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MSNBC - Environment News

New limits for Navy sonar off Hawaii (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 01:01:01
A federal judge has ordered the Navy to take additional precautions when conducting sonar exercises off Hawaii that environmentalists say can seriously injure or kill marine mammals.

New limits for Navy sonar off Hawaii (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 03:01:02
A federal judge has ordered the Navy to take additional precautions when conducting sonar exercises off Hawaii that environmentalists say can seriously injure or kill marine mammals.

New limits for Navy sonar off Hawaii (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 05:01:00
A federal judge has ordered the Navy to take additional precautions when conducting sonar exercises off Hawaii that environmentalists say can seriously injure or kill marine mammals.

New limits for Navy sonar off Hawaii (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 07:00:47
A federal judge has ordered the Navy to take additional precautions when conducting sonar exercises off Hawaii that environmentalists say can seriously injure or kill marine mammals.

New limits for Navy sonar off Hawaii (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 08:01:05
A federal judge has ordered the Navy to take additional precautions when conducting sonar exercises off Hawaii that environmentalists say can seriously injure or kill marine mammals.

New limits for Navy sonar off Hawaii (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 10:00:56
A federal judge has ordered the Navy to take additional precautions when conducting sonar exercises off Hawaii that environmentalists say can seriously injure or kill marine mammals.

Shark divers flirt with danger (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 12:01:01

Tourist divers plunge in a shark diving cage off the Farallon Islands 26 miles west of California's coastline, November 17, 2006. Shark enthusiasts go there every year from September to November to dive in cages in hopes of seeing a great white shark. But environmentalists want to limit such activities in the future. Photo taken November 17, 2006. REUTERS/Adam Tanner    (UNITED STATES)Ask any shark diver why they do it and the answer is quick and simple -- the thrill.



New limits for Navy sonar off Calif., Hawaii (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 12:01:01

This image provided by the Cascadia Research Collective shows an adult female beaked whale swimming off the Kona coast in Hawaii, Dec. 4, 2006. These beaked whales have been at the center of the dispute over the Navy's use of sonar ever since several washed ashore bleeding around their brains and ears during Navy exercises in the Bahamas seven years ago. (AP Photo/ Cascadia Research Collective, Robin W. Baird) ** NO SALES **Federal judges ordered the Navy to abide by limits on its sonar training off the Southern California and Hawaii because the exercises could harm dozens of species of whales and dolphins.



High-tech maps reveal coral reefs (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 12:01:01

Glenn Taylor, of the National Undersea Research Center at the University of North Carolina,  lowers a Remote Operated Vehicle aboard the Nancy Foster ship, of the  National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), into the water off western Puerto Rico, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2008.  A submersible equipped with cameras is helping to provide the most detailed maps ever recorded of underwater shelves and struggling coral reefs off this U.S. Caribbean territory. (AP Photo/Andres Leighton)In Puerto Rican waters, shallow-water reefs have been harmed by pollution and overfishing. Nearly half of the coral in areas of the neighboring U.S. Virgin Islands died from diseases after months of warming waters in 2005.



High-tech insulator created from rice husks (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 12:01:01

**APN ADVANCE FOR SUNDAY MARCH 2**  This photograph taken on Saturday Jan. 19, 2008 in Skudai, Malaysia shows Malaysian Scientist Halimaton Hamdan showing off a sample of Aerogel in her laboratory in Universiti Teknologi Malaysia. Hamdan says she has discovered a cheap way to turn discarded rice husks into a high-tech material that could reduce electricity bills, protect buildings from bomb blasts and make airplanes and tennis rackets lighter. Aerogel, the lightest solid known to man, was invented in 1931 by an American scientist, but its high cost has limited its use. (AP Photo/Vijay Joshi)A Malaysian scientist says she has discovered a cheap way to turn discarded rice husks into a high-tech material that could reduce electricity bills, protect buildings from bomb blasts and make airplanes and tennis rackets lighter.



Shark divers flirt with danger (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 02:00:57

Tourist divers plunge in a shark diving cage off the Farallon Islands 26 miles west of California's coastline, November 17, 2006. Shark enthusiasts go there every year from September to November to dive in cages in hopes of seeing a great white shark. But environmentalists want to limit such activities in the future. Photo taken November 17, 2006. REUTERS/Adam Tanner    (UNITED STATES)Ask any shark diver why they do it and the answer is quick and simple -- the thrill.



Shark divers flirt with danger (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 04:01:14

Tourist divers plunge in a shark diving cage off the Farallon Islands 26 miles west of California's coastline, November 17, 2006. Shark enthusiasts go there every year from September to November to dive in cages in hopes of seeing a great white shark. But environmentalists want to limit such activities in the future. Photo taken November 17, 2006. REUTERS/Adam Tanner    (UNITED STATES)Ask any shark diver why they do it and the answer is quick and simple -- the thrill.



Shark divers flirt with danger (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 06:00:54

Tourist divers plunge in a shark diving cage off the Farallon Islands 26 miles west of California's coastline, November 17, 2006. Shark enthusiasts go there every year from September to November to dive in cages in hopes of seeing a great white shark. But environmentalists want to limit such activities in the future. Photo taken November 17, 2006. REUTERS/Adam Tanner    (UNITED STATES)Ask any shark diver why they do it and the answer is quick and simple -- the thrill.



Shark divers flirt with danger (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 08:01:00

Tourist divers plunge in a shark diving cage off the Farallon Islands 26 miles west of California's coastline, November 17, 2006. Shark enthusiasts go there every year from September to November to dive in cages in hopes of seeing a great white shark. But environmentalists want to limit such activities in the future. Photo taken November 17, 2006. REUTERS/Adam Tanner    (UNITED STATES)Ask any shark diver why they do it and the answer is quick and simple -- the thrill.



Israelis, Arabs join to save wildlife (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 10:00:48

Gazelles are seen in Wadi Qelt in the West Bank, where Israel plans to build part of its separation barrier, Thursday, Dec. 20, 2007. The separation barrier Israel is building to keep out Palestinian attackers threatens to cut off the animals from a vital water source in the area. Fearing for the environment, an odd mix of Jewish settlers and Israeli and Palestinian activists have joined forces to prevent construction of the barrier in this sensitive area, saying the pristine landscape and wildlife in Wadi Qelt could suffer irreversible damage.Gazelles, hyenas and foxes drink from the  stream that flows through a West Bank canyon. But the separation barrier Israel is building threatens to cut the animals off from this vital water source.



'Initial payment' for S.F. spill agreed (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 10:00:48
Agents for the owner of a cargo ship that dumped oil into San Francisco Bay have agreed to pay $2 million to the city of San Francisco.

Shark divers flirt with danger (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 10:00:48

Tourist divers plunge in a shark diving cage off the Farallon Islands 26 miles west of California's coastline, November 17, 2006. Shark enthusiasts go there every year from September to November to dive in cages in hopes of seeing a great white shark. But environmentalists want to limit such activities in the future. Photo taken November 17, 2006. REUTERS/Adam Tanner    (UNITED STATES)Ask any shark diver why they do it and the answer is quick and simple -- the thrill.



Israelis, Arabs join to save wildlife (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 11:01:03

Gazelles are seen in Wadi Qelt in the West Bank, where Israel plans to build part of its separation barrier, Thursday, Dec. 20, 2007. The separation barrier Israel is building to keep out Palestinian attackers threatens to cut off the animals from a vital water source in the area. Fearing for the environment, an odd mix of Jewish settlers and Israeli and Palestinian activists have joined forces to prevent construction of the barrier in this sensitive area, saying the pristine landscape and wildlife in Wadi Qelt could suffer irreversible damage.Gazelles, hyenas and foxes drink from the  stream that flows through a West Bank canyon. But the separation barrier Israel is building threatens to cut the animals off from this vital water source.



Japan: Activists hurt whalers (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-02-2008 at 11:01:03
Anti-whaling activists hurled containers of rotten butter at a Japanese whaling ship in Antarctic waters Monday, lightly injuring several crewmembers, Japan's government said.

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