Juvenile Spadefish

Juvenile Spadefish
I took this picture this summer

Monday, November 11, 2013

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Keystone Pipeline

Keystone Pipeline article- Harvard Magazine 
Keystone Pipeline in Texas Please read these articles

Dear Sophomores- The two most immediate and controversial environmental issues in America today are the issue of fracking and the Keystone Pipeline.  While we are studying geology and resource extraction, I think it is really important for us to pause and seriously consider these two issues, become knowledgeable and discuss.  In the last presidential election, the Keystone Pipeline came up as an important "litmus test" for President Obama by environmentalists, and I am sure that it will come up again.  The truth is we cannot have a cheap, plentiful supply of oil and gas without causing tremendous harm to our environment and our atmosphere.  At the end of the day, we either have to accept these realities or make a wholesale shift to green technologies that will either run on a different energy source altogether, or will make super high efficiency advances to reduce the petrol used.  In this exercise, I want us to learn about these issues, discuss them and you decide how you feel about this issue.   Is it worth it to fire up your Mustang V-8, or are you willing to drive an Urbee that gets 200 mpg and looks like a rolling jelly bean?

Yale 360 Phosphorus Article   Please read this article for your "Peak Phosphorus" assignment.

Dear Juniors- As we learn about anthropogenic eutrophication, it is really important that we understand the driving forces behind this pollution and the sources of the nutrients that are accumulating in the Chesapeake Bay.  Ultimately it is everyday human activities that are causing the problem of nutrient pollution, things like: eating, farming, driving cars, growing a garden or lawn, and even going to the bathroom.  This is why this problem is so widespread and so insidious, you have to eat, you have to move, to have to live!  Phosphorous and nitrogen are part of our lives.  Personally, I think the solution is to live more carefully and more aware of what we are doing and how we are doing it, so that we make as small an impact as possible.  For example, gardening with very limited inputs of fertilizer, or using cover crops to fix nitrogen, not a product from a bag.  Trying to purchase products that are phosphate free, or choosing organic products that were hopefully made fertile with compost and not 10-10-10.  Other things we can do as a society, is to demand clean water technologies, to demand that industry not dump waste into our rivers and bay, and to push for cleaner industry and cars.  Yes, these things cost more money, but in the end, isn't a clean, healthy environment worth it?