We watched the presidential debate Friday night. I've never wanted to watch a debate before, and I don't remember ever watching one all the way through, but I was really looking forward to this one (maybe I'm finally growing up?). I spent most of the debate e-mailing back and forth with my friend M (I have three friends M) who was watching on a different channel, while Bill yelled periodically at the TV. Ok, I admit I yelled, too.
McCain spent a lot of his time telling folksy stories, while Obama actually explained his stance on the issues.
I thought that both candidates did quite well, but the main things we all noticed (me, M, and Bill) was the body language. Obama addressed many of his comments to McCain while looking directly at him, while McCain almost never looked at Obama, and leaned away most of the time, Even when they shook hands.Charles Dharapak/AP Photo
Obama actually addressed McCain directly, calling him "John," while McCain spoke only to Jim Lehrer, using the third person, "Senator Obama." The condescending and frequent "Senator Obama does not understand this issue," only irritated me because it was obviously not true.
I can't wait for the vice-presidential debate, although I'm going to have to have someone tape it for me, as I have band rehearsal that night. I mentioned to a kindly little old lady while I was volunteering at the Charlie Brown for Congress office yesterday that it should be painful to watch. She startled me by vehemently exclaiming,"I hope so!" (Maybe I should re-think the little old lady part. She might get mad)
After all this, I'm still up in the air about who to vote for* because McCain is obviously a closet Pastafarian.
*NOT!!
Sunday, September 28, 2008
Debate thoughts
Thursday, September 25, 2008
Pirates attack Navy Tanker
Brother Phil sent me this link today. Pirates apparently attacked a Navy Tanker off the coast of Somalia yesterday.A security team aboard the vessel opened fire on two small boats near Somalia after they ignored warnings and pursued the ship, a U.S. Fifth Fleet spokesman said.
Ok, my only question is WHAT WERE THEY THINKING? It's a US Navy ship for crying out loud. They were in SKIFFS! Are they complete idiots or only halfwits?
"From all appearances it does look like it was a pirate attack and the incident is currently under investigation," he said by telephone from Bahrain.
On the other hand, this is obviously very good news for global warming, since there is a scientifically proven inverse correlation between global temperature and the number of pirates.
Luckily, the Flying Spaghetti Monster only needs large numbers of pirates. Common sense and intelligence apparently don't enter into the equation. And he was obviously protecting them with his noodly appendages, as they survived the attack.
ARrrrr and RAmen.
Saturday, September 20, 2008
Dear Elizabeth Dole UPDATE
I received this e-mail a couple of days ago from the Kay Hagan campaign in response to this e-mail I sent to the Elizabeth Dole campaign. At least it looks as though an actual person might have read it and responded with a modified form letter. It also took them three weeks to get back to me, which also makes me think that someone is actually reading Kay's e-mails and responding personally.
Dear Ms. Soule,My original e-mail was appended.
Thank you for your support! Kay is focused on running a grassroots campaign and she is proud and excited to receive support from a diverse group of people. The reason she has been able to make it this far is due to the support and efforts of folks like you, and it really means a lot to us. Be sure to stay up to date and visit our website frequently, and I hope you'll take some time to help us get the word out about Kay by telling your friends and neighbors. Thanks again!
Sunday, September 14, 2008
Saturday Night
I try not to post too many videos on this blog because I know at least one reader (Hi Pater!) has dial-up and can't download them, but this one was too good to pass up:
Saturday, September 13, 2008
Wildlife? or Scenes from the garage
Last weekend, Bill slammed the door of the house open and yelled, "Laurie! Come out here! NOW!" I rushed out the front door, rushed back in and through the house, snatching my camera up on the way, and went out the garage door in time to take this: Yes, a flock of foraging wild turkeys had just made its way around our house and was headed across the street.
We counted 23 of them, and then these two came running at top turkey speed around from the front yard (we live on a corner) to catch up.
As you can see, we live in a housing development which wouldn't appear to be conducive to wildlife, although we often have the smell of skunk wafting in in the evenings (Bill had one in the garage once, stealing some catfood), and treefrogs can be surprising loud in the evenings. Bill has lived here for 20+ years, and he used to see the occasional coyote. Up until West Nile virus hit, we had large, loud flocks of yellow-billed magpies. It is rare to see one anymore. Apparently they've been replaced by turkeys.
A few minutes later they came back the other way, and even later, we saw them going past our house and around the block again - still with all 25 of them.Why, you might ask, is all the landscaping green when we live in an arid state in the middle of a drought? I ask myself that all the time.
Sunday, August 31, 2008
Delta in distress
The Sacramento San Joaquin River Delta (Delta) is dying. It has really been dying since 1849, when that historically highly invasive and destructive race of homo sapiens - the white man - discovered gold and started invading the state in large numbers. To be fair, white women started arriving, too.
This particular delta is a fairly rare example of an inverted river delta. Map from the 1995 Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Atlas. Click to enlarge
An inverted delta comes to a point where the river leaves a wide, flat area rather than where it enters. In fact, if you look up inverted river delta on the internet, the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta very often used as an illustration. Historically, the Sacramento and the San Joaquin rivers dropped much of their sediment loads in the valley before converging and flowing out to the Pacific Ocean through a gap in the Coast Range, forming a huge inland tidal marsh. If you look at a relief map of California, you'll see a large valley down the middle. This is the Sacramento-San Joaquin Valley, otherwise known as the Central Valley.
This entire area used to drain through the Delta, the Carquinez Straights, and out to the Pacific through San Pablo and San Francisco bays.
The Delta is important for many species, including: anadromous species (e.g. sturgeon, lamprey, salmon), the endemic Delta smelt, and the non-endemic humans. The anadromous species migrate out through the Delta as juveniles, and then back in again as adults. Half the waterfowl migrating along the Pacific Flyway use it as a stop over.
Gold Rush
One of the first major negative impacts to the Delta was the California Gold Rush.
Forty-niners
The gold rush brought hundreds of thousands of people into California very suddenly. This many people meant that within a short time, most of the easily accessible gold had been collected, and the miners resorted to more destructive means of collection. Hydraulic mining - using high pressure jets to wash all alluvial sediment, often entire hillsides, down where the miners could then extract the gold - was the most destructive. Photo of hydraulic placer mining at the Malakoff Diggings, circa 1860.
This created millions of tons of sediment that washed down into the Central Valley, aggrading the stream and rivers beds, burying farmland, and causing widespread flooding. Farmers sued, and the practice was largely stopped in 1884, but much of the environmental damage is still being felt today.
Thousands of pounds of liquid mercury were used in the placer mining process. The very dense mercury amalgamates with gold, making it heavier and easier to separate from sand and gravel. The U.S. Geological Survey indicates that potentially over 10,000,000 lbs. of mercury were lost to the environment in California due to placer mining. This mercury is very slowly making it's way down the river systems and out to the Pacific - via the Delta. In addition, other watersheds that drain into the Sacramento River have naturally high concentrations of cinnabar (mercury ore).
Farming
Over about the last 7000 to 10,000 years (since the last ice age), peat had built up in the Delta, and formed very low islands surrounded by meandering waterways. This peat is extremely fertile. Farmers arrived along with the Forty-niners, and started building levees around the edges of the islands to barricade their houses and crops against the natural yearly flooding - and then unnatural flooding due to mining.
Once peat is dried out and disturbed, it starts to oxidize and subside. This, wind, and compaction have caused some of these islands to subside by more than 20 feet in the last 150 years. Rather than many small islands with gently sloping banks covered with emergent vegetation, the Delta is now enormous leveed "bowls" surrounded by dredged and riprapped channels.From a 2000 USGS pamphlet about Delta subsidence.
Although most of these levees have been raised, strengthened, and riprapped over the years, many are original and getting very old. Built on soft peat soils, and made mostly of peat and dredge material, they are highly susceptible to erosion and external pressure during flood events, and rodent burrowing. Note the water surface elevation compared to the island interior. The more the interior of the islands subside, the higher the pressure from the water.
There are also numerous faults in the area, and a moderate earthquake could cause several levees to break at once. When a levee breaks, it can "suck" salt water from San Francisco Bay into the Delta. Breaches in the levees of several islands at once could disrupt the water supply of millions of Californians (see below).
A levee around the Jones Tract island broke on a clear morning in June of 2004 when water levels were normal for that time of year.Photo from the California Department of Water Resources website.
The California Department of Water Resources spent months and millions of dollars fixing the break and then pumping out all the water.
The Delta farmers pump water from the channels. This map from the California Delta Atlas shows thousands of pumps - many of which are unscreened. Map from the 1995 Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Atlas. Click to enlarge
Fish are sucked in and pumped out onto fields ending up as very expensive fertilizer (or cheap, depending on how you look at it).
The conversion of seasonally inundated wetlands and floodplains due to urbanization and agricultural land conversion also results in a reduction in overall primary productivity.
Waterworks
Historically, salinities in the Delta fluctuated greatly. Salt water would ebb and flow with the tide, and how far upstream it "intruded" depended on the Sacramento and San Joaquin river outflows.
As the area became more populated, a constant source of fresh water became much more important. The California legislature authorized the Central Valley Project (CVP) in 1933, and the project was reauthorized by the federal Rivers and Harbors Act of 1937. Construction began on Shasta Dam on the Sacramento River in 1938. Shasta Dam alone dramatically reduced the Delta salinity fluctuations, but numerous large dams have been built on most of the major and many minor rivers in the system. The State Water Project (SWP) was authorized in 1960, and the tallest dam in the United States, Oroville Dam, was finished in 1968.Photo of Oroville Dam from the California Department of Water Resources website.
The dams affect the system in several ways:
1. They block the upstream migration of anadromous fish.
2. They act as sediment traps, leaving the rivers below with "hungry" water, which tends to erode steep, incised banks. Some were built as sediment traps due to the huge volumes of sediment still moving down from the hydraulic mining.
3. They are operated to keep the summer river flows artificially high and constant for irrigation and Delta water export purposes.
Another component of the CVP and SWP are the delta pumps. Each project has huge pumps at the south end of the Delta which pump millions of gallons down through the Central Valley in enormous aqueducts; irrigating California agriculture, supplying drinking water, and helping keep California between the 7th and 10th largest economy in the world. Much of the water coming out of taps in Los Angeles comes from the Delta, 444 miles away.
When the Delta pumps are operating, they are pumping enough water to reverse the flow in many delta channels. This confuses fish who are trying to swim downstream and end up swimming back up into the Delta. The pumps have enormous screens to filter out (most of the) fish and divert them into tanks rather than into the canals. The fish are then pumped into trucks and taken to be released back into the Delta. Not surprisingly, many fish do not survive this process. Predatory fish also learn where the release points are, and hang out in the area waiting for confused and stunned prey to be dropped in front of their noses. The federally threatened Delta smelt (Hypomesus transpacificus) are particularly delicate, and rarely survive the ordeal.
Invasive Species
The Delta is rife with introduced species which directly compete with or eat native species. Additionally, some have the ability to change the environment. When the tiny estuarine Asian or overbite clam (Corbula amurensis) was introduced in the 1980's, probably via bilgewater from one of the many ships docking in the San Francisco Bay Area, it rapidly spread up through the estuarine system, and now coats the bottom in many places. There are enough of them to filter out huge amounts of phytoplankton - the basis of the food web. The future freshwater parts of the Delta will likely include quagga and zebra mussels, as I pointed out in a previous post. These have a history of, among other things, filtering out phytoplankton and reducing primary productivity.
Another species which has changed the Delta environment is Brazilian elodea (Egeria densa). This was probably introduced via people dumping fishtank water, as it is a common aquarium plant, and it forms dense mats in many of the shallower freshwater areas, crowding out many of the native aquatic plants. It also slows water flow, allowing fine sediments to drop out, and increasing clarity in a naturally turbid environment. The pelagic and nearly translucent Delta smelt evolved in this environment and relies on turbidity to hide from predators.Photo from the California Department of Fish and Game Bay-Delta Region website.
Introduced plankton are changing the base of the Delta food web. The cyclopoid copepod Limnoithona tetraspina has made up a large part of the copepod biomass for about the last 15 years, but it apparently is not a good food source for native species.
Purposefully introduced species include: Striped bass, large mouth and small mouth bass, bullhead and channel catfish, American shad, threadfin shad, wagasaki...the list goes on.
Toxins
Toxins that occur in the Delta are many and various. Almost the entire Central Valley drains through the Delta, and any pesticides, municipal, industrial, or agricultural effluent, mercury and arsenic from mining, and other toxins that get into the water supply, eventually make it through there. In addition, since it was first detected in 1999, there have been more frequent, and more widespread blooms of the toxic cyanobacteria, Microcystis aeruginosa.
Threatened and Endangered Species
Here is a short list of native species in trouble in the Delta:
Delta Smelt
Central Valley Spring-run Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tschawytscha)
Sacramento River Winter-run Chinook salmon,
Apparently Fall-run Chinook are also having trouble, now
California Central Valley steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss)
longfin smelt (Spirinchus thaleichthys)
green sturgeon (Acipenser medirostris)
river lamprey (Lampetra ayresii)
Hopefully we can avoid what happened to the thicktail chub - once one of the most common fish in the Delta, which was extinct by about 1953.
I am an aquatic ecologist, so I tend to be biased toward the aquatic species, but Tule Elk, once the predominant deer in California, - thousands of which lived in the Delta - were nearly extinct by the 1860s. There are now 22 small herds left, scattered throughout California. The California state animal, the California Grizzly, was hunted to extinction by 1922. There are numerous threatened and endangered amphibians, reptiles, birds, and plants in California. The historic range of many of these includes or once included the Delta.
Threats to the Delta are multiple and synergistic. One of my former university professors, Peter B. Moyle, calls this "the heavy hand of humans."
Friday, August 29, 2008
Dear Elizabeth Dole,
The Friendly Atheist brought attention to this press release by Senator Elizabeth Dole of North Carolina in which she attacked her opponent, Kay Hagan, because Ms. Hagan had the gall to attend a fundraiser held by leaders of the Secular Coalition of America. The coalition is apparently one of the "wacky left-wing outside groups bent on policies that would horrify most North Carolinians if they knew about it." Yes, a coalition that is trying to improve the civic situation of citizens with a naturalistic worldview is just scary.
Dole Campaign Communications Director Dan McLagan goes on to state, "You can tell a lot about a person by their friends and these are friends most North Carolinians would not be comfortable having over for dinner." No wonder atheists, humanists, freethinkers and other nontheistic Americans stay closeted. This is the e-mail I wrote and cc'd to the Hagan campaign:
Dear Elizabeth Dole campaign,
I am a resident of the State of California, but I donated $50 to the Kay Hagan campaign last night because I was completely disgusted by an August 26th press release from Elizabeth Dole trying to paint Kay Hagan in a negative light because she chose to associate with people like me - a secular humanist/atheist. Elizabeth Dole certainly doesn't know me, but apparently would not feel comfortable having dinner with me. I am a 43 year old happily married mother of three college students who donates to numerous charities, donates blood, pays taxes, plays in a community band, loves life, and is proud to be an American citizen. I also have extremely good table manners.
I am generally not very politically active - I have only contributed money to a political campaign once before - but this outrageous press release shocked me into action. Imagine the outcry if you had said this about any other minority group. It certainly makes your smear-meter laughable. I am not anti-religious, but I am anti-bigot. Until yesterday, I had never even heard of Kay Hagan, but I am a supporter now, thanks to you.
Sincerely
Laurie ******
UPDATE - The Elizabeth Dole Commmittee e-mailed me back. With a form letter:
Thank you for contacting The Elizabeth Dole Committee. Senator Dole appreciates hearing from people regarding issues that are important to them. We will be sure to pass your message along to her. If you have any other questions or concerns please feel free to contact us at anytime. Thanks again for contacting The Elizabeth Dole Committee and may God bless you and your family.
Sunday, August 24, 2008
Scenes from my new job
Some photos from my field trip last week. We came in on a road not much wider than the truck I was driving.I didn't get photos of the dirt road with fallen trees around which we had to navigate.
This bridge wasn't much wider than the road. Why is there such a nice bridge out in the middle of nowhere, you might ask? Just upstream:
Yep. A fairly large dam. We're really not that far from civilization.
We stopped on top of a nice granite outcrop for lunch
Plunge pool just below us:
There was an enormous rainbow trout swimming around in the farthest pool.
At one point, one of my coworkers turned to me and said, "Can you believe that we're actually being paid for this?"

Friday, August 22, 2008
Is it Christian or Egyptian mythology? Apparently sometimes it's hard to tell
I found this on the Atheist Nexus. In my best Arty Johnson imitation - Very Interesting. I have only researched some of it so I don't know if it is all true, but he comes to some of the same conclusions as I did in this post. Sorry if you have dial-up (Pater)...
Watch them in order:
He indicates that the Christian cross is a pagan adaptation of the cross of the Zodiac. I thought it was kind of sick that Christians use a torture and execution device as a symbol of their religion, but given the history, it is more understandable.