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What A Week It Was: Apocadocuments from
View By Scenario:
Species Collapse:(6)
Plague/Virus:(1)
Climate Chaos:(8)
Resource Depletion: (4)
Biology Breach:(9)
Recovery:(6)
This Week's Top Ten Very Scary Tags:
health impacts  ~ pesticide runoff  ~ oil issues  ~ wetlands  ~ carbon emissions  ~ climate impacts  ~ bird collapse  ~ endocrine disruptor  ~ ocean acidification  ~ falling fertility  ~ soil issues  



ApocaDocuments (34) gathered this week:
Sun, May 25, 2008
from Ventura County Star:
Poor soil lowers world's production of food
"...Soils around the world are deteriorating with about one-fifth of the world's cropland considered degraded in some manner. The poor quality has cut production by about one-sixth, according to a World Resources Institute study. Some scientists consider it a slow-motion disaster." ...


Ooooooh.... nooooooo.... saaaaay... itttt... aaaaaain't.... soooooo....!

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Sun, May 25, 2008
from London Independent:
Coca-Cola to phase out use of controversial additive after DNA damage claim
"Coca-Cola, the world's biggest soft drinks company, is phasing out a controversial additive that may cause hyperactivity and DNA damage. By August, no cans of Diet Coke should contain the preservative sodium benzoate." ...


But don't things go better with sodium benzoate?

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Sun, May 25, 2008
from Agence France-Presse via Terra Daily:
Five Arctic powers to meet in Greenland
"Representatives of the five countries bordering the Arctic will meet in Greenland on Wednesday to discuss the impact of climate change on the icy region -- and how to divide up its as-yet untapped rich resources." ...


Sounds like a cold day in hell to me.

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Sun, May 25, 2008
from Houston Chronicle:
Tufts global warming study eyes cost of doing nothing
Doing nothing about global warming would cost America dearly in the rest of this century because of stronger hurricanes, higher energy and water costs, and rising seas that would swamp coastal communities, according to a new study by economists at Tufts University. ...


But it will make for some great reality TV!

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Sun, May 25, 2008
from London Guardian:
So what's Plan Bee?
"In the last few months, the British Beekeepers' Association (BBKA), which claims almost 12,000 members, has begun speaking words of doom. 'Nation's honeybees could be wiped out in 10 years' the organisation claimed in December." ...


Honey, I screwed up the planet.

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Sun, May 25, 2008
from Chicago Tribune:
Haven for birds still harbors traces of chemical poison
"Some of Illinois' rarest and most imperiled birds return each spring to marshes on Chicago's Southeast Side, where they weave nests of loose reeds, start the season's courtship rituals and, scientists believe, resume ingesting a poison most people thought was gone a generation ago. Researchers studying the state's endangered population of black-crowned night herons reported this year that the birds contain remnants of the insecticide DDT, a contaminant popularly imagined to have faded into America's hazy chemical past, but which scientists say has lingered in a persistent form almost everywhere in the world nonetheless." ...


DDT... the poison that keeps on poisoning!

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Sun, May 25, 2008
from Washington Post (US):
Nations urge deep emission cuts by US, Japan
"KOBE, Japan -- European and developing countries urged the United States and Japan on Sunday to commit to deep cuts in greenhouse gas emissions by 2020 -- a step they say is needed to defuse a coming ecological disaster caused by global warming... The United States, however, has not committed to a midterm goal, demanding that top developing countries like China also commit to reductions. Japan has called for emissions by industrialized countries to begin to fall in the next one or two decades, but it too has stopped short of setting a 2020 target." ...


Na-na-na-na-na! We're not gonna do it til YOU do! So there!

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Sun, May 25, 2008
from Houston Chronicle:
Drought turning futures to dust
"APALACHICOLA BAY, FLA. — Longtime oysterman Keith Millender sees every shower taken or car washed in metropolitan Atlanta as a small threat to his family, which has harvested seafood from northwest Florida's Apalachicola Bay for generations. The Apalachicola River — which carries water more than 300 miles from Georgia's Lake Lanier into the bay, providing the delicate balance of freshwater and saltwater oysters need to thrive — is running dry." ...


How long before these water disagreements turn to water war?

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Sat, May 24, 2008
from National Wildlife Federation via ScienceDaily:
Dramatic Impact Of Sea-Level Rise On Chesapeake Bay's Coastal Habitats
"A new report ... shows in vivid detail the dramatic effects of sea-level rise on the largest estuary in the US, which sustains more than 3,600 species of plants, fish and animals including great blue herons and sea turtles. If global warming continues unabated, projected rising sea levels will significantly reshape the region's coastal landscape, threatening waterfowl hunting and recreational saltwater fishing in Virginia and Maryland, according to the report by the National Wildlife Federation." ...


Since global warming doesn't seem to be abating, everybody better start heading for the hills.

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Sat, May 24, 2008
from University of Florida via ScienceDaily:
Invasion Of Gigantic Burmese Pythons In South Florida Appears To Be Rapidly Expanding
"The invasion of gigantic Burmese pythons in South Florida appears to be rapidly expanding, according to a new report from a University of Florida researcher who’s been chasing the snakes since 2005." ...


And boy, do they have a taste for the snowbirds!

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Sat, May 24, 2008
from Science News:
Ocean reflux
"Seawater with the potentially shell-disrupting chemistry predicted for the open ocean after 2050 has already surfaced along North America's West Coast, scientists report. In spring 2007, the corrosive, deep water rose temporarily to the Pacific surface some 40 kilometers roughly west of the California-Oregon border, says Richard Feely of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory in Seattle." ...


We can't believe we ate the whoooooole thing.

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Sat, May 24, 2008
from BBC:
Vast cracks appear in Arctic ice
"Scientists travelling with the troops found major new fractures during an assessment of the state of giant ice shelves in Canada's far north. The team found a network of cracks that stretched for more than 10 miles (16km) on Ward Hunt, the area's largest shelf... One of the expedition's scientists, Derek Mueller of Trent University, Ontario, [explained]: "It means the ice shelf is disintegrating, the pieces are pinned together like a jigsaw but could float away." ...


The jigsaw metaphor is great, but wouldn't Humpty Dumpty be even more to the point?

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Fri, May 23, 2008
from NOAA, via EurekAlert:
New study finds most North Pacific humpback whale populations rebounding
The new research reveals that the overall population of humpbacks has rebounded to approximately 18,000 to 20,000 animals. The population of humpback whales in the North Pacific, at least half of whom migrate between Alaska and Hawaii, numbered less than 1,500 in 1966 when international whaling for this species was banned. In the 1970s, federal laws including the Marine Mammal Protection Act and the Endangered Species Act provided additional protection. ...


Once upon a time we made some laws that protected and nurtured the world, instead of legalizing the raping and pillaging of it.

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Want more context?
Try reading our book FREE online:
Humoring the Horror of the Converging Emergencies!
More fun than a barrel of jellyfish!
Fri, May 23, 2008
from European Science Foundation, via EurekAlert:
Ocean acidification -- another undesired side effect of fossil fuel-burning
"Ocean acidification is more rapid than ever in the history of the earth and if you look at the pCO2 (partial pressure of carbon dioxide) levels we have reached now, you have to go back 35 million years in time to find the equivalents"... A maximum allowed change in pH, where the system is still controllable, needs to be found. This is a major challenge considering the multifaceted unknowns that still are to be clarified. This so-called "tipping point" is currently estimated to allow a drop of about 0.2 pH units, a value that could be reached in as near as 30 years. More research and further modeling needs to be undertaken to verify the predictions. ...


Um, yeah. More research is needed to determine this point before we tip it.

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Fri, May 23, 2008
from Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture:
Oregano oil works as well as synthetic insecticides to tackle common beetle pest
Not only does oregano oil work as well as synthetic versions but it has none of the associated side effects of synthetic insecticides on the environment. Growing resistance to synthetic insecticides combined with potential environmental damage and new government directives on changes to the way chemicals are registered means that scientists are increasingly looking at natural alternatives that can be produced in the large scale quantities needed for agricultural industry use. ...


Now, what pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizer will we need, to grow a really bumper crop of oregano?

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Fri, May 23, 2008
from Aquatic Conservation, via EurekAlert:
Over 50 percent of oceanic shark species threatened with extinction
The experts determined that 16 out of the 21 oceanic shark and ray species that are caught in high seas fisheries are at heightened risk of extinction due primarily to targeted fishing for valuable fins and meat as well as indirect take in other fisheries. In most cases, these catches are unregulated and unsustainable. The increasing demand for the delicacy 'shark fin soup', driven by rapidly growing Asian economies, means that often the valuable shark fins are retained and the carcasses discarded. Frequently, discarded sharks and rays are not even recorded. ...


If only sharks were warm and fuzzy and cute.

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Thu, May 22, 2008
from Associated Press:
Governor: Alaska to challenge polar bear endangered listing
"The state of Alaska will sue to challenge the recent listing of polar bears as a threatened species, Gov. Sarah Palin announced Wednesday. She and other Alaska elected officials fear a listing will cripple oil and gas development in prime polar bear habitat off the state's northern and northwestern coasts. Palin argued that there is not enough evidence to support a listing. Polar bears are well-managed and their population has dramatically increased over 30 years as a result of conservation, she said. Climate models that predict continued loss of sea ice, the main habitat of polar bears, during summers are unreliable, said Palin, a Republican." ...


Unreliable? Or just not what she wants to hear?

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Thu, May 22, 2008
from Associated Press:
USDA axes the sole national survey to chart pesticide use
"Consumers lost a key source of information about what's sprayed on their food on Wednesday, the last day the government published a long-standing national survey that tracks the amount of pesticides used on everything from corn to apples. Despite opposition from prominent scientists, the nation's largest farming organizations and environmental groups, the U.S. Department of Agriculture confirmed Wednesday it plans to do away the program." ...


What we don't know surely can't hurt us!

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Thu, May 22, 2008
from Chemical and Engineering News:
Groups Petition EPA To Ban Endosulfan
Widely used pesticide is an endocrine disrupter and neurotoxicant... EPA estimates that farmers use approximately 1.4 million lb of endosulfan each year in the U.S. The pesticide is used extensively on cotton, tomatoes, potatoes, and apples, but residues of it have been detected in numerous other foods, including cucumbers, green peppers, raisins, cantaloupe, spinach, and even butter, according to the petition. Endosulfan has been detected in humans and the environment, including remote areas such as the Arctic, where it is not used. ...


Let's see, which would I prefer: blemishes on my tomatoes, or blemishes in my brain function?

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Thu, May 22, 2008
from Guardian (UK):
Shell 'selling suicide' by preferring tar sands to wind
Shell was accused yesterday of "selling suicide on the forecourt" by pressing ahead with tar sands operations in Canada and continuing to flare off excess gas in Nigeria while pulling out of renewable schemes such as the London Array - the world's largest offshore wind scheme. The accusation that Shell was irresponsibly adding to climate change was made by an unnamed shareholder at its annual meeting in The Hague after Shell chief executive Jeroen van der Veer insisted the company was doing all it could to meet rising demands for energy while reducing CO2 emissions. Shell would listen to all stakeholders but he warned "ultimately it will not be possible to meet fully everyone's expectations". ...


The price of suicide may closely track the price of oil.

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Thu, May 22, 2008
from AP, via Belleville News-Democrat:
Conservationists auction off frog naming rights
Amphibian Ark, an international collaboration of conservationists working to save frogs, is organizing the effort to auction the naming rights to five species of frogs on the Internet - one frog a month for five months. Profits will fund efforts to protect frogs at a crucial time, said Kevin Zippel, Amphibian Ark's program director. Amphibians have been on the planet for 360 million years, but based on recent science, "This is the greatest extinction rate they've ever faced," he said. ...


Cool! I think I'll bid for
Itstoolatebutwe apologii.

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Wed, May 21, 2008
from World Wildlife Fund via ScienceDaily:
Biodiversity Loss Puts People At Risk: World Wildlife Fund
"Future generations face hunger, thirst, disease and disaster if we carry on losing biodiversity. And as biodiversity plummets our use of resources soars. WWF now estimates that biodiversity has declined by more than a quarter in the last 35 years." ...


WWF must stand for We're Worrywart Fussbudgets.

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Wed, May 21, 2008
from American Chemical Society via ScienceDaily:
Simple, Low-cost Carbon Filter Removes 90 Percent Of Carbon Dioxide From Smokestack Gases
"Researchers in Wyoming report development of a low-cost carbon filter that can remove 90 percent of carbon dioxide gas from the smokestacks of electric power plants that burn coal and other fossil fuels. The study describes a new carbon dioxide-capture process, called a Carbon Filter Process, designed to meet the need. It uses a simple, low-cost filter filled with porous carbonaceous sorbent that works at low pressures." ...


Dude, this news is sooooo carbonaceous!

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Wed, May 21, 2008
from Guardian (UK):
Oil hits record near $130 as supply fears grow
Crude oil prices scaled a new peak near $130 a barrel on Tuesday amid deepening worries over tight global stockpiles and signals from OPEC that no additional supplies are forthcoming to ease the crunch. Billionaire investor T. Boone Pickens said Tuesday he expected oil to hit $150 a barrel this year. The prediction came on the same day two investment banks raised their 2008 crude price forecasts and two weeks after Goldman Sachs said a barrel could fetch $200 by 2010. "There's a feeling that some of these forecasts of $150 oil might be right," said Peter Beutel, president of Cameron Hanover. "So why not buy it now, rather than later?" ...


There's a feeling that some of these forecasts are telling us something.

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Wed, May 21, 2008
from Institute for Children:
Learning and Developmental Disabilities Initiative Publishes Scientific Consensus Statement on Environmental Factors
"Given the established knowledge, protecting children from neurotoxic environmental exposures from the earliest stages of fetal development through adolescence is clearly an essential public health measure if we are to help reduce the growing numbers of those with learning and developmental disorders and create an environment in which children can reach and maintain their full potential." ... "We could cut the health costs of childhood disabilities and disease by billions of dollars every year by minimizing contaminants in the environment..." "The overwhelming evidence shows that certain environmental exposures can contribute to life-long learning and developmental disorders"... ...


We is learning.

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Wed, May 21, 2008
from Washington Post (US):
Effects of Nanotubes May Lead to Cancer, Study Says
Microscopic, high-tech "nanotubes" that are being made for use in a wide variety of consumer products cause the same kind of damage in the body as asbestos does, according to a study in mice that is raising alarms among workplace safety experts and others. Within days of being injected into mice, the nanotubes -- which are increasingly used in electronic components, sporting goods and dozens of other products -- triggered a kind of cellular reaction that over a period of years typically leads to mesothelioma, a fatal form of cancer, researchers said. ...


Hmm. I wonder if Haliburton's involved in nanotubes too?

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You're still reading! Good for you!
You really should read our short, funny, frightening book FREE online (or buy a print copy):
Humoring the Horror of the Converging Emergencies!
We've been quipping this stuff for more than 30 months! Every day!
Which might explain why we don't get invited to parties anymore.
Tue, May 20, 2008
from London Times:
Obesity fuels growing 'boy-boob' problem
"Obesity has been blamed for the growing problem of "boy-boobs" – cases of teenage boys with breasts so well developed that surgery is needed to reduce them. Doctors at Alder Hey Hospital in Liverpool say that they are seeing dozens of teenagers every year with gynaecomastia, the condition in which males develop breasts." ...


Why have surgery? Maybe this is just a way for these lads to get in touch with their feminine side.

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Tue, May 20, 2008
from Reuters UK:
Flu bugs growing resistance to drugs: studies
"Seasonal flu viruses are developing the ability to evade influenza drugs globally, but how and why this is happening is not clear, experts told a conference on Monday. Europe is the worst-affected by strains of influenza that resist the effects of antiviral drugs, but the resistance is growing globally, they told a meeting of the Infectious Diseases Society of America." ...


Pretty soon, they may be so smart, they'll stop being seasonal and start being all year long!

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Tue, May 20, 2008
from TIME Magazine:
What Condoms Have to Do with Climate Change
"As the director of the Central Intelligence Agency, Gen. Michael Hayden should have some insight on the biggest threats facing the U.S. But when Hayden recently described what he saw as the most troublesome trend over the next several decades, it wasn't terrorism or climate change. It was overpopulation in the poorest parts of the world. "By mid-century, the best estimates point to a world population of more than 9 billion," Hayden said in a speech at Kansas State University. "Most of that growth will occur in countries least able to sustain it." The sheer increase in population, Hayden argued, could fuel instability and extremism, not to mention worsening climate change and making food and fuel all the more scarce. Population is the essential multiplier for any number of human ills." ...


Malthusian enthusiasts are orgasmic over this speech.

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Tue, May 20, 2008
from BBC:
Climate 'accelerating bird loss'
Climate change is "significantly amplifying" the threats facing the world's bird populations, a global assessment has concluded. The 2008 IUCN Bird Red List warns that long-term droughts and extreme weather puts additional stress on key habitats. The assessment lists 1,226 species as threatened with extinction - one-in-eight of all bird species. ...


This is how you kill many birds with one stone climate change.

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Mon, May 19, 2008
from Associated Press:
Recycling options lag the compact fluorescent push
"It's a message being drummed into the heads of homeowners everywhere: Swap out those incandescent lights with longer-lasting compact fluorescent bulbs and cut your electric use. Governments, utilities, environmentalists and, of course, retailers everywhere are spreading the word. Few, however, are volunteering to collect the mercury-laced bulbs for recycling — despite what public officials and others say is a potential health hazard if the hundreds of millions of them being sold are tossed in the trash and end up in landfills and incinerators." ...


We're so good at making stuff and so bad at figuring what to do with it once we don't want it anymore.

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Mon, May 19, 2008
from Planet Ark via Reuters:
UN Experts To Say 2010 Biodiversity Target Elusive
"Up to 5,000 delegates and some heads of state, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel, will try to agree at the Convention of Biological Diversity in the German city of Bonn on ways to save plant and animal species. UN experts say the planet is facing the worst spate of extinctions since the dinosaurs died out 65 million years ago and some say three species vanish every hour as a result largely of human activity causing pollution and loss of habitat." ...


What's a few more extinctions here or there?

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Mon, May 19, 2008
from Planet Ark via Reuters:
US Changes Course, Bans Drilling In Arctic Wetland
"The Bush administration on Friday proposed keeping potentially oil-rich wetlands in Arctic Alaska off-limits to drilling because of their ecological sensitivity, a reversal of its earlier plan. The Bureau of Land Management proposed a 10-year leasing moratorium for 430,000 acres of wetlands north and east of vast Teshekpuk Lake in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska. Environmentalists and local groups hailed the decision." ...


The polar bear plight has suddenly made this administration all touchy-feely!

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Mon, May 19, 2008
from Toronto Globe and Mail:
A sea of synthetic trash
"...The United Nations estimates that each square kilometre of ocean carries 13,000 pieces of debris, but this area in the north Pacific has something like 330,000 pieces per square kilometre. Now, armed with proof that the plastic is making its way into the human food chain, experts warn the existence of the garbage patch and its far-reaching implications could be just as imminent as the worldwide food shortage and the effects of global warming." ...


Perhaps refugees from regions devastated by global warming could live here.

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Other
Weeks' Archived
ApocaDocuments:

Sep 26 - Dec 31, 1969
Sep 19 - Sep 26, 2011
Sep 12 - Sep 19, 2011
Sep 5 - Sep 12, 2011
Aug 29 - Sep 5, 2011
Aug 22 - Aug 29, 2011
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