Saturday, February 11, 2012

OPINIONS

If a Pastor Falls

Letter to the Editor:
The allegations against Bishop Eddie Long move me to seek the Lord for more mercy and grace upon my own soul. They also provide an opportunity for all believers to consider what we should expect of the pastor’s morality...

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Why Black Christian Church Must Disband

Letter to the Editor:
Overwhelming troubles  facing  racial group  is  evidence  of  broken  covenant with the  God  of  Abraham,  Isaac  and Jacob.  ...

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Weather

Latest Washington, D.C., weather
Scientists Predict Larger ‘Dead Zones’ in Gulf
Written by Marian Wang, Propublica   
Thursday, 01 July 2010 08:13

Federally-funded scientists predicted a "larger than average" dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico this year, but said it's unclear what the oil spill's effects on the dead zone will be.

Dead zones are underwater areas where oxygen levels are so depleted that they're inhospitable to most marine life. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, these hypoxic (or low-oxygen) areas develop in the Gulf every summer. (Quick science lesson: Typically, nutrient runoff stimulates growth of algae that gets decomposed by oxygen-consuming bacteria, leading to dead zones.)


Here's NOAA, quoting one of the scientists:

"The oil spill could enhance the size of the hypoxic zone through the microbial breakdown of oil, which consumes oxygen, but the oil could also limit the growth of the hypoxia-fueling algae," said R. Eugene Turner, Ph.D., professor of oceanography at Louisiana State University. "It is clear, however, that the combination of the hypoxic zone and the oil spill is not good for local fisheries."

These scientists, however, made no mention of the "astonishingly high" levels of methane gas found by another crew of scientists-levels that were as much as 1 million times normal levels in some areas of the Gulf.

Methane, a primary component of natural gas, accounts for anywhere from 40 to 70 percent of the flow from BP's well.

According to John Kessler, a Texas A&M University oceanography professor, all this extra methane could spur the growth of bacteria that consume oxygen, exacerbating the oxygen problem.

BP spokesman Mark Proegler disputed the suggestion that the Gulf's deep waters harbor large amounts of methane. He told the Associated Press that the company is burning off gas at the surface, and that "the gas that escapes, what we don't flare, goes up to the surface and is gone."

 

 


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