Elementary and middle school students from schools across Qatar recently tested their robotics know-how.
Mason jar salads: cheap eats for a healthier planet
My kid is hell-bent on healthy eating. No more shawarma or falafel sandwiches she says, and she’s had it with high school cafeteria hummus here in Amman, Jordan. She’s also insistent on sustainable packaging (the little green prophet didn’t fall far from the tree), so cling-film wrapped leftovers don’t make it onto her lunch menu. Serendipitous that I just discovered Mason jar salads.
Magnetic pole reversal and how it can flip your world
Is there a chance of a “flip flop” reversal in the earth’s magnetic poles? Scientists have noticed some changes in the earth’s magnetic field suggesting a pole reversal could happen any day now – well, in the next 2,000 years. But if this happens, how will it affect life on earth?
How will the polar magnetic influence weather patterns? Will this reversal affect the harmony caused by the sun’s and earth’s current electro-magnectic fields?
Tesla’s energy dreams harvested?
The earth’s electro-magmetic fields, and their effect on electricity and communications were important aspects to theories and work carried out by the Serbian-American electrical engineer Nikola Tesla.
Tesla believed in the possibility of obtaining ‘free electricity’ by harnessing the earth’s electro-magnetic fields.
A magnetic pole reversal is not a common event; with the last significant one estimated to have occurred around 780,000 years ago, according to Scientific American.
Geophysicists who study such phenomena now say that a magnetic polar flip flop could occur sooner than previously thought. What effect this could have on communications and electrical power grids would not really be known since the time frame involved for this event to occur could be anywhere from now to as long as 20,000 years. Still, the earth’s magnetic field is said to be weakening 10 times faster than previously thought; with the present magnetic north said to be moving somewhere over the Russian province of Siberia.
Leveled by liquid iron core
Scientists say that the earth’s own magnetic field is the result of a layer of liquid iron near the earth’s solid iron core. This layer, when moving, causes the planet to act like a large dipole magnet (photo above) with opposite north and south poles.
Such magnets were often used in electrical devices like traditional TV sets, with the harmony created by the two poles resulting in the TV picture’s size and clarity.
Large dipole magnets are also used in accelerator physics to realize bends in the design trajectory or ‘orbit’ of particles, as in circular accelerators. In this way, our planet can be looked at as being one large dipole magnet with opposite north and south poles. The reversal of these poles could have significant influences on current electro-communications systems, especially large electric grids.
Dr. Gary Glatzmaier, a geophysicist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, says that this kind of occurrence is not something to worry about; due to how long it will take this phenomenon to occur. “Similar to a hurricane, you can’t predict [exactly] when or where a reversal will start, even though you understand the basic physics,” says Glatzmair. He adds that by the time this would happen, human technology will be at a point where the effects of it would be minimal on people. “By then, humans almost certainly will have the technology to cope with a magnetic-field reversal,” says Glatzmair.
We should feel better already.
Read more on the earth’s magnetic fields, and polar climatic influence:
Climate Change “worst” is yet to come U.N. report warns today
Will the Polar Vortex “Dip” freeze the Middle East?
Were Tesla’s Solar Innovations “Buried” by Big Oil?
Photo of large Dipole magnet by wikipedia
Swimming UpStream with Steven Looi’s water farm
Star Trek tractor beams can clean the seas and lasso pirates!?!
Tel Aviv graffiti made into sexy furniture (PHOTOS)
A pair of Israeli designers has turned alleyway graffiti into fine furniture with the help of some unwitting street artists in their south Tel Aviv neighborhood. It’s ersatz “WickiFurniture” made up anonymous contributions by anyone acting on an urge to create.
Energy drinks illegal for under 20s in this Arab country?
Why donkeys should be the new garbage truck
Tunisians are famous the world over for trash selfies. Now simple calculations made by this Green Prophet shows that Tunisia, and many other countries in the MENA region, could spend at least three times as less than they do for collecting municipal solid waste by donkey.
Build your own sustainable WikiHouse for under $200!
Love Lego as a kid? Or maybe you jumped straight into IKEA flat-pack furniture assembly? Now you can design and build your own low-energy, full-scale house with parts that slot together like a jigsaw puzzle. No nails or glue, screws or mortar. A new open source info system called WikiHouse allows you to download, adapt, “print” and assemble a home in a few days, with no construction skills and for less than $100!
Play with nature and lift Middle East moods (PHOTOS)
How best to stay on track living productive, happy lives in the midst of communal fear and sadness? Tap into the healing power of nature, but make it more potent by pairing it with paint.
Shmita and surviving a year in Israel without starving as the land rests
Shmita is a Jewish way to let the land rest once every 7 years. For Jewish Israelis it’s a deeply spiritual practice. Some may be surprised to know that the significance of this commandment is deeply ecological too.
Breastfeeding is great; but breast milk jewelry?
Breastfeeding is brilliant. Medically optimal for newborns and new mothers; naturally sustainable (no plastic bottles to create, clean and dispose of, no shipping and transport, and no need to refrigerate since it’s delivered on demand), and best of all it’s free. But how do you feel about breast milk turning into an accessory?
How agtech is going to pot
The tide is turning on American cannabis laws. More and more states are opting for medicinal and recreational use of marijuana and whether you are for or against it, there is an interesting effect: technologies being applied for growing cannabis will help make our planet make better food.
Desmond Tutu on climate change

Nobel Prize-winning retired archbishop Desmond Tutu, long-time environmental advocate, just released a powerful video urging world leaders arriving in New York City for this year’s UN Climate Summit to “move beyond the fossil fuel era.”
In an associated editorial published in The Observer, he convincingly argues that the same boycott, divestment and sanction tactics used against firms which did business with apartheid-era South Africa must now be applied to institutions that exploit fossil fuels.
The Climate Summit 2014 kicks off tomorrow in New York City, when world leaders from government, finance, business, and civil society will meet to catalyze climate action. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has asked all invitees to bring bold action plans that will significantly reduce emissions, strengthen climate resilience, and mobilize political will for a meaningful legal agreement in 2015.
“Never before have human beings been called on to act collectively in defense of the Earth. As a species, we have endured world wars, epidemics, famine, slavery, apartheid and many other hideous consequences of religious, class, race, gender and ideological intolerance. People are extraordinarily resilient. The Earth has proven pretty resilient, too. It’s managed to absorb most of what’s been thrown at it since the industrial revolution and the invention of the internal combustion engine,” he wrote.
Until now, that is, when science clearly indicates that our environment is carbon-saturated. Tutu continued, “If we don’t limit global warming to two degrees or less we are doomed to a period of unprecedented instability, insecurity and loss of species. It is time to act.”
Tutu frames the issue as the premier human rights challenge, linking the most devastating effects of climate change – deadly storms, drought, rising food prices and the emergence of “climate refugees” – directly to the world’s poor. He rightly illustrates that developing states, which emit far less carbon than industrialized nations, will pay the steepest price.
He describes sensible, scalable ways we can be agents of change. “Boycott events, sports teams and media programming sponsored by fossil fuel companies; demand that their advertisements carry health warnings; organize car-free days and other platforms to build broader societal awareness; and ask our religious communities to speak out on the issue from their pulpits. We can encourage energy companies to spend more on the development of sustainable energy products, and we can reward those companies that demonstrably do so by using their products to the exclusion of others,” he stated in his editorial.
He urged swift action by nations and individuals alike, including freezing fossil fuels exploration, redirecting investments into renewable energies, encouraging governments to stop accepting lobbyist money from the industry and holding those who have damaged the environment legally liable for the harm they have caused. No histrionics or hype, just simple strategies to start now.
We can stop climate change. Join the global movement – a moral movement – spearheaded by individuals across the spectrum of professions and culture, religions and political alliances. Climate Change is the game the whole human family can play, we are collectively responsible for immediate action. “We can no longer tinker about the edges,” he said. “We can no longer continuing treating our addiction to fossil fuels as if there were no tomorrow, or there will be no tomorrow.”
Jewelry made from butterflies and bugs doesn’t fly with us
How do you feel about jewelry made from dead animals? I’m not talking about fetish jewelry where teeth, bones, and vertebrae turn into sinister charms, but tasteful pendants and earrings made more colorful by adding real insect wings.





