Filed under: maps | Tags: brine, climate, diagonal drilling, energy, environment, fracking, fracking waste, gaming, HCLs, horizontal drilling, Marcellus Shale, natural gas production, radioactive fracking waste, vertical drilling
A link to an animated map of drilling operations in Bradford County since 2008.
http://www.bradfordcountypa.org/Natural-Gas.asp?specifTab=2
Filed under: maps | Tags: Aggies, bicycle, bicycle transportation, bicycling, bike map, bike paths, bike routes, cycling infrastructure, Fort Collins, Rams, urban cycling
http://www.fcgov.com/bicycling/pdf/bike-map-front.pdf
Filed under: maps | Tags: baseball mascots, Beverly Hills Cop, bike infrastructure, Detroit, Detroit bicycling, Motor City, pedestrian infrastructure, Rock City, Shia Lebouef, sidewalks, Ted Nugent, the Nuge, urban cycling, urban freestyle walking
Hey everybody’s got their things, man. Sidewalk width is one of my things.
via Downtown Detroit Master Plan, 2004 (pdf): http://www.detroitmi.gov/Portals/0/docs/planning/planning/transportation/DTMP_2004.pdf
Filed under: maps | Tags: climate, hurricane, hurricane track, landfall, nhc noaa gov, Ocean City, Sandy, storm surge, storm track, tropical storm
Hurricane Sandy.
via http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/refresh/graphics_at3+shtml/211343.shtml?5-daynl?large#contents
Filed under: maps, Uncategorized | Tags: cone of probability, Hurricane Sandy, hurricane track
The cone of probability.
As of 10/24 afternoon.
Filed under: maps | Tags: al Qaeda, civilian casualties, collateral damage, drone attacks, drones n' clones, habeas corpses, habeas corpus, Obama, Pakistan, predator drones, Robama, Robomney, UAV, UAVs, unmanned aerial vehicle
via http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/datablog/interactive/2012/aug/02/drone-attacks-pakistan-map
The US has launched drone strikes in Pakistan over 330 times with up to 3,247 casualties – including up to 852 civilians.
The More Effective Evil craves the legitimacy of your middle class “liberal” vote as a ratification for its More Effective Evil policies.
Filed under: maps | Tags: bubbling, bubbling sites, CH4, energy, LA, louisiana, Louisiana sinkhole, methane, Natural gas, sink hole
via (pdf) http://www.edsuite.com/proposals/proposals_280/bubble_map_9-7-12_fi_430.pdf
The Louisiana sinkhole.
Filed under: maps | Tags: Baldwin-Felts, Boulder County coal, Boulder County history, coal mining, debt slavery, Industrial Mine, Lafayette, Marshall, northern field, peonage, Superior, United Mine Workers
Rocky Mountain Fuel Company was one of the worst employers imaginable.
Q. Now, as to the strike conditions existing in Boulder County … let me ask you first whether or not any system of peonage has been or is being maintained in Boulder County, so far as your knowledge goes? — A. Well, I investigated reports that came into our office of the existence of peonage in Boulder County in 1910 — several times — and I covered them in my reports.
Q. Did you or not find that peonage did exist there? –A. I would say that they did.
Q. Why? –A. Because men were held in the camps who didn’t want to stay.
Q. By whom? –A. By company guards.
Q. Now, you say that they were held by company guards. What causes you to make that statement? What information have you to justify you in making any such statement? –A. Well, at the time — at that time the restricted confines of the camp of the coal property in Boulder County — at least those that I visited — there were certain definite lines — they were not always stockaded — they didn’t always have fences, but certain lines were the limits of the camp, and those lines were patrolled by armed guards.
Q. Employed by whom? –A. The coal operators.
Q. What company? –A. Different companies.
Q. Name them. –A. I think the National Fuel and — really, I don’t know that I can name the companies. I can name the mines better.
Q. Do that. –A. Superior, Monarch, Bijou, Gorham — it is some years back and I don’t recall them rightly.
Q. How were the guards employed — jointly? –A. No; each company employed their own guards. I don’t think the companies went together to employ guards.
Q. You say, in your opinion, peonage did exist there? –A. Yes, sir.
Q. Tell us why you say that. –A. Well, I found the men in the camp wanted to leave — in fact, I took them out of the camps.
Q. You say you took them out? –A. Yes, sir.
Q. Well, give us the names of them. –A. I can not give you the names now off-hand.
Q. Have you any record of them? –A. I imagine there is a record in our office; yes, sir.
Q. You say you imagine — did you make any report? –A. I made a report, but I don’t believe I mentioned the names when I made the report; as a matter of fact, I didn’t know anything about the peonage law at all then.
Q. How many men did you say you took out of the mines? –A. I took one bunch, I think, of about eight.
Q. What became of them? –A. I turned them loose when we got them outside of the mine. Some of the mine workers put them in the car and sent them to Denver.
Q. Where did you take them from? –A. I think I took that bunch from — if you will let me look at my report a minute — that was at Superior, Colo. That is the mine at Superior; I don’t know whose mine that is. I don’t know what company runs that mine.
Q. It was the Superior mine? –A. Yes, sir; the Superior mine, up north there.
Q. Where did you find these men? –A. They were inside the camp.
Q. Were they inside or underground? –A. No, sir; they were just within the limits of the camp.
Q. Was there anything to prevent them from leaving? –A. You bet there was.
— Testimony of Eli Gross, Colorado Dept. of Labor official, Conditions in the Coal Mines of Colorado: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Mines and Mining, United States Congress, United States Government Printing Office, 1914.
Filed under: maps | Tags: bike race, Boulder, Boulder Canyon, elevation profile, Flagstaff Mountain, Golden, Highway 93, Leipheimer, Lyons, Nederland, Phinney, Pro Cycling Challenge, South Saint Vrain, stage 6, USA Pro Cycling Challenge
Much of the course of the 2012 USA Pro Cycling Challenge seems like it was designed by Chambers of Commerce, not bike racing professionals. The Breck – CS stage, for instance, which begins with Hoosier Pass then rolls flat and downhill for a zillion miles to the finish, is almost a waste. But stage 6, Golden to Boulder (by way of Nederland and Lyons), is going to provide a lot of action and a lot of separation. There aren’t any flat roads on this route — even the flat sections are hilly. There will be some desperate moves on the final climb up Flagstaff Mountain. Great stage. Saturday. (Wednesday’s Gunnison – Aspen stage includes two big passes and should also provide some G.C. fireworks — watch that final descent into Aspen, very tricky.)
Filed under: maps | Tags: bike race, Colorado bike race, Durango stage, Durango to Telluride, Pro Cycling Challenge, stage race, USPCC
Because if you go looking for it on the official website, it’s almost like they don’t want you to know.
Filed under: maps | Tags: 12 men, 2012 Olympics, august 11, London Olympics, mountain bike, mountain bike racing, MTB, Olympics, travel
August 11 women, August 12 men.
I fully expect Taylor Phinney to take fourth.
Filed under: maps | Tags: 2012 Denver bike map, Bike Denver, bike map, bike maps, bike routes Denver, biking, city bicycling, cycling, denver, Denver bike routes, map, pdf, transportation, urban bicycling, urban cycling
Via Bike Denver. Download: http://www.bikedenver.org/wp-content/uploads/2007/02/Bike_Map_Final_2012_Final.pdf
Filed under: maps | Tags: aircraft carriers, amphibious warship, crude oil, en route, energy, Iran, middle-east, Persian Gulf, Strait of Hormuz, the Great Game
via http://www.zerohedge.com/news/three-us-aircraft-carriers-now-middle-east-fourth-en-route
Filed under: maps, Uncategorized | Tags: Liege, Metz, route map, Switzerland, TDF, Tour de France
Filed under: maps | Tags: AGW, CH4, climate change, climate science, CO2, global warming, heat wave, meteorologist, nashville, politics, record heat
is on the street
Filed under: maps | Tags: Cedar Heights, climate, Colorado Springs, Crystola, fire map, fire perimeter, forest fire, Garden of the Gods, Garden of the Gods Fire, Green Mountain Falls, Manitou, Manitou Springs, Mountain Shadows, science, Waldo Canyon Fire, Woodland Park
Today’s Events:
Fire activity is expected to increase today and tomorrow, with higher temperatures and decreasing humidity. Possible afternoon thunderstorms could also bring strong, gusty winds. Temperatures are expected to reach at least 15 degrees above season normal.
On the west side of the fire, crews will hold and improve line from Rampart Ridge Road south to Highway 24, eliminating hotspots where required, extinguishing roll-out logs, and continuing structure protection, with the aim of re-opening the highway as soon as possible. Night crews successfully performed a burnout operation in this area overnight.
Smoke may again be visible from Colorado Springs, as a large island of fuel within the fire perimeter continues to burn, but poses no threat.
Aircraft will make retardant drops on the northern perimeter as firefighters attempt to hold the fire south of Monument Creek. Three spot fires northeast of Rampart Reservoir are being aggressively attacked by air, bulldozers and hand crews. Firefighters will also continue construction of a contingency bulldozer line along Mt. Herman Road north of the fire.
Air resources will continue to be used to suppress fire activity in Williams Canyon on the southern flank of the fire.
via http://inciweb.org/incident/article/2929/14645/
Yesterday’s perimeter map:
Filed under: maps | Tags: Anglestone, Blodgett Drive, Colorado Springs, fire fighting, forest fire, Garden of the Gods, Manitou Springs fire, Mount Saint Francis, Needlecone Lane, Rampart Reservoir, Sawback, Stanley Reservoir, USAFA, Waldo Canyon Fire, Woodland Park, Woodmen Road
I listened to the fire fight most of the day yesterday [Wednesday June 27, a day after 300-plus houses burned]. The fire made a bull rush on the houses above and west of Woodmen Road, around a street called Blodgett Drive and its associated cul-de-sacs, a little neighborhood placed to burn vigorously at the extreme northwest point of Colorado Springs.
The fire “flashed over” and many of the houses started to burn. Without quick action by multiple fire crews from all over the state, dexterously coordinated by radio and face-to-face meetings, the houses would have burned to their foundations.
After its big charge the fire kept up a cat-and-mouse game with the fire crews for the rest of the day, sneaking up on the houses through the brush. The situation was especially tense up on Angelstone, where five luxury homes sit in an exclusive little enclave hanging above the Blodgett Drive neighborhood. Fire smoldered on the hillside all day and into the night, and into the next day, as crews tended the houses with one easily blocked escape route.
The photo shows heavily wooded area behind Blodgett Drive and the houses perched on Angelstone. Woodmen Road is below.
At some point fire started in the open area west of Mount Saint Francis, below Woodmen Road. Fire fighters had already identified the nearby houses as a problem spot. The houses along Needlecone Lane and Sawback Trail were lined up along a gully that would “go up like a chimney” and so would be “very hard to defend,” according to radio traffic. But they jumped on it in the open area and put it out.
Screenshot shows the houses along Needlecone Lane and Sawback Trail below Woodmen Road. Mount Saint Francis is just off screen to the northeast.
If you live in this neighborhood, the fire fighters saved your house yesterday. Today is a different day.
Filed under: maps, Uncategorized | Tags: Cedar Heights, Colorado fire, Colorado Springs fire, fire map, fire perimeter, forest fire, IR map, Manitou Springs fire, Mountain Shadows, Rampart Reservoir, Waldo Canyon, Waldo Canyon Fire, wildland fire, Woodland Park
As of 0600 6/28 June.
Filed under: maps, Uncategorized | Tags: Colorado, Colorado Springs, forest fires, Garden of the Gods, Manitou Springs, Mountain Shadows, Ormes Peak, Palmer Reservoir, Rampart Reservoir, Scar on the Mountain, Waldo Canyon Fire
Early AM 6/27, via http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_20928988?nstrack=sid:4529940|met:300|cat:0|order:3































