Solar Eclipse 2012: How to See “Ring of Fire” Today

Solar Eclipse 2012: How to See “Ring of Fire” Today

May 20, 2012

This weekend, a “time traveling” solar eclipse will turn the familiar disk of the sun into a ring of fire for sky-watchers in parts of Asia and the U.S. West.

Known as an annular eclipse, the event is the first of its kind to be visible from the mainland United States since 1994. The region won’t see another such eclipse until 2023.

Watch a live feed of the May 20-21 annular eclipse.

Like a total solar eclipse, an annular eclipse happens when the moon lines up between Earth and the sun. But in this case, the dark moon’s apparent diameter is smaller than the visible disk of the sun, leaving a ring—or annulus—of fiery light around the edges. (See annular eclipse pictures.)

During such an eclipse, “the path of annularity, where the full eclipse will be visible, is hundreds of miles wide and thousands of miles long,” said eclipse expert Jay Pasachoff, the Field Memorial Professor at Williams College in Massachusetts.

In this path, “viewers looking through special solar filters can see a ring of sunlight around the black silhouette of the moon,” said Pasachoff, who is also a National Geographic Society grantee. (National Geographic News is a division of the Society.)

The annular eclipse starts in China at local sunrise on May 21. The path of the moon’s shadow then goes over Japan around 7:35 a.m., local time, and races across the Pacific Ocean.

(Also see “Eclipses in Ancient China Spurred Science, Beheadings?”)

Due to the time zone change, the eclipse makes landfall again in North America in the late afternoon of May 20, starting at the California-Oregon border at 6:26 p.m. PT.

The annular eclipse then crosses southern Nevada, southern Utah, the Grand Canyon in northern Arizona, the lower-left corner of Colorado, and most of New Mexico before ending in the area of Lubbock, Texas, around sunset at 8:36 p.m. CT.

For most viewers in the path of annularity, the eclipse will last for a just over four and half minutes.

Active Sun to Add Beauty to Eclipse

Some picturesque wilderness areas—including several U.S. national parks—will be in the 190-mile-wide (300-kilometer-wide) path of the full annular eclipse.

Viewers in a broader track stretching for thousands of miles across northeastern Asia and the western two-thirds of the U.S. and Canada will instead see a striking partial eclipse.

“Unlike a total eclipse, in which the sun is entirely covered and the sky therefore gets dark, it never gets dark during an annular eclipse like this one,” Pasachoff said.

“So the only loss in view from being off to the side of the zone of totality is that you won’t see a complete ring and things won’t appear symmetric, but you’ll still be able to see a partial eclipse of the sun.”

(See partial eclipse pictures.)

The best chances for clear skies during the event will be in states such as Nevada, Arizona, and Utah, added Anthony Cook, an astronomer at the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles.

“But most of the path in the Western U.S. has better than even odds of clear enough weather to observe the eclipse,” he said.

Cook also predicts some added beauty with this eclipse, since it occurs close to the expected maximum of the current solar cycle in early 2013.

“We can expect interesting moments when sunspots of various sizes will be covered by the advancing limb of the moon, then later uncovered as the moon retreats from the sun’s face,” he said.

(Related: “Solar Eclipses Can [Slightly] Change Weather on Earth.”)

To view the eclipse safely, astronomers recommend using either a professionally manufactured solar filter in front of a telescope or camera, or using eclipse viewing glasses that sufficiently reduce the sun’s brightness and filter out damaging ultraviolet and infrared radiation.

But probably the safest and easiest way to take in the eclipse is to use the pinhole projection method, Williams College’s Pasachoff said.

“Punch a one-eighth to one-quarter-inch hole in a piece of cardboard and use it to create a projection of the partial or annular phases on a wall a few feet away,” he said.

Eclipse as a Science Tool

The Griffith Observatory’s Cook says scientists will probably also be making use of this weekend’s annular eclipse.

(Also see “Eclipse Expert Makes Hot Finds in Sun’s Darkest Hour.”)

“Radio telescopes close to the path of annularity will make observations as the moon passes over sunspots and other sources of radio disturbances on the sun,” he said.

Sunspots are linked to eruptions of intense electromagnetic radiation called solar flares, which can cause disturbances to radio communications on Earth and also hinder radio astronomers’ views of the universe. (Find out more about solar storms in National Geographic magazine.)

“Also,” Cook said, “precise timing of the onset of annularity can provide data on possible changes in the diameter of the sun when compared with historical measurements.”

Site Link:  http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2012/05/120520-solar-eclipse-2012-ring-of-fire-annular-sun-science-how-see-where/

Common Vaccine Ingredient Linked To Kidney Injury
March 12, 2012

[reprinted with permission by Dr. Suzanne Humphries. Original title: "Common vaccine ingredient implicated in NEJM article as causative in serious type of kidney disease."]

A June, 2011 New England Journal Of Medicine article titled “Early-Childhood Membranous Nephropathy Due to Cationic Bovine Serum Albumin”[1] recently caught my attention. Namely, because it admits the plausible association between circulating cationic bovine(cow) serum albumin (BSA, a common vaccine ingredient) and a very difficult-to-treat form of kidney disease called idiopathic membranous nephropathy (IMN). Skeptics often demand peer-reviewed articles to support the fact that vaccines cause bodily harm. Often, while we know what we see in front of us, “scientific” proof is non-existent due to lack of motivation by researchers in exploring the likely associations.

Well, here in one of the world’s most respected medical journals lies some very interesting information, and it was conducted by two renowned nephrologists. Dr. Giuseppe Remuzzi is an expert in the field of protein trafficking within the kidney, and Dr. Pierre Ronco is a well-known and highly respected nephrologist.

First, let me explain what nephrotic syndrome and membranous nephropathy are. Nephrotic syndrome is a condition where the kidneys leak large amounts of protein into the urine and is defined in detail HERE. The term just describes a clinical condition that can have one of several causes. This article discusses one cause called membranous nephropathy. (Read more)

Birth Controll Pill Recalled Re Packaging Flaws?

Pfizer cites packaging flaws in birth control pill recall| Fox News

Februray 2, 2012

Published February 02, 2012 — The Wall Street Journal

  • LoOvral.jpg

    A correctly packaged Lo/Ovral pack. Lo/Ovral was one of the brands involved in the Pfizer recall.Pfizer

SUMMARY

Pfizer said Wednesday that it believes only 30 packs had packaging problems, including having the active and inert tablets out of order, or lacking the proper amount of each kind of pill. The company said it recalled a million packs in the U.S. to be safe

Drug maker Pfizer Inc. recalled about a million packs of birth-control pills that weren’t packaged correctly, which raised the risk of unplanned pregnancies among women who relied on the pills.

Pulled from shelves were Lo/Ovral-28 pills and their Norgestrel generic versions, which doctors have been prescribing for years to tens of thousands of women. The pills come in blister packs containing a mix of 21 active tablets and seven that are inert. As guided by the packs, women are supposed to take a certain pill each day in order to prevent pregnancy, taking the inert pills at the end of a monthly cycle.

Pfizer said Wednesday that it believes only 30 packs had packaging problems, including having the active and inert tablets out of order, or lacking the proper amount of each kind of pill. The company said it recalled a million packs in the U.S. to be safe.

The Food and Drug Administration hasn’t received any reports of adverse events, such as unintended pregnancies, and the agency is investigating, according to an agency spokeswoman. Pfizer said it hadn’t received reports either, while noting that it had only just alerted the public.

The pills were made and shipped last year by a Pfizer plant in upstate New York, on the Canadian border. To encourage proper use, active pills in the packs are colored white, while the inert tablets are pink. An alert customer noticed that her pack had a pink pill where a white one should have been, and complained to the company on Oct. 19, a Pfizer spokeswoman said.

Investigating the complaint, Pfizer discovered that some blister packs of pills had an extra active pill at day 22 or 28, one pack lacked an active tablet at day 10 and another pack lacked a placebo tablet at day 24, the FDA spokeswoman said.

Pfizer identified three glitches in its production of the packs that could, on rare occasion, result in improper packaging, a Pfizer spokeswoman said. The problems: The design of the packaging line could allow for incorrect placement of the pills; a mechanical system for detecting defective packs could miss one in “very, very infrequent” times; and plant workers could also miss problem packs. The company said it has since fixed the problems.

Pfizer notified pharmacies and distributors on Dec. 28 that it was recalling the pills, according to an FDA spokeswoman. The company believed, based on the “low defect rate and our health-hazard assessment,” that providing public notice wasn’t necessary, but then went public late Tuesday following an FDA request, a Pfizer spokeswoman said.

Women who miss birth-control pills—say, by taking an inert pill when they should take an active one—are at risk of an unintended pregnancy because they may ovulate in the absence of the hormonal medicines meant to prevent it.

A list of the affected lots is available at www.pfizer.com.

Click here to read more on this story from The Wall Street Journal. 

In Solidarity: SOPA Protest Gets Intended Effect!

SOPA protest gets intended effect
By Roger Yu, USA TODAY

Updated

The Internet community’s rally cry against anti-piracy legislation is triggering its intended effect,though the final outcome remains far from settled.
STAN HONDA, AFP/Getty Images

People hold signs at a protest by the group New York Tech Meetup outside the offices of U.S. Democratic Senators from New York Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand on Third Avenue in New York. Schumer and Gillibrand are co-sponsors of the Senate bill PIPA (Protect Intellectual Property Act).

Lawmakers on Capitol Hill were flooded with calls Wednesday morning in response to an online blackout by technology companies, including Wikipedia, Moveon.org, Reddit and thousands of other small sites protesting two related bills that would crack down on websites that use copyrighted materials and sell counterfeit goods. Some key lawmakers who’ve supported or co-sponsored the legislation are also backing off.

Many of the sites that went dark Wednesday explained the legislation and entreated users to call their representatives by listing their phone numbers and e-mail addresses.

(Link: http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/technology/story/2012-01-18/SOPA-PIPA-protest-reaction/52641560/1)

Voluntary Recall of Limited Quantity of 6-pack 250 mL Martinelli’s Gold Medal Sparkling Cider

Voluntary Recall of Limited Quantity of 6-pack 250 mL Martinelli’s Gold Medal Sparkling Cider
http://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/ucm285808.htm?source=govdelivery

Contact:
Consumer:  Recall Hotline 1-800-662-1868
Customer_Service@martinellis.com

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – December 30, 2011 -As a precautionary measure, certain production lots of Martinelli’s Gold Medal® Sparkling Cider in six-pack shrink-bundled 250 mL glass bottles are being recalled in the Western United States due to the possibility of a defective seal that could break when opening the bottle.

The six-pack shrink-bundled 250 mL Martinelli’s Gold Medal Sparkling Cider “Best By” dates being recalled are:

    11 APR 2014         12 APR 2014          13 APR 2014        14 APR 2014   

These production codes can be found on the front, lower corner of the bottle label under the words “BEST BY:” in a gold colored box.

They are for case UPC 4124499932, six-pack UPC 4124446256, and single bottle UPC 4124400256.

Consumers who have purchased the recalled products are asked to return the product to the store where it was purchased for product replacement or credit.

Note: The 750 mL size of Martinelli’s Gold Medal Sparkling Cider is NOT affected and is NOT part of this recall.

For further information, contact the Recall Hotline at 1-800-662-1868, ext 333, or email us at Customer_Service@martinellis.com

S. Martinelli & Company, a family-owned business in Watsonville, California, has been producing award-winning apple juice & apple cider since 1868.  For more information, visit www.martinellis.com

###

Implantable RFID Chips Are Here

naturalnews.com
Originally published October 26 2011
New World Order: Implantable RFID chips capable of remotely killing non-compliant ‘slaves’ are here
by Ethan A. Huff, staff writer

(NaturalNews) Positioned as the solution to eliminating identify theft, lost wallets and purses, and a host of other information breaches, the all-inclusive implantable RFID tracking chip is gaining momentum for widespread implementation. Recent news reports indicate that an RFID tracking chip capable of killing humans (that presumably do not comply with rogue government demands) has already been invented.

There is simply no denying the fact that “the powers that be” are working towards microchipping all of humanity. Countless news reports, including those compiled in the following YouTube clip, openly speak of microchips designed for implant into human skin:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yl2L…

But what many people do not realize is that this technology exists now, and has already been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in humans. Not only do these chips “silently and invisibly” store and transmit personal data, but they can also be encoded to perform a variety of other functions (http://arstechnica.com/old/content/…).

Beginning at 00:42, the YouTube clip contains a segment on a “killer” RFID microchip that, upon being remotely triggered, can send a lethal dose of cyanide into a person’s skin. The FOX News reporter that introduces the segment can be heard saying that the chip “will kill you if you get out of line” (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yl2L...).

Later in the YouTube compilation around 04:45, Chairman and CEO of Applied Digital Solutions Scott Silverman, who happens to have a “VeriChip” in his own arm, promotes the technology as useful and beneficial during a CNBC segment. Several of the hosts can be heard questioning Silverman about the “slippery slope” of the technology, and how it could be used to control the world’s populations.

The PositiveID Corporation, which produces the VeriChip, has also announced that the Israeli Military recently ordered implantable microchips for its soldiers. The stated reason for this is that the chips will supposedly aid in “disaster preparedness and emergency management” (http://www.rfidnews.org/2011/10/11/…).

Assuming that they will only be used for the benign-sounding purposes that their proponents claim (which is highly unlikely), human microchips are a privacy nightmare that is much worse than credit cards and cash. Because human microchips transmit information via RFID and GPS signals, criminals can easily hijack personal information by intercepting transmission signals. (Article Link)

Sources for this article include:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yl2L…

http://www.rfidnews.org/2011/10/11/…

Phthalates: The Sweet Smell of an Environmental Hazard?

Phthalates: The Sweet Smell of an Environmental Hazard?  : Internal Medicine News.

Blognosis

Phthalates: The Sweet Smell of an Environmental Hazard?

October 18, 2011

Their fragrance may be pleasant, but their health impact is unclear, and possibly dangerous.

Phthalates are a class of chemicals primarily used to treat plastics to make them flexible, but they are also ubiquitous in artificial fragrances: air sprays, plug ins, detergents and cleansers, and scented candles.


Mitchel Zoler/Elsevier Global Medical News

“Almost no home product does not have a fragrance, and we don’t need these things,” Jerome Paulson said last week at a meeting on children’s health and the environment.

Phthalates are endocrine-disrupting chemicals, and while the evidence remains preliminary so far they may potentially cause important disruptions to human reproductive development and function, trigger allergies, and are possibly carcinogenic.

“To the extent that we worry about phthalates [for these possible health effects], we don’t need these things,” said Dr. Paulson, a specialist on the health effects of the environment at Children’s National Medical Center in Washington, D.C. His argument is: Why should modern society and manufacturers insist on prettifying the odors of so many commercial products with compounds that may pose health risks?

“If you had a law that banned all fragrances, I think the long-term benefit would be large,” he said. He went on to advise those at the meeting to “take the precautionary approach and get them out of your life even though we can’t [currently] prove that they are bad” for human health.

—Mitchel Zoler (on Twitter @mitchelzoler)

Artical Link:  http://www.internalmedicinenews.com/views/blognosis-the-internal-medicine-news-blog/blogview40836/phthalates-the-sweet-smell-of-an-environmental-hazard/8a0956eeb6.html

 

Supplementary Calcium, Not Dietary, Linked to Kidney Stones

Supplementary Calcium, Not Dietary, Linked to Kidney Stones.

This Labor Day we need protest marches rather than parades – CSMonitor.com

This Labor Day we need protest marches rather than parades – CSMonitor.com.


This Labor Day we need protest marches rather than parades

It’s been the worst decade for American workers in a century. That hardly calls for a celebration.

Verizon worker Steven Simard, of Danvers, Mass., holds a placard and chants slogans from a picket line outside a Verizon office, in Boston. Conditions for American workers warrant protests rather than picnics.

Steven Senne/AP/File


By Robert ReichGuest blogger / August 25, 2011

Labor Day is traditionally a time for picnics and parades. But this year is no picnic for American workers, and a protest march would be more appropriate than a parade.

Robert ReichRobert is chancellor’s professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor under President Clinton. He has written 13 books, including ‘The Work of Nations,’ ‘Locked in the Cabinet,’ and his most recent book, ‘Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future.’ His ‘Marketplace’ commentaries can be found on publicradio.com and iTunes.

Not only are 25 million unemployed or underemployed, but American companies continue to cut wages and benefits. The median wage is still dropping, adjusted for inflation. High unemployment has given employers extra bargaining leverage to wring out wage concessions.

All told, it’s been the worst decade for American workers in a century. According to Commerce Department data, private-sector wage gains over the last decade have even lagged behind wage gains during the decade of the Great Depression (4 percent over the last ten years, adjusted for inflation, versus 5 percent from 1929 to 1939).   (Read more)

The Wheels Come Off the Bus on Genetically Engineered Crops!

The Wheels Come Off the Bus on Genetically Engineered Crops! | Welcome to the Alliance for Natural Health – USA.

The Wheels Come Off the Bus on Genetically Engineered Crops!

Posted By ANH-USA On July 26, 2011 @ 1:00 pm In Uncategorized

GE grass

Despite a lack of independent safety testing, the government has seen fit to declare there will be no oversight of a genetically engineered grass. Is this the beginning of a GE avalanche?

Just before the July 4th weekend, the USDA released a statement saying that the agency has no authority to regulate genetically engineered (GE) Kentucky bluegrass. This leaves Kentucky bluegrass completely unregulated—and sets the precedent for a complete lack of oversight of GE crops in the future [1]. This is extremely worrying: there are very few independent studies investigating the safety of genetically modified organisms (GMOs), and the ones that have been published show that GMOs can have very dangerous long term effects.

Oversight of GE crops is extremely lax, because there is no federal law specific to their regulation [2]. The USDA only has two provisions that apply to GMOs—the regulation of plant pests, and the noxious weed provision.

The Plant Pest Act—a law established in the 1950s—gives the USDA power to restrict the introduction of organisms that might harm plants. In a bit of a stretch, the USDA has used this power to regulate GE crops. The reasoning is that GE crops qualify as “plant pests” because historically the DNA from natural plant pathogens/microbial material (bacteria, fungi, etc.) was used in the genetic engineering of various plants.

However, this is increasingly no longer the case. Kentucky bluegrass, for example, doesn’t use the DNA from plant pests at all. Accordingly, the makers of Kentucky Bluegrass, Scotts Miracle-Gro, claims the USDA has no authority over them [3] since “Kentucky bluegrass itself is not a plant pest, and no plant pest components will be involved in the transformation.” And on July 1, the USDA agreed [4], sending the Scotts Miracle-Gro Company official confirmation [5] on Kentucky bluegrass’s regulatory status.

In 2000 the Plant Pest Act was expanded to allow the USDA to also regulate noxious weeds, and became the Plant Protection Act. This is significant, because we believe this provision gives USDA the authority to regulate GE Kentucky bluegrass: any engineered crop that threatens to go rogue in the field and become a hard-to-control weed may be regulated. In this case, pollen is light enough to be carried for miles in the wind, causing gene transfer with non-GE crops; and bluegrass spread rapidly.

However, even though the USDA admitted that GE bluegrass could be considered a noxious weed, the agency declared it still would not “cause impact significant enough to warrant regulation at the federal level” [6]—a position we find both absurd and unconscionable.

(READ FULL ARTICLE)

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