Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Night. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Night. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Hai, 25 tháng 3, 2013

Meteor lights up night sky over eastern United States

By Daniel Trotta

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A meteor bright enough to be classified as a fireball lit up the night sky over eastern North America on Friday, providing a spectacle witnessed in at least 13 states, Washington, D.C. and two Canadian provinces, the American Meteor Society said.

The society verified more than 300 witness sightings from Ontario and Quebec down to the southern U.S. state of North Carolina with more than 100 reports yet to be reviewed, said Mike Hankey, an observer for the American Meteor Society.

"This was most certainly a fireball seen over a good portion of the eastern states," said Robert Lunsford, the society's fireball coordinator.

"It happened at a good time, around 8 o'clock on a Friday night, when a lot of people were out to see it," Lunsford said.

The society describes a fireball as a meteor brighter than Venus and Lunsford said they can be brighter than the Sun, as was the case with the one that streaked across the sky and exploded over Russia on February 15.

Meteors are small particles from the solar system that burn from friction when entering the atmosphere.

Several thousand meteors of fireball magnitude occur each day, most of them unseen over the oceans or hidden by daylight, the society said on its website.

This one was seen up and down the East Coast and in inland states such as West Virginia and Ohio, the society said.

The fireball's likely trajectory showed it moving east from eastern Pennsylvania and across New Jersey, passing just south of New York City and then over the Atlantic Ocean, based on witness reports to the society.

"I originally thought the fireball was a low-flying plane," said one witness from West Chester, Pennsylvania, whose comments were logged by the society.

Many witnesses called it the brightest meteor they had ever seen. "I'm still in disbelief," said another from Boonsboro, Maryland.

(Editing by Todd Eastham)


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Chủ Nhật, 24 tháng 3, 2013

Meteor lights up night sky over eastern United States

By Daniel Trotta

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A meteor bright enough to be classified as a fireball lit up the night sky over eastern North America on Friday, providing a spectacle witnessed in at least 13 states, Washington, D.C. and two Canadian provinces, the American Meteor Society said.

The society verified more than 300 witness sightings from Ontario and Quebec down to the southern U.S. state of North Carolina with more than 100 reports yet to be reviewed, said Mike Hankey, an observer for the American Meteor Society.

"This was most certainly a fireball seen over a good portion of the eastern states," said Robert Lunsford, the society's fireball coordinator.

"It happened at a good time, around 8 o'clock on a Friday night, when a lot of people were out to see it," Lunsford said.

The society describes a fireball as a meteor brighter than Venus and Lunsford said they can be brighter than the Sun, as was the case with the one that streaked across the sky and exploded over Russia on February 15.

Meteors are small particles from the solar system that burn from friction when entering the atmosphere.

Several thousand meteors of fireball magnitude occur each day, most of them unseen over the oceans or hidden by daylight, the society said on its website.

This one was seen up and down the East Coast and in inland states such as West Virginia and Ohio, the society said.

The fireball's likely trajectory showed it moving east from eastern Pennsylvania and across New Jersey, passing just south of New York City and then over the Atlantic Ocean, based on witness reports to the society.

"I originally thought the fireball was a low-flying plane," said one witness from West Chester, Pennsylvania, whose comments were logged by the society.

Many witnesses called it the brightest meteor they had ever seen. "I'm still in disbelief," said another from Boonsboro, Maryland.

(Editing by Todd Eastham)


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Thứ Ba, 19 tháng 3, 2013

Zimbabwe rights lawyer to spend 3rd night in jail

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — Prominent Zimbabwean rights lawyer Beatrice Mtetwa was set to spend a third night in jail Tuesday after a court adjourned a hearing on charges she faces of allegedly obstructing justice.

Police brought her to court after ignoring a judge's order to release her Monday.

Her arrest, the day after a referendum on a new Zimbabwe constitution, prompted an outcry from African and international law organizations.

"Her arrest is not just an attack on her profession but on the people of Zimbabwe who have just voted yes to a new constitution that enshrines fundamental human rights," said her lawyer, Thabani Mpofu.

Mtetwa, arrested Sunday while representing four officials of the prime minister's party being searched by police, arrived at the Harare magistrate's court in an open-back police truck. She greeted colleagues and activists with a spirited wave but was not allowed to speak to reporters.

In court, state prosecutors alleged the four officials in Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's office, including his chief legal advisor, were compiling information, some of it in breach of official secrets laws, to discredit the nation's judicial officials for allegedly not prosecuting corrupt politicians.

Mtetwa's arrest was a ploy to stop her from defending officials of Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change party, her attorney argued in court Tuesday.

State prosecutors objected to bail for Mtetwa and the officials and Gofa adjourned the court to resume Wednesday.

Mtetwa was led by prison officials to the basement cells of the courthouse for transportation to the main Harare remand prison.

Mtetwa's arrest was "patently senseless" at a time when she wanted to act on behalf of suspects on Sunday, argued Mpofu, her lawyer.

"Her intimidation was of unwarranted proportion which reflects badly on our institutions," he said.

She was abused by the police in "the high-handed manner in which they treated her by handcuffing her and throwing her into the back of an open truck as if she was a threat to police and national security," Mpofu said.

While in custody, police confiscated her mobile phone and went through it in breach of norms of attorney-client confidentiality.

"There is no basis to act in such a manner to a lawyer of over 30 years," said her lawyer.

He said when locked in a cell two male police officers at around midnight even tried to remove prison-issue blankets from her.

To the charge she shouted at police officers and attempted to prevent them from doing their duty, Mtetwa,  in her written testimony, said she told the police she wanted to see their search warrants but was ignored.

"What you are doing is unlawful, unconstitutional and undemocratic," she told the officers, Mpofu said.

The police response was to arrest her, he said.

Justice Charles Hungwe issued an order around 1 a.m.Monday (2300 GMT Sunday) for arresting officers to immediately release Mtetwa.

But police refused to obey the order and Mtetwa was still held in police cells on Monday. 

The action showed that Zimbabwe "is a state that is prepared to act like an outlaw," Mpofu told the court.

Obstructing justice carries a maximum penalty of two years in prison.

Mtetwa has represented Tsvangirai and several of his top aides in past cases brought against them. She has also defended human rights defenders and journalists. She holds an array of international awards, including those from the American Bar Association and the main European Bar Human Rights body.


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Thứ Tư, 13 tháng 3, 2013

Wanna See What Keeps Sharks Up at Night? Look in the Mirror

New Zealand native Ryan Johnson arrived in South Africa in 1998 to undertake postgraduate studies in zoology. The following year he was given the opportunity to conduct research on the great white shark at Dyer Island near Gansbaai, an area known for its dense population of sharks.

Scientists must simply step up and utilize the mass media and public dialogue to supply and spread the truth about how vulnerable sharks are and how poorly we are managing them.

Living on Dyer Island for a year, Johnson investigated the impact of the white shark cage diving industry on sharks and also whether it was making the fish more dangerous to humans. This experience led to a fascination with sharks and a passionate career that’s been dedicated to their protection.

TakePart recently caught up with Johnson to gauge his concern for the survival of the great white and other shark species, and the significance of including great whites on the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).

TakePart: For those unfamiliar with your background, tell us a bit about your work with Oceans Research and Oceans Aware?

Ryan Johnson: After my work on Dyer Island, I began my own research career, but having an entrepreneurial bent I opted to found my own research institute rather than seek employment at a university or established institute. To achieve this, I enlisted the support of three of my colleagues and we founded Oceans Research. Our goal was to create an organization where passion allowed people to thrive and make their own contributions to researching and conserving marine life in southern Africa.

Following this, I realized that for conservation efforts to be successful, there has to be education, awareness, and legislative initiatives in addition to research. Thus came the formation of Oceans Aware, an organization dedicated to educating youth about the marine environment and empowering them to make wise choices when it comes to protecting this vital resource.

In 2004 you were part of a team that tracked a great white shark named Nicole on a 20,000 kilometer journey from South Africa to Australia and back—the longest ever recorded tracking of a great white shark. How did this research help get great whites listed on CITES?

It was a major component in the movement to get the white shark listed on CITES. But there was also other research that was central to the CITES effort. For instance, the satellite tracking of California’s white sharks into the middle of the pacific oceans. The basic premise of all this research was that national protection was insufficient to safeguard this species due to the fact that it is an ocean wanderer and is not restricted to occurring within a single nation’s exclusive economic zone. As such, effective management of the resource requires international cooperation. CITES restricts cross-border trade in CITES listed species and was the most powerful tool available to protect the white shark on an international scale.

There’s been a lot of controversy around the process of chumming—where scientists dump a mixture of water, fish oil, and mashed parts of sardines into the water to attract sharks so that they can attach satellite and sonar tags to them. You co-authored a paper in 2006 that indicated that this practice doesn’t, as some believe, increase shark attacks on humans. Do you think people have come to accept this view, or are they still fearful that there’s a link between the two?

Shark attacks are always going to be incredibly emotional. And when humans try to understand such a tragic loss of life they seek answers and they seek ways that they can control the situation to stop such tragedy in the future. With white sharks, the fact that people interfere with them (chumming and baiting) for research and for tourism does not sit well with user groups who feel they are vulnerable to a shark attack. These water users believe that if they can stop humans from interfering with white sharks via chumming and baiting then sharks will not bite them. This is unfortunately not the case, and white sharks will continue to bite on rare occasions for as long as people and white sharks coexist. Chumming and baiting does not make these sharks more likely to attack a human they encounter—it is simply not how conditioning works.

But truth be told, with so much emotion invested into this argument, it is near impossible to change the minds of those who believe that chumming and baiting endangers them and their friends. I personally try to keep a dialogue going, but there comes a point where you have to agree to disagree. Fortunately for the scientific and shark tourism community, the government in South Africa has assessed the evidence in a non-emotional and pragmatic manner and continues to support these activities.

A number of news reports have stated that even though South African officials have come across fisherman equipped with tackle designed to catch white sharks—and are fishing in areas that are known to be great white aggregation sites—the authorities say that intent can’t be sufficiently established to lead to a successful prosecution. Why is this and how can the laws be changed?

The law is in fact in place and fishermen can be prosecuted for simple intent. That is, throwing in tackle in an area where the fishermen has a reasonable knowledge that he may catch a white shark. There is utterly no defense for a fisherman if caught throwing in tackle that can land a great white in a white shark aggregation site.

The issue was that compliance officers and the government did not have confidence or knowledge to allow a good prosecutor to illustrate this. Luckily with the Leon Bekker case, the state provided an excellent prosecutor who explained all this to the judge and defense attorney which resulted in Mr Bekker [who was accused of abusing a great white] pleading guilty. I believe this case has given compliance officers and the government the confidence to do their work since they understand the law is behind them. 

How can we increase awareness among the general population to the fact that great white sharks are an endangered species?

The reality is that the scientific community has traditionally been reluctant to actively take a position in public dialogue with regards to many of the misconceptions about sharks and management. By not doing so, you allow people who are less informed to push agendas without restraint. Scientists must simply step up and utilize the mass media and public dialogue to supply and spread the truth about how vulnerable sharks are and how poorly we are managing them. The days when scientists could hide away in their laboratories is over.

Could you tell me about some of the other shark species that are at risk and outline some of the factors that are contributing to the reduction in their numbers?

Today, most sharks are at risk as the shark fin soup trade is not picky about where the fins come from. In South Africa, the sharks I’m very concerned with are the pelagic species such as blue sharks, mako sharks, porbeagles, etc. They do not have the eyes on them that many of the coastal species do. But the guys who go out and look for them are seeing them getting smaller in size, and rarer by the year.

The main issue is that the consummate demand from the market is outpacing the ability of the government to conduct research, let alone put in place informed and effective management plans. By the time such research and legislation is in place, many of these populations would already be hugely over exploited.

What do you think governments should be doing to protect the great whites and other sharks? Tell us in the COMMENTS below.

Related Stories on TakePart:

• Are You Eating Fins in Your Soup?

• 10,000 Shark Fins Drying on a Hot Tin Roof

• Shark Reportedly Saves Man Lost at Sea


Lawrence Karol is a writer and editor who lives with his dog, Mike. He is a former Gourmet staffer and enjoys writing about design, food, travel and lots of other stuff. @WriteEditDream | Email Lawrence | TakePart.com


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