Monday, February 28, 2011

Cancun Spring Break 2009 TRAILER

Cancun Mexico Spring Break 2009
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SNOOP DOGG FEAT. KURUPT “Cancun” Dir: Dah Dah .m4v

Snoop Dogg as Slim Feat. Kurupt as Keaf production by Niggarachi. Dir: by Dah Dah We were in Cancun for Spring Break last year so we decide to do what we do & shoot something. The song is from another project thats in the Vault. Be Sure to go get that Snoop Dogg MORE MALICE 3-23-10 THE MOVIE! & U DO KNOW THAT!
From: DBAKER
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Cancun Spring Break 2009 TRAILER

Cancun Mexico Spring Break 2009
Views: 734293
267 ratings
Time: 04:53 More in Travel & Events

Source: YouTube Videos matching query: cancun

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CANCUN SPRING BREAK 2010

party party party lets all get wasted
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Sunday, February 27, 2011

atardecer en Ixtapa (3)



By calabacitale
Ale Wawis+ Add Contact

This photo was taken on January 25, 2008 using a Samsung Samsung L700.

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BP Oil Spill in Gulf of Mexico Mobilizes Coast Wildlife Rescue Teams

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By billyaustindillon

Birds of the Gulf CoastBirds of the Gulf CoastBirds of Florida's Gulf Coast GuideBirds of Florida’s Gulf Coast GuideGulf Coast Birds: An Introduction to Familiar Species (Regional Nature Guides)Gulf Coast Birds: An Introduction to Familiar Species (Regional Nature Guides)

Wildlife Casualties

The first casualty from the oil spill found
on the Gulf coast is a single Northern Gannet seabird. The Northern Gannet
feeds by plunge diving for fish and squid. You may be familiar with it because
of its black and white plumage. Most birds stay fairly close to land, and as such
their vulnerability will increase as the spill meanders towards shore.

The bird was found alive but coated in the
oil slick making it’s way ashore along the Louisiana coastline. Images brought
back memories of the Exxon Valdez disaster. This disaster however potentially
dwarves tithe Valdez disaster s caused by a drunken ship captain running off
course and rupturing the oil tanker.

What must be understood is the wetlands of
this region of the United States are the largest of its kind in the world. The
region has a thriving population of fish, birds, turtles and wetland and coast
marine wild life
. The potential environmental calamity is mind numbing if the
oil slick is not repelled. Five threatened and endangered species of sea
turtles
have been identified in the region. There are also alligators, manatees, dolphins,
sharks, stingrays
and whales in the vicinity of the spill.

Sperm whales have been seen swimming in the
waters that have been covered by oil. Studies previously have found dolphins
and whales tend to avoid oil spills, lets hope these sighted sperm whales are
an anomaly. Whales draw one of the strongest reactions by environmentalists and
the public alike when they are put at risk.

Thankfully there have been no ‘confirmed
animal impacts’ yet according to one of the wildlife rescue teams leaders. Dr.
Michael Ziccardi is a veterinarian and director of the ‘oiled wildlife care
network’ currently in Houma, Louisiana overseeing some of the wildlife rescue
teams. He did add in an interview that; ‘That is not going to stay the same. We
are expecting many more (casualties) in the days to come. We hope that number
is not catastrophic. We’re … hoping for the best but planning for the worst.’

Oiled Wildlife Care Network

The Oiled Wildlife Care Network is a California-based
organization and has deployed Dr. Ziccardi to assist with the wildlife response
activities since the oil spill. The network also directs and assists volunteers
to the spill site. 

  • If you wish to assist call OWCN on
    1-866-448-5816. You can also track the clean up and oil spill by visiting the Deepwater
    Horizon site
    or the OWCN blog,
  • If you find or wish to report an oiled
    animal, please call 1-800-557-1401 and leave a message with OWCN. OWCN has said
    that messages will be checked hourly.

Dr. Ziccardi has responded to over sixty
Californian oil spills. What he has learnt there is that until wildlife is
washed ashore or found stranded it is not clear just how intensely damaging to
wildlife the oil spill will be. 

Climate Change Adaptation and Disaster Risk Reduction: Issues and Challenges (Community, Environment and Disaster Risk Management)Climate Change Adaptation and Disaster Risk Reduction: Issues and Challenges (Community, Environment and Disaster Risk Management)Environmental Hazards: Assessing Risk and Reducing Disaster, Third editionEnvironmental Hazards: Assessing Risk and Reducing Disaster, Third editionNova: Secrets Beneath the IceNova: Secrets Beneath the Ice
Oil Spill! (Let's-Read-and-Find-Out Science 2)Oil Spill! (Let’s-Read-and-Find-Out Science 2)Oil Spills: Damage, Recovery, and Prevention (A Save-the-Earth Book)Oil Spills: Damage, Recovery, and Prevention (A Save-the-Earth Book)Not One Drop: Betrayal and Courage in the Wake of the Exxon Valdez Oil SpillNot One Drop: Betrayal and Courage in the Wake of the Exxon Valdez Oil SpillOil Spills (Our Environment Series)Oil Spills (Our Environment Series)

The Potential Impacts

We know the slick is huge and we know it is
growing by the minute. The question is what hopes do we have of diverting this
massive wildlife disaster?

The crucial factors

  1. When can the broken undersea be capped,
    obviously the sooner the better?
  2. What role will the weather take? Currently
    the Gulf is seeing high winds and choppy seas, this makes rescue efforts harder
    and moves the slick faster and over a larger area.
  3. Can we contain the oil slick? This is
    crucial, the weather works against this also with high seas limiting the
    effectiveness of mobile barriers placed to keep the oil offshore and contained. We can have the environmental dangers of chemical dispersants to contend with.


Oil Spill Bad Timing for Wildlife

Of course the fact that the oil spill
happened is bad timing. However it is especially bad given that the oil slick
is heading directly for the Mississippi Flyway. This flyway is a key migratory
corridor said Dr. Ziccardi. He added that ‘There are certain songbirds and
shorebirds that are going through their peak migratory period.’ ‘There are other birds for which this
is a nesting and egg-laying period.’

Sea turtles, which already face natural
predators such as birds for their eggs are now being exposed because this is
right when their nesting cycle begins.

A positive (if you can garner one) from having the large presence
of boats and planes in cleanup operation Dr. Ziccardi said they ‘are a
wonderful deterrent’ to scaring the threatened wildlife away from the spill
zone.

Though the spill may be greater than the
1989 Exxon Valdez spill
in Alaska the mortality level for birds along the Gulf
Coast may be smaller. It has been estimated 250,000 seabirds perished in the
Valdez disaster. Dr Ziccardi explained that, ‘We don’t have the same densities
of sea birds in this area as Prince William Sound,’ and ‘But that’s not to say
that if the spill continues and birds are affected, we won’t have sizable
losses

The Gulf of Mexico oil spill mobilizes
wildlife rescue teams; lets just hope it is enough to turn back the untold
damage that awaits the marine wildlife if the slick is not turned back.

billyaustindillon profile image

billyaustindillon 5 months ago

Test received Sunforged ….

sunforged profile image

sunforged 5 months ago

test

billyaustindillon profile image

billyaustindillon 7 months ago

Ixtoc also occurred in the Gulf of Mexico and was much larger, it leaked a record 140 million gallons of oil. however wind and currents managed to contain the damage as it was on the other side of the Gulf and not right near sensitive coastlines. Though massive slicks hit the northern Mexican Gulf coast and Texas covering almost 170 miles (275 kilometers) of U.S. beaches.

This from the Brownsville Herald:

The good news is the Ixtoc experience suggests the Gulf of Mexico has natural properties that help it cope with massive oil spills, scientists say. Warm waters and sunlight helped break down the oil faster than many expected. Weathering reduced much of the oil into tar balls by the time it reached Texas.

Two decades after the Ixtoc disaster, marine biologist Wes Tunnell sank his diving knife into an area where he had spotted a tar patch just after the spill. The blade came out black and tarry but the hardened surface of the patch was under sand, shells and algae that had completely covered it.

“No one else would know that it was anything other than a rock ledge,” said Tunnell of Harte Research Institute for Gulf of Mexico Studies at Texas AM University. “I think that the Gulf of Mexico is hugely resilient, or at least it was 30 years ago. We’ve insulted it a lot since then in various ways.”

Storytellersrus profile image

Storytellersrus 7 months ago

This is very comprehensive. I am sure living near the ocean brings this reality home every day. How did the other Gulf oil spill resolve- the one down in Mexico in 1979? At the time, it was huge. Are they using information from that to predict what might happen with this one?

billyaustindillon profile image

billyaustindillon 7 months ago

Jay thanks for your comments – the Marine wildlife rescue teams have done a terrific job – they actually d things rather than just talk about tit like the politicians.

jaymelee23 profile image

jaymelee23 7 months ago

What a well put together hub. You put some serious time into this one. Thanks for sharing your knowlege on the Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill.

billyaustindillon profile image

billyaustindillon 8 months ago

Trimar7 the more that comes out about this the more unsettling it is and explains why the President has behaved so aggressively towards BP and so late in the peace. It has come out that the administration knocks back BP’s initial containment plans, they stalled at getting equipment there and that they have knocked back other companies and nations help. Now if I was a conspiracy theorist and wanted to push an agenda to get a cap and trading bill through what would I do? Scary isn’t it.

The thing is we will never know the truth and all these ecosystems and animals lives are lost.

trimar7 profile image

trimar7 8 months ago

As a teacher of young children I have been trying to educate them about becoming more aware and knowledgeable of what is happening in the world and trying to impress how much it affects them and their future. The thing that has really disturbed me as of late is that I am hearing that our president turned down help from 12 other countries. Please someone explain this to me. I am appalled.

billyaustindillon profile image

billyaustindillon 8 months ago

Stacie thanks for your feedback

stacies29 profile image

stacies29 8 months ago

great hub on such a sad situation

billyaustindillon profile image

billyaustindillon 8 months ago

Robert thank you for your comments and input about the BOP flanges. I did read somewhere that the reason they didn’t was because there is a concern that there is a fracture in the pipe below the sea bed and the pressure would force it lower and be much worse. However it may be the quietness is merely not to get people’s hopes up. If it is a down hole than this would be a worse case scenario. It is bewildering how long it has gone on and that sounds like the worse case. Lets hope that there is something before the relief wells are completed.

Robert Brown 8 months ago

——They just dont get it. Still no mention at all,pro or con,of the flange/bolts on all the news. Some of the bloggers that do are top engineers within the industry.——

The oil leak can be TOTALLY controlled in half a week. Replacing the flange atop the BOP with a riser is absolutely possible,even in that blast. A pre-assembled guide—four 40 ft pcs drill pipe— with a five ft diameter band connecting the top ends, and solidly mounted on the BOP flange below,will steer the new riser perfectly, over the drill pipe stub and down, with 2 tapered pins on the new flange, precisely aligning it for bolting. A manifold with 4 lines to the surface completes it,redundantly accomplishing more than the present cap, only with positively NO leaking at all, and no sea water to “freeze”. After working the giant shear, these tasks,including clamping before unbolting, and trimming projections on the flange,etc. are comparatively simple for the robot operators. Please hurry.

billyaustindillon profile image

billyaustindillon 8 months ago

Green tea-cher. Thanks for the link to kevin Costner’s solution. It is wonderful that there are people that do such a wonderful job with wildlife rescue. They are amazing really.

billyaustindillon profile image

billyaustindillon 8 months ago

PaperNotes thanks for your comments – lets hope something is done for their rescue – the damage is going to be severe here is the well still pours out.

green tea-cher profile image

green tea-cher 8 months ago

Great Hub billy! It is wonderful to see the concern that exists for the marine life and birds and the great efforts of the people forming the wildlife rescue teams. I am linking to my hub “Kevin Costner’s Oil Spill Solution”.

Thanks for sharing such great information.

PaperNotes profile image

PaperNotes 8 months ago

Thank you for the information hub, I hope more will be done to help protect our ocean’s wildlife.

Also, thank you for stopping by my hubs.

billyaustindillon profile image

billyaustindillon 8 months ago

Magickal thanks for your comments – another example of man being animals worse predator – even when we don’t mean to be.

Magickal profile image

Magickal 8 months ago

Great article. It is really sad that wildlife is put at risk because of human error. Hopefully things will get better.

billyaustindillon profile image

billyaustindillon 8 months ago

Leslie thanks for your comments. You must be having a very interesting time in Jerusalem at the moment. Lets hope that things do change soon for the better for the wildlife in the Gulf.

Leslie Jo Barra profile image

Leslie Jo Barra 8 months ago

You have some strategic methods for coping with the oil spill. The Jeruslem Post reported last week that wildlife rescuers and cleanup crews along the shore where sparse. Part of me wishes I was back in the States so I could effect some change somehow. Great hub, keep up the good work.

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