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Reported from Steve Quayle:
- Earthquake
Rattles Southern Colorado, New Mexico (August
12, 2005)
- A 4.9 magnitude earthquake - according to authorities the largest
recorded in the area - shook Southern Colorado and Northern New
Mexico on Wednesday afternoon, alarming people but producing few
reports of damage. The U.S. Geological Survey National Earthquake
Information Center in Golden reported the quake struck around 4:08
p.m. with an epicenter 25 miles west-southwest of Trinidad in New
Mexico. Early indications are that it was the largest recorded
earthquake in Colorado this year, according to USGS geophysicist
Grant Richardson. "We haven't seen anything that large in
Colorado in quite a while," he said. more...
- Fire
in Ice (August 12, 2005)
- Gas hydrates are a class of materials that Sir Humphrey Davy first
described in the early 1800s. They since have been defined as
"an ice-like crystalline mineral in which hydrocarbon gases and
non-hydrocarbon gases are held within rigid cages of water
molecules" (Sassen et al. 2001). Described in this way, gas
hydrates may not sound very interesting or important, but they are.
If you hold a hydrate nodule in your hand and light it with a match,
it will burn like a lantern wick. There is fire in this ice. more...
- Gulf
of Mexico Mystery (August 12, 2005)
- About 20 dead sea turtles have washed ashore in Pinellas County in
the past three days, an extremely high number that has doctors and
scientists puzzled. One of the two survivors that's being kept at
the Clearwater Marine Aquarium is a large, loggerhead turtle named
Siratti Sam. "I still don't know if he'll make it," said
Dr. Janine Cianciolo. "It's little movements. Yesterday, he
wasn't moving at all. [He's] still not in water because he's not
keeping his head above water for long enough periods of time."
It's not clear why the various kinds of sea turtles are washing
ashore. "It may or may not be associated with red tide,"
said Cianciolo. "They tend to show symptoms of what's called a
red tide intoxication, but you have to take a lot of samples and
they must go through testing to actually determine that."
more...
- Mystery
Odor in Florida (August 12, 2005)
- McCarty and other officials can't explain the odor. Many Pinellas
County residents are wondering what's causing an awful smell. Some
attribute it to red tide, while others say it's from a gas leak. The
situation started Thursday morning when Pinellas Emergency Services
received several phone calls from people saying they smelled propane
in Largo, Madeira Beach and Seminole. Seminole Fire Rescue responded
to the calls. "There is a heavy odor in the area," said
Allison McCarty with Seminole Fire Rescue. "We have responded
to all the 911 calls, as we are supposed to. We have an actual gas
meter that we can detect the air quality [with]. And there's no
reading of any gas in the area. There's no propane, although it
smells like it. It appears that [it's] something related to the
gulf, something coming in off the gulf." The Florida Fish and
Wildlife Conservation Commission said it hasn't received any odor
complaints in the area.
- Big
Storm Wreaks Devastating Havoc (August 12, 2005)
- In a small canyon miles north of Phoenix, a little girl slipped
away. It seemed improbable: Moments earlier, Marissa Sabrina Reyes,
7, was sitting with her grandparents, mother and infant sibling at
the family's home north of Carefree. Then the walls of water came:
12- to 15-foot waves that crashed through the small canyon where
their house was perched, ripping Marissa from the hands that were
grasping to help her. Wednesday, a day after a torrential monsoon
storm devastated parts of the Valley, searchers recovered Marissa's
body about 1 1⁄2 miles from where she was last seen alive.
Tuesday's storm hit particularly hard, killing not only Marissa but
also a 65-year-old man who was trapped in his overturned truck when
water suddenly raged through a river near an Interstate 17 frontage
road. more...
- Siberia's
rapid thaw causes alarm (August 12, 2005)
- The world's largest frozen peat bog is melting, which could speed
the rate of global warming, New Scientist reports. The huge expanse
of western Siberia is thawing for the first time since its
formation, 11,000 years ago. The area, which is the size of France
and Germany combined, could release billions of tonnes of greenhouse
gases into the atmosphere. This could potentially act as a tipping
point, causing global warming to snowball, scientists fear. more...
Reported from harpazo Ready:
- Tisha
B'Av: Does the Divine Cry? (August 12, 2005)
- On Tisha B'Av, the ninth day of the Hebrew month of Av (which this
year begins at nightfall August 13), Jews mourn over the loss of the
Holy Temple, Beis HaMikdash in Hebrew, that stood in Jerusalem. On
this day, the Babylonians destroyed the First Temple in 586 BCE.,
and the Romans demolished the Second Temple in 70 C.E.. Each Tisha
B'Av, we have a custom to read Eicha, or the Book of Lamentations, a
painful account of the prophet Jeremiah's intense sorrow over the
destruction of the First Temple. In addition to reading the Eicha,
we abstain from any physical pleasures the entire day. We are not
allowed to eat, drink, wash our bodies for enjoyment or wear leather
shoes. A little less-known Halacha, or Jewish law, is that we are
not allowed to say hello to each other. This law is perhaps the most
difficult for me and yet the most meaningful. In Jerusalem in the
summertime, when there are many new faces to meet and old friends to
greet, not saying hello to people saddens me deeply. If only we felt
the simple pain of not saying hello to each other and internalized
the meaning of this mournful act, perhaps we would then be more
careful to warmly and lovingly greet each other and not hurt each
other. more...
- Scientists'
Belief in God Varies Starkly by Discipline (August
12, 2005)
- About two-thirds of scientists believe in God, according to a new
survey that uncovered stark differences based on the type of
research they do. The study, along with another one released in
June, would appear to debunk the oft-held notion that science is
incompatible with religion. Those in the social sciences are more
likely to believe in God and attend religious services than
researchers in the natural sciences, the study found. The opposite
had been expected. Nearly 38 percent of natural scientists -- people
in disciplines like physics, chemistry and biology -- said they do
not believe in God. Only 31 percent of the social scientists do not
believe. In the new study, Rice University sociologist Elaine Howard
Ecklund surveyed 1,646 faculty members at elite research
universities, asking 36 questions about belief and spiritual
practices. "Based on previous research, we thought that social
scientists would be less likely to practice religion than natural
scientists are, but our data showed just the opposite," Ecklund
said. more...
- Israeli
hawks circle Iran's N-plants (August
12, 2005)
- Ever since its 1979 Islamic revolution the only fate Iran has had
in mind for Israel has been simple: its destruction. Now that
Teheran seems to be moving towards acquiring its own nuclear
arsenal, its plans for its great enemy threaten to be both fiery and
radioactive. Sometimes Iran's stated policy towards Israel is
couched in inflammatory rhetoric, like that on a 40ft banner that
used to hang outside the entrance of the foreign ministry in Teheran
bearing the message: "Israel Must Burn". Sometimes the
language is tamer, such as the "Down With Israel" chants
of students who march after Friday prayers in Teheran week in, week
out. But whatever the tone, the message remains the same. The Jewish
state has survived wars, internal upheaval, intifadas and bloody
entanglements in the internal affairs of its neighbours. But now a
major enemy, one committed to its annihilation, appears close to
deploying the most destructive force known to Man. more...
- Yesha
Council: Block Access to Gaza Strip (August
12, 2005)
- An estimated 1,000 buses brought in protesters from all over
Israel. Earlier police assessments had predicted only 50,000
protesters would come to demonstrate. Leaders of the Yesha Council
of settlements presented to the crowd the settlers' plan - called
"Orange Dawn" - to prevent the disengagement from taking
place. One leader, Tzvika Bar-Hai, told the protesters to make their
way to Israeli towns near the Gaza Strip "on Monday by car, by
bus, and by foot. We will then leave for the entrances into Gush
Katif. "We will not be stopped at checkpoints, we will
bypass them from the right and from the left. We will not raise a
hand against police and army personnel, we will reach our
destination by use of our bodies and with our children. We will not
confront anyone," Bar-Hai told the crowd. "Neither the
blows of police or the batons of Border Police will deter us. We
will glue ourselves to the ground until the prime minister faces the
people and tells them he will hold new elections," he
added. Yesha Council chairman Bentzi Lieberman also called for new
Knesset elections at the rally and said the settlers would have
accepted a decision to withdraw from Gaza if it had been made
democratically. Participants received instructions on how to begin
their protest after the Tisha B'Av fast, which ends Sunday night. more...
- IDF
and PA Step Up Security Coordination for Pullout (August
12, 2005)
- The IDF said there has been a sharp drop in Palestinian terrorism
in the Gaza Strip, which the army chalks up to a concentrated effort
to pressure by the PA, assisted by the Egyptians, on terror groups.
On Sunday they will meet again for a final pre-pullout meeting and
joint or adjacent operations rooms will be inaugurated to coordinate
the deployment of forces. By Monday night the Palestinians are to
deploy 7,500 security personnel near the settlements, to prevent
Palestinian marches on the communities before they are evacuated,
and to thwart rocket, mortar and shooting attacks. more...
e-mail: watchmanbiblestudy comcast.net
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