Last night, around 11.30, a lot of noise of unusual character started coming from the roof. Stepping out onto the balcony, you could hear it from outside, but could not see the part of the roof it was coming from. It sounded like something hitting a tile on the roof.
It persisted, and was loud enough to stop sleep, so after midnight I was carrying the stepladder upstairs and poking my head through the access hole with a torch. A furry movement was noted, and eventually a possum appeared clearly, walking nonchalantly from one part of the roof it appeared to be intend on attaching, to another corner of the roof space. It seemed to me to be trying to make or enlarge an access point through tiles. The sound resumed about 20 minutes later, but did stop.
While rats in our roof space are common (I have already had to bait it once this so-called autumn), and I always assumed it might be next to impossible to block all tile roof entry spaces to prevent rat entry, when you find you have a possum in the ceiling, it's time to call in the professionals.
I have done so already, and will post the results.
Update: the possum man identified a clear gap in some roof flashing where he was sure the possum had entered, and it was at the spot where the possum had been noisily doing something on Wednesday night. He said that the way the roof flashing had been pushed/chewed open, it possibly was finding it hard to get back out. This is consistent with what I had guessed. (He said it is unusual to have a possum in the roof at that time, as they usually leave of an evening to eat, returning in the morning. This would also likely explain the 'walking' sound that we had heard from the roof/ceiling, as it was generally heard at those times.)
Trap cages were left in the roof space last night to try to catch the possum if it was still inside. None caught yet, though.
Thursday, March 26, 2015
Bad ocean acidification news
Shell-shocked: Ocean acidification likely hampers tiny shell builders in Southern Ocean
Anyhow, sounds bad.
The coccolithophore E. huxleyi is important in the marine carbon cycle and is responsible for nearly half of all calcium carbonate production in the ocean, said lead study author Natalie Freeman, a doctoral student in the CU-Boulder'sDepartment of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences (ATOC). The new study indicates there has been a 24 percent decline in the amount of calcium carbonate produced in large areas of the Southern Ocean over the past 17 years.Not quite sure how those percentages add up to 24% - I suppose it has to do with the area over which the reductions happen.
The researchers used satellite measurements and statistical methods to calculate the calcification rate - the amount of calcium carbonate these organisms produced per day in surface ocean waters. Across the entire Southern Ocean, which surrounds Antarctica, there was about a 4
percent reduction in calcification rate during the summer months from 1998 to 2014. In addition, the researchers found a 9 percent reduction in calcification during that period in large regions of the Pacific and Indian sectors of the Southern Ocean.
Anyhow, sounds bad.
That big a surprise?
Widely used herbicide linked to cancer : Nature News & Comment
I dunno - I tend to assume that chemicals that pretty rapidly cause living things to die are probably going to be cancer causing if you're exposed to too much of them.
The issue is more about the dose, really.
And having said that, I still rely on my common sense to tell me that the Monsanto tactic of making Roundup tolerant crops so you can spray heaps of chemicals on them to control weeds is not that great an idea, certainly in the long term, but also quite possibly in the short term.
Update: I probably linked to it before, but here's a short report from the Nature website that explains how herbicide tolerant weeds have developed despite Monsanto's improbable claim that they wouldn't.
I dunno - I tend to assume that chemicals that pretty rapidly cause living things to die are probably going to be cancer causing if you're exposed to too much of them.
The issue is more about the dose, really.
And having said that, I still rely on my common sense to tell me that the Monsanto tactic of making Roundup tolerant crops so you can spray heaps of chemicals on them to control weeds is not that great an idea, certainly in the long term, but also quite possibly in the short term.
Update: I probably linked to it before, but here's a short report from the Nature website that explains how herbicide tolerant weeds have developed despite Monsanto's improbable claim that they wouldn't.
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
Hitler and the nude dude
BBC - Culture - The Discobolus: Greeks, Nazis and the body beautiful
Hey, I didn't know that Hitler liked the old Greek discus thrower statue so much that he bought it:
As for the exhibition which inspired the BBC link about Hitler and the statue, there is a more detailed article about it at The Guardian, including some odd bits such as:
Hey, I didn't know that Hitler liked the old Greek discus thrower statue so much that he bought it:
Hitler’s opportunity to acquire the statue arose in the 1930s, when the Lancellotti family fell upon hard times and offered it for sale. At first the sculpture was earmarked for the Metropolitan Museum in New York, but the original asking price of eight million lire was deemed too high. By 1937, Hitler had made known his interest in the statue, andSome more interesting reading about the popularity of a Nazi era coffee table book of nude photos of the body beautiful is to be found here.
the following year, despite initial misgivings on the part of the Italian authorities about exporting it, the Discobolus was sold to him for the still huge sum of five million lire. Funded by the German government, this was delivered in cash to representatives of the Lancellotti family in their palazzo.
By the end of June 1938, the Discobolus had arrived in Germany where it was displayed not in Berlin but in the Glyptothek museum in Munich. On 9 July it was officially presented as a gift to the German people. Hitler addressed the crowds: “May none of you fail to visit the Glyptothek, for there you will see how splendid man used to be in the beauty of his body… and you will
realise that we can speak of progress only when we have not only attained such beauty but even, if possible, when we have surpassed it.”
As for the exhibition which inspired the BBC link about Hitler and the statue, there is a more detailed article about it at The Guardian, including some odd bits such as:
The Greeks could see their nudity was a bit odd, and wondered how it came about. One theory was that an early competitor at the Olympics had accidentally or deliberately lost his loincloth and went on to win the 200m sprint, thanks to some aerodynamic advantage. Not to be outdone, the other competitors copied him. More likely it has something to doErk. The article gets a bit more sordid after that...
with primitive rituals of “stripping off” one’s childhood cloak and “running out” into the ranks of citizens at the age of 20, practices still going on in Sparta and Crete in the historical period.
In Athens, meanwhile, on Athena’s birthday at the hottest time of year, each graduating year of ephebes would streak all the way from the altar of Love in the gymnasium called “the Academy” to the Acropolis carrying torches, the laggards and the podgier ones getting slaps from the crowds as they huffed and puffed through the main city gate.
Nudity was a kind of costume, an idea enhanced by the fact that much time seems to have been spent oiling oneself up and scraping oneself down. The best condiment for the body was that olive oil produced from the sacred olive trees given to Athens by Athena and awarded as prizes
in the games that accompanied her birthday. The resulting salty “boy gloop” or paidikos gloios was sometimes collected and used to treat ailments and signs of ageing.
Because we wouldn't like to think it was a sign of things to come
Autumn's record-breaking hot spell - Agriculture - General - Weather - The Land
Several media outlets, including The Land, are reporting on the weather bureau special report about how ridiculously, record breakingly, hot March has been over a large slab of Australia. (The weather in Brisbane was weird last week - very hot and humid for a couple of days, followed by two days of storms popping up from odd directions.)
But what is most amusing is this comment:
Several media outlets, including The Land, are reporting on the weather bureau special report about how ridiculously, record breakingly, hot March has been over a large slab of Australia. (The weather in Brisbane was weird last week - very hot and humid for a couple of days, followed by two days of storms popping up from odd directions.)
But what is most amusing is this comment:
I must thank The Land for publishing a story about hot weather without mentioning climate change or global warming. This would have to be a first and hopefully it's something that will continue.I expect that person reads Catallaxy, too.
Tuesday, March 24, 2015
Doing my bit for Tom
I think I read a comment about this that was like "Physics - who needs physics?" And it's true, it seems some of the stunt fighting is starting to look a tad too enhanced via invisible cables.
On the other hand, it's a pretty funny joke at the end, and by the time the theme kicks in, well, who can resist?
Big crunch mentioned again
Universe may be on the brink of collapse (on the cosmological timescale)
I posted about these guy's ideas last year. They're still working on it, and I have no idea what other physicists/cosmologists think of it.
I posted about these guy's ideas last year. They're still working on it, and I have no idea what other physicists/cosmologists think of it.
Uh huh
3D food printers could end famine, says academic Vivek Wadhwa | The Australian
Very hard to believe...
Very hard to believe...
A change with unclear consequences
RealClimate: What’s going on in the North Atlantic?
No one seems 100% sure how big the effects will be as it continues to slow down and (perhaps) eventually stops.
But hey, let's just keep pumping CO2 into the air and see what happens, folks?
No one seems 100% sure how big the effects will be as it continues to slow down and (perhaps) eventually stops.
But hey, let's just keep pumping CO2 into the air and see what happens, folks?
Explanation for Newspoll today...
I can't really see any other explanation.
Update: Essential has the vote 54/46 in favor of Labor, which is quite a jump for the slow moving poll, while Newspoll jumped in the opposite direction. All rather odd....
Monday, March 23, 2015
The pre-trailer trailer for Mission Impossible 5
Well, this seems a new marketing technique - put out a pre-trailer trailer announcing the arrival of the actual trailer in a couple of days. Odd.
However, in the absence of really bad reviews, I will see it. Tom Cruise just makes great action films, with only the occasional complete misfire. (He is also what I assume is a rarity - an actor with not the slightest fear of heights.)
However, in the absence of really bad reviews, I will see it. Tom Cruise just makes great action films, with only the occasional complete misfire. (He is also what I assume is a rarity - an actor with not the slightest fear of heights.)
The battle of the Tims
Tim Wilson, the Human Rights Commissioner for Selfies, Gays and Things the IPA Wants, manages to turn a valedictory comment about Lee Kuan Yew into a message from the IPA:
Yeah, thanks for the heartfelt sentiment, Tim.*
Meanwhile, I have been meaning to comment that it seems to me that the other Tim at the HRC, Tim Soutphommasane, who I tend not to refer to much because his surname is even harder to memorise than Senator Blofeld's, might be on some sort of selfie twitter war with Wilson. I really think Tim S has increased the number of photos of himself with groups of people as a response to the intense selfie-ifcation of the work of a Human Rights Commission since Wilson arrived on the scene. (Maybe there is also a rumour around that the Commission will be defunded to just one Commissioner, and the one who seems busiest will get the job.)
But on the weekend, I think Tim Wilson struck back, and wow, with this tweet photo, allegedly about the fountain in the background, he is still winning the selfie twitter war by a country mile:
Congratulations, Tim. (Wilson: King of the Selfie.)
* actually, from just Googling around, I'm not even sure what Wilson says makes sense. Didn't LKY pay scant attention to property rights when refusing compensation to land owners when it was needed for economic development? And I see that the public housing system, which has a very active role in the government providing housing (admittedly, with private ownership as the outcome) still shows an incredible amount of government involvement which one would have thought the IPA would run a mile from.
Is this a case of another small government Right identity praising Singapore for systems they are adamant should not be done in their own country?
Yeah, thanks for the heartfelt sentiment, Tim.*
Meanwhile, I have been meaning to comment that it seems to me that the other Tim at the HRC, Tim Soutphommasane, who I tend not to refer to much because his surname is even harder to memorise than Senator Blofeld's, might be on some sort of selfie twitter war with Wilson. I really think Tim S has increased the number of photos of himself with groups of people as a response to the intense selfie-ifcation of the work of a Human Rights Commission since Wilson arrived on the scene. (Maybe there is also a rumour around that the Commission will be defunded to just one Commissioner, and the one who seems busiest will get the job.)
But on the weekend, I think Tim Wilson struck back, and wow, with this tweet photo, allegedly about the fountain in the background, he is still winning the selfie twitter war by a country mile:
Congratulations, Tim. (Wilson: King of the Selfie.)
* actually, from just Googling around, I'm not even sure what Wilson says makes sense. Didn't LKY pay scant attention to property rights when refusing compensation to land owners when it was needed for economic development? And I see that the public housing system, which has a very active role in the government providing housing (admittedly, with private ownership as the outcome) still shows an incredible amount of government involvement which one would have thought the IPA would run a mile from.
Is this a case of another small government Right identity praising Singapore for systems they are adamant should not be done in their own country?
Financial scandals of Rome
‘God’s Bankers,’ by Gerald Posner - NYTimes.com
Like most people, I guess, I have only the vaguest idea of the corruption issues relating to modern Vatican finances. This review indicates the scale of the problem:
Like most people, I guess, I have only the vaguest idea of the corruption issues relating to modern Vatican finances. This review indicates the scale of the problem:
From there Posner weaves an extraordinarily intricate tale of intrigue, corruption and organized criminality — much of it familiar to journalists who cover the Vatican, though not widely known among more casual church watchers — from Pius XII down to Benedict XVI. These were years when the Vatican moved beyond the last vestiges of feudal restraint to become “a savvy international holding company with its own central bank” and a “maze of offshore holding companies” that were used as sprawling money-laundering operations for the Mafia and lucrative slush funds for Italian politicians.
Posner’s gifts as a reporter and storyteller are most vividly displayed in a series of lurid chapters on the American archbishop Paul Marcinkus, the arch-Machiavellian who ran the Vatican Bank from 1971 to 1989. Notorious for declaring that “you can’t run the church on Hail Marys,” Marcinkus ended up implicated in several sensational scandals. The biggest by far was the collapse of Italy’s largest private bank, Banco Ambrosiano, in 1982 — an event preceded by mob hits on a string of investigators looking into corruption in the Italian banking industry and followed by the spectacular (and still unsolved) murder of Ambrosiano’s chairman Roberto Calvi, who was found hanging from scaffolding beneath Blackfriars Bridge in London shortly after news of the bank’s implosion began to break. (Although the Vatican Bank was eventually absolved of legal culpability in Ambrosiano’s collapse, it did concede “moral involvement” and agreed to pay its creditors the enormous sum of $244 million.)
In one of his biggest scoops, Posner reveals that while Marcinkus was running his shell game at the Vatican Bank, he also served as a spy for the State Department, providing the American government with “personal details” about John Paul II, and even encouraging the pope “at the behest of embassy officials . . . to publicly endorse American positions on a broad range of political issues, including: the war on drugs; the guerrilla fighting in El Salvador; bigger defense budgets; the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan; and even Reagan’s ambitious missile defense shield.”
The cumulative effect of Posner’s detective work is an acute sensation of disgust — along with a mix of admiration for and skepticism about Pope Francis’ efforts to reform the Vatican Bank and its curial enablers. Pope Benedict, too, attempted to bring the bank into conformity with the European Union’s stringent money-laundering and transparencystatutes. But the effort failed.
Agricultural State
The Economics of California's Drought — The Atlantic
I was surprised to read about how important agriculture is to California, and how thirsty the industry is:
I was surprised to read about how important agriculture is to California, and how thirsty the industry is:
California is known globally for its coastal beaches, mountains, and desert. But the state's most important economic region may be its Central Valley, one of the world's most productive agricultural areas. Virtually all of the almonds, artichokes, lemons, pistachios, and processed tomatoes grown in the United States originate from the valley, whose productive soil is unmatched elsewhere in the country. California's spinach yield, for example is 60 percent more per acre than in the rest of the United States. The state's marine climate allows it to grow crops like broccoli that wilt in humid climates.
California is the world's fifth-largest supplier of food, a big reason why the state would, if an independent country, be the 7th largest economy in the world.
But California's agricultural output demands a lot of water. Irrigation claims up to 41 percent of the state's water supply, while cities such as Los Angeles and San Francisco demand comparatively little. Crops such as almonds, grown exclusively in California in the United States, consume 600 gallons of water per pound of nuts, more than 25 times the water needed per pound of tomato. These water-intensive crops tend to have high profit margins, providing farmers with an incentive to plant them.
A good sign
BBC News - Climate change: China official warns of 'huge impact'
The more seriously China takes climate change, the better.
And of course, it's remarkable how the global conspiracy of scientists and national weather organisations who make up pretend science about climate change extends even into this (nominally) communist nation, isn't it? [Sarcasm for any visitor from Catallaxy.]
The more seriously China takes climate change, the better.
And of course, it's remarkable how the global conspiracy of scientists and national weather organisations who make up pretend science about climate change extends even into this (nominally) communist nation, isn't it? [Sarcasm for any visitor from Catallaxy.]
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