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by November 16, 2008 No Comments

With mountains, skiing, and good weather it's no surprise that people are moving to the Rocky Mountain States in droves. However, with a rising population comes an increasing demand for more water. And, right now, water is a dwindling resource.
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by November 10, 2008 2 Comments

Photo courtesy of Madison Square Park Conservancy
By Laura Pelcher
Two hundred pumping hearts form a web across the oval field in Madison Square Park. Pulse Park, an installation by Mexican artist Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, measures heartbeats in visitors' hands with two sensor sculptures and projects the two hundred most recent measurements with narrow-beam light. Each light dramatically projects a beam onto the field while illuminating the energy of humanity within each of us.
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by November 7, 2008 No Comments

By Cindy Quezada
Rochester, Minnesota is home to the esteemed Mayo Clinic and IBM, two of the largest employers in the area. However, by the year 2020, they won't have anyone to employ! There just aren't enough young people who are becoming scientists, physicians, and engineers. In order to address this upcoming shortage of skilled workers, the Rochester Chamber of Commerce has had the foresight to establish a program called Workforce 2020.
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by November 4, 2008 No Comments

It was steam power that originally conquered the West and it might just be steam power that saves it. Fed on trees and water, the first "iron horses," or steam locomotives, forged their way across the Rockies opening up economic opportunities and building a precedent of fossil fuel dependence. And now steam power is once again in the headlines. Only this time there’s no smoke and no fire, only an almost inexhaustible supply of clean energy.
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by November 4, 2008 2 Comments

My choice of presidential candidate has been unambiguous for several months, but it was still very fascinating to learn a few months ago that presidential candidates had answered 14 questions on science posed by the Science Debate 2008 team. I was so super-interested in the whole thing because I've been wondering exactly how we're planning on making a turnaround in the science world, and out came the September 25 issue of Nature, featuring McCain and Obama on the cover, with questions posed in the issue. There was only ...

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by October 22, 2008 No Comments

"No science is immune to the infection of politics and the corruption of power." --Jacob Bronowski
Politics is based on everything that science is not. Years of study are largely unnecessary. Politicians need only the ability to read and write 4 things: Yeah, Nay, their own signature, and the digits on the check they are receiving by lobbyists to alter their votes.
But what about facts?
Most people have never heard of the IPCC report, let alone the opening statement, the entirety of section 2 and much of section 6.1. Apparently, neither has ...

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by October 22, 2008 No Comments

In 2005, a spill of organic solvents from a uranium mill south of Canon city killed 40 ducks and geese. Now, however, the question is whether incidences of water pollution from the mine, owned by Cotter Corp. is behind a slew of health problems experienced by the local population.
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by October 10, 2008 4 Comments

Rain. Just because it falls on your roof doesn't mean it's yours. At least not in Colorado or Utah.
In these states, citizens or businesses that attempt to collect or store rainwater are in fact breaking the law. The overriding rule here is that of prior appropriation i.e. in order to have any rights to water you have to gain a state water right.
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by October 1, 2008 1 Comment

If you live in the Rocky Mountain States and have been feeling a little irritable or losing hair lately just blame the selenium in your water. In a recent report it was found that over 80% of the areas studied in the American West are suffering from highly toxic levels of selenium caused, primarily, by the mining industry. So ubiquitous is the problem that it is causing the citizens, lawmakers, and environmentalists, to question whether the Clean Water Act, and the infrastructure which enforces it, is adequate in protecting and ...

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by September 23, 2008 No Comments

Colorado has recently made the bold move of committing to invest $1.5 million annually into a program to preserve the state's streams. Bold because, while the Colorado has been operating under a prolonged drought since 2002, the move to secure water solely for environmental purposes is controversial.
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