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3rd Time at Tee-Lor-Su,9 Dec 03
3rd Time at Tee-Lor-Su,9 Dec 03
April 15
April 15
From This Moment On..<Steve's Wedding ..What A Happy Day/Cradit: Brian TX>..January 27
From This Moment On..<Steve's Wedding ..What A Happy Day/Cradit: Brian TX>..January 27
Full Moon Loy-Kra Thong Festival 2006, November 05
Full Moon Loy-Kra Thong Festival 2006, November 05
Graduation, July 14 '05
Graduation, July 14 '05
Gran Monte' La Kao-Yai Trip Last Week December 02
Gran Monte' La Kao-Yai Trip Last Week December 02
Gutt&Jome's Wedding (My Friends's Wedding)May 17
Gutt&Jome's Wedding (My Friends's Wedding)May 17
In The Morning Mist, November 29
In The Morning Mist, November 29
In The Past (My old photo shoots)..July 07
In The Past (My old photo shoots)..July 07
Inside the small planet(Macro)
Inside the small planet(Macro)
It's Me!! Anyway..
It's Me!! Anyway..
July 30, Ayutaya with Friends
July 30, Ayutaya with Friends
July, 2004..What were we doing!!
July, 2004..What were we doing!!
Kao-Yai Trip Part II  December 15
Kao-Yai Trip Part II December 15
Lady Annivier..March 20
Lady Annivier..March 20
Last Night at Flower Market
Last Night at Flower Market
Last Year At NRC
Last Year At NRC
Loy-Kra-Tong Nov,25 2004
Loy-Kra-Tong Nov,25 2004
March 10
March 10
Marine Night, 18 Dec 2004
Marine Night, 18 Dec 2004
Meadow of Krachieo Flower,6 Aug'05
Meadow of Krachieo Flower,6 Aug'05
My Bachelor's Degree Graduated
My Bachelor's Degree Graduated
My Old Photography(My Products)..July 16
My Old Photography(My Products)..July 16
My Old Pix Products..August 11
My Old Pix Products..August 11
My Products(1st Product)
My Products(1st Product)
Our LomO (aLiKE) Will Rock You..July 05
Our LomO (aLiKE) Will Rock You..July 05
P'Kluay" & P'Nok's Wedding. Dec 03
P'Kluay" & P'Nok's Wedding. Dec 03
Rythmic Night 2 Yrs Before..
Rythmic Night 2 Yrs Before..
Self Portraits
Self Portraits
Self-Portrait In My Restroom..January 08
Self-Portrait In My Restroom..January 08
Silly Freaky Creepy Me!..January 12
Silly Freaky Creepy Me!..January 12
Sleeping's Styles...February 19
Sleeping's Styles...February 19
Somewhere In Time II
Somewhere In Time II
Somewhere Over The Rainbow.
Somewhere Over The Rainbow.
Sri-Chang Trip "June 25,2005"
Sri-Chang Trip "June 25,2005"
Sweet October Rain..
Sweet October Rain..
The Queen Of The World Falls (Tee-Lor-Su).
The Queen Of The World Falls (Tee-Lor-Su).
The Yellow Smile Thai's Style Coup d'état !!!  September 22
The Yellow Smile Thai's Style Coup d'état !!! September 22
To Someone Who Left His Piglets at Home..LOL(Juz Kidding)..July 09
To Someone Who Left His Piglets at Home..LOL(Juz Kidding)..July 09
Today I miss U muz..October 23
Today I miss U muz..October 23
Vien-Tien@Wat Hua-Lum-Phong/July 21,05
Vien-Tien@Wat Hua-Lum-Phong/July 21,05
Walked Alone In BKK Christmas' Night! December 25
Walked Alone In BKK Christmas' Night! December 25
What a wonderful world..
What a wonderful world..
When I'm Fat..Cat..February 20
When I'm Fat..Cat..February 20
White Krachieo Flower 6 Aug 2005
White Krachieo Flower 6 Aug 2005
Winter's Songs..(Thanks Damir..Merry X'mas To U Too!:Credit:I.Damir)December 21
Winter's Songs..(Thanks Damir..Merry X'mas To U Too!:Credit:I.Damir)December 21
X'mas Eve 2004(My Products)
X'mas Eve 2004(My Products)
X'mas Eve in BKK..December 25
X'mas Eve in BKK..December 25
Zoo Trip 2003(My Products)
Zoo Trip 2003(My Products)
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Is Global Warming Fueling Forest Fires?

Is Global Warming Fueling Forest Fires?

By Andrea Thompson, LiveScience Staff Writer

posted: 24 October 2007 02:36 pm ET

Wildfires that raged in Southern California this week and forced more than half a million people from their homes spread so rapidly in part because the landscape was parched by a hot, dry summer—conditions that may become more of a norm for the Southwest, thanks to global warming.

But can these wildfires be attributed to a changing climate?

This very issue was brought to light Tuesday when Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid told reporters, “One reason why we have the fires in California is global warming,” according to The Hill.com, a political news Web site, though Reid later said many factors contributed to the wildfires.

Like hurricanes and other extreme events that could possibly be influenced by global warming, it is impossible to connect any one wildfire to climate change. But scientists say that in a warming world, the likelihood of wildfires like the ones tearing across Southern California is definitely higher.

"I think the only thing we can say is that it is likely that the probability of fire initiation [a fire starting] will be higher during [hot] and dry periods of time," said Guy Brasseur of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Colorado.

Climate changes

Climate models run by scientists have shown a clear drying trend in the subtropics, which includes the American Southwest, Mexico, the Mediterranean, Australia and parts of Asia, over the course of this century.

"If they get drier, the likelihood for fires will be higher," Brasseur said.

The hot, dry conditions that dominated the Southwest this summer were a small taste of what could become the prevailing conditions in the future, and they helped provide the fuel for the fires to start.

"When you have a hot summer and a dry summer, boom, you have a lot of fires," Brasseur told LiveScience.

But temperature and humidity aren't the only factors affecting the likelihood of wildfires occurring. The frequency of the occurrence of thunderstorms is also important because lightning triggers most wildfires—"so if lightning increases, we could have more fires," Brasseur said.

The wildfires burning now in California have also shown how important winds are to the ability of the fire to spread. The ferocious and chaotic Santa Ana winds in California make predicting which way the fires will move very difficult, and so they are a challenge for firefighters to control. Just how these winds will be affected by climate change is a big unknown, Brasseur said.

California's population explosion is another key factor in terms of the threat to humans, because, "the more people you have, the more fires you might also have by people," Brasseur said.

Wildfire's effects

While wildfires are a huge threat to the homes of people who live in areas prone to these disasters, they are also a threat in terms of the pollution they emit.

Wildfires create intense emissions of carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, smoke, particles, aerosols and other chemical compounds. Carbon monoxide in turn contributes to the formation of ground-level ozone, a pollutant. These pollutants can damage the lungs of firefighters and fleeing residents who breathe them in.

The fires also affect the local ecosystem—forest fires have always been a natural phenomenon that helped clear out underbrush, but the changes that humans have wrought to the landscape have changed that dynamic.

"[Forest fires are] good because [they] rejuvenate the forest in a way, so it's part of the natural system," Brasseur said. "The problem is that, of course, humans have affected the forest to a certain extent in certain places. The resistance of the forest might not be the same as it used to be against fire."

The spate of forest fires in recent years has called forest management practices into question. Many years ago, forest rangers would clear out underbrush with proscribed, or controlled, burns to deprive forest fires of their main fuel source. That approach is similar to what would happen naturally, when frequent lightning-sparked fires would burn underbrush but not be intense enough to destroy entire forests.

But in recent years, the practice was to let forest grow and to stamp out fires before they got out of control, which set up a situation in which "the forest may be more vulnerable to fires than it used to be," Brasseur said.

Wie Min Hao of the United States Forest Service said that in addition to encouraging residents in fire-prone areas to be more careful, the Forest Service is moving back to using proscribed burns, but he said these can only be performed under limited forest and weather conditions when the fires won't accidentally spread out of control.

"You don't get too many chances," he said.

LiveScience's Image of the Day

Thursday October 25, 2007

Fiery View From Above

NASA satellites have captured new images of the California wildfires, which illustrate the immense scale of the blazes. The National Interagency Fire Center reports that 12 large, uncontained fires have consumed over 335,000 acres in Southern California.

Fierce Santa Ana winds continue to fuel the spread of the fires.

The images show the continuously burning area between Los Angeles and San Diego, California. Fire activity is denoted with red pixels. Vast plumes of thick smoke can be seen blowing out over the Pacific Ocean.

Credit: NASA/MODIS Rapid Response

 


Scientists Envision Growing Human Eyeballs

By Jeanna Bryner, LiveScience Staff Writer

posted: 24 October 2007 01:00 pm ET

A genetic switch that gives tadpoles three eyes could allow stem-cell scientists to eventually grow human eyeballs or at least create replacement parts needed for repair jobs.

If scientists could grow eyeballs from stem cells in the lab, the process would be a boon to individuals with damage to cells within the eye, including retinal disorders.

"If you knew all the genes, and how to turn them on, that you needed to make an eye, you could start with very early embryonic cells and turn on all the right genes and grow an eye in a dish," said co-leader of the study Nicholas Dale, a neuroscientist at the University of Warwick in England.

"What I think is the more realistic possibility is to make precursor cells for different bits of the eye, which could then be transplanted and differentiate in-situ to replace damage to the retina or the lens or iris," Dale told LiveScience.

Scientists already had established the amphibian genes that initiate and direct eye development, which they refer to as Eye Field Transcription Factors (EFTFs). How these genes get activated in the right location at a certain time during development had been cloaked in mystery.

The new study, detailed in the Oct. 25 issue of the journal Nature, suggests a nitrogen-bearing molecule sets off a series of steps that result in eye formation in frogs. The mechanism probably also applies to humans and other animals with eyes, the researchers say.

Dale and University of Warwick developmental biologist Elizabeth Jones, along with colleagues, discovered the eye-switch while investigating how "ectoenzyme" molecules located on the external surface of cells contributed to the development of locomotion in the African clawed frog (Xenopus laevis). The biologists injected the molecules into frog embryos that comprised just eight cells.

One of the ectoenzymes triggered wonky eye development. When added to cells that would eventually form the head, the resulting tadpole sported three eyes instead of two. An even stranger sight resulted when they injected the ectoenzyme into other developing body cells. The molecule caused an additional "ectopic" eye, leading to tadpoles with a spare peeper growing out of the side, abdomen or even along the tail.

On a molecular level, the scientists say the enzyme converts a burst of the energy-carrying molecule ATP into ADP, which ultimately turns on the embryo's eye-making machinery.

The researchers think the same mechanism for triggering eye development applies across a wide range of species, including us. Mutations to the human equivalent of this enzyme lead to severe head and eye defects in humans.

Oceans may be losing ability to absorb CO2

Oceans may be losing ability to absorb CO2
Oct 22 07:44 AM US/Eastern
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           The world's oceans may be losing their ability to soak up extra carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere, with the risk that this will help stoke global warming, two new studies say.

Absorption of atmospheric CO2 by the North Atlantic plunged by half between the mid-1990s and 2002-5, British researchers say in a paper published in the November issue of the Journal of Geophysical Research.

The data comes from sensors lowered by a container ship carrying bananas, which makes a round trip from the West Indies to Britain every month. It has generated more than 90,000 measurements of ocean CO2.

The finding touches on a key aspect of the global warming question, because for decades the ocean has been absorbing much of the CO2 released into the atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels.

If the sea performs less well as a carbon sponge, or "sink" according to the technical jargon, more CO2 will remain in the atmosphere, thus accelerating the greenhouse effect.

Ute Schuster, who led the research with Professor Andrew Watson of the University of East Anglia's School of Environmental Sciences, admitted she was astonished by the data.

"Such large changes are a tremendous surprise. We expected that the uptake would change only slowly because of the ocean's great mass," Schuster was quoted by the university in a press release Monday as saying.

Research last year pointed to rising acidification of the oceans as a result of CO2 uptake, highlighting the risk of carbon saturation as well as a looming peril for biodiversity.

Schuster was cautious about drawing too swift a conclusion from the new research.

"Perhaps this is partly a natural oscillation or perhaps it is a response to the recent rapid climate warming," she said.

"In either case, we now know that the sink can change quickly and we need to continue to monitor the ocean uptake."

In another study also published on Monday, the researchers said that economic growth had caused levels of atmospheric CO2 to increase 35 percent faster than expected since 2000.

Eighteen percent of the increase could be attributed to a decline in the efficiency of sinks -- the oceans as well as forests -- in soaking up airborne CO2. The remainder came from fossil fuels.

"Fifty years ago, for every tonne of CO2 emitted, 600 kilograms (1,300 pounds) were removed by natural sinks. In 2006, only 550 kilograms were removed per tonne and that amount is falling," said lead author Pep Canadell of the Global Carbon Project.

The findings were published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, which like the Journal of Geophysical Research is published in the United States.


Copyright AFP 2007, AFP stories and photos shall not be published, broadcast, rewritten for broadcast or publication or redistributed directly or indirectly in any medium

Report: Soda May Seriously Harm Your Health!


Scientists Ruminate on Cow Stomach Fluid for Fuel Cells

By Andrea Thompson, LiveScience Staff Writer

posted: 29 August 2007 09:25 am ET

Fluid from the stomach of cows could help power alternative fuel cells, new research shows.

Electricity is generated in the new fuel cells by the breakdown of cellulose, which can be found in waste paper, other wood products and in the corn leaves and stalks that farms generate after a harvest.

Using cellulose as an ethanol fuel source has been proposed as an alternative to using corn.
Cows come into the picture because the fluid in their rumen (the largest chamber of their stomach) is rich in microbes that break down cellulose.
Fuel cells are energy conversion devices like batteries, except they consume a reactant that must be replenished, whereas batteries store electrical energy chemically in a closed system. Various fuels can be used, including hydrogen, hydrocarbons and alcohols.
The new fuel cell contains two compartments, one of which is filled with cellulose and rumen fluid. As the microbes break down the cellulose, electrons are created, which flow into the other chamber of the fuel cell, creating an electric current.
"Energy is produced as the bacteria break down cellulose, which is one of the most abundant resources on our planet," said study team leader Hamid Rismani-Yazdi, a graduate student at Ohio State University.
The fuel cells Rismani-Yazdi and his team created are a refinement from an original model they created two years ago. The new fuel cells are a quarter of the size of their original model and can produce about three times the power—two of the cells can create enough electricity to recharge a AA-sized battery, whereas it took four of the older generation of fuel cells to do this.
The fuel cells are also long-lasting.
"The power output of these fuel cells is sustainable indefinitely as long as we keep feeding the bacteria with cellulose," said study team member Ann Christy, also of Ohio State. "We ran these cells for three months."


Full Moon Sends More Dogs and Cats to Emergency Room

By Robert Roy Britt, LiveScience Managing Editor

posted: 15 July 2007 12:38 pm ET

Injuries and illness among dogs and cats seems to be higher during full moon than at other times of the month, a new study finds. But researchers don't know why.

The study, reported in the July 15 issue of the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, finds emergency room visits for these pets increases during or near the full moon. In studying 11,940 cases at the Colorado State University Veterinary Medical Center, the researchers found the risk of emergency room visits to be 23 percent higher for cats and 28 percent higher for dogs on days surrounding full moons.

The types of emergencies ranged from cardiac arrest to trauma.

"If you talk to any person, from kennel help, nurse, front-desk person to doctor, you frequently hear the comment on a busy night, 'Gee is it a full moon?'" said study leader Raegan Wells of the university's College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. "There is the belief that things are busier on full-moon nights."

Belief does not make for good science, however. And despite the newfound numbers, Wells doesn't know what sort of lunacy is at play.

"It is difficult to interpret the clinical significance of these findings," she said.

Research into mysterious lunar connections has a long history of baffling and mixed results. A pair of studies in 2001 looked into how many humans are bitten by animals during full moons. British researchers found a lunar link, while the separate study in Australia uncovered no connection.

More recently, scientists found that beach pollution is worse during the full moon. That discovery, however, is linked to real variations in tides related to the lunar cycle.

Pinning animal and human behavior to the moon's movements has proved elusive. One suggestion for some observed changes is simply that more people (and pets) are out during the full moon because the night is bright and good for walking. This could lead to more mischief, too, and could explain the recent decision by some British police departments to increase patrols during full moon.


What a day for snow in Argentina

BY BILL CORMIER, Associated Press

Article Last Updated: 07/09/2007 11:40:10 PM PDT


 

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — Thousands of Argentines cheered and threw snowballs in the streets of Buenos Aires on Monday as the capital's first major snowfall since 1918 spread a thin white mantle across the region.

Wet snow fell for hours in the Argentine capital, accumulating in a mushy but thin white layer late Monday, after freezing air from Antarctica collided with a moisture-laden low pressure system that blanketed higher elevations in western and central Argentina with snow.

"Despite all my years, this is the first time I've ever seen it snow in Buenos Aires," said Juana Benitez, an 82-year-old who joined children celebrating in the streets.

Argentina's National Weather Service said it was the first major snow in Buenos Aires since June 22, 1918, though sleet or freezing rain have been periodically reported in decades since.

One man stripped to his shorts to welcome the snow. Children scraped snow off cars and threw snowballs. Motorists honked horns, some with small snowmen on their hoods. Some fender benders were reported on slick suburban streets.

The storm struck on Argentina's Independence Day holiday, adding to a festive air and prompting radio stations to play an old tango song inspired by the 1918 snowfall, "What a night!"

"This is the kind of weather phenomenon that comes along every 100 years," forecaster Hector Ciappesoni told La Nacion newspaper. "It is very difficult to predict."

The snow followed a bitter cold snap in late May that saw subfreezing temperatures, the coldest in 40 years in Buenos Aires. That cold wave contributed to an energy crisis and 23 deaths from exposure.

Two more exposure deaths were reported on Monday.


World News

Snow falls in Buenos Aires
2007-7-10 08:28
 
Buenos Aires - Thousands of Argentines cheered and threw snowballs in the streets of Buenos Aires as the capital's first major snowfall since 1918 spread a thin white mantle across the region.

Wet snow fell for hours in the Argentine capital on Monday, accumulating in a mushy but thin white layer, after freezing air from Antarctica collided with a moisture-laden low pressure system that blanketed higher elevations in western and central Argentina with snow.

"Despite all my years, this is the first time I've ever seen snow in Buenos Aires," said Juana Benitez, an 82-year-old who joined children celebrating in the streets.

Argentina's National Weather Service said it was the first major snow in Buenos Aires since June 22, 1918, though sleet or freezing rain have been reported periodically in decades since.

One man stripped to his shorts to welcome the snow. Children scraped snow off cars and threw snowballs. Motorists honked their hooters, some with small snowmen on their bonnets. Some fender benders were reported on slick suburban streets.

The storm struck on Argentina's Independence Day holiday, adding to a festive air and prompting radio stations to play an old tango song inspired by the 1918 snowfall, "What a night!"

"This is the kind of weather phenomenon that comes along every 100 years," forecaster Hector Ciappesoni told La Nacion newspaper. "It is very difficult to predict."

The snow followed a bitter cold snap in late May that saw subfreezing temperatures, the coldest in 40 years in Buenos Aires. That cold wave contributed to an energy crisis and 23 deaths from exposure.

Two more deaths from exposure were reported on Monday.

AP

Caution: Some soft drinks may seriously harm your health

Expert links additive to cell damage

By Martin Hickman, Consumer Affairs Correspondent

Published: 27 May 2007

      A new health scare erupted over soft drinks last night amid evidence they may cause serious cell damage. Research from a British university suggests a common preservative found in drinks such as Fanta and Pepsi Max has the ability to switch off vital parts of DNA.

The problem - more usually associated with ageing and alcohol abuse - can eventually lead to cirrhosis of the liver and degenerative diseases such as Parkinson's.

The findings could have serious consequences for the hundreds of millions of people worldwide who consume fizzy drinks. They will also intensify the controversy about food additives, which have been linked to hyperactivity in children.

Concerns centre on the safety of E211, known as sodium benzoate, a preservative used for decades by the £74bn global carbonated drinks industry. Sodium benzoate derives from benzoic acid. It occurs naturally in berries, but is used in large quantities to prevent mould in soft drinks such as Sprite, Oasis and Dr Pepper. It is also added to pickles and sauces.

Sodium benzoate has already been the subject of concern about cancer because when mixed with the additive vitamin C in soft drinks, it causes benzene, a carcinogenic substance. A Food Standards Agency survey of benzene in drinks last year found high levels in four brands which were removed from sale.

Now, an expert in ageing at Sheffield University, who has been working on sodium benzoate since publishing a research paper in 1999, has decided to speak out about another danger. Professor Peter Piper, a professor of molecular biology and biotechnology, tested the impact of sodium benzoate on living yeast cells in his laboratory. What he found alarmed him: the benzoate was damaging an important area of DNA in the "power station" of cells known as the mitochondria.

He told The Independent on Sunday: "These chemicals have the ability to cause severe damage to DNA in the mitochondria to the point that they totally inactivate it: they knock it out altogether.

"The mitochondria consumes the oxygen to give you energy and if you damage it - as happens in a number if diseased states - then the cell starts to malfunction very seriously. And there is a whole array of diseases that are now being tied to damage to this DNA - Parkinson's and quite a lot of neuro-degenerative diseases, but above all the whole process of ageing."

The Food Standards Agency (FSA) backs the use of sodium benzoate in the UK and it has been approved by the European Union but last night, MPs called for it to investigate urgently.

Norman Baker, the Liberal Democrat chair of Parliament's all-party environment group said: "Many additives are relatively new and their long-term impact cannot be certain. This preservative clearly needs to be investigated further by the FSA."

A review of sodium benzoate by the World Health Organisation in 2000 concluded that it was safe, but it noted that the available science supporting its safety was "limited".

Professor Piper, whose work has been funded by a government research council, said tests conducted by the US Food and Drug Administration were out of date.

"The food industry will say these compounds have been tested and they are complete safe," he said. "By the criteria of modern safety testing, the safety tests were inadequate. Like all things, safety testing moves forward and you can conduct a much more rigorous safety test than you could 50 years ago."

He advised parents to think carefully about buying drinks with preservatives until the quantities in products were proved safe by new tests. "My concern is for children who are drinking large amounts," he said.

Coca-Cola and Britvic's Pepsi Max and Diet Pepsi all contain sodium benzoate. Their makers and the British Soft Drinks Association said they entrusted the safety of additives to the Government.

Report: Soda May Seriously Harm Your Health

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

You may want to put that soda can down.

A common preservative found in drinks such as Coca-Cola, Sprite, Dr. Pepper, Fanta and Diet Pepsi may cause serious cell damage, according to a report in Britain's The Independent.

Sodium benzoate has the ability to switch off vital parts of a person's DNA, according to research from a British university.

The problem is usually associated with aging and alcohol abuse, but new findings show that drinking soda with the preservative can eventually lead to cirrhosis of the liver and degenerative diseases such as Parkinson's.

Sodium benzoate, which derives from benzoic acid, has been used for years by the carbonated drinks industry to prevent mold from developing in soft drinks. The ingredient has been the subject of concern on cancer, because when mixed with Vitamin C, it turns into a carcinogenic substance called benzene, the Independent reported.

Last year, a Food Standards Agency survey of benzene in drinks found high levels in four brands that were removed from store shelves.

"These chemicals have the ability to cause severe damage to DNA in the mitochondria to the point that they totally inactivate it: they knock it out altogether," said Peter Piper, a professor of molecular biology and biotechnology.

Dancing Buildings!

 
New Buildings to Dance in the Wind

By Bill Christensen

posted: 22 May 2007 12:00 pm ET

A series of rotating buildings based on Dynamic Architecture will be built around the world, starting in Dubai, U.A.E. The Dynamic Architecture concept was introduced by Florentine architect David Fisher.

The rotating buildings [VIDEO ] get their electrical power from wind turbines that are placed between floors and which rotate freely with the wind. Additional power is provided from solar cells on the tops of the individual floors.

Buildings based on Dynamic Architecture would use wind power to generate movement. Credit: Dynamic Architecture



Each individual floor is able to rotate slowly, based on commands issued by the owners of condos or apartments on that floor. I assume that the building owners can also take control, for coordinated movements of the floors. Note that the rotation of the floors is slow and uses power - the rotation of the floors does not produce power.

The building is constructed around a central core; each floor is composed of individual pie-like sections that are pre-built and hoisted up the central core (see illustration). The builder claims that rotating buildings can be constructed by just ninety people on the construction site; compare this to the typical skyscraper construction site, which may have up to 2,000 workers at a time.

Construction dates for the first building have not yet been announced, but the first one will be built in Dubai. Pre-fabricated units for the tower will be produced in a facility set up in Jebel Ali (a port 35 kilometers southwest of Dubai). The same units will then be shipped to eleven other major cities, including Moscow, Milan, New York and Tokyo, where similar towers will rise.

Science fiction writers have also made some use of the idea of rotating buildings. In his eccentric 1972 novel The Godmakers, Frank Herbert writes about a rotating house:

"Lewis was just telling me how our place is very much like his home on Chargon," Polly said.

"Old-fashioned, but we like it that way," Bullone said. "I don't like the modern trend in architecture. Too mechanical. Give me an old-fashioned tetragon on a central pivot every time."

(Read more about the rotating house)

For an overview of the rotating building and a quick look at the dynamic architecture that underlies it, take a look at this video.

Be sure to take a look at another "green" (that is, ecology-minded) Dubai building, one that was inspired by an ancient Middle Eastern design - Burj al-Taqa Dubai Energy Tower - High Tech Badgir.

Visit the Dynamic Architecture website; tip via Futurismic.

(This Science Fiction in the News story used with permission from Technovelgy.com - where science meets fiction.)

 

 
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