This Blog is created to stress the importance of Peace as an environmental directive. “I never give them hell. I just tell the truth and they think it’s hell.” – Harry Truman
(I receive no compensation from any entry on this blog.)
Friday, April 22, 2005
Slovadia Amber.
Mount Kilimanjaro.
Mount Sinai.
Mount St. Helens.
Mount Shasta, California.
The Third Highest Peak on Earth. At 28,169 feet, Mount Kanchenjunga.
The Mountain Village of Annapura, Nepal.
Palm Beach Shores, Florida.
A ship of the desert. The pyramids of Egypt.
Another view of the Canyon in Utah.
This is Snow Canyon Recreationals Area. Note the stratigraphy of the scarp. It is sedimentary rock. It's been eroded over time to the soil the plants are growing on. For every layer of rock you can count are the number of episodes of sea level transgression and regresson that occurred over Earth's history.
The skies of Lake Albert, Meningie, South Australia taken on April 23, 2005.
Earth Day in Kentucky.
Sunrise at Green Mountain, North Carolina.
April 22, 2005. The Canadian Side, Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada.
April 22, 2005. Madison, Indiana. April showers bring May flowers.
HAPPY EARTH DAY !! I hope everyone had a great day. Would Google ever forget us all. I hope all the pictures you took with your firends come out well. Now that all the celebration is over take the time tomorrow to write the EPA in DC to demand limits on CO2 emissions. Think Green.
Celebs Join Inuits at Earth Day Event By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Published: April 22, 2005 Filed at 8:04 p.m. ET TORONTO (AP) -- Hollywood stars Salma Hayek and Jake Gyllenhaal joined Canadian Inuits in the Arctic Circle for a traditional spring dance on Earth Day Friday, seeking to highlight the effect of global warming on northern Canadians. The celebrities joined some 1,000 Inuit -- half of whom were children -- in their traditional dress and followed elders onto an ice floe to form the image of an Inuit drum dancer. From the air, photographers were able to see the humans spell out the words: ''Arctic Warning: Listen.''
When Nature Assaults Itself LATE one afternoon not long ago, I stood on the bridge of an Alaska-bound oil tanker, trying to divine our ecological future from the encircling horizon: a gray band of haze separating an overcast sky from the slate-gray sea.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/22/opinion/22burdick.html Tech giants boost recycling efforts David Becker, Staff Writer, CNET News.com Published: April 21, 2005 Dell and Hewlett-Packard cut fees for their recycling programs this week, in advance of Friday's Earth Day observance. Technology companies have come under growing pressure in the past few years to address the growing mounds of dangerous waste created by outdated computer hardware. Gear such as monitors and circuit boards are full of hazardous chemicals that can leach into the soil and groundwater if dumped into landfills. Groups such as the National Electronics Product Stewardship Initiative have successfully pushed computer makers to responsibly recycle more and more of their obsolete goods.
HP Celebrates Earth Day In honor of the day devoted to all things earth-healthy, HP offers a limited-time 50-percent discount on its recycling services. And then some. Libe Goad - PC Magazine April 22 In honor of Earth Day, HP is offering new initiatives to encourage consumers to recycle their old computers and computer-related products. First on the list – a 50 percent discount on the company's recycling program, along with a push to educate the general consumer about e-waste and how to take care of it. HP's Manager, Corporate Environmental Strategies & Sustainability John Fray said that recent HP surveys shows a surprising lack of consumer knowledge about e-waste and related recycling programs.
The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, located off the coast of the Beaufort Sea on Alaska's north shore, is prized for its wilderness and wildlife. It is also coveted by multi-national oil companies for its possible oil reserves. The Wilderness Society is working to set this area off limits to oil development, and protect its most precious resources: Wilderness and the wildlife that depend on it.