Feed aggregator

Rosetta saw cliffs collapse on comet

BBC - Wed, 2017-03-22 00:30
The comet visited by the Rosetta spacecraft is constantly being re-shaped, sometimes in dramatic fashion, a study suggests.
Categories: Around The Web

Space view of Earth's magnetic rocks

BBC - Tue, 2017-03-21 21:32
Earth's history is recorded in the magnetisation of its hard, outer shell.
Categories: Around The Web

Satellite eye on Earth: February 2017 – in pictures

The Guardian - Tue, 2017-03-21 21:09

Vibrant vegetation in a Venezuelan lake, Saharan dust in snowy Sierra Nevada, cloud vortices in South Korea, a vast solar farm in China, and a lone ship in the Atlantic are among our satellite images this month

Every so often, a vibrant green colour infuses the waters of Lake Maracaibo. Floating vegetation – likely duckweed – was swirling in the Venezuelan lake when Nasa’s Aqua satellite flew over in February 2017. Most of the time, Maracaibo’s waters are stratified into layers, with nutrient-rich, cooler, saltier water at the bottom, and a warmer, fresher layer near the surface. But after heavy rains, the layers can mix and make the lake an ideal habitat for plant growth. A narrow strait roughly 6km (4 miles) wide and 40 km (25 miles) long connects the lake to the Gulf of Venezuela and the Caribbean Sea. The influx of saltwater through the strait makes Maracaibo an estuarine lake. This mixing causes the water currents responsible for the concentric swirl pattern, according to Lawrence Kiage, a professor of geoscience at Georgia State University.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Spaceport protest delays rocket launch in French Guiana

BBC - Tue, 2017-03-21 20:49
Striking workers block the roll-out of the booster at the Kourou spaceport in French Guiana.
Categories: Around The Web

'Step change' needed to create more woodland

BBC - Tue, 2017-03-21 19:19
Too little new woodland is being created in England, say MPs, amid warnings of a "tree planting crisis".
Categories: Around The Web

'Extreme and unusual' climate trends continue after record 2016

BBC - Tue, 2017-03-21 19:19
The world continues to experience extreme climate trends after a record breaking 2016, says WMO.
Categories: Around The Web

Spider venom may offer stroke therapy

BBC - Tue, 2017-03-21 19:12
Protein extracted from funnel webs may help minimise the effects of brain damage after a stroke.
Categories: Around The Web

Perfect touch: man-made works that dovetail with nature – in pictures

The Guardian - Tue, 2017-03-21 17:00

From a red bridge emerging from mist in rural Japan to a tiered stream stepping down a hillside, Toshio Shibata’s photographs – gathered for a new exhibition in New York – take a positive view of our impact on the landscape

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Let the lapwing's joyful call not fade into silence

The Guardian - Tue, 2017-03-21 15:30

Claxton, Norfolk Lapwing song was the omnipresent soundtrack of all my childhood springs. Now it has gone from behind our family home

Part of the charm of lapwings is that they look silly, a friend says, and I can surmise what she means. It’s the ridiculous crest, the unnecessary breadth of wing, which gives them so much more aerial lift and loop than they require, and then there’s the zaniness of their spring display. Nor should we leave out the high-pitched notes that pass for song and which remind me of a dog’s squeaky play bone wheezing in and out of tune as the animal chews.

Yet lapwings are too ingrained in a lifetime of memory for me to think them only silly. They are the first sounds I awakened to as a naturalist in Derbyshire, whose nests we came upon in the grass like a revelation, and whose blotched-brown Easter eggs seemed a kind of miracle.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

How healthy soils make for a healthy life

The Conversation - Tue, 2017-03-21 13:45
Soils play an important role in the nutritional value of our food.

The next time you bite into an apple, spare a thought for the soils that helped to produce it. Soils play a vital role, not just in an apple’s growth, but in our own health too.

The formation of soil, pedogenesis, is a very slow process. Creating one millimetre of soil coverage can take anything from a few years to an entire millennium.

But with soils around the world under threat, we’re in danger of losing their health benefits faster than they are replaced.

Healthy soils for healthy plants

A healthy soil is a living ecosystem in which dead organic matter forms the base of a food web consisting of microscopic and larger organisms.

Together, these organisms sustain other biological activities, including plant, animal and human health. Soils supply nutrients and water, which are vital for plants, and are home to organisms that interact with plants, for better or worse.

In the natural environment, plants form relationships with soil microbes to obtain water, nutrients and protection against some pathogens. In return, the plants provide food.

The use of mineral fertilisers can make some of these relationships redundant, and their breakdown can lead to the loss of other benefits such as micronutrients and disease protection.

Certain farming practices, such as tillage (or mechanical digging), are harmful to fungi in soils. These fungi play important roles in helping plants obtain crucial nutrients such as zinc.

Zinc is an essential micronutrient for all living organisms. Zinc deficiency affects an estimated one-third of the world’s population, particularly in regions with zinc-deficient soils. If food staples such as cereal grains are grown on zinc-deficient soils and further lack their fungi helpers, they become deficient in zinc.

If the way food is grown affects the composition and health of plants, could farming practices that focus on soil health make food more nutritious? A recent review on fruits says yes.

The researchers found that fruits produced under organic farming generally contained more vitamins, more flavour compounds such as phenolics, and more antioxidants when compared with conventional farming. Many factors are at play here, but pest and soil management strategies that benefit soil organisms and their relationship with plants are part of the equation.

The composition and function of animals and humans reflects, to some extent, what they eat. For example, the fish you eat is only rich in omega-3 fatty acids if the fish has eaten algae and microbes that manufacture these oils. The fish itself does not produce these compounds.

Increasing numbers of studies are demonstrating the link between nutrition and human health issues. We know, for example, that antioxidants, carbohydrates, saturated fat content and the ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 fatty acids contribute to immune system regulation.

We do not produce some of these nutrients; we must obtain them through our food. Therefore, how food is grown is a matter of public health.

Beyond nutrition

Soil is the greatest reservoir of biodiversity. A handful of soil can contain millions of individuals from thousands of species of bacteria and fungi, not to mention the isopods, rotifers, nematodes, worms and many other identified and yet-to-be-identified organisms that call soil home.

Soil microbes produce an arsenal of compounds in their chemical warfare for dominance and survival. Many widely used antibiotics and other drugs were isolated from soil. It may hold the answers to our battle with antibiotic resistance and other diseases including cancer.

It has also been suggested that exposure to diverse microbes in the natural environment can help prevent allergies and other immune-related disorders.

The road to healthy soils

Unfortunately, we are doing a poor job of looking after our soils. About two-thirds of agricultural land in Australia is suffering from acidification, contamination, depletion of nutrients and organic matter, and/or salinisation. And in case anyone forgets, soil is every bit as non-renewable as oil because soil formation is such a slow process.

On the other hand, soil erosion can happen very quickly. For a taste of what happens when soils are destroyed, nothing beats sitting through a dust storm and watching day turn into night. Dust storms inspired George Miller’s film Mad Max: Fury Road.

In the 2009 Red Dawn in Sydney, some 2.5 million tonnes of soil were lost within hours to the ocean in a 3,000km-long, 2.5km-high dust plume.

Australia’s major cities began on fertile land. Melbourne’s food bowl can supply 41% of the city’s fresh food needs. Such secure access to fresh and whole food needs our protection.

Healthy soils are part of the solution to some of our dilemmas – poverty, malnutrition and climate change – as they underpin processes that gives us food, energy and water. If we want to meet the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals, soil health is a linchpin we cannot ignore.

From this perspective, agricultural practices to maintain healthy soil are clearly an important target for policymakers. Looking after our soils ultimately means looking after ourselves.

The Conversation

Ee Ling Ng works at the Australian-China Joint Research Centre: Healthy Soils for Sustainable Food Production and Environmental Quality. She receives funding from the Department of Industry, Innovation and Science.

Deli Chen receives funding from Australia Research Council, Meat Livestock Australia, Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research.

Categories: Around The Web

No Beta version of Tesla Model 3, going directly to “early release candidate”

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2017-03-21 12:55
Musk says no “Beta” version of the Tesla Model 3, and Tesla to begin driving early release candidate within week or two.
Categories: Around The Web

Solar, driverless airport shuttle among SA grant winners

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2017-03-21 12:31
Adelaide Airport's solar powered, autonomous shuttle bus service one of seven successful applicants to SA Future Mobility Lab Fund.
Categories: Around The Web

Singapore firm buys more than 300MW Australia wind projects

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2017-03-21 12:30
Singapore's Nexif Energy picks up more than 300MW of Australian wind power assets, including late-stage developments Lincoln Gap and Glen Innes.
Categories: Around The Web

Energy storage: the game changer disrupting the electricity market

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2017-03-21 12:18
Energy storage lies at the heart of grid digitisation and is part of a larger trend of technologies that is disrupting South Australia’s network for the better.
Categories: Around The Web

IEA, IRENA says renewables can provide 80% global power by 2060

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2017-03-21 11:23
Solar is playing an increasingly vital role in the world's decarbonisation, and with wind energy will provide 80 per cent of global electricity needs by 2060.
Categories: Around The Web

Record-breaking climate change pushes world into ‘uncharted territory’

The Guardian - Tue, 2017-03-21 10:39

Earth is a planet in upheaval, say scientists, as the World Meteorological Organisation publishes analysis of recent heat highs and ice lows

The record-breaking heat that made 2016 the hottest year ever recorded has continued into 2017, pushing the world into “truly uncharted territory”, according to the World Meteorological Organisation.

The WMO’s assessment of the climate in 2016, published on Tuesday, reports unprecedented heat across the globe, exceptionally low ice at both poles and surging sea-level rise.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Tesla says Australia market rules outdated, favour incumbents

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2017-03-21 10:33
Tesla says Australian energy market rules stacked in favour of incumbent fossil fuel technologies, need to be changed for battery storage to fulfil potential.
Categories: Around The Web

Japan’s thermal power to drop 40% by 2030

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2017-03-21 10:17
Japanese thermal power generation could decline to 40% below 2015 levels by 2030 as government turns to renewables and energy efficiency.
Categories: Around The Web

Woodside Petroleum to evaluate its portfolio for 2°C target

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2017-03-21 10:15
If Woodside classifies climate change as a material, financial risk, then why doesn’t every other energy company?
Categories: Around The Web

Show me the money! Interest in latest ERF auction slumps

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2017-03-21 10:12
Just 17 new projects have been registered since the last auction, down from 28, ahead of the fourth auction of the Coalition's emissions reduction fund.
Categories: Around The Web

Pages

Subscribe to Sustainable Engineering Society aggregator