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  • Edward Wechner's patents

    My husband Edward Wechner's work - 2011 version. ..

  • Chainless Biycle

    Edward 愛看Tour d' France, 每次看到看到那些賽手因為 jamming the chain, 而lose the race又或跌倒甚至傷得很重! 這是他自此而很大願望設計出一款比chain drive 鏈條單車更可reliability賴性, 更安全safety, without losing performance and without increasing the weight of the bicycle, but also inprove the efficiency..

  • Trench Casting Machine

    It does dig a trench 300mm wide and 6000mm deep and fills it with concrete simultaneously at an advance rate of 20m/hour...

  • solar power and terrestrial power

    The world is desperately looking for alternative power sources in order to reduce greenhouse gases and with it save our planet. Opinions vary widely on what course we should take to achieve a more environmentally acceptable power source ...

  • 2 22 2011 Christchurch Earthquake

    在 4 日 9 月 2010 年, 紐西蘭的基督城發生了一次 7.1 magnitude earthquake. 那時才死了不到幾個人. 建築物也損害不太重(與今次6.3級地震相比). 於是, 地震後, 政府就開始重建了. 才不到半年(5 個月吧了) 就有了第二次的大地震. 2月22日2011, 這次只是 6.3 級地震. 可是死了123人226人失蹤(至今天2月26日為至). 成為了紐西蘭80年來最大的自然災難....

  • Bowerbirds

    Bowerbirds 神奇之處是他們是天才建築師, 為了吸引女性, 他們會建一巢(請看圖), 外面加很多裝飾品(有石塊/水果/果實/花葉/汽水罐... 所有有顏色的東西), 而顏色的挑選完全是由男性認為什麼顏色可以吸引自己喜愛的女性, 而已這些個人口味完全是從遺傳因子而來的...

Posted by Wechner 0 意見

 

The Killer Lakes (crater Lakes) of Cameroon :

1. Lake Nyon:

ImageImage(1)

 

 

Lake Nyos is a crater lake in the Northwest Region of Cameroon, located about 315 km (196 mi) northwest of Yaoundé.[1] Nyos is a deeplake high on the flank of an inactive volcano in the Oku volcanic plain along the Cameroon line of volcanic activity. A volcanic dam impounds the lake waters.

A pocket of magma (岩漿) lies beneath the lake and leaks carbon dioxide (CO2) into the water, changing it into carbonic acid. Nyos is one of only three known exploding lakes to be saturated with carbon dioxide in this way, the others being Lake Monoun, also in Cameroon, and Lake Kivuin Democratic Republic of Congo.

On August 21, 1986, possibly as the result of a landslide, Lake Nyos suddenly emitted a large cloud of CO2,………………..

What happens in such cases is that the CO2 is trapped in the water, which acts rather like the cork in a champagne bottle. Release the cork and you get an explosion of CO2 gas that has catastrophic consequences if the build up is too large. In this case, thousands of villagers lost their lives as well as many more thousands of livestock animals.

Imagine living in a remote village. Darkness has fallen and villagers are getting ready for bed, when suddenly you hear a loud 'boom'. Nothing too much to scare you in itself, but then comes the strange fog, rolling, rolling over everything, spreading out its poisonous tentacles. You and your family start to have trouble breathing. Desperate for air, you go outside – right into the deadly fog. This actual event befell 1,700 people and 3,500 animals on August 21, 1986 in Cameroon.

Though not completely unprecedented, it was the first known large-scale asphyxiation caused by a natural event. To prevent a recurrence, a degassing tube that siphons water from the bottom layers of water to the top allowing the carbon dioxide to leak in safe quantities was installed in 2001, and two additional tubes were installed in 2011.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Nyos

Image(2)Image(3)Image(4)Image(5)Image(6)Image(7)Image(8)Image(9)Image(10)Image(11)Image(12)Image(13)Image(14)

 

 

 

2. Lake Monoun, Cameroon

 

23_big

The third of the three African exploding lakes, Lake Monoun also has the three essential elements needed to accumulate CO2 in deadly quantities. In order to do so, first these lakes need to be at least 160 feet deep; second, they have to have an equatorial location so gas won't naturally escape in the colder season; third, they must be situated in a volcanic region.

Lake Monoun is only 60 miles away from Lake Nyos. Two years before the larger catastrophe at Nyos in 1986, 37 people were killed from the lake overturn at Monoun. Twelve of the people were in a truck, but the two riding on top of it survived because CO2 is heavier than air and was lower to the ground.

 

 

3. Lake Kivu, Rwanda

 

Gallery-49-1280x960

 

Another lake of stunning beauty, Lake Kivu is the second exploding lake in the mold of Lake Nyos – a body of water that experiences 'lake overturns'. Lake Kivu is 2000 square kilometers larger than Nyos and very close to an active volcano. The chemical gas that would lead to the overturn is also different; here, it is a mixture of methane and carbon dioxide. According to Wikimedia: "Scientists hypothesize that sufficient volcanic interaction with the lake's bottom water that has high gas concentrations would heat water, force the methane out of the water, spark a methane explosion, and trigger a nearly simultaneous release of carbon dioxide. The carbon dioxide would then suffocate large numbers of people in the lake basin as the gases roll off the lake surface. It is also possible that the lake could spawn lake tsunamis as gas explodes out of it."

If Kivu explodes, it will make the catastrophe at Nyos look small in comparison as there are two million people living in the basin here. Unfortunately, the sheer size of the lake makes degassing it with a pipe, as they are doing now at Lake Nyos, impossible. Therefore it is just a matter of time before it overturns, killing thousands of people in the surrounding area.


Read more at:  http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/news-killer-lakes?image=11#fSxtv7Dw5gd67Xkh.99

 

Read more at:

http://www.globalchange.umich.edu/globalchange1/current/lectures/kling/killer_lakes/killer_lakes.html

 

*********************

 

The Killer Lakes (crater Lakes) of America :

 

 

1. Mount Rainier Crater Lake, USA

 

most-dangerous-volcanoes-united-states-crater-lake-oregon_20364_600x450

Mount Rainier's crater lake is unusual on this list; at the peak of the mountain is a large crater which is always covered in ice and snow. The lake is only reachable through underground caverns but is as deadly as many exposed ones. Only 70 miles from Seattle, the volcanic gas there is a threat to 100,000 people. Sulfur dioxide when combined with water forms sulfuric acid. The water in the crater lake and below the lake itself is creating sulfuric acid that is eating into the volcanic rock of the mountain. Most volcanic rock you find in the world is strong, but in parts of Mount Rainier it can easily crumble in your hand.If this rock (which is the what the mountain is made of) were to collapse in any area, it would cause something called a 'lahar', a slurry of mud, rock and ice. The rock collapse would also breach the lake, letting loose tons of water within it as well. It happened 500 years ago at Mount Rainier, and one 25 ton rock was found 30 miles away in the back of a garden from when the lahar buried the valley. This is not a question of if but when the people in the area are going to be quite literally buried – and no eruption is needed for this, just the erosion of rock and its collapse. There is a possibility the people of Seattle will be buried in mud and rock because of a natural event deadlier than eruptions themselves.
NASA recently announced that they had found an organism that used the arsenic in the lake in their DNA instead of phosphorus. Nevertheless, this a lake that exemplifies man's capacity to meddle with nature – with deadly consequences to all but the smallest and hardiest of of life forms.

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/05/photogalleries/100518-mount-st-helens-americas-most-dangerous-volcanoes-science-pictures/#/most-dangerous-volcanoes-united-states-crater-lake-oregon_20364_600x450.jpg

 

 

2. Horseshoe Lake, USA

 

Image(22)Capture51Capture52Capture53Capture56Capture57Capture59Capture62

 

Horseshoe Lake, near the town of Mammoth Lakes, California, is a silent killer. It is beautiful and deadly, and at its north end there are few trees or signs of life visible. Carbon dioxide is present at 95 times its normal quantities in the soil. A way to show the effect of this is to dig a hole in the sandy earth and then hold a flame inside it. It will extinguish right away as there is not enough oxygen. This has a deadly effect on humans. In the town or any windy area it often disperses, but in the lake itself and some areas surrounding it, it doesn't. In 2006, three people were killed by the CO2 build up in a cave not far from the lake where they took shelter. A frightening case of out of the frying pan, into the fire.

So far, evidence of 25 such explosions have been found to have taken place in the last 25,000 years, and another is long overdue. When the last one occurred, 100,000 gallons of boiling water exploded causing a tidal wave. Rock and mud covered 10 square miles. A small earthquake, normally harmless deep under the lake bed, would be enough to trigger such an explosion. The deadly potential is there. This is a lake to not only blow your mind, but blow away every other part of your body too!

 

 

3. Yellowstone Lake, USA

 

Image(23)

 

Scientists have recently found a new way that crater lakes can kill. In 2003, they mapped the floor of the 3

 

stunning Yellowstone Lake in Yellowstone National Park, a very active volcanic region (hence the famous geysers). There they discovered a 100-foot dome on the floor in Mary's Bay. This dome was caused by water being heated under the lake bed, which then expands, building up pressure and creating the dome. A geyser is a small example, but unlike the dome in the lake, it has a relief valve. Without such a valve, there is a real hazard of what is known as a 'hydrothermal explosions

Interestingly, Lake Nyos does not produce anywhere near the amount of carbon dioxide that California's Horseshoe Lake does, as we will see later. If the gas had the devastating effect here, the people who live in the valley adjacent to Horseshoe are all in danger of the same fate. Lake Nyos was a warning sign to everyone: these killers are real. Men, women and children can die in a single evening from poisoned air!

 

 

 
 

Posted by Wechner 0 意見

Lake Natron:

lake-calcifies-animals-frozen-swallow_72201_600x450lake-calcifies-animals-frozen-flamingo_72200_600x450lake-calcifies-animals-frozen-bat_72197_600x450lake-calcifies-animals-frozen-fish-eagle_72199_600x450lake-calcifies-animals-frozen-dove_72198_600x450

It may look like this bird was gripped by the icy hand of death, but scientists will explain that it was actually calcified in the caustic waters of Tanzania’s Lake Natron. Photographer Nick Brandt’s eerie black and white photos allow both interpretations. ”I unexpectedly found the creatures — all manner of birds and bats — washed up along the shoreline of Lake Natron in Northern Tanzania. No one knows for certain exactly how they die, but it appears that the extreme reflective nature of the lake’s surface confuses them, and like birds crashing into plate glass windows, they crash into the lake. ”The water has an extremely high soda and salt content, so high that it would strip the ink off my Kodak film boxes within a few seconds. The soda and salt causes the creatures to calcify, perfectly preserved, as they dry,” Brandt writes in his new photo/essay book, Across The Ravaged Land. To give these obviously lifeless creatures an air of reanimation, Brandt picked them up off the shoreline and perched them in pre-death poses.

http://endtimeheadlines.wordpress.com/2013/10/02/deadly-lake-waters-turn-birds-to-stone/

 

Lake Natron is a salt lake located in northern Tanzania, close to the Kenyan border, in the eastern branch of the East African Rift. The lake is fed by the Southern Ewaso Ng'iro River and also by mineral-rich hot springs. It is quite shallow, less than three metres (9.8 ft) deep, and varies in width depending on its water level, which changes due to high levels of evaporation, leaving behind a mixture of salts and minerals called natron(泡碱, 蘇打) . The surrounding country is dry and receives irregular seasonal rainfall. The lake falls within the Lake Natron Basin Wetlands of International Importance Ramsar Site. Temperatures in the lake can reach 60 °C (140 °F), and depending on rainfall, the alkalinity can reach a pH of 9 to 10.5 (almost as alkaline as ammonia).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Natron

 

--------------------

@@@

After read the above news on the web, the first thought on my mind is, has any human being turned to stone when they were swimming in this lake?

Therefore, I searched for the answer:

----------------------------

http://www.geekosystem.com/natron-birds/

Contrary to Popular Belief, Lake Natron Does Not Instantly Turn Birds To Stone

natron-640x480

No one is disputing that Natron is a dangerous place for most species, of course. As the New Scientist says, the lake can reach temperatures up to 60 °C and has an alkalinity between pH 9 and pH 10.5, making it pretty dang gross on the best of days — it can even burn the skin and eyes of animals who aren’t adapted to it. It also does preserve many of these animals’ bodies, specifically due to the combination of chemicals that are deposited into the water via runoff from a nearby Great Rift Valley volcano, Ol Doinyo Lengai.

@@@

Therefore, I am sure people would not love to swimming in 60 °C lake.  and the calcifying, and the preservation process :

the preservation process is not something that happens instantaneously — it happens over a much longer period of time. So, the birds are not “stone,” preserve.  The chemical process to which they were subjected is much closer to Egyptian mummifcation than anything else, and although the bodies appear chalky and stone-like in appearance, but they are not completely immovable. After all, if that were the case then Brandt would not have been able to reposition his birds into such surreal and breathtaking poses.

Furthermore, there are species that are perfectly capable of living near lake Natron without facing inevitable doom — specifically, there are extremophile fish, bacterium, and a specific type of algae that thrives in the alkaline-rich waters. The lake is also one of the largest breeding ground for North Africa’s lesser flamingos (not to be confused with the greater flamingo, which has a different bill and is just a bit larger– you know, “greater”), who come to the lake to feed on the aforementioned algae. Yes, the occasional flamingo dies and is preserved, but as you can see from the featured image above, there are plenty more that come out just fine.

--------------------------------

@@@@

In : 10 deadiest Lakes on Earth :-

http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/news-killer-lakes?image=13#0ROTrswxewH6tG4j.99

I found lakes which are temperatures can reach 60 °C,  rich of minerals, salts and deadly :

1. Lake Rakshastal, Tibet

800px-MtKailashsatjpg.img_assist_custom-600x432

 

Lake Rakshastal in Tibet is the body of water on the left in this picture, and unlike its sister, Lake Manasarovar, is a saltwater lake. No plants or fish survive in this water and the locals consider it poisonous. In fact, the myth is that it is the home of the 10-headed demon king, Lanka! In Buddhism, Lake Manasarovar is shaped like the sun and represents brightness, while Lake Rakshastal, shaped like a crescent, represents darkness. It certainly has brought darkness to anything that tried to live in it – the final darkness of death.

 

Read more at http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/news-killer-lakes?image=14#pEL1E3xEwpC5DHlq.99

2. Lake Mono, USA

mono-lake1

 

Mono Lake (/ˈmn/ moh-noh) is a large, shallow saline soda lake in Mono County, California, formed at least 760,000 years ago as a terminal lake in a basin that has no outlet to the ocean. The lack of an outlet causes high levels of salts to accumulate in the lake. These salts also make the lake water alkaline.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mono_Lake

Mono Lake is know for its tufa tower rock formation alongside its shores. It supports a unique productive ecosystem.There is no fish in the lake. Its warm ancient saline water inhabit trillions of brine shrimp and alkali flies. Although they've no value for humans, they're the food source for millions of migratory birds that visit the lake each year. Freshwater streams feed this lake, supporting lush riparian forests of cottonwood and willow along their banks.

3. Boiling Lake, Dominica ( the second largest hot lake in the world)

Dominicaboilinglakejpg.img_assist_custom-600x450

 

Boiling lake in Dominica is filled with bubbling superheated water that is enveloped in a vapor cloud. It is between 180 and 197 degrees Fahrenheit (82 to 91.5 Celsius) on the edges alone and will kill you in minutes. It is actually a flooded fumarole, a crack through which gases from molten lava below escape. The basin collects rainwater, and there are two streams which also empty into the lake, as well as groundwater seeping up through the hot rocks. For visitors, a slip here is really going to be a fall to one's death.

Read more at http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/news-killer-lakes?image=13#0ROTrswxewH6tG4j.99

 

 

@@@

actually, we have the world largest boiling lake in New Zealand call Frying Pan Lake: Although the average temperature of the lake is around 50°C the hottest areas are almost boiling.  As a result steam and various noxious gases are constantly released from Frying Pan Lake.

http://www.kuriositas.com/2012/10/fryingpanlake.html

 

 

to be continued with………….” Killer lake Nyons, Lake Kivu, Lake Monoun,…..

Posted by Wechner 0 意見

Lake Natron:

lake-calcifies-animals-frozen-swallow_72201_600x450lake-calcifies-animals-frozen-flamingo_72200_600x450lake-calcifies-animals-frozen-bat_72197_600x450lake-calcifies-animals-frozen-fish-eagle_72199_600x450lake-calcifies-animals-frozen-dove_72198_600x450

It may look like this bird was gripped by the icy hand of death, but scientists will explain that it was actually calcified in the caustic waters of Tanzania’s Lake Natron. Photographer Nick Brandt’s eerie black and white photos allow both interpretations. ”I unexpectedly found the creatures — all manner of birds and bats — washed up along the shoreline of Lake Natron in Northern Tanzania. No one knows for certain exactly how they die, but it appears that the extreme reflective nature of the lake’s surface confuses them, and like birds crashing into plate glass windows, they crash into the lake. ”The water has an extremely high soda and salt content, so high that it would strip the ink off my Kodak film boxes within a few seconds. The soda and salt causes the creatures to calcify, perfectly preserved, as they dry,” Brandt writes in his new photo/essay book, Across The Ravaged Land. To give these obviously lifeless creatures an air of reanimation, Brandt picked them up off the shoreline and perched them in pre-death poses.

http://endtimeheadlines.wordpress.com/2013/10/02/deadly-lake-waters-turn-birds-to-stone/

 

Lake Natron is a salt lake located in northern Tanzania, close to the Kenyan border, in the eastern branch of the East African Rift. The lake is fed by the Southern Ewaso Ng'iro River and also by mineral-rich hot springs. It is quite shallow, less than three metres (9.8 ft) deep, and varies in width depending on its water level, which changes due to high levels of evaporation, leaving behind a mixture of salts and minerals called natron(泡碱, 蘇打) . The surrounding country is dry and receives irregular seasonal rainfall. The lake falls within the Lake Natron Basin Wetlands of International Importance Ramsar Site. Temperatures in the lake can reach 60 °C (140 °F), and depending on rainfall, the alkalinity can reach a pH of 9 to 10.5 (almost as alkaline as ammonia).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Natron

 

--------------------

@@@

After read the above news on the web, the first thought on my mind is, has any human being turned to stone when they were swimming in this lake?

Therefore, I searched for the answer:

----------------------------

http://www.geekosystem.com/natron-birds/

Contrary to Popular Belief, Lake Natron Does Not Instantly Turn Birds To Stone

natron-640x480

No one is disputing that Natron is a dangerous place for most species, of course. As the New Scientist says, the lake can reach temperatures up to 60 °C and has an alkalinity between pH 9 and pH 10.5, making it pretty dang gross on the best of days — it can even burn the skin and eyes of animals who aren’t adapted to it. It also does preserve many of these animals’ bodies, specifically due to the combination of chemicals that are deposited into the water via runoff from a nearby Great Rift Valley volcano, Ol Doinyo Lengai.

@@@

Therefore, I am sure people would not love to swimming in 60 °C lake.  and the calcifying, and the preservation process :

the preservation process is not something that happens instantaneously — it happens over a much longer period of time. So, the birds are not “stone,” preserve.  The chemical process to which they were subjected is much closer to Egyptian mummifcation than anything else, and although the bodies appear chalky and stone-like in appearance, but they are not completely immovable. After all, if that were the case then Brandt would not have been able to reposition his birds into such surreal and breathtaking poses.

Furthermore, there are species that are perfectly capable of living near lake Natron without facing inevitable doom — specifically, there are extremophile fish, bacterium, and a specific type of algae that thrives in the alkaline-rich waters. The lake is also one of the largest breeding ground for North Africa’s lesser flamingos (not to be confused with the greater flamingo, which has a different bill and is just a bit larger– you know, “greater”), who come to the lake to feed on the aforementioned algae. Yes, the occasional flamingo dies and is preserved, but as you can see from the featured image above, there are plenty more that come out just fine.

--------------------------------

@@@@

In : 10 deadiest Lakes on Earth :-

http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/news-killer-lakes?image=13#0ROTrswxewH6tG4j.99

I found lakes which are temperatures can reach 60 °C,  rich of minerals, salts and deadly :

1. Lake Rakshastal, Tibet

800px-MtKailashsatjpg.img_assist_custom-600x432

 

Lake Rakshastal in Tibet is the body of water on the left in this picture, and unlike its sister, Lake Manasarovar, is a saltwater lake. No plants or fish survive in this water and the locals consider it poisonous. In fact, the myth is that it is the home of the 10-headed demon king, Lanka! In Buddhism, Lake Manasarovar is shaped like the sun and represents brightness, while Lake Rakshastal, shaped like a crescent, represents darkness. It certainly has brought darkness to anything that tried to live in it – the final darkness of death.

 

Read more at http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/news-killer-lakes?image=14#pEL1E3xEwpC5DHlq.99

2. Lake Mono, USA

mono-lake1

 

Mono Lake (/ˈmn/ moh-noh) is a large, shallow saline soda lake in Mono County, California, formed at least 760,000 years ago as a terminal lake in a basin that has no outlet to the ocean. The lack of an outlet causes high levels of salts to accumulate in the lake. These salts also make the lake water alkaline.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mono_Lake

Mono Lake is know for its tufa tower rock formation alongside its shores. It supports a unique productive ecosystem.There is no fish in the lake. Its warm ancient saline water inhabit trillions of brine shrimp and alkali flies. Although they've no value for humans, they're the food source for millions of migratory birds that visit the lake each year. Freshwater streams feed this lake, supporting lush riparian forests of cottonwood and willow along their banks.

3. Boiling Lake, Dominica ( the second largest hot lake in the world)

Dominicaboilinglakejpg.img_assist_custom-600x450

 

Boiling lake in Dominica is filled with bubbling superheated water that is enveloped in a vapor cloud. It is between 180 and 197 degrees Fahrenheit (82 to 91.5 Celsius) on the edges alone and will kill you in minutes. It is actually a flooded fumarole, a crack through which gases from molten lava below escape. The basin collects rainwater, and there are two streams which also empty into the lake, as well as groundwater seeping up through the hot rocks. For visitors, a slip here is really going to be a fall to one's death.

Read more at http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/news-killer-lakes?image=13#0ROTrswxewH6tG4j.99

 

 

@@@

actually, we have the world largest boiling lake in New Zealand call Frying Pan Lake: Although the average temperature of the lake is around 50°C the hottest areas are almost boiling.  As a result steam and various noxious gases are constantly released from Frying Pan Lake.

http://www.kuriositas.com/2012/10/fryingpanlake.html

 

 

to be continued with………….” Killer lake Nyons, Lake Kivu, Lake Monoun,…..

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