarctic circle and is surrounded by ocean. It is covered almost entirely by a sheet of ice and snow which has an average thickness of approximately 6,500 feet, comprising slightly more than 90% of the world's ice and 70% of the world's freshwater resources. This thick sheet of ice - also known as the ice cap - reflects most of the heat generated by the sun back into the atmosphere, leaving the continent with an annual mean temperature of -57º Fahrenheit. Antarctica is the world's coldest and most pristine environment. The continent is also the driest and windiest landmass on Earth; with winds reaching speeds of up to 200 miles per hour and areas where rain has not fallen in millions of years. Antarctica also is the highest continent on earth, with an average elevation of 7,380 feet.

Oil Exploration
Antiarctica's Mount Erebus. Having trouble contact our National Energy Information Center on 202-586-8800 for help. Antarctica's serenely primitive wilderness faces an uncertain future as debate continues over the question of tapping into the continent's wealth of mineral resources. Beginning in the early 1950s, scientists began to notice the value inherent in such an unusual and largely undiscovered continent and began establishing research stations there. By 1958, the International Geophysical Year (IGY) saw twelve countries establish over 60 bases, both on and around the Antarctic continent, with some countries claiming parts of Antarctica as sovereign territory. The countries initially involved in the scientific body known as the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) included the United States, Chile, Argentina, Norway, France, Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, South Africa, Belgium, Russia and Japan. SCAR now includes Germany and Poland as members of the organization which aims to coordinate a number of scientific and working group programs and to further facilitate the sharing and planning of scientific information relating to Antarctic research, such as Climate Change.

The successful establishment of SCAR and the IGY in Antarctica was due in large part to cooperation between the countries involved, and led directly to the signing of the Antarctic Treaty in 1959, which has administered Antarctic affairs since 1961 when it officially entered into force. The Antarctic Treaty, signed during mounting Cold War tensions, successfully banned all military activity, nuclear testing, and the dumping of radioactive materials on the continent. The 1991 Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty, also known as the Madrid Protocol, entered into force in 1998 and serves as an additional mechanism for ensuring the protection of the Antarctic environment. The Madrid Protocol goes further than the original treaty as it designates Antarctica as a natural reserve devoted to peace and science and places a moratorium on mining and drilling for oil for a minimum of 50 years. The Protocol sets forth basic principles and detailed, mandatory rules which apply to all human activities in Antarctica.

The call for an environmental protocol to the Antarctic Treaty came after scientists discovered large deposits of natural resources such as coal, natural gas and offshore oil reserves in the early 1980s. Antarctica is considered to be part of the theoretical super-continent known as Gondwanaland, which separated near the end of the Paleozoic era and consisted of South America, Africa and Australia. And, because it once was completely covered in vegetation, many scientists believe it may hold one of the last supergiant oil fields yet to be discovered. The continental shelf of Antarctica is considered to hold the region's greatest potential for oil exploration projects, and although estimates vary as to the abundance of oil in Antarctica, the Weddell and Ross Sea areas alone are expected to possess 50 billion barrels of oil - an amount roughly equivalent to that of Alaska's estimated reserves. However, Antarctica's extreme conditions make oil field accessibility in many areas economically problematic.

Nevertheless, following the energy crisis of the 1970s, several oil companies looked to Antarctica as a possible solution to future world oil shortages by announcing plans to exploit the continent's resources. The necessary conditions for economically-sound oil production projects were beginning to ripen along with high oil prices and demand, and improved drilling technology. The prospect that Antarctica's fragile wildnerness could be tainted as a result of oil exploration and drilling activities resulted in the mobilization of several conservation groups who were intent on preserving the continent's status as the most pristine in the world.

On January 28, 1989 the Bahia Paraiso, an Argentine navy transport ship Divers investigating the 1989 Bahia Paraiso wreckage. Having problems contact our National Energy Information Center on 202-586-8800 for helphauling supplies and tourists, ran aground approximately two miles off the coast of Antarctica in the vicinity of Palmer Station. Although no one aboard the ship was injured, the wreck proved to be a setback for the nearby coastal ecosystem, as a 30-foot gash in the ship's double-walled hull released some 250,000 gallons of diesel fuel and other petroleum products into the surrounding area. The effects from the fuel spill on the local flora and fauna were mostly limited to various sea bird, krill and moss populations, with few populations seeing mortality rates greater than 20%. Because the Bahia Paraiso spill was reportedly the first known accident of its kind in the Antarctic region, the accident alarmed environmental groups, which viewed the incident as a foreshadowing of future accidents if trends in tourism and ship transport were to continue at their current pace along the continental fringe.

The devastating March 24, 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska's Prince William Sound two months later sent an even stronger alarm around the world to dozens of international environmental organizations for the need to protect Antarctica's unique environment from similar accidents. Although avoiding altogether the issue of sovereignty claims, the development of the 1991 Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty is viewed as a model for future environmental treaties which employ the precautionary principle towards natural resource exploration.

Climate Change
Because of its influence on world weather and climate patterns, Antarctica lies at the heart of the debate on climate change and has become the premier location in which to study the effects of global warming. Over the course of the past 50 years, Antarctica's average year-round temperature has warmed by about 3-4 degrees Fahrenheit - more than 10 times the average worldwide increase during that period. As a result of these increases in temperature (which are not necessarily the result of global warming), the Antarctic continent has experienced changes in its landscape and ecology. Scientists are also concerned that with such dramatic increases in the icy continent's temperature, significant rises in global sea levels could occur if Antarctica's thick polar ice sheet melts. The West Antarctic ice sheet alone, if melted, could raise average sea levels around the world by about 20 feet, resulting in the flooding of low-lying coastal zones.

Despite the numerous scientific research bases located on the continent, Antarctica produces negligible amounts of greenhouse gases and is not considered to be a significant contributer to the problem of global warming. In 1998, Antarctica produced 0.06 million metric tons of carbon, 100% of which came from the burning of petroleum fuel products. Carbon dioxide is the chief culprit among the greenhouse gases, which are blamed for contributing to a process called global warming. The theory of global warming states that as carbon dioxide and other 'greenhouse gases' continue to accumulate in the earth's atmosphere, the earth's natural warming process known as the 'greenhouse effect' is intensified, thus resulting in higher global temperatures.

The effects of climate change on Antarctica vary from migrations of seal and penguin populations to other parts of the continent to abrupt changes in the glacial landscape. In March, 2000 the Larson B ice shelf in northern Antarctica - an area the size of Delaware - broke away from the continent and retreated into the sea. Similarly, in January, 1995, the Larson A ice shelf calved away from the continent, disappearing into the sea and bringing with it part of an Argentine base camp. Ice shelf instability is created as a result of higher sea and air temperatures, and a number of northern ice shelves have displayed similar trends such as the Wordie, Muller and Prince Gustav Channel shelves.

Perhaps most vulnerable to the effects of Antarctic climate change are the continent's wildlife populations. Increasing temperatures, less ice, and more snowfall have altered the patterns and habitats of several Antarctic species, such as the southern fur and elephant seals and Adelie and Chinstrap penguins. Antarctica Penguins. Having problems contact our National Energy Information Center on 202-586-8800 for help.Although the past 20 years have seen an increase in the numbers of Chinstrap penguins on the continent, the opposite is true for the Adelie penguin. As temperatures have increased, removing significant portions of sea ice, krill (a tiny shrimp-like crustacean) populations in certain areas have decreased significantly due to a reduction in the amount of their food source - algae - which grows on the bottom of sea ice. As krill is one of the mainstays of the Adelie penguin diet, the Adelie penguin population has decreased by almost 50% in some areas. Rising Antarctic temperatures also have resulted in more snowfall on the continent; making breeding difficult for the ice-loving Adelie penguins. Seal populations, on the other hand, have benefited from the reduction in sea ice as they prefer breeding and feeding in open waters. Several seal populations in Antarctica have increased their numbers by over 300% in the last 20 years.

Energy Use in Antarctica
Approximately 4,000 scientists and researchers live in Antarctica during the austral summer, with about half of these being American. During the winter months, however, this number is greatly reduced to a total of about 500 people. Fuel tanks near a runway. Having problems contact our National Energy Information Center on 202-586-8800 for help.Although the number of people living on the Antarctic continent remains quite small, scientists have been blamed for pollution problems ranging from sewage leaks to oil spills. In July, 1995, approximately 21,000 gallons of oil were spilled in Argentina's Marimbo base as the result of a poorly constructed fuel storage system, which consisted of large rubber fuel bladders placed directly on the snow. Similar incidents have occured on other international scientific bases, including Russia's Bellingshausen base (known to be one of the continent's more contaminated sites) and the United States' McMurdo Station. However, as more attention has been placed on the continent of Antarctica such spills are rare, and scientists have done much to clean up and improve waste management procedures on the continent.

Antarctica in the 21st Century
Despite the 1991 Madrid Protocol's 50-year moratorium placed on the exploitation of Antarctica's natural resources, future economic and population pressures could pose significant environmental threats to the continent of Antarctica. An expected and dramatic increase in world demand for energy over the next 30 years may expose the continent to countries and markets looking for alternative petroleum supplies. If Antarctica is indeed eventually opened for oil exploration activities, which many believe it will be, the potential for oil pollution occurrences such as oil tanker spills, the dumping of waste oil, natural oil seeps and well blowouts will rise substantially.

However, the Antarctic Treaty system currently in place offers the internationally-owned continent an opportunity to temporarily avoid such premature exploration activities. The continent's usefulness as a scientific tool and international research station will continue to be taken advantage of and Antarctica will continue its important role in providing answers to the dilemma of climate change.
Posted by Kancha at 22:14:19 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Fact about Antarctica


Fascinating Facts about Antarctica

1/ If Antarctica's ice sheets melted, the worlds oceans would rise by 60 to 65 metres (200 - 210ft)  - everywhere.

2/ Antarctica is pushed into the earth by the weight of its ice sheets. If they melted, it would "spring back" about 500m (1 625 ft). It would do this v...e...r...y   s...l...o...w...l...y taking about 10000 years to do so.

Scotland and Scandinavia are still rebounding today after the last ice age - at the rate of half a meter a century in the Northern Baltic - the fastest place.

3/ Antarctica is the best place in the world to find meteorites. Dark meteorites show up against the white expanse of ice and snow and don't get covered by vegetation. In some places, the way the ice flows concentrates meteorites there. The ice makes them gather in one place.

4/ The cold and dry conditions in the "Dry Valleys" region of Antarctica are so close to those on Mars that NASA did testing there for the Viking mission. It has not rained in the dry valleys for at least 2 million years.
5/ One of the biggest icebergs ever (possibly the biggest iceberg ever) broke free from the Ross ice shelf in Antarctica in 2000.

It was 295km (183 miles) long and 37km (23 miles) wide, with a surface area of 11,000 sq km (4,250 square miles) above water - and 10 times bigger below.  It's similar in size to The Gambia, Qatar,  The Bahamas, or Connecticut.

6/ It has been estimated that during the feeding season in Antarctica, a full grown blue whale eats about 4 million krill per day (krill are small shrimp-like creatures), that's 3600 kg or 4 tons - every day for 6 months. 

The daily intake would feed a human for about 4 years! If you could stomach it. Krill may be nutritious but they're not very nice as people food - which is lucky for the whales!

7/ Since the Antarctic convergence arose about 20 million years ago, there has been very little exchange of fish or other marine life in either direction. This means that fish have lived in their side of the ocean and have not crossed over to their neighbours side.

Antarctic fish have lived at between +2°C and -2°C for 5 million years (-2°C is the freezing point of sea water, below zero because of the salt). They are therefore the best cold adapted animals that there are on the planet - now or ever.

8/ A domestic deep freeze runs at about -20°C. The mean summer temperature on the great East Antarctica icecap is -30°C and mean winter temperature around -60°C.  That's a lot colder than your freezer!

The lowest ever temperature recorded was at the Russian Vostok station. It was - 89.6°C

9/ When the Antarctic sea-ice begins to expand at the beginning of winter, it advances by around 40,000 square miles (100,000 square kilometres) per day, and eventually doubles the size of Antarctica, adding up to an extra 20 million square kilometres of ice around the land mass.

That's one and a half USA's, two Australia's or 50 UK's worth of ice area that forms, then breaks up and melts each year.

10/ Snow falling at the South Pole takes about 100 000 years to "flow" to the coast of Antarctica before it drops off the end as part of an iceberg.
11/ The Antarctic ice cap has 29 million cubic kilometres of ice. This is 90% of all the ice on the planet and between 60 and 70 % of all of the world's fresh water.

Only about 0.4 percent of Antarctica is not covered by ice.

12/ Antarctica has a peculiar group of fish called the ice fish. These have no red pigment - haemoglobin - in their blood to carry oxygen around. They get by perfectly well without it because the temperature is so low and oxygen dissolves better in cold temperatures. They just have a larger volume of clear blood instead and this gives them an unusually ghostly white colour, particularly their gills.

Recent research on the ice fish ahs shown that their DNA has been damaged by high levels of ultra violet light coming from the ozone hole. They have less pigment to stop the UV getting through.

Many other Antarctic sea creatures including fish have antifreeze in their blood so they don't accidentally get frozen solid! 

13/ The largest land animal in Antarctica is an insect, a wingless midge, Belgica antarctica, less than 1.3cm (0.5in) long. There are no flying insects (they'd get blown away), just shiny black springtails that hop like fleas and tend to live among penguin colonies.

14/  Samples of ice known as ice cores are regularly drilled through the ice in Antarctica by scientists. They are removed as a long cylinder of ice that gives an indication of the past going back tens of thousands of years. The properties of the ice, of dust trapped in the ice, and even of air bubbles trapped in the ice give valuable information about the earth's climate at various times in the past.

A glaciologist could easily give you a drink of water that was frozen during the life of Christ.

15/ In 1981 a swarm of krill was tracked by US scientists that was estimated at being up to 10 million tonnes of krill!!!!! This is the equivalent of about 143 million people (at an average of 70kg each) or more than the entire populations of the UK and Germany combined ( and wandering around in a group!)
Posted by Kancha at 22:11:12 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Fact about world

HISTORY OF THE WORLD

IMPORTANT EVENTS IN WORLD HISTORY


By Region & Empire
(separately):

Prehistory: -15bn to -1000
Ancient Middle East: -7000 to 600
Ancient Egypt: -5000 to -30
Ancient Greece: -4400 to 267
Early India: -3000 to 1556
Early China & Japan: -2500 to 907
Early Americas: -2000 to 1490
Ancient Rome: -1000 to 476
Early Africa: -800 to 1652
Barbarian Invasions: 214 to 1000
Byzantine Empire: 315 to 1453
Early Spain and Portugal: 415 to 1433
Early Britain: 446 to 1042
Early France: 451 to 1589
Early Italy: 489 to 1380
Rise of Islam and Persia: 622 to 1587
Early Northern Europe: 680 to 1417
Early Germany/Holy Roman Empire: 843 to 1273
Early Russia: 862 to 1584
Early Scandinavia: 930 to 1721
Medieval China: 960 to 1751
Rise of Turkish Empire: 1055 to 1546
Medieval England: 1066 to 1476
Crusades: 1075 to 1291
Feudal Japan: 1185 to 1694
Mongol Empire: 1206 to 1481
Early Poland: 1226 to 1830
Early Switzerland: 1291 to 1541
Renaissance Italy: 1420 to 1798
Austro-German Hapsburg Empire: 1438 to 1848
Early Netherlands: 1477 to 1890
Imperial Spain: 1479 to 1898
Britain under the Tudors: 1485 to 1603
Imperial Portugal: 1488 to 1910
The New World: 1492 to 1763
Decline of Turkish Empire: 1579 to 1908
France under the Bourbon Kings: 1589 to 1788
Colonial India: 1600 to 1930
Britain under the Stuarts: 1603 to 1714
Australia and New Zealand: 1606 to 1953
Russia under the Romanovs: 1613 to 1916
Rise of Prussia: 1618 to 1870
Georgian Britain: 1714 to 1836
Independent America: 1773 to 1909
Modern Scandinavia: 1778 to 1957
French Republic and Empire: 1789 to 1906
Modern Latin America: 1800 to 1990
Colonial Africa: 1814 to 1912
Victorian Britain: 1837 to 1901
Modern China: 1839 to 1989
Modern Italy: 1849 to 1993
Pre-War Germany: 1867 to 1911
Modern Japan: 1867 to 1989
Modern Ireland: 1900 to 1994
Modern Britain (uptil WW2): 1901 to 1945
Modern France: 1907 to 1994
Modern Germany: 1914 to 1990
Modern America (uptil WW2): 1914 to 1945
Modern Russia: 1917 to 1991
Modern Middle East: 1918 to 1991
Modern Warsaw Pact Countries: 1919 to 1990
Modern Internationalism: 1919 to 1994
Modern Spain and Portugal: 1926 to 1989
Modern Africa: 1930 to 1994
Modern South-East Asia: 1940 to 1986
Post-War Britain: 1945 to 1994
Modern India and Pakistan: 1947 to 1991
Post-War America: 1947 to 1994
Posted by Kancha at 22:06:28 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

The Power of Positive Thinking

Key Point
You are what you think. You feel what you want.


Why Think Positively?

All of our feelings, beliefs and knowledge are based on our internal thoughts, both conscious and subconscious. We are in control, whether we know it or not.
Aim high and do your best
We can be positive or negative, enthusiastic or dull, active or passive.

The biggest difference between people is their attitudes. For some, learning is enjoyable and exciting. For others, learning is a drudgery. For many, learning is just okay, something required on the road to a job.

"Most folks are about as happy as they
make up their minds to be."

Abraham Lincoln

Our present attitudes are habits, built from the feedback of parents, friends, society and self, that form our self-image and our world-image.

These attitudes are maintained by the inner conversations we constantly have with ourselves, both consciously and subconsciously.

The first step in changing our attitudes is to change our inner conversations.

What Should We Be Saying?

One approach is called the three C's: Commitment, Control and Challenge.

Commitment
Make a positive commitment to yourself, to learning, work, family, friends, nature, and other worthwhile causes. Praise yourself and others. Dream of success. Be enthusiastic.

Control
Keep your mind focused on important things. Set goals and priorities for what you think and do. Visualize to practice your actions. Develop a strategy for dealing with problems. Learn to relax. Enjoy successes. Be honest with yourself.

Challenge
Be courageous. Change and improve each day. Do your best and don't look back. See learning and change as opportunities. Try new things. Consider several options. Meet new people. Ask lots of questions. Keep track of your mental and physical health. Be optimistic.

Studies show that people with these characteristics are winners in good times and survivors in hard times.

Research shows that,
"... people who begin consciously to modify their inner conversations and assumptions report an almost immediate improvement in their performance. Their energy increases and things seem to go better ..."

Commitment, control and challenge help build self-esteem and promote positive thinking. Here are some other suggestions.

7 Suggestions for Building Positive Attitudes
  • In every class, look for positive people to associate with.
  • In every lecture, look for one more interesting idea.
  • In every chapter, find one more concept important to you.
  • With every friend, explain a new idea you've just learned.
  • With every teacher, ask a question.
  • With yourself, keep a list of your goals, positive thoughts and actions.
  • Remember, you are what you think, you feel what you want.
Posted by Kancha at 21:55:44 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |


        Reading Books Is Important To Development



We always tell our children how important reading is but have you ever stopped to think about why it is so important? What exactly does it do for children, and for adults? What is the real purpose behind learning to read?

Reading is important for many reasons. Some of these reasons are very practical, while others less tangible, and not so obvious. When we teach our children to read at an early age and to improve their reading we are preparing them to be productive adults in the future.

Not only is reading a required skill to complete school and then university it is also a needed skill in adult hood. The ability to read and learn new things through out your life keeps your brain young and health.

With the ability to read comes the ability to understand and comprehend new subject matter that you have not previously been expose do. Perhaps you have a health problem you wish to research. If you can read well you can learn plenty about your health issue.

People that predict the future previously predicted that printed material would go by the way side with the advent of higher technology. In fact the opposite has occurred. With the advent of the internet more and more reading is required on a daily basis. There will never be the paperless society that was once believed to be just around the corner.

Rather what the computer has done is give the operator’s the ability to take data and reproduce it over and over in different reports and documents. So rather than decreasing the amount of reading it has actually increased the amount of reading. Because computers have the ability to endlessly analyze we know can read on endlessly.

When you are surfing around the internet reading various information you must have a good level of reading in order to sore through the information, sorting out authentic information from junk. As important as reading is, you must also be able to think critically to help determine truth from fiction.

It’s a known fact that the more children read the better they can read. The more they can read and the better the comprehension becomes the more they enjoy reading. Reading actually becomes much more than a fundamental need. It becomes an enjoyable pass time.

If you get your children to read out loud they will learn proper grammar and pronunciation. Reading out loud enhances their spoken language development and helps them learn to express themselves clearly and concisely.

By exposing your children to books, magazines, and the web your children will be exposed to new words. Even if they don’t quite understand the work they will figure it out through association or the use of a dictionary. This not only allows their vocabulary to grow it deepens their level of understanding.

Reading opens doors for your child that will continue through to adulthood. They can learn about things that interest them but that they are not able to physically explore. Space is a great example. Perhaps your child has an interest in the stars. Well of course they cannot visit the other solar systems but by being able to read they can bring the solar systems to them and learning can be a lifetime adventure. And of course with the web the amount of free information available has grown by leaps and bounds.

So with books or any form of reading no longer do far away places need to be foreign or not understood. This has another added benefit. As adults the more we understand the more accepting we are and the less afraid we become of the unknown which is no longer unknown.

You’ve all heard the term “global village.” This is how the world is now seen. With technology came the ability to unite with people from another part of the globe. And when you feel in touch with another culture you tend to care a great deal more about what happens to them. They become real and exist in your world. So improved reading can actually lead to a more peaceful world.

Books also allow children to roll play. They can pretend they are a King, a great warrior, a caveman. They can place themselves in the story. Look what has become with Harry Potter. The phenomenon grew like wild fire and not just movie attendance. The books have sold in record numbers. Because reading gives you the chance to engulf yourself in the story and become part of it.

Reading can also enhance a child’s social skills. Although reading is normally a solitary activity it can be a social activity as well. A parent reading to a child encourages social interaction. A class room that has a reading hour encourages social interaction. Reading groups bring children together to read and discuss books which are excellent for developing social skills, especially analytical social skills.

E-books which are found on line can improve your child’s fine motor skills and their eye hand coordination. They must type click and pick. Move forward, backwards, and otherwise interact with their screen and keyboard to get the material they want.

As you can see reading is a vital skill that all children need to master. Do your child a favor and spend extra time with them to help them learn to read. There is no other skill you will teach your child that will have as much impact throughout their life. Once your children appreciate the magic of reading a whole new world opens up to them. Reading does matter!

Deon Melchior is the Editor and Publisher of Article Click. For more FREE articles for your ezine and websites visit ArticleClick.com. Article Click is a free content article directory. This means that as a publisher you may reprint the articles that are included in our site, as long as the article is unedited and the author box is included with it's live hyperlinks.

Posted by Kancha at 21:50:01 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |