Life as an Extreme Sport

World’s Largest Marine Sanctuary Created

Finally, in a touch of good environmental news, Bush creates a huge national refuge:

The nation’s newest national monument, which will be given a native Hawaiian name based on suggestions from state residents, covers an archipelago stretching 1,400 miles long and 100 miles wide in the Pacific Ocean.

The region is home to more than 7,000 species, at least a fourth of them found nowhere else.

The decision to create the nation’s 75th national monument immediately sets aside 140,000 square miles of largely uninhabited islands, atolls, coral reef colonies and underwater peaks known as seamounts to be managed by federal and state agencies.

Conrad C. Lautenbacher, head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which will manage nearly all of it, said the new protected area would dwarf all others.

“It’s the single-largest act of ocean conservation in history. It’s a large milestone,” Lautenbacher said. “It is a place to maintain biodiversity and to maintain basically the nurseries of the Pacific. It spawns a lot of the life that permeates the middle of the Pacific Ocean.”

Making Light: Jim Baen

Patrick over at Making Light says:
Just now posted to the Baen Books discussion board by Baen author Julie Cochrane, and reproduced on various SF-oriented sites:

Okay, people, here’s what’s going on.

Jim Baen is in the ICU after a stroke, it is serious, Toni [Weisskopf] and a relative are there with him. Now you know as much as we do about his condition.

Baen Books is functioning under the very detailed emergency plans that Jim has in place.

Please don’t send cards or flowers. Please do send whatever prayers are appropriate to your faith.

When we know more, we’ll let you know.

Thanks,

Julie

Jim Baen has been responsible for publishing most of the science fiction books I’ve read in the last 15 years. My thoughts are with him and his family; here is hoping for speedy resolution.

Bug-Killing Chemicals Linked to Parkinson’s in Men

Bug-Killing Chemicals Linked to Parkinson’s in Men – CME Teaching Brief – MedPage Today
Men exposed to pesticides are more than twice as likely to develop Parkinson’s disease as are men who have managed to avoid contact with the toxic chemicals, according to Mayo Clinic researchers.

The risk for Parkinson’s from pesticide exposure was equally high among farmers and non-farmers reported Walter A. Rocca, M.D., M.P.H., and Mayo Clinc colleagues in early online version of Movement Disorders. There was no elevated risk associated with exposure to any of six other categories of household or industrial chemicals.

There was no association between pesticide exposure and Parkinson’s disease in women, but women in general had significantly less opportunity for exposure at to pesticides than men, the investigators noted.