Massive canyon lies beneath Greenland ice sheet

0 0
Read Time:1 Minute, 24 Second
A huge canyon twice the size of the longest river in Britain and as deep as the Grand Canyon lies beneath the ice sheet in Greenland, scientists said .
Prior to the establishment of the ice sheet some four million years ago, the canyon is believed to have been a major pathway for water from the interior of the land mass to the coast.
 
Even today, the deep river channel — which originates in the center of Greenland and terminates at its northern coast — transports sub-glacial meltwater to the edge of the ice sheet and then into the ocean.
 
“A 750-kilometer (460-mile) canyon preserved under the ice for millions of years is a breathtaking find in itself, but this research is also important in furthering our understanding of Greenland’s past,” said David Vaughan of the British Antarctic Survey.
 
“This area’s ice sheet contributes to sea level rise and this work can help us put current changes in context.”
 
Scientists found the canyon using airborne radar data, much of which came from a NASA mission called Operation IceBridge, which used radio waves that traveled through the ice to measure the depth of the bedrock.
 
The Greenland sub-ice canyon is about twice as long as the River Severn in Britain, which extends 350 kilometers.
 
Michael Studinger, Operation IceBridge Project Scientist at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, described the finding as “quite remarkable.”
 
“It shows how little we still know about the bedrock below large continental ice sheets.”
 

 

The study was published in the US journal Science.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
Happy
0 0 %
Sad
0 0 %
Excited
0 0 %
Sleepy
0 0 %
Angry
0 0 %
Surprise
0 0 %

Peeper who hid in portable toilet gets 3 year-sentence

0 0
Read Time:43 Second
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — A Colorado man who hid in the tank of a portable toilet at a yoga festival to spy on women has been sentenced to three years in prison and 10 years of probation.
 
Luke Chrisco's sentence was handed down Friday in Boulder. The 31-year-old pleaded guilty in July to attempted unlawful sexual contact and two burglary counts.
 
Police arrested Chrisco in 2011 after a woman at a yoga festival in Boulder noticed something moving in the tank of the portable toilet, then saw a feces-stained man emerge and run away. Police say he also was suspected of hiding in other bathrooms around Boulder to watch women use the toilet.
 
KUSA-TV reports that prosecutors dropped other burglary charges and a misdemeanor count of criminal invasion as part of a plea agreement.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
Happy
0 0 %
Sad
0 0 %
Excited
0 0 %
Sleepy
0 0 %
Angry
0 0 %
Surprise
0 0 %

Report: Earthquake kills 3 in China

0 0
Read Time:1 Minute, 9 Second
BEIJING (AP) — An earthquake hit a mountainous area in southwestern China Saturday morning, killing at least three people injuring several more, according to state media and the China Earthquake Administration.
 
The quake, which measures 5.9 on the Richter scale by the administration and 5.8 by the U.S. Geological Survey, shook several counties in Yunnan and Sichuan provinces, including the scenic Shangri-La county. A Chinese report said the epicenter was in a village in Shangri-La, but the USGS put it in Benzilan, a small town in a neighboring county
 
The China Earthquake Administration said two people were killed in Benzilan, where homes for 22 families collapsed, and that a driver died on a highway in Shangri-La, where falling rocks hit a tour bus and stranded three more buses. It said a total of 17 tourists were trapped.
 
The party-run People's Daily also reported three fatalities and said six others were seriously injured.
 
The administration said another major quake hit Shangri-La three days ago, and the U.S. Geological Survey recorded three major aftershocks on Saturday.
 
China's mountainous areas in its southwest are prone to earthquakes. In May 2008, a powerful quake in Sichuan left nearly 90,000 people dead or missing. In April this year, another quake in Sichuan killed 193 people.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
Happy
0 0 %
Sad
0 0 %
Excited
0 0 %
Sleepy
0 0 %
Angry
0 0 %
Surprise
0 0 %

Breast-feeding gets boost with airport lactation station

0 0
Read Time:3 Minute, 56 Second
SOUTH BURLINGTON, Vt. — A Burlington company has opened its first breast-feeding and pumping station at Burlington International Airport, hoping to replicate the experience at airports and workplaces across the country.
 
Mamava co-founders Sascha Mayer and Christine Dodson have dealt with the difficulties of trying to breast-feed their babies and travel, both for work and recreation. Mayer remembers trying to use a breast pump in an airport bathroom, not a pleasant experience.
 
"A lot of people breast-feed in the public. We totally welcome that if you have that comfort level," said Gene Richards, Burlington International Airport's director of aviation who paved the way for the lactation station here. "But for people who want privacy, we want to make sure they have a place to do it."
 
The Mamava, Spanish for "Mama goes," offers security, privacy and a clean, well-lit space outfitted in Corian, the same solid surface used for countertops and food preparation. And it is located after the security lines, on the second floor near Gates 1 to 8 in a spot that used to have pay phones.
 
The colors are bright and cheerful with two facing benches in white Corian and a fold-down table between them. An outlet to power breast pumps is below the table. The curved ceiling and recessed lighting give a sense of spaciousness, even though the enclosed area takes up only about 20 square feet, Richards said.
 
"Everything in there is meant to be used and cleaned," said John Abrahamsen, a designer and project manager for G3K in Springfield, Vt., which is manufacturing the Mamava.
 
Use of the pod is free. At the Burlington airport, Zutano, a children's clothing manufacturer in Cabot, Vt., is sponsoring the location.
 
"We feel like this is such an important piece to acknowledge the needs of working mothers, and address the balance between taking care of their babies and going back to work," said Michael Belenky, co-founder of Zutano. "It's not an easy transition."
 
More than three-quarters of babies begin life being breast-fed, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But by 6 months of age, the number declines to less than half. By 12 months, a little more than a quarter of babies are breast-feeding.
 
Now that support for breast-feeding is written into federal law, Mayer said she felt this was a good time to launch Mamava.
 
"The Affordable Care Act makes it a legal mandate if you have more than 50 hourly employees, which is a lot of places, to provide a space other than a bathroom for breast-feeding, and there's legislation in the works that goes across all worker classes," Mayer said.
 
The Mamava unit at the Burlington airport would sell for about $3,500, she said. The company is also developing "pop-up" portable units that would sell for around $1,200 for use by companies and others who have an intermittent need.
 
"A school, for example, might not have a breast-feeding mom every year but when they do they can install a Mamava," Mayer said of the portable units.
 
Mayer said her motivation for starting the company was not so much profit as fairness. She read a New York Times article in 2006 that detailed how executives at Starbucks were treated much differently than baristas with access to private space for breast-feeding on the job.
 
"The idea that I had the privilege, but a teacher, a nurse, a woman at Walmart wouldn't have the same privilege is a social-justice issue," Mayer said. "That's what we're trying to solve."
 
Michael Jager, founder and chief creative officer of JDK Design where Mayer and Dodson also work, is a partner in Mamava along with G3K. He said the company is talking to Starbucks about the Mamava, along with other corporations such as Marriott hotels and even Chinese government officials.
 
Mamava does not plan to stop with the breast-feeding and pumping station, which Jager said could wind up in locations across the USA and around the world.
 
"Once you solve a problem like this we can solve other design problems," Jager said. "We have the right and the responsibility to keep the movement going, and make it as clean and smart for women as possible."
 
Dan D'Ambrosio also writes for The Burlington (Vt.) Free Press.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
Happy
0 0 %
Sad
0 0 %
Excited
0 0 %
Sleepy
0 0 %
Angry
0 0 %
Surprise
0 0 %

Wildfire survivor won’t second-guess 19 who died

0 0
Read Time:5 Minute, 14 Second
PRESCOTT, Ariz. — The lone member of a hotshot firefighting crew to escape a raging wildfire says he'll never second-guess the decisions his 19 colleagues made two months ago.
 
Brendan McDonough was serving as a lookout for his Prescott-based Granite Mountain Hotshots that Sunday when flames forced him to retreat before the Yarnell Hill Fire enveloped his crewmates.
 
Now, after the memorials, funerals and the bulk of an official investigation into the fire, McDonough said he feels sorry for those who have publicly criticized the team's decision to descend into a brush-filled canyon as the inferno approached.
 
"I don't question why. I never questioned before, and I'm not going to now," McDonough said. "They did it because that's what they wanted to do, and that's the choice they made. I stand behind them on that choice."
 
McDonough declined to speak about specific details of the fire, instead focusing on his fellow firefighters. In an interview with KPNX-TV, Phoenix, he was matter-of-fact about his experience during the fire and the emotional turmoil since.
 
The Yarnell Hill Fire, though modest in size at about 13 square miles, destroyed more than 100 homes in communities on the mountain 80 miles northwest of Phoenix and resulted in the largest wildland-firefigher death toll in more than a half century.
 
McDonough was assigned as the Granite Mountain crew's spotter that June 30, a job he said he had been trained for and had filled on previous fires.
 
The blaze seemed docile that morning when it was still a brush fire slowly moving to the northeast.
 
"I didn't have an eerie feeling," he said. "It wasn't doing much at all."
 
Then, as afternoon thunderstorms kicked up and a weather alert blared over his radio, the blaze turned, racing through the chaparral and around the hotshots. McDonough was forced from his post, communicating with the crew by radio about his plans as he pulled out.
 
Fire officials and reports have outlined the sequence of events that followed. A member of another team on the fire, the Blue Ridge Hotshots, encountered McDonough descending from the hill.
 
The teams moved their crew vehicles away from the fire, but members of the Granite Mountain team were trapped by the advancing flames and had to deploy their portable fire shelters.
 
McDonough, separated from the team, had only radio chatter to give him an idea of its condition.
 
He described hearing a call from the Granite Mountain crew as members were forced to cover up in the emergency shelters. He said he knew the situation was grim.
 
"You have two options: They're going to pass away, or they're going to live," McDonough said. "I was just praying for their safety."
 
Within a short time, he said voices over the radio signaled a catastrophe: "The way they talked, you could kind of tell — the tone of voice, just the emotions."
 
Once the fatalities were announced, McDonough said he wanted to go home and be alone, but instead he joined hotshot friends and survivors at a school in Prescott. "That was the toughest. I didn't want to disappear on those families," he said. "I knew them. I knew the wives and kids. … I wasn't OK, but I was there."
 
In the past two months, McDonough said he has tried to come to grips with the event and with a nagging question about why he came out alive.
 
"It's not as much that I should have died with them," he said. "(But) I could have been up there. …
 
"It's tough not to ask, but that question will never be answered. So, I need to get over it. Why me? I just have to put that in the past, and I have. … I'm here."
 
McDonough said he understands that a fatal fire must be reviewed and that mistakes may be identified. But he criticized armchair experts who rushed to judgment, especially when no one ever will know what was going on with the Granite Mountain Hotshots during the final minutes before they died.
 
VIDEO: Crews in Rim Fire working slowly toward containment
MORE: The Arizona Republic's complete coverage of the Yarnell Hill Fire
 
"You know, these people are entitled to their opinion," McDonough said. "But people coming out with that information, I feel sorry for them because they're misinformed. … (The critic) is going to think it over in his head, and now, he is going to live with what he said about 19 firefighters who died, and he's bad-mouthing them."
 
McDonough said he visited the burned-out valley days later with wildfire experts who are conducting an investigation at the request of the Arizona Division of Forestry. Their report is expected to be completed in mid-September.
 
"I don't care what they say, I'll respect it whether it comes out good, bad, negative," McDonough said. "Hopefully, maybe they can find something out, you know. If there was a decision made that maybe we can learn from, that's great. It sucks that we have to learn like that, but I'm not saying I won't support them."
 
In the meantime, McDonough said he strives to be strong for his daughter and to provide support for the families of crew members whom he thinks about every day.
 
"I might hit rock bottom. I don't know," he said. "We'll see. I know I'll have support if I do. … Yeah, I cry. Yeah, it sucks. Yeah, it hurts. But you can't dwell on it. It's just not going to get me anywhere. It's just like the question: Why?"

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
Happy
0 0 %
Sad
0 0 %
Excited
0 0 %
Sleepy
0 0 %
Angry
0 0 %
Surprise
0 0 %

Soldier who fought ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ dies in crash

0 0
Read Time:2 Minute, 19 Second
ROCHESTER, N.Y. — A gay combat medic who challenged the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy while serving in Iraq, died this week in a car crash in New York.
 
Darren Manzella, 36, a former Army sergeant, went on national television in 2007 to reveal his sexual orientation, becoming the face of gay servicemen and women before being discharged in 2008 for publicly discussing his sexual identity.
 
The policy was repealed in 2011, and a friend said Manzella had recently signed on as a reservist.
 
The accident that killed him Thursday night began as a two-car collision in the westbound lanes of Interstate 490 in Pittsford, when Manzella's car sideswiped another car about 8:30 p.m., according to Cpl. John Helfer of the Monroe County Sheriff's Office.
 
Manzella stopped his car in the middle lane, got out and started pushing it from behind, Helfer said. A sport utility vehicle rear-ended the car, pinning Manzella between the two vehicles.
 
He was pronounced dead at the scene, Helfer said.
 
The two other people were taken to Strong Memorial Hospital with minor injuries.
 
In December 2007, Manzella told a 60 Minutes interviewer that he was gay and had violated the 1993 policy that barred gay servicemen and women from disclosing their sexual orientation. A few months later, he was discharged.
 
In a 2010 letter to President Barack Obama, Manzella detailed his journey.
 
"I gave voice to the tens of thousands of men and women who serve everyday under the fear of DADT. The interview also ended my career," Manzella wrote.
 
Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., who opposed "don't ask, don't tell," remembered Manzella in an emailed statement
 
"We will always remember Sgt. Manzella as someone who had the courage both to fight for his country and to change it," Schumer said.
 
Manzella, a Rochester resident, was working at the Canandaigua Veterans Affairs Medical Center's crisis call center. He married Javier Lapeira-Soto at a ceremony in Rochester on July 5.
 
Friend Anne Colwell Colangelo of Rome, N.Y., said
 
Manzella had recently joined the Army Reserves.
 
"Being in the military and serving was a very important part of his life," she said. "He was very proud to be a soldier."
 
She and Manzella grew up together in tiny Brocton.
 
"He has lived so much life. He's been around the world — so much experience he put into such a short time here. He really was a hero in so many ways," she said.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
Happy
0 0 %
Sad
0 0 %
Excited
0 0 %
Sleepy
0 0 %
Angry
0 0 %
Surprise
0 0 %

Suriname leader’s son arrested on U.S. drug charge

0 0
Read Time:3 Minute, 19 Second
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — The son of the president of the South American country of Suriname has been arrested on U.S. drug and weapon charges, federal prosecutors said Friday.
 
Dino Bouterse, director of Suriname's anti-terrorism unit, was arrested Thursday in Panama by local authorities and turned over to U.S. agents, said Preet Bharara, U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York.
 
His arrest came as his father, Desi Bouterse, a former coup leader and himself convicted of drug offenses, hosted the annual UNASUR summit for leaders of South American countries. Officials in Suriname announced Friday that the opening statement by Desi Bouterse would be postponed by several hours.
 
Local government officials have declined further comment.
 
Dino Bouterse pleaded not guilty on Friday afternoon before Magistrate Judge James C. Francis in Manhattan federal court after being flown to New York late Thursday. Prosecutors asked that Bouterse be held, and the request was not immediately opposed.
 
Bouterse's court attorney Christopher Flood declined to comment outside court. A hearing was set for Sept. 9.
 
"Bouterse is a significant drug trafficker," said Derek Maltz, special agent-in-charge with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
 
Bouterse faces a U.S. federal indictment alleging he worked with a man identified as Edmund Quincy Muntslag to smuggle cocaine into the United States starting in or about December 2011. It also charges him with violating firearms laws by brandishing a light anti-tank weapon during the narcotics offense.
 
The indictment says Bouterse was involved in smuggling a suitcase filled with 10 kilograms (22 pounds) of cocaine aboard a commercial flight from Suriname to the Caribbean in late July.
 
Bouterse was arrested at Panama's main international airport shortly after arriving in the Central American country, apparently on personal business, the government said in a statement.
 
Federal prosecutors said Muntslag was arrested Thursday in the Caribbean island of Trinidad.
 
Bouterse's father is a convicted drug trafficker who was elected president of Suriname in July 2010. Shortly after his inauguration, Bouterse appointed his son as director of Suriname's Counter Terrorist Unit, drawing heavy criticism from opposition legislators who expressed concern that no legal framework was created for the unit to operate.
 
In 2011, unit officials were criticized for acting as police officers when they killed two men suspected in several violent crimes.
 
In August 2002, prosecutors in Suriname charged Dino Bouterse with stealing 50 guns from the government intelligence service. Police at the time accused Bouterse of fleeing to Curacao to avoid arrest, although his father said Bouterse had traveled there for personal business.
 
A year later, prosecutors dropped charges, citing a lack of evidence.
 
Police detained the younger Bouterse again in September 2004 after seizing a large number of assault weapons, ammunition and 1 kilogram (2.2 pounds) of cocaine from a local auto shop.
 
He was sentenced to eight years in prison in August 2005 after a judge found him guilty of leading a ring that trafficked in cocaine, illegal arms and stolen luxury cars. He was freed in 2008.
 
The president, a two-time dictator who first seized power during a 1980 coup, was convicted in absentia in 1999 on drug trafficking charges by a court in the Netherlands. At home, he and 24 associates face trial on charges of killing 15 prominent political opponents in 1982, but the case has been stalled while courts determine if they are covered by an amnesty law adopted last year.
 
Bouterse has said he intends to run for a second elected term as the 2015 elections approach. The former Dutch colony of some 560,000 people is located on the shoulder of South America. Its economy relies largely on exports of alumina, gold and oil, although roughly 70 percent of is population lives below the poverty level.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
Happy
0 0 %
Sad
0 0 %
Excited
0 0 %
Sleepy
0 0 %
Angry
0 0 %
Surprise
0 0 %

Marijuana movements likely to get a boost from new guidelines

0 0
Read Time:3 Minute, 6 Second
Marijuana movements already simmering across the country could get a big boost from the Obama Administration's announcement Thursday that it would take a laid-back approach to states with softer laws on marijuana.
 
"This is one of the most significant milestones in the movement toward ending marijuana prohibition in this country," says Mason Tvert, spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project, which advocates for legalization and regulation of marijuana. The group has led several ballot initiatives around the country.
 
"The federal government for the first time ever has sent a clear signal to states that they can adopt their own marijuana policies if they don them in a responsible manner."
 
Two states, Colorado and Washington, have legalized marijuana, and 20 states have approved marijuana for medical use. Until Attorney General Eric Holder's announcement Thursday, marijuana users in those states could face federal prosecution even if they adhered to state laws and local regulations.
 
Under the new guidelines, the Justice Department will not challenge state laws and prosecutors may not bring cases against individual users unless they violate eight federal priorities, including marijuana distribution to minors or as a cover for drug trafficking operations.
 
Political opponents of marijuana legalization can no longer cite the federal government as a reason to squelch reform, Tvert said.
 
Marijuana legalization advocates are already geared up for 2014 and 2016 elections with ballot initiatives in a number of states, including Alaska, California, Maine, Nevada and Oregon, says Stephen Gutwillig, deputy executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, which advocates a public-health approach to drug use.
 
Tvert said he expects to see legalization measures by 2016 in Arizona, California, Maine, Massachusetts, Montana and Nevada.
 
"The victories in Colorado and Washington were already so significant that a number of activists in a number of states were already planning similar campaigns," Gutwillig said. "The announcement, if anything, will embolden those campaigns and potentially inspire activists and elected officials elsewhere who were waiting to see the official federal response."
 
Drug abuse prevention groups say they will work to derail the movement. Arthur Dean, CEO of the Community Anti-Drug Coalition, said he had expected the Justice Department to "reaffirm federal law and slow down this freight train."
 
" Instead, this decision sends a message to our citizens, youth, communities, states, and the international community at large that the enforcement of federal law related to marijuana is not a priority," Dean said. "We remain gravely concerned that we as a nation are turning a blind eye to the serious public health and public safety threats associated with widespread marijuana use."
 
Gutwillig sees the greatest potential for the movement among state legislators who may have feared tangling with the Justice Department if they passed laws in conflict with federal statutes. The new federal guidelines tell states that robust state regulation of marijuana will likely met the federal government's drug control goals if they keep drugs away from kids and criminals.
 
The Drug Police Alliances expects to see bills introduced on the whole range of marijuana reform, Gutwillig said. Legislators in New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania have said they would advance bills in upcoming legislative sessions, he said.
 
"Just from a policy perspective, that's going to encourage state elected officials. This isn't just the feds looking the other way," he said. "This is an acknowledgement that state regulation can work in concert with the federal government on a more effective way of dealing with the realities of marijuana in our communities today."

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
Happy
0 0 %
Sad
0 0 %
Excited
0 0 %
Sleepy
0 0 %
Angry
0 0 %
Surprise
0 0 %

7.0 quake recorded in Alaska’s Aleutian Islands

0 0
Read Time:3 Minute, 4 Second
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — A magnitude 7.0 earthquake rocked Alaska's Aleutian Islands with a jet-like rumble Friday that shook homes and sent residents scrambling for cover.
 
"I heard it coming," said Kathleen Nevzoroff, who was sitting at her computer in the tiny Aleutians village of Adak when the major temblor struck at 8:25 a.m. local time, getting stronger and stronger. "I ran to my doors and opened them and my chimes were all ringing."
 
There were no immediate reports of damage or injuries from the earthquake, which occurred in a seismically active region. It was strongly felt in Atka, an Aleut community of 64 people, and the larger Aleutian town of Adak, where 320 people live. The quake was followed by multiple aftershocks, including one measuring magnitude 5.4.
 
The earthquake didn't trigger a tsunami warning, but Michael Burgy with the West Coast and Alaska Tsunami Warning Center in Palmer, Alaska, said the center is monitoring for potential tsunamis caused by landslides, either on land or under water.
 
The Alaska Earthquake Information Center said the primary earthquake was centered 67 miles southwest of Adak, about 1,200 miles southwest of Anchorage. Shaking lasted up to one minute.
 
The quake occurred offshore in the subduction zone where plates of the Earth's crust grind and dive. By contrast, California's most famous fault line, the San Andreas, is a strike-slip fault. Quakes along strike-slip faults tend to move horizontally.
 
In Adak, city clerk Debra Sharrah was upstairs in her two-story townhome getting ready for work when she heard a noise.
 
"I thought it was my dog running up the stairs," she said. "It kept making noise and then it got louder. So then all of a sudden the rumbling started."
 
The four-plex of townhomes was shaking and swaying as Sharrah and her dog, Pico, dashed out the door. It seemed like the building moved for a long time, but the only thing disturbed in her home was a stepstool that fell over.
 
"Nothing fell off my walls, and the wine glasses didn't go out of the hutch or anything," said Sharrah, who moved to the island community from Montana's Glacier National Park area almost two years ago.
 
In Atka, Nevzoroff manages the village store and expected to find goods had flown off the shelves. But nothing was amiss.
 
"Everything seems to be okay," she said.
 
The communities are located in a sparsely populated region and both played roles in World War II.
 
Atka residents were displaced during the war, relocating to Southeast Alaska so the U.S. government could demolish the village to prevent the Japanese from seizing it as they had other Aleutian communities. After the war, the U.S. Navy rebuilt the community and residents returned. Today, the community is a cluster of solidly built utilitarian buildings scattered over rolling hills that turned emerald green in warmer months.
 
Adak, 110 miles to the west, had been home to U.S. military installations that allowed forces to wage a successful offense against the Japanese after they seized the Aleutian Islands of Kiska and Attu. After the war. Adak was transformed into a Naval air station that served as a submarine surveillance center during the Cold War. Later, the facilities were acquired by the Aleut Corp. — a regional native corporation — in a federal land-transfer agreement. It became a city in 2001 and today retains its military appearance.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
Happy
0 0 %
Sad
0 0 %
Excited
0 0 %
Sleepy
0 0 %
Angry
0 0 %
Surprise
0 0 %

Jodi Arias’ attorneys want 2nd jury sequestered

0 0
Read Time:2 Minute, 20 Second
PHOENIX (AP) — Jodi Arias' lawyers are asking a judge to sequester the jury in her second trial to shield the panel from the intense publicity that enveloped her first trial, which ended with a murder conviction but without a sentence.
 
Arias was convicted of first-degree murder May 8 in the 2008 stabbing and shooting death of boyfriend Travis Alexander in his suburban Phoenix home. The same jury failed to reach a decision on whether she should get the death penalty, setting the stage for a second penalty phase.
 
While the judge has yet to set a new trial date, Arias' attorneys filed a motion this week seeking to have the new panel sequestered "to ensure that the jury is not exposed to community and/or media influence."
 
The motion filed Thursday cites thousands of television news shows and newspaper articles about Arias throughout her roughly five-month trial, as well as a recent Lifetime movie about the case that attorneys said attracted 3.1 million viewers.
 
Arias' lawyers claim the same intense publicity will no doubt come with a second penalty phase and will hinder her ability to get a fair trial.
 
"This integrity is in the most danger of being compromised when the process is contaminated by outside influences," the attorneys wrote. "Given what took place in the last trial and the propensity for history to repeat itself, it is certainly beyond legitimate dispute that the threat to the integrity of the retrial is severe."
 
Prosecutors have not yet filed a response.
 
The motion comes on the heels of several others filed recently. One seeks to have the retrial moved out of the Phoenix metropolitan area because of excessive publicity and to prohibit live television coverage. Another motion filed last month seeks to have the judge compel all jurors eventually seated in the second trial to reveal their Twitter user names so Arias' lawyers can monitor their accounts to be sure they're not communicating about the case.
 
Under Arizona law, while Arias' murder conviction stands, prosecutors have the option of pursuing a second penalty phase with a new jury in an effort to get a death sentence. If the second jury fails to reach a verdict, the death penalty would be removed as an option, and the judge would sentence Arias to ether spend her entire life behind bars or be eligible for release after 25 years.
 
Arias, 33, admitted she killed Alexander, but claimed it was self-defense after he attacked her. Prosecutors argued it was premeditated murder carried out in a jealous rage after the victim wanted to end their affair and planned a trip to Mexico with another woman.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
Happy
0 0 %
Sad
0 0 %
Excited
0 0 %
Sleepy
0 0 %
Angry
0 0 %
Surprise
0 0 %