ClimatePatrol.com
Menu
Site Home
Forums [ Recent Posts ]
Chat
Photo Gallery
News
News Archives
Satellite Images
Weather Maps

Google Links
 

News
New Scientist - Climate Change
Science Daily
National Hurricane Center - Atlantic Basin Updates
National Hurricane Center - Pacific Basin Updates
USGS - Recent Quakes Mag 2.5 or Greater
NOAA News
AccuWeather News
FEMA - News & Disasters
NASA - News
National Geographic - News
Volcano Live - John Seach
Climate Ark
Yahoo Hurricane News
Christian Geology News
Topix.net - Tornado News
[ List All News Sources ]
Important Information
Search the forums Search   Frequently Asked Questions FAQ   View member list Member List   Recent Posts Recent Posts   Forum Stats Stats Back to: ClimatePatrol.com
News

ClimatePatrol.com RSS News Archives

MSNBC - Environment News

Water woes could mean new dams (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-04-2008 at 12:00:54

An overview of the Grand Coulee Dam, about 70 miles west of Spokane, in north central Washington is shown in 2007. Grand Coulee was one of the huge dams built by the federal government during the dam-building binge from the 1920s to the 1960s. Now, population growth and global warming have people studying building such dams again to provide more water for summer months.(AP Photo/Nick Geranios)The West's booming population and growing fears about climate change have governments once again studying construction of dams to capture more winter rain and spring snowmelt.



Water woes could mean new dams (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-04-2008 at 02:00:57

An overview of the Grand Coulee Dam, about 70 miles west of Spokane, in north central Washington is shown in 2007. Grand Coulee was one of the huge dams built by the federal government during the dam-building binge from the 1920s to the 1960s. Now, population growth and global warming have people studying building such dams again to provide more water for summer months.(AP Photo/Nick Geranios)The West's booming population and growing fears about climate change have governments once again studying construction of dams to capture more winter rain and spring snowmelt.



Water woes could mean new dams (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-04-2008 at 04:00:58

An overview of the Grand Coulee Dam, about 70 miles west of Spokane, in north central Washington is shown in 2007. Grand Coulee was one of the huge dams built by the federal government during the dam-building binge from the 1920s to the 1960s. Now, population growth and global warming have people studying building such dams again to provide more water for summer months.(AP Photo/Nick Geranios)The West's booming population and growing fears about climate change have governments once again studying construction of dams to capture more winter rain and spring snowmelt.



Water woes could mean new dams (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-04-2008 at 06:01:07

An overview of the Grand Coulee Dam, about 70 miles west of Spokane, in north central Washington is shown in 2007. Grand Coulee was one of the huge dams built by the federal government during the dam-building binge from the 1920s to the 1960s. Now, population growth and global warming have people studying building such dams again to provide more water for summer months.(AP Photo/Nick Geranios)The West's booming population and growing fears about climate change have governments once again studying construction of dams to capture more winter rain and spring snowmelt.



Water woes could mean new dams (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-04-2008 at 08:00:46

An overview of the Grand Coulee Dam, about 70 miles west of Spokane, in north central Washington is shown in 2007. Grand Coulee was one of the huge dams built by the federal government during the dam-building binge from the 1920s to the 1960s. Now, population growth and global warming have people studying building such dams again to provide more water for summer months.(AP Photo/Nick Geranios)The West's booming population and growing fears about climate change have governments once again studying construction of dams to capture more winter rain and spring snowmelt.



Water woes could mean new dams (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-04-2008 at 11:00:51

An overview of the Grand Coulee Dam, about 70 miles west of Spokane, in north central Washington is shown in 2007. Grand Coulee was one of the huge dams built by the federal government during the dam-building binge from the 1920s to the 1960s. Now, population growth and global warming have people studying building such dams again to provide more water for summer months.(AP Photo/Nick Geranios)The West's booming population and growing fears about climate change have governments once again studying construction of dams to capture more winter rain and spring snowmelt.



Road threatens 6,000-year-old antelope path (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-04-2008 at 01:01:04

Antelope graze outside a rural home near Pinedale in western Wyoming on Nov.  7, 2007. A $900,000 detection system is one of the measures wildlife managers have taken to help thousands of pronghorn and deer make the increasingly dangerous annual trek in western Wyoming.



Japan plugs into fuel cells in homes (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-04-2008 at 01:01:04

Masanori Naruse sits back on a couch at his home in Hiratsuka, near Tokyo, Japan, Thursday, Feb. 21, 2008.  Naruse's home gets its electricity and hot water from power generated by a hydrogen fuel cell. Masanori Naruse jogs every day, collects miniature cars and feeds birds in his backyard, but he's proudest of the way his home and 2,200 others in Japan run off a hydrogen fuel cell.



U.S. biologist wins $100,000 eco-award (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-04-2008 at 01:01:04
American biologist and writer Gretchen Daily won Norway's Sophie Prize on Tuesday for exploring the potential profits of protecting the environment.

Water woes could mean new dams (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-04-2008 at 01:01:04

An overview of the Grand Coulee Dam, about 70 miles west of Spokane, in north central Washington is shown in 2007. Grand Coulee was one of the huge dams built by the federal government during the dam-building binge from the 1920s to the 1960s. Now, population growth and global warming have people studying building such dams again to provide more water for summer months.(AP Photo/Nick Geranios)The West's booming population and growing fears about climate change have governments once again studying construction of dams to capture more winter rain and spring snowmelt.



Road threatens 6,000-year-old antelope path (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-04-2008 at 03:00:56

Antelope graze outside a rural home near Pinedale in western Wyoming on Nov.  7, 2007. A $900,000 detection system is one of the measures wildlife managers have taken to help thousands of pronghorn and deer make the increasingly dangerous annual trek in western Wyoming.



Road threatens 6,000-year-old antelope path (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-04-2008 at 05:01:07

Antelope graze outside a rural home near Pinedale in western Wyoming on Nov.  7, 2007. A $900,000 detection system is one of the measures wildlife managers have taken to help thousands of pronghorn and deer make the increasingly dangerous annual trek in western Wyoming.



EPA chief grilled over mercury issue (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-04-2008 at 05:01:07
The EPA chief said Tuesday he didn't know of behind-the-scenes efforts by EPA officials to blunt state attempts to reduce mercury emissions from power plants.

Road threatens 6,000-year-old antelope path (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-04-2008 at 07:01:05

Antelope graze outside a rural home near Pinedale in western Wyoming on Nov.  7, 2007. A $900,000 detection system is one of the measures wildlife managers have taken to help thousands of pronghorn and deer make the increasingly dangerous annual trek in western Wyoming.



Prince Charles drops jet for yacht (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-04-2008 at 07:01:05

Britain's Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall arrive at Staubles Bay coastguard facility in Trinidad and Tobago, on the island of Trinidad, Tuesday March 4, 2008, after disembarking from the boat the Leander, background, on the first day of their tour of the Caribbean. The couple began an11-day tour of the Caribbean, and  will travel to five West Indian islands to promote the themes of sustainable development, environmental protection and youth opportunity.Britain's Prince Charles, eschewing pollution-spewing jets, is touring the Caribbean on a 246-foot megayacht, complete with hot tub, gym and 24-member crew.



Road threatens 6,000-year-old antelope path (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-04-2008 at 09:01:00

Antelope graze outside a rural home near Pinedale in western Wyoming on Nov.  7, 2007. A $900,000 detection system is one of the measures wildlife managers have taken to help thousands of pronghorn and deer make the increasingly dangerous annual trek in western Wyoming.



Road threatens 6,000-year-old antelope path (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 03-04-2008 at 11:01:01

Antelope graze outside a rural home near Pinedale in western Wyoming on Nov.  7, 2007. A $900,000 detection system is one of the measures wildlife managers have taken to help thousands of pronghorn and deer make the increasingly dangerous annual trek in western Wyoming.



User Info
Welcome Guest!



Site Stats
Registered Users: 150
Topics: 4080
Posts: 20651
News Stories: 147677
Satellite Images: 1108648


Last 10 Active Threads
Coming soon to a zoo near you: Live mammoths (maybe)
Northwest Passage Opens Early - 2007 record may be broken
'It's going to be much worse' (Economy)
Over 200 whales trapped in Canadian ice
Magnetic Portals Connect Sun and Earth
Peak Oil Tracker
GM - Live or Die
Cheney, Gonzales indicted
Central America Region
Even as winds calm, more Californians flee fires




XMB Modified By ClimatePatrol.com Team. Original By Aventure Media & The XMB Group
ClimateBoard v2.0 © 2004-2008 ClimatePatrol.com