Trillions of plastic pieces found in Arctic ice

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Arctic Ocean ice may hold trillions of small pieces of plastic and other synthetic trash, and they are being released into the world's oceans as global warming melts the polar cap, researchers say.
 
Though the finding is surprising and worrying, the possible harm to marine life is so far unknown, the authors concluded.
 
Called microplastics, the pollutants come mostly from debris that has broken apart, as well as from cosmetics and fibers released from washing clothes, according to the study, which was published in the journal Earth's Future and first reported by Science magazine.
 
At current melting trends, more than 1 trillion pieces 5 millimeters or smaller could wind up in the oceans during the coming decade, the authors estimate.
 
The concentration of plastic debris is 1,000 times greater than that floating in the so-called Great Pacific Garbage Patch.
 
The researchers based their findings on core samples of ice taken during polar expeditions in 2005 and 2010.
 
Rayon was the most common synthetic material discovered — 54%. Though rayon is not a plastic (it's made from wood), the authors included it "because it is a manmade semi-synthetic that makes up a significant proportion of synthetic microparticles found in the marine environment."
 
Rayon is used in cigarette filters, clothing and personal hygiene products.
 
Polyester was the next most common pollutant found in the ice (21%), followed by nylon (16%), polypropylene (3%) and polystyrene, acrylic and polyethylene (2% each).
 
The authors called the ice trap "a major historic global sink of man-made particulates," and said their findings "go some way to help clarify one of the most puzzling aspects of current understanding on the quantities of plastic debris reported in the oceans."
 
As Science points out, 288 millions tons of plastics were produced in 2012.
 
Microplastics garbage has also been found on the shores of southernmost Chile, so the authors said it's time to investigate the planet's other polar region.
 
"While multiyear sea ice makes up a smaller proportion of annual sea ice cover in the Southern Ocean, and perennial sea ice cover around Antarctica is following different trends, our finding indicate the importance of sampling ice from the Antarctic to see if it too contains microplastics," they write.

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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.
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Jury finds ex-soldier eligible for death penalty

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HONOLULU (AP) — A federal jury has decided a former Hawaii soldier convicted of murder is eligible for the death penalty, in the first capital case in the history of Hawaii's statehood.
 
Jurors will next decide whether to sentence Naeem Williams to death or give him life in prison without the possibility of release. That phase of the trial begins Wednesday.
 
The same jury last month convicted Williams in his daughter Talia's 2005 beating death.
 
Hawaii's territorial government abolished capital punishment in 1957, meaning the death penalty hasn't been an option in Hawaii since it became a state. But Williams was tried in the federal system because the crime occurred on military property.
 

 

His attorneys argued he was ineligible for a death sentence because of his low IQ. Prosecutors said Talia's age and other factors made the killing heinous enough to warrant the death penalty.

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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.
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Never-before-seen meteor shower set to appear tonight

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Coming to a circumpolar constellation near you: An all-new, never-before-seen, awkwardly named meteor shower that just might knock your astronomical socks off.
 
It's called the Camelopardalid meteor shower, and unlike annual showers such as the Perseids and Leonids that have been occurring for hundreds or thousands of years, it will occur for the first time the night of May 23 and early morning of May 24.
 
A meteor shower happens when the Earth passes through debris left in space by a comet (the Perseids, for example, are debris from Comet Swift-Tuttle); the debris, little chunks of rock and other material, burns up in the atmosphere to form what some people call shooting or falling stars.
 
The Camelopardalids will be debris from Comet 209P/LINEAR, a very dim comet that orbits the sun every five years. The comet was discovered in 2004 by the Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research project, a partnership of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lincoln Laboratory, NASA and the U.S. Air Force.
 
But while the Earth has been passing through Swift-Tuttle debris to create the Perseids for thousands of years (the first written account of the shower was in 36 A.D.), this will be the first time the Earth has passed through Comet 209P/LINEAR's leftovers.
 
Meteor showers vary in intensity: Some produce more meteors than others, and some years a particular meteor shower is better than other years.
 
It all depends on how much debris the Earth passes through, and some astronomers are predicting that all of Comet 209P/LINEAR's debris trails from 1803 through 1924 will intersect Earth's orbit, so the Camelopardalid meteor shower will be a meteor storm producing hundreds of meteors per hour.
 
So, how good will it be?
 
"That's always a good question, more so with this meteor shower because it's the first time we're seeing it," said Rich Talcott, senior editor of Astronomy magazine. "Over the past 15 or 20 years, astronomers have done a very good job at figuring out, 'OK, here's where the debris streams will lie.' I'm thinking the odds are pretty good we'll get something nice May 24."
 
Meteor showers are named for the constellation from which the meteors seem to radiate. That point is known as the radiant, and radiant for the Camelopardalids will be the constellation Camelopardalis (the giraffe).
 
Camelopardalis is a circumpolar constellation, which means that, rather than moving from east to west across the night sky, it goes around Polaris, the North Star, so it's up all night.
 
It's also easy to find because it's close to the Big Dipper and Little Dipper, two easily recognizable constellations.
 
The meteor shower will be easier to view in the South, says Carol Stewart, astronomer at the Calusa Nature Center and Planetarium in Fort Myers, Fla.
 
"In Southwest Florida, we have an advantage over Northern latitudes because the meteors will come in at us from a lower altitude," she said. "Those are called 'Earth-grazers,' and they're longer-lasting and run farther across the sky."
 
Aside from clouds, a meteor watcher's worst enemy is a bright moon, which can wash out all but the brightest meteors.
 
On the night of May 23, however, the moon is not present, and it doesn't rise until 3:41 a.m. May 24. When it does rise, it will be a waning crescent, so it won't affect the meteor shower.
 
Astronomers predict peak activity for the shower will be from 2 a.m. to 4 a.m. May 24, but Stewart will be looking at a wider window.
 
"They could start as soon as it gets dark the night of the 23rd," she said. "I'm going to go out and check every hour. We don't know because this is the first time, and I don't want to miss it."

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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.
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Flight diverts to Phoenix for unruly passenger

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PHOENIX — An American Airlines flight diverted its course and landed at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport on Thursday because of an unruly passenger, according to the Phoenix Police Department.
 
A police statement issued Friday said a 21-year-old man began to act erratically on a flight traveling from Los Angeles to Miami, which prompted the flight crew to divert the plane from its course and make an unscheduled landing in Phoenix.
 
Police stationed at the airport were notified about the flight at 12:30 p.m. MST and boarded the plane after it had safely landed, the statement says.
 
A passenger on the plane posted video of the incident to YouTube. In the clip, the man could be heard making loud noises and resisting police as multiple officers forced him out from the back of the plane.
 
Once the man was removed from the flight, the plane continued to Miami.
 
Based on observations from authorities and the flight crew, the 21-year-old was taken to a hospital for medical attention.
 
It was unknown whether the man's erratic behavior was drug-induced, the statement says.
 
The man's identity was not released, as he was not booked into jail, according to the statement.
 
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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.
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U.S. Coast Guard: Missing British yacht’s hull found

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BOSTON (AP) — A U.S. Navy warship has located the overturned hull of a British yacht that went missing last week in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, but officials said Friday night's deadline to end the search remains in effect.
 
U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer Robert Simpson said a helicopter from the warship spotted the hull Friday afternoon, in an area roughly 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) off the coast of Massachusetts. A small boat crew confirmed it bore the name of the 40-foot (12-meter) Cheeki Rafiki.
 
The hull had previously been spotted by a container ship last Saturday. The Coast Guard, at the time, said there was no sign of the sailors or a life raft.
 
Simpson said Friday was the first time rescuers examined the hull, which had a breach where the keel had broken off.
 
A Navy swimmer found the boat's cabin completely flooded and its windows shattered. Simpson said the swimmer also knocked on the hull and reached below the waterline but got no response.
 
Simpson said confirmation of the overturned hull does not change its deadline for suspending the search. He said among the items rescuers are searching for is a bright-colored life raft.
 
The Coast Guard has said it would only extend the search beyond 10 p.m. (0300 GMT) if they find evidence the crew members are still alive. The search has involved American, British and Canadian vessels and aircraft.
 
The British Foreign Office said it has informed the missing sailors' families of the discovery. The Foreign Office said earlier Friday that the families were "saddened to hear that the US Coast Guard will be suspending the search. But they were prepared for the fact that this would have to happen."
 
The Cheeki Rafiki had had been returning to England from a regatta in Antigua when it reported trouble last Thursday. Contact with the crew was lost Friday, May 16. The crew included 22-year-old captain Andrew Bridge and crew members James Male, 23, Steve Warren, 52, and Paul Goslin.

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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.
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Canadian clinic confirms Toronto mayor’s in rehab

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TORONTO (AP) — A rehab facility in a small Ontario town has confirmed that Toronto Mayor Rob Ford is undergoing treatment at its clinic.
 
GreenStone Clinic Muskoka in Bala, Ontario, released a statement Friday saying that Ford is at its facility. The clinic says it released this information with the embattled mayor's consent.
 
Ford announced late last month that he was seeking treatment for an alcohol problem after a new video surfaced that appeared to show the mayor smoking a crack pipe — nearly a year after reports of an initial video that appeared show him smoking the drug.
 
Ford's erratic behavior — including another video in which he threatened to "murder" — led Toronto's city council to strip him of most of his powers. For says he's running for re-election in October.

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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.
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US: Officers arrest naked man at White House gate

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Protestors are occasionally arrested outside of the White House gate — but very few of them are naked, as happened Friday.
 
Secret Service police arrested a man who stripped and fought with officers after being denied access to the White House grounds.
 
The Secret Service identified the man as Michel Bechard, and said he was charged with assault and indecent exposure.
 
From Reuters:
 
"Officers subdued the man, covered him and sent him to a hospital for treatment of minor injuries suffered in the tussle.
 
"A reporter for the Daily Caller website, who was entering the White House through the same checkpoint, said the man had told the Secret Service officers he had a 3 p.m. appointment with President Barack Obama and presented his identification.
 
"The reporter said the ID was rejected because it was from a foreign country and the man then began undressing while insisting that he had to keep his appointment with Obama."

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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.
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US: VA treats 2,500 transgender veterans

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WASHINGTON — Pvt. Chelsea Manning, an inmate at the Army's prison at Fort Leavenworth, may have more luck receiving treatment after serving her sentence and being drummed out of the Army.
 
That's because the Veterans Health Administration treats veterans with gender dysphoria, offering them counseling and hormone therapy. The Army does not. And Manning, who enlisted as a man known as Bradley but who now identifies as a woman, will remain a soldier as long as she serves her sentence in a military prison.
 
In 2013, the Veterans Affairs department treated 2,567 veterans with the diagnosis of gender dysphoria with transgender-specific care, according to Ndidi Mojay, a VA spokeswoman. The department does not have a cost estimate for the treatment, which can include male or female hormones depending on gender.
 
"Few transgender individuals pursue a goal of transformation to the other gender that also includes the complete set of sex reassignment surgeries," Mojay said in an email. "The VA does not pay for or support sex reassignment surgeries."
 
The VA has supported counseling, cross-sex hormone therapy, evaluations for sex reassignment surgeries performed outside the department and post-reassignment surgical care since 2011, Mojay said.
 
The Pentagon is looking to transfer Manning to a civilian prison. Transgender therapy is offered to those inmates. Manning, however, insists through her lawyers that she wants to stay in Army custody and receive care there.
 
Before that happens, the military would likely need to reverse its policy barring transgender troops from serving. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel indicated that he is open to reviewing the rule.
 
In any event, Manning won't be leaving prison anytime soon. She is serving a 35-year sentence for springing one of the biggest leaks of classified government information in history. Manning provided the anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks with a trove of classified military and diplomatic reports and cables.
 
Through her lawyers, Manning said in a statement that life behind bars at Leavenworth is tolerable. She fills her days working, reading and exercising.

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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.
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Toronto Mayor Rob Ford spotted in Ontario town

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TORONTO (AP) — Toronto Mayor Rob Ford was spotted in a small Ontario town Friday despite his lawyer insisting that the embattled leader of Canada's biggest city is still in rehab.
 
Ford announced late last month that he was seeking treatment for an alcohol problem after a new video surfaced that appeared to show Ford smoking a crack pipe late last month. It was only the latest twist in the ongoing saga of Ford, whose notorious and frequently filmed behavior led the city council to strip him of most of his powers after he admitted last year that he had smoked crack in a "drunken stupor" and was depicted on video threatening to "murder" someone.
 
On Friday, dozens of people spotted Ford outside a shopping plaza in Bracebridge, a community in the province's countryside, said resident Brody Lisle, 19. Lisle was one of many locals who posed with the mayor for a photo.
 
"I was so excited, I'm still shaking after seeing him," Lisle said. "He seemed a lot thinner and he was really happy and cheerful."
 
Ford said rehab was "really good," said Lisle, who called herself a fan of the confessed crack-smoking mayor.
 
"He's done two weeks so far and he's got six more weeks left," she said, "and he's feeling really good about himself, and health-wise, he's lost a few pounds."
 
The Bracebridge Examiner first reported that it received a tip Ford was in the area Friday afternoon and posted mobile phone photos of the mayor posing with residents.
 
More photos of Ford posing with construction workers and staff at a dry cleaning store were posted later on Twitter.
 
Ford's lawyer Dennis Morris wouldn't confirm his client's whereabouts.
 
"I cannot tell you where the mayor is, unfortunately," Morris said. "The good news is, he's in rehab, and you know, it's always nice to leave him alone."
 
Friday marked a year since the Toronto Star and the U.S. website Gawker first reported seeing a video that appeared to show the mayor smoking crack cocaine.
 
Months later, Ford admitted to trying the drug while drunk and to using drugs while in office.
 
The mayor has previously publicly swore off alcohol, saying he had cleaned up his act and was working out.
 
However, he was forced to admit drinking after another videotaped incident in which he used obscene Jamaican slang words and criticized Toronto's chief of police.
 
The Globe and Mail said last month a drug dealer had shown two of its reporters video of Ford allegedly smoking what was said to be crack in the basement of his sister's home. The paper said it paid $10,000 for frame grabs showing Ford holding a copper pipe.
 
The Toronto Star also published details of "two nights of utter debauchery" involving Ford at a Toronto nightclub.
 
Police began investigating Ford after a guns and gangs probe turned up wiretaps that allegedly captured conversations about the first "crack" video.
 
A friend of Ford's has been charged with extortion related to attempts to retrieve the video.

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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.
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One man arrested as California fires rage

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As cooler weather helped firefighters make gains against a string of dangerous wildfires raging in Southern California, police announced an arrest in connection with one of the blazes that broke out in San Diego County this week.
 
Alberto Serrato, 57, was charged with arson Friday in one of the smaller fires — a 105-acre fire in suburban Oceanside that started Wednesday and is fully contained.
 
Tanya Sierra, a spokeswoman for the San Diego County district attorney's office, says Serrato wasn't seen igniting a fire but witnesses saw him adding dead brush onto smoldering bushes that flamed up. The spokeswoman says he has not been connected to any other fire.
 
The San Diego County sheriff's website says Serrato was arrested Wednesday in Oceanside, but his arrest wasn't announced until Friday. He faces up to seven years in prison if convicted.
 
Nine fires broke out during a heat wave, including eight in one day, raising suspicions that some may have been set.
 
Meanwhile, a new blaze cropped up Friday in the northwest section of Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, bringing the number of active fires to at least 10.
 
Late Friday, Marine Corps officials lifted an evacuation order for some base housing although fires that have burned about 34 square miles of brush continue to rage. However, several camp areas and an infantry school remain under evacuation.
 
Three fires have now burned more than 22,000 acres on the base and surrounding areas. Base spokesman Jeff Nyhart says at their peak, the fires prompted about 8,400 military personnel and their families to leave. The fires are all only partially surrounded
 
State fire officials said Friday the first blaze that erupted in San Diego County between Tuesday and Thursday was caused by a spark from malfunctioning construction equipment. But it could take months to get to the bottom of the most damaging fires.
 
Residents of two neighborhoods in a suburb north of the city were allowed to return home Friday as crews build containment lines around the fires.
 
The hardest-hit areas were in San Marcos and Carlsbad, a suburb of 110,000 people that lifted evacuation orders late Thursday.
 
A flare-up Thursday in the suburb of San Marcos forced new evacuation notices to more than 18,000 homes as flames raced through tinder-dry brush on hillsides. That fire was 50% contained Friday evening, with 1,500 homes at risk, NBC San Diego reported.
 
Two teens were arrested Thursday evening after police say they started at least two brush fires in San Diego's Escondido area, as a number of larger fires rage across the county.
 
Police arrested 19-year-old Isaiah Silva of Escondido and a 17-year-old juvenile on suspicion of attempted arson after a witness unsuccessfully tried to chase the teens, who were on bicycles, NBC San Diego reported.
 
Lt. Neal Griffin of Escondido police said investigators could not yet connect them to any of the larger fires currently burning across the county that have have driven tens of thousands from their homes and shut down schools and amusement parks.
 
A red flag warning, which means that critical fire weather conditions are either occurring now or will shortly, are in effect in Hanford, Oxnard and San Diego, according to the National Weather Service.
 
Flames have charred more than 15 square miles and caused more than $20 million in damage.
 
A wildfire burned across the hills in San Marcos.
 
Firefighters found a badly burned body Thursday in a transient camp in Carlsbad — the first apparent fatality — and a Camp Pendleton Fire Department firefighter was treated for heat exhaustion while battling a blaze on the Marine base.
 
The fires are fed by brush and trees left brittle by prolonged drought. They are also being whipped by a Santa Ana wind system that reverses the normal flow of wind from the Pacific Ocean and creates tinderbox fire conditions.
 
Tourists coming to San Diego face a somewhat surreal situation. "The view of the fires on the fly in was a little bit terrifying," said Sam Pfeifle, who lives in Maine.
 
"It's also unsettling to show up at your in-laws only to find that their bags are packed in anticipation of being evacuated," he said.
 
Pfeifle's family spent the day at the beach Thursday, which was packed because many schools were closed due to the fires. But "other than some haze from the smoke" everything appeared normal. "Hate to think of people having their homes burn down not far away," he said.
 
As of Thursday, for the first time this century, the entire state of California is in a severe drought – or worse. The three worst levels of drought are severe, extreme and exceptional: 100% of the state is now in one of those three categories: (23.31% severe, 51.92.% extreme and 24.77% exceptional.)
 
A flare-up Thursday prompted 18,400 new evacuation notices in and around San Marcos, a north San Diego, suburb. But with cooler temperatures forecast, there was an overwhelming sense that far more damage could have been inflicted on a region of more than 3 million people.
 
It could take months to find the causes of the blazes concentrated in the northern San Diego and its northern suburbs, from the coast to areas 10 to 15 miles inland.
 
Contributing: Beth Weise in San Francisco; Doyle Rice in McLean, Va.; Associated Press
 

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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.
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