海角大神

Elsewhere on the Web

A look at what other eco-sites are up to.

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AFP PHOTO/HO/NASA
A meteor crater in Arizona.

At the New York Times's Dot Earth blog, Andrew Revkin looks into an often-ignored potential natural disaster: . Monday marks the 100th anniversary of the , in which a meteor estimated to be as small as a few dozen yards across exploded over Siberia, creating a blast capable of destroying a large metropolitan area.

Gavin Schmidt at RealClimate dissects the media attention over forecasts that the for the first time this summer. Schmidt, a climate modeller at the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, asks "[W]hy do stories about an geographically special, but climatically unimportant, single point traditionally associated with a christianized pagan gift-giving festival garner more attention than long term statistics concerning ill-defined regions of the planet where very few people live?"

Yale's new eco-mag, Environment 360, has a long essay by Chris Mooney . The next president, writes Mooney, will need to get political appointees to back off and let government scientists do their jobs. Mooney, the author of a book called The Republican War on Science, blogs at .

EcoGeek's Hank Green has , the computer-animated children's movie with an environmental theme. Green points out that the surface area of Wall鈥's solar panels would be insufficient for providing power to the robot. (Well, what did you expect from a site with "geek" in the name?)

The Onion's 'Obligatory Green Issue' is out this week, in which the paper offers up recycled stories from its 252-year history. Some highlights: , , and a commentary by a smokestack titled,

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