Reading Around the Internet: October 6, 2014

Welcome to October! This is my favorite month of the year… Fall leaves in my part of the country turn brilliant; temperatures cool down so that I can make stews and soups; and best of all, Halloween comes at the end of the month! (That’s my favorite holiday, so you see, October is my favorite month).

This week’s Reading Around the Internet includes — you guessed it — more about…

Volcanoes!

A friend posted a link to my FB page recently, and when I followed the link I discovered a whole bunch of fascinating videos put together by DJI, a company that makes drones for aerial photography. It’s part of a series of videos they are putting together called “DJI Feats”.  Since I usually associate drones with military uses, I shied away at first, but then decided I should see what aerial photography with a drone could look like (the nature photographer in me coming out here)… Here’s their YouTube video on the Bardabunga Volcano eruption in Iceland. DJI does some fascinating work, and not just with volcanoes. Check them out! I find myself wishing I could go with them sometime!!

Ebola

So what do you need to know about Ebola? Here’s some helpful information.  Note that the Ebola virus is not transmitted through the air. You have to come into contact with bodily fluids. And a person is not contagious until they are showing symptoms. This is not a virus that moves easily from one person to the next.

US Supreme Court

Another reason to love October when you study law — the first Monday in October means the Supreme Court is back in session… Here’s a run down from the New York Times concerning the Court’s current docket. Scotusblog also has its summaries up here.  While there isn’t a blockbuster property case on this year’s docket, I know that at least some of our readers — particularly the ones who love to fish — will find Yates v. U.S. (No. 13-7451) interesting. The Court will address whether the prohibition against destroying “any record, document or tangible object” in the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 applies not only to the white collar crimes the law was originally written to address; but could it also be stretched to include dumping over-sized fish back into the water when you’re about to be cited by a state fish and game officer? At issue here is not simply whether you can destroy evidence in this particular case, but whether Sarbanes-Oxley can be used as a general destruction-of-evidence provision in federal law. See the National Law Journal’s discussion of this case and others on the docket here.

Emergency Management: Preparing for a Possible Oil Spill Along the Mississippi

From Minnesota Public Radio, we have an excellent report on emergency preparations for potential oil spills that many states along the river have been working on. Driving this concern is the large number of crude oil shipments moving along the river and what many experts say is an inevitable emergency waiting to happen: an oil spill in the river’s watershed or the river itself. Many of these shipments travel by rail, but should a train derail and the oil spill, first responders and emergency management officials want to be ready. the MPR story has some excellent photos, and the audio is available at this link.

Learning About the Oceans

The scientific community was excited this week with release of new satellite imagery of the ocean floor that shows many more mountains in the deep than had previously believed to exist. This was story was covered by several news outlets, but the BBC has a particularly good discussion that includes some very interesting maps. For those interested in plate tectonics and the drift of our continents, this is fascinating stuff. For those with access, the news stories are summarizing research that was published in Science, titled “New Global Marine Gravity Model From CryoSat-2 and Jason-1 Reveals Buried Tectonic Structure” (David T. Sandwell, R. Dietmar Muller, Walter H.F. Smith, Emanuel Gracia and Richard Francis). Mind you, whenever we talk about plate tectonics, we are in the realm of earthquakes, volcanoes — and when that happens under the ocean floor, we’re also in the realm of tsunamis.

Reading Around the Internet: September 29, 2014

Here’s some of the things we think were especially noteworthy this last week:

Volcanoes!

Japan’s Mount Ontake erupted this last week. The eruption was a surprise. The National Geographic  explains that Mount Ontake belongs to a class of “stratovolcanoes”, which are notoriously hard to predict. They write, “[Stratovolcanoes] are the most lovely and deadly of volcanoes, with gentle lower slower that steepen dramatically at their narrow tips.” The Japan Times reports at least 31 people feared dead.

Don’t forget that we have volcanoes in the US too: Mount St. Helens may be showing signs of reawakening, and Glacier Peak in Washington’s Snohomish County is getting a closer look by scientists. It’s considered one of the “most dangerous but least monitored volcanoes in the country.”

Ebola Outbreak in West Africa

Kim Yi Dionne, Laura Seay and Erin McDaniel write about “AFRICOM’s Response and the Militarization of Humanitarian Aid,” at the Monkey Cage.  AFRICOM, for readers unfamiliar with the various acronyms out there, is the US Africa Command. The US military has sent 3,000 troops to West Africa, where an Ebola outbreak has been the focal point for many cries for humanitarian aid since August. Dionne, Seay and McDaniel walk through the current situation and politics, as well as provide an insightful analysis concerning the increased militarization of US policy to Africa.

Storms in the Southwest US

Some amazingly strong storms have been hitting the southwest US very hard of late. AccuWeather has a great summary here.