Monday, April 30, 2012

Interesting Martian Geology...


Lava coils on the surface of Mars.
Large spirals on Mars, as seen by an orbiting spacecraft.
Image courtesy U. Arizona/NASA
Brian Handwerk
Published April 26, 2012
Hundreds of large spirals have been discovered on Mars, and scientists think the coiled features are evidence of a type of lava flow never before seen on the red planet.
If so, the spirals would suggest that volcanoes—not ice floes, as other experts believe—shaped an unusual area near the red planet's equator.
Athabasca Valles is a region of flow channels and valleys covered with terrain plates, structures that show clear evidence of something fracturing and drifting across the planet's surface millions of years ago.
Scientists have been divided, however, as to whether the plates were made by the hardening of a massive lava flow or by icy "rafts"—much like Arctic pack ice—from an ancient inland sea.
Now, high-resolution pictures of Athabasca Valles from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter have revealed 269 coils up to a hundred feet (30 meters) wide.
"There are no known mechanisms to naturally produce spiral patterns in ice-rich environments on the scale and frequency observed in our study area," study authors Andrew Ryan and Philip Christensen write in a new paper in this week's issue of the journal Science.
Instead Ryan and Christensen, of Arizona State University, think the coils are most similar to features seen in smooth, slow-moving Hawaiian lava flows.
"Everything that we have observed in Athabasca Valles can be formed by lava. Although you could attribute certain features to ice, the lava coils indicate that this is not the case," Ryan told National Geographic News in an email.
Valley Shaped by Ice or Fire?
On Earth, so-called pahoehoe lava flows can move past each other in different directions or at different speeds. The resulting shear produces a twisting motion, which coils the rubbery crust atop the flows into a distinctive shape—one that closely resembles the newfound Martian spirals.
On Earth similar spirals are found underwater on a mid-ocean ridge, where two "conveyor belts" of spreading crust move outward in opposite directions, causing the upwelling lava between them to swirl.
As with many things Martian, however, the new data remain open to interpretation.
John Murray, with the Department of Earth Sciences at the Open University in the U.K., said Ryan's paper is interesting and that the spiral features are quite curious. But Murray still believes that the surface near Athabasca Valles shows the lingering effects of an ancient frozen sea.
"I think there are so many features here that it's difficult to explain them other than [the theory] that this was essentially water that froze and has since sublimated away," he said. Sublimation is when a solid turns directly into a gas.
"There is no lava that behaves in so many different ways."
The appearance of the plates themselves, not the spirals in between, remains a main sticking point for Murray.
"You do get plates in lava, but on the scale of a few meters," he said. "Here you're talking about things which are kilometers long, and the only way you can do that really is to have a liquid that's extremely mobile and fluid—water or something like water.
"If you freeze the top of that, as in the Arctic, you do get ice floes that are several kilometers or more, which is what you get on Mars in this region. You never see anything like that in a lava flow."
A Place to Look for Life?
The debate pitting lava against ice is more than purely geological. If Athabasca Valles does show clear evidence of water ice, the region could become an important target for future Mars astrobiology missions.
"If this really is the remains of a large inland sea, that's where you're going to find life, if there is any there," Murray said.
"Even if the sea was five million years old, there may still be subsurface remains of the ice, and ... microfossil traces could perhaps be found there."
Study author Ryan, meanwhile, is confident the odd features of Athabasca Valles can be explained by volcanism alone.
"I don't believe it would be a very good place to search for life," he said. "However, it is a very interesting place to study the volcanic and geologic history of Mars."

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Fracking, Continued...

The EPA, in a move positively viewed by both industry personnel and environmentalists, revised air quality standards with regards to natural gas wells utilizing hydraulic fracturing, or fracking.  One case in Colorado cited that fracking wells in a county there were responsible for almost 70% of atmospheric benzene (a none carcinogen).  Some people are still very opposed to fracking, but this ruling by the EPA allows the US to continue increasing its domestic energy sources while advocating for the safety and health of  US citizens who live near fracking operations.


First National Fracking Air Emissions Standard Set by U.S. EPA
WASHINGTON, DC, April 18, 2012 (ENS) - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency today issued the first federal air rules for natural gas wells that are hydraulically fractured. Operators of new fractured natural gas wells will be required to use technologies to capture natural gas that might otherwise escape into the atmosphere, threatening public health.
Hydraulic fracturing, or fracking involves the injection of a mixture of chemicals, sand and water under high pressure into rock to release hydrocarbons.
In response to a court deadline in a lawsuit brought by the nonprofit WildEarth Guardians and San Juan Citizens Alliance, the EPA today finalized standards to reduce air pollution by requiring the industry to recover more oil and gas from fractured wells.
Air emissions from fracking operation on Tim and Christine Ruggiero's property in Texas (Photo by Tim Ruggiero)
"By ensuring the capture of gases that were previously released to pollute our air and threaten our climate, these updated standards will not only protect our health, but also lead to more product for fuel suppliers to bring to market," EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson said today. "They're an important step toward tapping future energy supplies without exposing American families and children to dangerous health threats in the air they breathe."
"The President has been clear that he wants to continue to expand production of important domestic resources like natural gas, and today's standard supports that goal while making sure these fuels are produced without threatening the health of the American people," said Jackson.
EPA has updated and broadened two Clean Air Act standards to control gases released during fracking, drilling, pumping, and distribution of natural gas through pipelines to processing facilities.
The final rule does not require new federal permits. Instead, it uses enhanced reporting to strengthen transparency and accountability, and ensure compliance.
An estimated 13,000 new and existing natural gas wells are fractured or re-fractured each year. As those wells are being prepared for production, they emit volatile organic compounds, which contribute to smog formation, and air toxics, including benzene and hexane, which can cause cancer and other serious health effects.
The Clean Air Act requires EPA to set new source performance standards for industries that cause, or significantly contribute to, air pollution that may endanger public health or welfare and to review them every eight years. The existing standards were issued in 1985.
The updated "new source performance standards" and "hazardous air pollutant standards" will require better controls on emissions and require the industry to begin capturing methane, the primary constituent of natural gas.
When released into the atmosphere, methane is a potent greenhouse gas, more than 20 times more potent at trapping the Sun's heat than carbon dioxide, the most abundant greenhouse gas.
Roads and drill pads on Colorado's Roan Plateau, November 2011 (Photo by Anne Pogoriler / Colorado Environmental Coalition)
"These rules are a major American public health milestone," said Jeremy Nichols, WildEarth Guardians Climate and Energy Program director. "With our clean air literally being fracked away across the nation, these rules promise to safeguard our communities and keep the dirty process of drilling in check."
WildEarth Guardians and the San Juan Citizens Alliance say that in many parts of the western United States, drilling and fracking has pushed ground-level ozone, a key ingredient of smog, above legal health limits. In western Wyoming and northeast Utah, smog levels have been higher than those measured in Los Angeles.
The groups point to western Colorado's Garfield County, where drilling has increased by more than 132 percent since 2004, bringing 7,000 new natural gas wells to the region.
The state of Colorado says oil and gas operations in the County are responsible for more than 67 percent of all emissions of benzene, a known carcinogen. Studies by the state show that Garfield County residents face an "unacceptable" risk of cancer as a result.
These findings were confirmed by a peer-reviewed study soon to be published in the journal "Science of the Total Environment," which found that people living near fracking face increased health risks due to benzene and other toxics.
Public demonstrations against fracking have been held across the country. This one at the New York State Capitol in Albany was part of the National Fracking Day of Action, January 23, 2012
Jackson said the updated standards were informed by feedback from a range of stakeholders including the public, public health groups, states and industry. During the nearly 100-day public comment period and three public hearings, the agency received more than 150,000 comments on the proposed rules.
The final standards reduce implementation costs while ensuring they are achievable and can be met by relying on proven, cost-effective technologies as well as processes already in use at about half of all U.S. fractured natural gas wells, Jackson said.
These technologies will not only reduce 95 percent of the harmful emissions from these wells, they will enable companies to collect additional natural gas that can be sold, offsetting the cost of compliance. The EPA estimates that the industry will save from $11 to $19 million each year after the rules are fully implemented in 2015.
Even the regulated industry found something constructive to say about the new standards.
American Petroleum Institute Director of Regulatory and Scientific Affairs Howard Feldman said today he recognizes improvements in the EPA's final air rules for that allow for emission reductions while still allowing for production of oil and natural gas.
"The industry has led efforts to reduce emissions by developing new technologies that were adopted in the rule," said Feldman. "EPA has made some improvements in the rules that allow our companies to continue reducing emissions while producing the oil and natural gas our country needs."
The final rule establishes a phase-in period that will ensure emissions reduction technology is broadly available.
Natural gas drilling, Dimrock, Pennsylvania, August, 2009(Photo by Helen Slottje / Shaleshock)
During the first phase, until January 2015, owners and operators must either flare their emissions or use emissions reduction technology called "green completions," technologies that are already widely deployed at wells. In 2015, all new fractured wells will be required to use green completions.
In a green completion, special equipment separates gas and liquid hydrocarbons from the flowback that comes from the well as it is prepared for production. The gas and hydrocarbons can then be treated and used or sold.
While environmental groups are disappointed that the final rule postpones requiring green completions for two and a half years and does not directly regulate methane, they acknowledge that the rule is a step forward.
"More work needs to be done to ensure people are fully protected from drilling and fracking," said Nichols. "This is a risky process, we can ill-afford to wait for people to get sick or worse before taking steps to keep harmful air pollution out of the air we breathe."
Nationwide, the standards will be the first step toward protecting communities in states with oil and gas operations, particularly California, New York, Pennsylvania, Alaska, and Texas, said Nichols. "Because state air quality regulations must at least be as stringent as federal regulations, the final rules will provide a critically important safety net for public health."
Trip Van Noppen, president of the nonprofit environmental law firm that represented the environmental groups, said, "Left to its own devices, the oil and gas industry has turned the clear skies over Wyoming as smoggy as the car-choked highways of Los Angeles. For decades, industry had a free pollution pass. Thanks to a court victory, that changes today."
Click here to learn more about specific requirements of the new rules.

Friday, April 13, 2012

Play Ball!!

As Pope Benedict, the "green Pope,"  has written several times, we each need to do our best to preserve the earth's resources for future generations.  We need to be good stewards of the earth.  Each of us is only a tenant, a temporary inhabitant, and not a permanent owner of any physical/material thing.


Major League Ballparks Power Up With Sun, Wind
ST. LOUIS, Missouri, April 13, 2012 (ENS) - Missouri's two major league baseball teams have scored solar energy projects. Both the St. Louis Cardinals and the Kansas City Royals have installed solar panels that were up and generating power when the 2012 season opened.
The fans will see the new solar arrays today when the Cardinals and the Royals each host their first games of the 2012 season.
At the Cardinals' home ballpark, Busch Stadium in St. Louis, the defending World Series champion Cardinals and St. Louis-based Microgrid Energy have installed 106 solar panels on the roofs of the concession area and ticket building in the Ford Family Plaza.
The solar array at the stadium's northeast corner will produce up to 32,000 kWh of energy each year. The Cardinals will celebrate Solar Day on April 29 when they play the Milwaukee Brewers.
"We are excited about this installation because of the tremendous impact we expect it to have on raising awareness and educating people on the strong viability of solar in Missouri," says Microgrid Energy CEO Rick Hunter. "The Royals and Cardinals have such a strong presence in our state, so it is exciting to think about the far-reaching impact their solar projects will likely have on growing interest in solar in Missouri."
120 solar panels atop the canopy of Kauffman Stadium's Outfield Experience. (Photo by Chris Vleisides / Royals courtesy Major League Baseball)
At Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, the Royals have partnered with the local electric utility, Kansas City Power & Light, to install a solar array capable of producing 36,000 kWh of energy each year.
The largest in-stadium solar array in the major leagues, 120 solar panels are mounted on the roof of Kauffman Stadium's Outfield Experience canopy facing south.
A kiosk has been placed in the Outfield Experience to inform fans about the benefits of solar energy. Fans can learn how to monitor the production of solar energy and how solar energy benefits Kauffman Stadium and the greater Kansas City region.
"KCP&L is proud to partner with the Kansas City Royals on this project - the largest in-stadium solar array," said Chuck Caisley, KCP&L vice president of marketing and public affairs. "KCP&L has a long-standing history of supporting renewable energy projects and is now excited to be able to do that while supporting America's national pasttime."
Caisley says the solar array could generate enough energy to power refrigeration for all the beverages in the stadium. "So your beer is going to be cooled by the sun," he smiled.
The solar array installation marks the first step in a long-term commitment between the Royals and KCP&L to maximize renewable energy resources at the ballpark, the venue for the 2012 All Star Game.
"The Royals are committed to making Kauffman Stadium one of the most environmentally-friendly facilities in sports," said Kevin Uhlich, Royals senior vice president, business operations. "We are excited to partner with KCP&L to bring the latest technologies in sustainable energy to the ballpark, especially as we prepare for the 2012 All-Star Summer."
New spiral wind turbine at Progressive Field (Photo by Through my windshield)
The partnership ties into the renewable energy initiatives of Major League Baseball, which will be highlighted during the 2012 MLB All-Star Game and festivities in Kansas City this summer.
Five other stadiums have installed solar panels, including the San Francisco Giants' AT&T Park, Colorado Rockies' Coors Field, Arizona Diamondbacks' Chase Field, Boston Red Sox' Fenway Park and the Cleveland Indians' Progressive Field.
At Progressive Field this season, an unusual wind turbine is generating electricity alongside the solar array, the first wind turbine to be installed by a Major League Baseball team.
The newly patented spiral wind turbine is the brainchild of Dr. Majid Rashidi, chairman of Cleveland State University's department of engineering technology, who calls it a "helical wind turbine."
The wind-deflecting structure with small-scale turbines can generate power at low wind speeds. This innovative design is better for urban areas and confined spaces than a long-bladed wind turbine. It is rated at 25,000 kWh, and generates enough electricity to power two typical homes for a year.
Development of the wind turbine was funded through grants from the U.S. Department of Energy.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

The Difference A Year Makes...

Check out this fascinating article and associated remote sensing maps of North American snowfall during this past winter and the winter of 2010-2011.  Both article and maps are from NASA's Earth Observatory.

The difference is rather stark.

NASA Earth Observatory

May God richly bless you and your families as we soon begin the Sacred Triduum and ultimately the joy of Easter Sunday.