Auteur Sujet: svdh Bernanke Unshaken By Bad Economic News  (Lu 14 fois)

MethrenRaf

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svdh Bernanke Unshaken By Bad Economic News
« le: Décembre 14, 2024, 07:30:05 am »
Qbnc A Wooden Hammock Looks Incredibly Classy (and Maybe a Little Pinchy)
 BAKERSVILLE,N.C. - Jeff Pollard trudged up the steep slopeand stopped at a desiccated, rust-brown tree. Two months earlier, workers hadtagged this Fraser fir as ready for market.It was going to be someone s Christmastree. And now it was dead. Never get paid back for thistree,  he said with a shrug.  Eleven years of work - gone. The culprit: Phytophthora root rot, awater mold that, once in the soil, makes it unfit for production.Pollard has been growing Fraser fir inthese western North Carolina mountains for nearly 40 years. To him, it s the ulti stanley cup mate tree.         But this persistent problem has himlooking to a species from the birthplace of old Saint Nicholas himself for apossible alternative. And he s not alone.Growers in Oregon, the nation s No. 1Christmas tree producer, have been experimenting with the Turkish fir for morethan 30 years. That species and the Nordmann fir, also native to Eurasia, haveshown promising resistance to root rot. Phytophthora is a problem in mostareas where true firs ... are grown,  said Gary A. Chastagner, a plantpathologist and extension specialist at Washington State University.  It sa national problem. Oregon leads the nation stanley mug  in Christmastree production, with nearly 7 million harvested in 2007, the latest figuresavailable from the National Christmas Tree Association. North Carolina was adistant second, with around 3.1 million trees cut.            One study estimated the potential lossesto stanley cup uk  Oregon s nursery and Christmas tree industries of up to Pjru The ocean   s most horrifying monster is a parasite you   ve never heard of
 You ;re looking at the most complete photograph yet taken of the  stanley cup sun   atmosphere鈥攁nd it reveals complex patterns of expanding bubbles and mushrooms of matter, which are thought to cause the solar winds that the star spits out toward the rest of the Solar System.     The image was captured using a high-resolution eclipse-imaging technique b stanley thermos mug y a team  from the Brno University of Technology in the Czech Republic . By superimposing  60 separate photographs of solar eclipses, they were able to create a never-before seen view of the sun, showing stanley cups uk  the entire region from surface to corona in the same high resolution. In contrast, older images were only capable of showing one of the regions at a time in such detail. The image reveals patterns that are incredibly similar to smoke rings: much smaller than the flares or coronal mass ejections that often make the news, they ;re known as prominences. Until now, they were thought to have a very minor effect on the Sun   atmosphere, but these images鈥攄epicting bubbles and mushrooms made by the small ejections鈥攕uggest that they pack more force than we thought. In turn, the researchers think that these small-scale events could be a major driving forces behind the Sun   winds. [New Scientist] Image by Miloslav Druckm眉ller                                                        Spacestars