Random thoughts

like' the @ our world bit

These Beautiful Maps Capture the Rivers That Pulse Through Our World
Cartographer Robert Szucs creates colorful maps of the watersheds that creep across states, countries, continents and the globe

Anna White
SMITHSONIAN.COM
MARCH 25, 2019 2:28PM
orangutan movement and changes in Indonesian forest coverage to monitoring whale behavior in Alaska. “GIS is a collective name for all things geographic, spatial and mapping related,” he explains. “It's basically a tool set, and I've used it for widely different things.”


usa_48_rivers_black_catchments_draft.png



Szucs didn’t make artistic maps until a decade into his cartography career. While volunteering at a marine environmental research NGO in Portugal, he began to experiment in his free time with open-source software commonly used by cartographers to generate data visualizations. Through trial and error, Szucs learned how to create maps that are both informative and visually striking. Szucs works under the alias “Grasshopper Geography,” a reference to his Hungarian nickname, “Szöcske,” which translates to grasshopper.


The majority of Szucs’ maps depict expanses of land sectioned off by watersheds, the areas of land that comprise the drainage systems channeling rainwater from creeks to rivers to oceans. The cartographer found existing river maps uninspiring, and decided to use satellite data based on digital elevation models to create his own. “I’ve had this feeling for quite a while when looking at river maps, that maybe I could do better,” says Szucs. “I wanted to do justice to the beauty of rivers.” Szucs’ maps show the watersheds in a way that is both elegant and informative—though his color use is primarily an aesthetic choice, the variation in hues delineates different watersheds with scientific accuracy, with each color corresponding to a continuous river system. For example, on his map of the United States, the pink spider-webbing across nearly half the country represents the massive Jefferson-Mississippi-Missouri River system, which includes, of course, the parts of the Missouri and Mississippi river basins that are experiencing catastrophic flooding right now.

image: https://thumbs-prod.si-cdn.com/0aF2...itish_isles_rivers_black_catchments_draft.png

british_isles_rivers_black_catchments_draft.png

River basin map of the British Isles (Grasshopper Geography)
According to Matthew Ross, an assistant professor with Colorado State University’s Department of Watershed Sciences, the bright colors highlight key factors of watershed morphology. “Watershed size and shape can control a lot of important hydrologic and biogeochemical functions of rivers,” says Ross. “The maps show the real variation in the world of watershed sizes well.”

Szucs’ maps lack the sterility common in data visualizations—though scientifically valuable, they are filled with personal connection. His favorite maps are of places that hold deep meaning for him. “South Africa,” he says, “where I first moved from my parents’ house. Alaska, where I spent two summers, and where my soul is at home.” So far, Szucs has created 156 maps showing watersheds and river systems across the globe, ranging in scale from singular states to an entire seven-continent expanse. In addition to water systems, Szucs has also mapped forest coverage, and intends to attempt city streets as his next endeavor.

Though never displayed in a gallery setting, Szucs’ maps have received international attention. After posting the works on Etsy in 2016, Szucs was inundated with responses from individuals captivated by the colorful maps.

“My maps reveal that I was right to think you could do justice to the beauty of nature in a scientific way,” says Szucs. “They are important because they inspire millions of people to go out and appreciate nature more.”


Read more: These Beautiful Maps Capture the Rivers That Pulse Through Our World | Arts & Culture | Smithsonian
 
good for them
clever forward thinking people, like Californians


Insect protection law mooted by German minister

Environment Minister Svenja Schulze says concerns over insect extinction have prompted demands for better safeguards. New research suggests 40 percent of insect species could be wiped out over the next few decades.

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Plummeting numbers of insect species, partly as a result of widespread pesticide use, has prompted Germany's Environment Minister Svenja Schulze to call for a new law to protect bugs.

The newspaper Bild am Sonntag cited the Social Democrat (SPD) minister as saying that better legal protection for insects would also protect humanity's future.

"We humans need insects," Schulze said. "They deserve protection from their own law. This not only to protect stag beetles and earth bumblebees, but above all ourselves."

Read more: Collective push against climate change more powerful than you'd think

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    MEGABUGS: 10 OF THE LARGEST INSECTS IN THE WORLD
    Macrodontia cervicornis
    This beetle can measure up to 17cm in length, in part thanks to its enormous mandibles - the pair of appendages near its mouth. Also known as the 'sabertooth longhorn beetle' this insect dwells in the rainforests of Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, the Guianas and Brazil.

Schulze called for Agriculture Ministry funds to be diverted to tackle the issue: "Agriculture receives billions in state resources. I want to use these for solutions that ensure the survival of insects and farmers."
 
It's only the female Mossie that sucks your blood.....the males feed on nectar, help pollinate and have sex with the bloodsucker.

The research being done is to genetically manipulate the sex during the mating to all males. Not sure if we should be muckin with something that's been here from the beginning.

They spread disease and death.....don't know if it's the only thing they do though. Reckon they would have played a big part in our evolution with regard to bacteria strengthening our immune systems.

The mossie always gets the bad rap in animations ....
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Queensland Australia renowned for these ugly creatures, now


Thousands of Invasive Cane Toads Overtake Florida Community
A mild winter and rain has led to a spring explosion of the amphibians, which are clogging pool filters, lawns and driveways

image: https://thumbs-prod.si-cdn.com/QXC-...a25-6f9e-4083-9f7d-73d40f733c0c/cane_toad.jpg

cane_toad.jpg

( Joydeb halder via Wikicommons under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license )

Read more: Thousands of Invasive Cane Toads Overtake Florida Community | Smart News | Smithsonian
 
Au rural
love it 000 xs mentioned ha
WTF
Join the conversation with ABC Rural on Twitter or Facebook or contact us via our feedback page.


Farmer admits 'I'm not dealing with it too well' as cattle starving from drought wash away in floods
Michael Thompson had become used to seeing his cattle starve to death. But seeing his animals drown in the aftermath of the strongest cyclone to hit WA in years is testing the limits of his resolve.



SA meat processing industry would be unsustainable without migration, inquiry hears
A meat processor says a "housing crisis" in one of the country's most productive agricultural regions is making it difficult to recruit long-term employees at abattoirs.



Cyclone Trevor flooding prompts fears for thousands of Far North Queensland cattle
A Cape York grazier has fears thousands of cattle stranded in floodwaters could be dead in the aftermath of Cyclone Trevor.



prince Charlie his missus Cuba and organic, thats life huh
 
Question: when we walk on uneven gound we look where we are putting our feet. So how do dogs know where there putting their rear feet ?
 
bit unfair ha
all guilty
glad i nmissed that dangerous activity,very dangerous


Pascal Pochard-Casabianca/AFP/Getty Images

More than 6,227 pedestrians died in traffic accidents across the U.S. in 2018, the highest number in nearly 30 years. Experts say the real increase comes from larger trends: drivers and pedestrians distracted by their phones and a growth of larger vehicles on the road. (Listening time, 3:55)
 
uuumm more on our health
dang
ya'all gonna be pissed wth me,Tlike manipulating your lives ha
have to admit tho, damn interesting ha

perhaps we can ask shop for a health forum


TOP STORIES
She has never experienced pain or anxiety, even during childbirth and surgery. Scientists have finally figured out why.
Thursday, March 28, 2019 1:24 PM EST
In a paper published Thursday in The British Journal of Anaesthesia, researchers attributed the woman’s virtually pain-free life to a mutation in a previously unidentified gene. The hope, they say, is that the finding could eventually contribute to the development of a novel pain treatment.

Read More »
 
cont, health season 11

personally

not into a therapist for every season' even if i had the money/insurance duh, for all my percieved health woes ha

LISTEN FFS F'n ridiculous methinks
talk about deterioation of society

YOUR HEALTH
A Psychotherapist Goes To Therapy — And Gets A Taste Of Her Own Medicine
36:29
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Lori Gottlieb writes about her experiences as a psychotherapist in therapy in her new book, Maybe You Should Talk to Someone.

DrAfter123/Getty Images
Even therapists need someone to talk to sometimes. Lori Gottlieb is a psychotherapist who started seeing a therapist herself five years ago, when the man she thought she would marry unexpectedly broke up with her, shattering her sense of the present and the future.
 
laugh
i would be joining the throngs just to hassle the authorites haha

SMARTNEWS Keeping you current
Superbloom Turns Southern California City Into a #Poppynightmare
Lake Elsinore has seen tens of thousands of people descend on Walker Canyon to see the recent superbloom, overwhelming local resources
image: https://thumbs-prod.si-cdn.com/q_q3...-a93a-14d022c130e4/gettyimages-1129911790.jpg

gettyimages-1129911790.jpg

Wildflower enthusiasts waiting to exit toward Walker Canyon on March 9, 2019. (Photo by Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
By Jason Daley
SMITHSONIAN.COM
MARCH 19, 2019
reports that the city of approximately 66,000 saw an estimated 100,000 people descend on the area, overwhelming officials’ ability to control traffic, and causing gridlock on main thoroughfares. In a bid to see the stunning superbloom, cars were even parking on the 15 Freeway. Even worse, once they made it to Walker Canyon, tourists were ignoring signs and wading into the fields of poppies to take photos, lie down in them and, even, pick some.

Read more: Superbloom Turns Southern California City Into a #Poppynightmare | Smart News | Smithsonian


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Can naked mole rats solve autism, epilepsy, and schizophrenia?

Naked mole rats are more powerful than you can possibly imagine.
 
personal
love Au rural
even more than NZ rural
f cant convnce others to love
esp willldlife and foods ,well, i give up ha

Expect more on Farm Household Allowance in Budget, but not rate relief
Agriculture Minister David Littleproud says farmers can expect a boost to the Farm Household Allowance in next week's Federal Budget, but it will be up to the states to provide rate relief.



Labor to review Murray-Darling Basin Plan if elected
Opposition Water spokesman Tony Burke has announced Labor would change the way 450 gigalitres of water is recovered, by "restoring the socio-economic definition" for delivering water.



Climate, politics and animal activists: We asked the northern beef industry why 'the steaks are so high' in 2019
Industry leaders at the NT Cattlemen's Association conference share their views on challenges and opportunities in 2019.



Glyphosate ruling sparks further controversy over common weedkiller's cancer link
The second ruling against Bayer could have impacts in Australia, but experts say the product remains safe.



Iron ore prices set to stay high but coal exports face problems
Iron ore prices are set to stay high but coal exports face problems, potentially handing the Government a windfall.



US-China trade war could endanger millions of hectares of Amazon rainforest
Researchers are warning that ramping up soy production in Brazil to supply the Chinese market could result in large-scale deforestation.



Corella cull by gassing proposed by South Australian regional council
A council in SA wants corellas gassed in large numbers to reduce their impact, but the proposal is getting a mixed response.



Confusion over future of kangaroo pet food trial
Anger grows among Victorian farmers as the future of the kangaroo pet food trial remains uncertain.




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