Friday, April 15, 2011

Global Seismographic Network

I make a regular visit to this site. TONS of information. Thought I would share. There was another magnitude 5.0 earthquate today near the east coast of Honshu, Japan.

Click on the link and keep it bookmark for the latest information on earthquakes around the globe.




* This event has been reviewed by a seismologist.

Magnitude 5.0
Date-Time

* Friday, April 15, 2011 at 14:34:25 UTC
* Friday, April 15, 2011 at 11:34:25 PM at epicenter
* Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones

Location 39.148°N, 142.282°E

Depth 31 km (19.3 miles)
Region NEAR THE EAST COAST OF HONSHU, JAPAN
Distances 114 km (70 miles) ESE of Morioka, Honshu, Japan
156 km (96 miles) NE of Sendai, Honshu, Japan
166 km (103 miles) SSE of Hachinohe, Honshu, Japan
444 km (275 miles) NNE of TOKYO, Japan
Location Uncertainty
horizontal +/- 18 km (11.2 miles); depth +/- 7.8 km
(4.8 miles)
Parameters NST=219, Nph=219, Dmin=327.3 km, Rmss=0.79 sec, Gp=104°,
M-type=body wave magnitude (Mb), Version=9
Source

* USGS NEIC (WDCS-D)

Event ID usc0002s5g

What Japan's nuclear crisis means for public heath (Q&A)

Sorry to keep going back to this subject, but I think we all should be very concerned not only for how this crisis will affect our world economy, but also for the poor souls that are dealing with this and everything else in Japan. I came across this article that's worth sharing.

This article was written by Martin LaMonica.
Martin LaMonica is a senior writer for CNET's Green Tech blog. He started at CNET News in 2002, covering IT and Web development. Before that, he was executive editor at IT publication InfoWorld.

"By far, the biggest danger from the disaster at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi power plant is to the workers who are trying to control a still-volatile situation. But with the crisis likely to play out for months, people are beginning to wonder what the release of radioactive material actually means.

Very low levels of radioactive material have been found in the water supply in Tokyo, for example, and those same particles are being carried by the wind elsewhere in the world.

Workers near the reactor core are being exposed to radiation coming directly from the core and spent-fuel cooling pools. For people living far from the source of the radiation, exposure can come from the radioactive material that entered the air or water during efforts to stabilize the cooling.

Radioactive versions of cesium, iodine, and strontium can enter the body either through the lungs or by eating and drinking affected food. A standard precaution is to prevent people, particularly growing children, from drinking milk in the area of a nuclear accident, since cows can eat grass with radioactive iodine and pass it on to people.


(Credit: Tokyo Electric Power via Martyn Williams)


The Environmental Protection Agency is monitoring and publishing data on the radioactivity in water and milk from Japan in the U.S. and the levels are "far below levels of public-health concern." But some argue that being exposed to even a small dose of the radioactive materials already released--iodine-131 and cesium-137 are the most prevalent--can be significant. If ingested, radioactive iodine can be absorbed by the thyroid gland, with children at the most risk. Cesium-137, which can also lead to cancer by affecting many types of cells, is more worrisome because it has a half-life of 30 years, versus 8 days for iodine-131. Radioactive strontium, which also has a long half-life, is linked to bone cancer and leukemia.

If there is a large-scale release of radioactive isotopes from the Fukushima Daiichi reactor or spent-fuel pools, then the risks will rise substantially.

But in the current situation, how should people evaluate the health risk? How do academics and scientists view this problem? Are sufficient safeguards being put in place?

To get a better understanding of these questions, CNET spoke to two experts in the field to get their views the same week that the Fukushima Daiichi was raised to the highest level possible for a nuclear power accident.

Below is an edited transcript of a discussion with David Brenner from Columbia University's Center for Radiological Research. Later today, we will run an interview with Ira Helfand, the former president of Physicians for Social Responsibility, a group quite firmly opposed to nuclear power which it says poses unacceptable risks.

In a nutshell, the view of Brenner, who recently testified to Congress on radiation from backscatter X-rays at airports, is that the individual risks are extremely low for people outside the exclusion zone around the Fukushima Daiichi power plant. At the same time, a large number of people will be exposed, which means that over the long term, that minute risk becomes more significant.

Q: What is the difference between what workers are exposed to and the rest of the population?

Brenner: It's simply a matter of the radiation dose. It's relatively low for people away from the plant. While we don't know what the doses are, the workers are clearly getting relatively high doses.

Q: There have been traces of radioactive material detected in food and milk here in the U.S. Should people be concerned?

Brenner: In the U.S., the levels of radioactivity in the water and milk both on the West Coast and the East Coast have been exceedingly low. I don't think there are any significant health issues with the level of radioactivity in this country.

It was inevitable that once radioactivity was released in Japan, that some of it would be blown here. What was fortunate is that most of the radioactivity released into the air was blown into the sea but it was inevitable that it would end up in this country...Very little indeed has gotten here because it got heavily distributed. The fact that you can measure it here doesn't mean that it's a high health risk, at least in the short term. That's the situation in the U.S.

In Japan, the doses are still pretty low outside the exclusion zone. Again, the further away people are from reactors, the lower the dose, such as the folks in, say, Tokyo. In Kyoto, it's even lower.

Q: What about the longer-term effects?

Brenner: The health consequences are actually very small for any individual. That being said, there are longer-term issues. The two main isotopes that were released are iodine-131 and cesium-137. The half-life for half the radioactive material in iodine to decay is eight days, so by a month or two later, it's essentially all gone. There's no long-term effect.

Whatever cesium was released will get into the food chain, into the ecosystem, and it will gradually get dispersed. So there will be some in the food and water for generations to come. It will be at some level but it will be at a very low level. What we really have will be a prolonged exposure to very low levels of radioactive from the Fukushima event. That's really what we're stuck with. But the risk for any individual will be tiny.

Although individual risk is low, an awful lot of people exposed to it. Think of the lottery. An awful lot of people will [be involved] because somebody's going to win...[In this case] one would expect some extra cancers in the long run but everybody's individual risk is low.

Some people say that even a tiny bit of exposure should be avoided because it could cause a specific type of cancer, such as thyroid cancer in children.

Brenner: You can think about risk in two different ways. There's the risk of an individual and certainly the risk is very small. You can also think about the lottery analogy. How many tiny individual risks affect a population? It's two complementary ways of looking at it.

From an individual's point of view, one doesn't have to worry. When you're starting to think about what is significant from the point of view of the population and how do we proceed with nuclear power, we need to think about the population.

Should we be restricting food imports?
Brenner: Most of radioactivity being seen in food, water, and fish is almost certainly from iodine. I would expect in a month or two months, those restrictions will probably go away. But what will be left will be much lower levels of cesium in food [in part because less cesium than iodine was released]. It's more than appropriate that Japan and the U.S. and any other country should be monitoring the food. It's not hard to do. I don't expect this will be long-term except in a broader sense.

How do people in your profession decide what's an acceptable risk?
Brenner: We try to think about risk and benefits. Having a CT scan, there's a small radiation risk, but there's a benefit to hopefully getting an accurate diagnosis. It's another story whether we get that balance right since there are alternatives to CT scanners.

You could argue, one should be doing the same estimations for nuclear power. The risk, unfortunately, is the scenario like what we have in Fukushima. What are the benefits of power with oil or use of fossil fuels? It's up to society to make the risk-benefit analysis as best they can. You need to understand risks as well as you can and different folks will come up with different conclusions.

One thing that's pretty clear is that we have in this country and Japan a pretty aging fleet of nuclear reactors. The Fukushima plant was built in the 1970s and there are plenty of similar reactors also built at the same time in the U.S.

It seems to me we're at that point where we have to make decisions about replacing older reactors with more modern reactors that have more defense mechanisms built into them. We can never say anything is 100 percent safe, but they can be a lot more safe.

Are you pro nuclear power?
Brenner: My job is to try to understand the risks. It's for society in general to determine how to balance risks. I'm all in favor of safe nuclear if it can be achieved. Some risks do always exist. The question is do they counter-balance the benefits.

The two extremes around nuclear power are either that it's extremely unsafe and it should be abolished, but that is not true. The other extreme is that it's entirely safe. That's not true either. The reality is in the middle.

It seems that there isn't agreement on the ultimate health impact from the Chernobyl disaster in 1986. Does that disaster provide much guidance?
Brenner: Most of the epidemiological studies that should have been done haven't been done for political and economic reasons. The Soviet Union broke up shortly after so it's difficult to have Belarus, Ukraine, and Russia work together on it.

The studies that have been done are the low-hanging fruit--studies about thyroid cancer and leukemia which you would expect to see first. There's no question there was a tremendous increase in thyroid cancers and it's pretty clear for [an increase in] leukemia too.

Studies on the more common cancers like lung cancer and breast cancer have not been done. And that's a shame, to put it mildly. Lacking those, people are having to estimate what consequences were because we don't know enough of the effects of very low levels or radiation.

It's still not appropriate to compare Fukushima to Chernobyl, where the containment blew up entirely and large amounts of the core were emitted high into the atmosphere. There was no ocean. I heard a statement that Fukushima was one tenth as hazardous as Chernobyl but I think it is far less.

You testified in Congress about backscatter X-rays at airports. For most people, this is the day-to-day question: how much low-level radiation is OK. Do we know?
Brenner: The argument's a little bit the same [as Fukushima]. The individual risk is miniscule. I didn't hesitate to go through [security] on my flight home. The concern is the population risk because an awful lot of people fly, about 700 million a year in the U.S.

If the TSA wants to scan every passenger, you got a scenario where you have a tiny risk and you take that tiny risk [and multiply it], you do get significant population risk. You could argue that there's risk but it's OK as a benefit. But there are alternative technologies, such as millimeter scanners that don't have this X-ray risk.

An individual who lives in Tokyo doesn't have that choice and there are no individual benefits. Fortunately, for an individual the risks are extremely low.

You readers may or may not know this but 40 percent of them are going to get cancer, so the sorts of increases we're talking about are miniscule. It's a tiny addition to a very large problem.

You've been working on a system where people can do individual testing with a blood test (called the RABIT, for rapid automated biodosimetry tool for radiological triage). Is the goal to get away from statistical estimates for whole populations?

Brenner: Yes. The motivation is a large-scale radiological terrorist event [from a dirty bomb]. In many senses, that scenario is quite like the scenario in Japan with a very small number of people exposed to high doses. And a very large number of people exposed to very small doses and not believing what they are being told. There is a great deal of skepticism in Japan and I'm sure that would be true in this country too. The goal is to have some very high-throughput way of estimating one's dose. So you can try to find the folks who did get high doses who need to be treated. The other part is to reassure people.

We're developing a finger stick approach where you take a drop of blood, something that can be done by nonexperts. You'd have many centers, such as hospitals and railway stations, where you can go have your finger sticked, give a drop of blood, and it would get transported to more centralized local machines. An individual estimate will mean that you won't clog up the emergency services.

What sorts of precautions should someone in the U.S. and Japan take?
Brenner: You don't need to be doing anything. The EPA is testing the water and milk and the levels are all pretty low and will get a lot lower as iodine decays. There's no reason to avoid any food or drink. The same goes for Japan. Yes, there will be some contaminated food [and they are being monitored with spot checks] for the moment. That's what the government is and should be doing [to watch that] it is going to be at reasonable levels.

Fukushima Nuclear Accident Update Log

Fukushima Nuclear Accident Update Log

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Outrigger Yacht Club - Lake Norman, NC: LET'S GO SAILING YA'LL!!!



Just watching the movie within this link makes me want to go sailing!!!

While hubby is working on restoring his Stiletto Catamaran, we're posting our Catalina 30 Cruising Sailboat for sale. Check out all the info on this fantastic OVERBOARD Sailing Delight. Email: mattz40@yahoo.com if you or someone you know is interested.

http://catalina-30-for-sale-in-nc.blogspot.com/

Wedding Photography: You Get What You Pay For

Often times, well, I think almost EVERY time somebody discovers I'm a photographer, the second question out of their mouth is "So, how much do you charge?" When I tell them, I get that "EEK!" look on their face. It's really frustrating. People don't realize everything it takes to BE a photographer, much less the equipment, scheduling, props, and editing! The software alone costs way more than what I'm charging them; the SKILL to operate the software and really know what you're doing and hell - the time it takes to go through 400+ pictures alone is worth what I charge by the hour!!!

The best response / article I've ever read on Photography was written by Alex Frazier, Yahoo! Contributor Network. A friend of mine had re-posted this article in response to somebody complaining about the price of her photography.

I find it appropriate to repost here also. ....Just as a reminder.

Wedding Photography: You Get What You Pay For
Alex Frazier
Alex Frazier, Yahoo! Contributor Network


Why is wedding photography so expensive? More than a few people have asked that question over the years. To the average consumer, it seems a common sense thing to ask. All they're doing is taking pictures. What about that is worth $2000 or more?
Let me begin this article with a reality check. People spend hundreds of dollars for a limo that they'll have for four hours. They spend $5000 on a reception hall with $30 a piece plated dinners. A bride will spend $1000 or more on a dress she's only going to wear once. The couple will spend $500 on a single bouquet of flowers, and in some cases over $1000 on the decorative flowers for the wedding, all of which will be gone by the next morning. The groom will rent a tuxedo that costs $200-$300, and it has to be returned promptly the following day. But when it comes to the photographer, who is going to produce and prepare the only lasting memento of their event, he or she is out of their mind to ask more than $500.

I've read many articles discussing ways to cut costs with your wedding photography, and most of them, unfortunately, are very bad advice.
1) Price Shop - While it can be generally agreed that shopping around for the best price is a good idea, be sure you are shopping within comparable areas of the market. A photographer who costs $3000 versus a photographer who costs $500 is comparing apples to lemons. If you want to compare $500 versus $600 or $450, then you are shopping comparable services. Likewise, you are shopping comparable services if you are comparing $3000 versus $2800 or $3200. If you think you are getting a deal by going with the $500 photographer to save yourself money over the $3000 photographer, you aren't.

2) Put Cameras on the Tables - This is by far the worst idea I've ever seen, and I speak from many weddings worth of experience. In the first place, you aren't saving as much money as you think.
Disposable cameras cost roughly $6 each, and it runs you, per roll, about $7 to develope the film and get prints. If you put out twenty cameras, you are talking about an approximate expense of $260. And you know what you are going to get for your $260? You are going to get pictures of walls and floors. You are going to get pictures of people taking pictures of people who are taking pictures. You are going to get pictures of Aunt Pat's behind. And that's provided you get pictures at all. Sometimes the cameras just sit there unused, and I've personally witnessed a wedding where someone was banging the camera on the table, saying, "look, you can make the flash go off." Other guests immediately began doing the same thing so they could all get a giggle. In the end, you'll walk away with about twenty pictures that are worthwhile, which amounts to about $13 an image. Not a good investment at all.

3) Find Someone Cheap - I know that you're trying to save money, but hiring someone cheap is a very bad idea. It is my experience that photographers who work cheap aren't typically photographers at all. The fact is, anyone can take a picture, but not everyone who can take a picture is a photographer. With the explosion of digital technology, it seems that anyone who buys a nice camera and snaps a few lucky shots suddenly considers themselves a photographer. And since they're so good three months out of the gate, maybe they should do some weddings.
If you go this route, you can expect them to show up with a consumer level camera and a kit lens. While there are exceptions to every rule, this generally tends to be the case. And my condolences to you if you're having a wedding in a low light environment with an amateur using a kit lens. There will be ghosting and motion blur in every last one of your orange pictures.

4) Have a Friend or Relative Do It - Refer to item 3. Whether you are hiring someone or getting a favor from a friend or relative, the fact is, either they are a photographer or they are not a photographer. If they don't have the equipment and know how to use it to accomplish the best possible results in any given environment, your pictures, if you're lucky, will be mediocre at best. Do you know what aperture to use if you are photographing a couple with the sun behind them? If you don't know, chances are good that the friend, relative, or amateur isn't going to know either. A professional will.
5) Get the Negatives/Raw Files to Make Your Own Album - First of all, no professional photographer worth his salt is going to give you the negative or Raw files. You might get processed jpegs, maybe even in high resolution, but you aren't going to get the Raw files. Secondly, professional photographers aren't providing you with scrapbook junk albums with the peel-back, static-plastic pages. The albums are generally matted or flush mount. You have to have a retail license to get those at anywhere close to a reasonable cost. So this is another instance of comparing apples to oranges. If you can get the files, and if you make your own album, it will pale beside what the photographer would have given you, both in quality and artistry. And that's assuming you can even open the Raw files, which requires particular software, in some cases proprietary.

What the people who try to help you save a buck neglect to realize is that there is a reason professional photography is so expensive. They'll tell you to ask, for example, if you can have the Raw files, when what you should be asking is, "do you have liability insurance?". They tell you to ask to see additional samples, when what you really need to see is a finished album that demonstrates their competence in photographing a wedding from start to finish. Any Joe can nail a good shot, but can he nail two or three hundred of them to make a nice album?
Some other questions that are truly worth asking:

1) Are you shooting medium format, full frame 35mm, or APS? - Medium format will give you images from 28-64 megapixels. Full frame 35mm will give you images from 21-25 megapixels. APS is a consumer level camera in the 10-12 megapixel range, and you shouldn't pay a premium price if that's what they're using.

2) Are you accredited with the Better Business Bureau? - If they're not, what recourse do you have if your photographer gives you terrible service or products? If they are, you can at least check their profile at the BBB website.

3) Do you have a business license? - Why in the world would you pay anyone for a service who isn't legitimate? That's very risky.

4) Are you insured? - What happens if they drop dead of a heart attack in the middle of your wedding? What happens if they fall in a fountain and ruin not only their camera gear, but all the pictures they took up to that point, as in this video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3cvsImyIZA? Liability insurance is a must.

5) Do you have backup equipment? - If they drop the only lens they have and damage it, what then? I guess they won't be taking any more pictures. Insurance is a non-issue. It can take care of their equipment after the fact, but it does nothing for them at the time of when they still have the rest of the wedding to shoot.

6) Are you going to use fresh flash cards? - While flash cards are generally reliable and have a very long, usable life, they will eventually go bad.
To illustrate the point, I shot a wedding on August 28th. Everything went smoothly. They were very happy with their pictures. You can see a review at this link


The previous weekend, her cousin got married at the same place. The amateur photographer photographed the entire wedding on a single, used flash card. The card went bad. The entire wedding was lost. She (the photographer) was not legitimate. She was not insured. The cousin lost everything with no recourse.
Was it worth the alleged savings?

But moving on to more important things, clearly a professional is a wiser choice. But the question that remains is, why does it cost so much?

1) A professional will show up at your wedding with $16000-$20000 worth of professional equipment, with back-ups of everything. That equipment costs a lot of money, and it needs to be maintained, repaired, and occassionally replaced.

2) A professional will have insurance that can cost as much as $800 a year.

3) A professional deserves a professional wage.

4) Prints, paper, ink, and other supplies and cost of goods cost money.

5) A professional is educated in his or her trade.

6) A professional can show you samples that will give you peace of mind and confidence.

7) A professional is experienced and knows what to do in a given situation to get the shot.

Ultimately, you can hire a $500 amateur and take your chances. They will show up with a 12 megapixel camera, a used flash card, a kit lens with a maximum aperture of F/4, and if you're lucky, they'll have a shoe-mount flash unit. If something goes wrong, I hate it for ya. If they mess up and miss all your important shots, I hate it for ya. When your inside pictures are all underexposed, or have motion blur because their lens is inadequate, I hate it for ya. When you and your intended are silouettes against a white sky because they didn't know how to light and expose for a backlit situation . . . I hate it for ya!

If you hire a professional, it will cost you a good bit more. But they'll show up with a professional camera that will give you high resolution images. They'll have new flash cards, professional series lenses
with F/2.8 apertures that can handle low light situations, and a shoe-mount flash. They'll also have backups of everything in case something happens. They'll have liability insurance in case something drastic happens. They'll get all the important shots. Your pictures, inside or outside, will be properly exposed, sharp, crisp, and without motion blur. When you're back lit against the sun, they'll have lights to compensate, and know how to meter the ambient light to get a clean exposure between the foreground and the background.

The choice is yours. The internet is loaded with woe-is-me tales from disappointed brides who got messed up pictures, haven't gotten their pictures at all, etc. In the end, you will get what you pay for.