RAINFOREST 

  Our Dying Planet  

 

Pictures of the Rainforest

 
LAST MODIFIED: 05/10/09 00:16

" LEARN  MORE,  BE  MORE " 

 

Translate this page to most languages in the world.

 

 

 

   Rainforest loss - Why do we have Global Warming - How quickly is the rainforest destroyed - The Rainforest - luxuriant forest, generally composed of tall, broad-leaved trees and usually found in wet tropical uplands and lowlands around the Equator. Our Rainforests are dying every second of every day. Rainforests are diminished by around one acre each second. Who, how, why, when. Logging / chopping / chopped / trees / decline  MANY PICTURES BELOW    

   RAINFOREST 

  Our Dying Planet  

 Learn More, Be More

The Rainforest - luxuriant forest, generally composed of tall, broad-leaved trees and usually found in wet tropical uplands and lowlands around the Equator.

Rainforests usually occur in regions where there is a high annual rainfall of generally more than 1,800 mm (70 inches) and a hot and steamy climate. The trees found in these regions are evergreen. Rainforests may also be found in areas of the tropics in which a dry season occurs, such as the “dry rainforests” of northeastern Australia. In these regions annual rainfall is between 800 and 1,800 mm and as many as 75 percent of the trees are deciduous

Tropical rainforests are found primarily in South and Central America, West and Central Africa, Indonesia, parts of Southeast Asia, and tropical Australia. The climate in these regions is one of relatively high humidity with no marked seasonal variation. Temperatures remain high, usually about 30° C (86° F) during the day and 20° C (68° F) at night. Where altitude increases along the borders of equatorial rainforests, the vegetation is replaced by montane forests, as in the highlands of New Guinea, the Gotel Mountains of Cameroon, and in the Ruwenzori mass of Central Africa. Tropical deciduous forests are located mainly in eastern Brazil, south-eastern Africa, northern Australia, and parts of Southeast Asia.

Other kinds of rainforests include the monsoon forests, most like the popular image of jungles, with a marked dry season and a vegetation dominated by deciduous trees such as teak, thickets of bamboo, and a dense undergrowth. Mangrove forests occur along estuaries and deltas on tropical coasts. Temperate rainforests filled with evergreen and laurel trees are lower and less dense than other kinds of rainforests because the climate is more equable, with a moderate temperature range and well-distributed annual rainfall.

The topography of rainforests varies considerably, from flat lowland plains marked by small rock hills to highland valleys criss-crossed by streams. Volcanoes that produce rich soils are fairly common in the humid tropical forests.

Soil conditions vary with location and climate, although mostrain forest soils tend to be permanently moist and soggy. The presence of iron gives the soils a reddish or yellowish color and develops them into two types of soils—extremely porous tropical red loams, which can be easily tilled, and lateritic soils, which occur in well-marked layers that are rich in different minerals. Chemical weathering of rock and soil in the equatorial forests is intense, and in rainforests weathering produces soil mantles up to 100 m (330 feet) deep. Although these soils are rich in aluminum, iron oxides, hydroxides, and kaolinite, other minerals are washed out of the soil by leaching and erosion. The soils are not very fertile, either, because the hot, humid weather causes organic matter to decompose rapidly and to be quickly absorbed by tree roots and fungi.

Rainforests exhibit a highly vertical stratification in plant and animal development. The highest plant layer, or tree canopy, extends to heights between 30 and 50 m. Most of the trees are dicotyledons, with thick leathery leaves and shallow root systems. The nutritive, food-gathering roots are usually no more than a few centimeters deep. Rain falling on the forests drips down from the leaves and trickles down tree trunks to the ground, although a great deal of water is lost to leaf transpiration.

Most of the herbaceous food for animals is found among the leaves and branches of the canopy, where a variety of animals have developed swinging, climbing, gliding, and leaping movements to seek food and escape predators. Monkeys, flying squirrels, and sharp-clawed woodpeckers are some of the animals that inhabit the treetops. They rarely need to come down to ground level.

The next lowest layer of the rainforest is filled with small trees, lianas, and epiphytes, such as orchids, bromeliads, and ferns. Some of these are parasitic, strangling their host's trunks; others use the trees simply for support.

Above the ground surface the space is occupied by tree branches, twigs, and foliage. Many species of animals run, flutter, hop, and climb in the undergrowth. Most of these animals live on insects and fruit, although a few are carnivorous. They tend to communicate more by sound than by sight in this dense forest strata.

Contrary to popular belief, the rainforest floor is not impassable. The ground surface is bare, except for a thin layer of humus and fallen leaves. The animals inhabiting this strata, such as rhinoceroses, chimpanzees, gorillas, elephants, deer, leopards, and bears, are adapted to walking and climbing short distances. Below the soil surface, burrowing animals, such as armadillos and caecilians, are found, as are microorganisms that help decompose and free much of the organic litter accumulated by other plants and animals from all strata.

The climate of the ground layer is unusually stable. The upper stories of tree canopies and the lower branches filter sunlight and heat radiation, as well as reduce wind speeds, so that the temperatures remain fairly even throughout the day and night.

Virtually every group of animals except fishes is represented in the rainforest ecosystem. Many invertebrates are very large, such as giant snails and butterflies. The breeding seasons for most animals tend to be coordinated with the availability of food, which, although generally abundant, does vary seasonally from region to region. Climatic variations, however, are slight and thus affect animal behavior very little. Those animals that do not have highly developed modes of quick locomotion are concealed from predators by camouflage or become nocturnal feeders.

 

Scientists from Brazil and the US say new research suggests deforestation of the Brazilian Amazon has been underestimated by at least 60%.  - CLICK HERE

 

Scientists from Brazil and the US say new research suggests deforestation of the Brazilian Amazon has been underestimated by at least 60%.

The team has completed a study using a more advanced technique of satellite imagery that can pick up more types of logging activity.

SEE THE VIDEO ON THE BBC WEBSITE

 

   RAINFOREST 

  Our Dying Planet  

To Die - Dies, Died, Dying - Cease to live; expire, lose vital force. Come to an end, fade away. Cease to function. Of a flame - to go out. Die or cease to function while in the presence or charge of a person, or country. Die away, fade to the point of extinction. Die back, in the case of a plant. Decay from the tip towards the root. Die down -  become fainter or weaker. Die Hard, die reluctantly. Die off, die one after another. Die out - become extinct, cease to exist. 

 

 

Forest Land - Forest covered with trees and undergrowth. Over 20% of the Earth's land-surface is forest, providing valuable oxygen, timber, and habitats for wildlife. Northern coniferous forests consist largely of pine, spruce, and firs. 

 

 

 

Forest Land - Forest covered with trees and undergrowth. Over 20% of the Earth's land-surface is forest, providing valuable oxygen, timber, and habitats for wildlife. Northern coniferous forests consist largely of pine, spruce, and firs. 

 Learn More, Be More

In temperate regions forests consist primarily of deciduous trees, especially oak, ash, elm, beech, and sycamore. In Mediterranean climates, the trees include the evergreen oaks. 

Broad-leaved evergreens are also found in New Zealand and South America, together with southern conifers. Tropical forests contain tall evergreen trees, with many climbing vines and epiphytes. The major rain forests are in the Amazon and Orinoco river basins, with others in Africa and SE Asia.

 

Broad-leaved evergreens are also found in New Zealand and South America, together with southern conifers. Tropical forests contain tall evergreen trees, with many climbing vines and epiphytes. The major rain forests are in the Amazon and Orinoco river basins, with others in Africa and SE Asia.

 

Forestry, the cultivation of forests, is of major economic importance. The felling of many tropical rain forests for timber and to clear land for farming could damage the Earth’s climate and atmosphere. 

 

 

 

     Rainforest, and Its Demise     The Rainforest - luxuriant forest, generally composed of tall, broad-leaved trees and usually found in wet tropical uplands and lowlands around the Equator. Our Rainforests are dying every second of every day. Rainforests are diminished by around one acre each second.

 

Three thousand acres of life-giving, oxygen producing plants are eaten away by some circumstance every hour of every day. That is FIVE acres destroyed for financial gain every time this clock sweeps by. And it will NEVER Stop !!!!

 

 

 

Forests of the Tropics

The planet Earth's tropical forests encircle the globe in an area either side of the Equator The equatorial forest is surprisingly diverse, ranging from abundant rainforest to waterless savannas and includes millions of species of plants and animals. Tropical forests once covered over 15 billion acres (6.2 billion ha). In recent times, however, they have been cropped at a brisk rate to make room for agriculture and to obtain valuable hardwoods and their many valuable by-products. Between 1985 and 1990, over 210 million acres (85 million ha) of tropical forests were destroyed in the name of commerce and human greed. Some trees have been found to be up to 1000 years old; these huge trees will not be seen again for many generations. 

 Learn More, Be More

 

Über dem Regenwald

 

Three thousand acres of life-giving, oxygen producing plants are eaten away by some circumstance every hour of every day.

Pictures of the Rainforest

 

 

This website will shows how current forest practices can help stem the tide of forest annihilation while providing valuable forest products for people. The tropical forests of Puerto Rico, which were abused for many decades, were already badly depleted by the late nineteenth century. Widespread abandonment of deficient over stressed agricultural lands has allowed natural reforestation and planting programs to create a patchwork of private, Commonwealth, and Federal forests across the land. 

 

 

Three thousand acres of life-giving, oxygen producing plants are eaten away by some circumstance every hour of every day. That is FIVE acres destroyed for financial gain every time this clock sweeps by. And it will NEVER Stop !!!!

Three thousand acres of life-giving, oxygen producing plants are eaten away by some circumstance every hour of every day. That is FIVE acres destroyed for financial gain every time this clock sweeps by. And it will NEVER Stop !!!!

 

The Rainforest Planting Program

 

 

The most frequent example in this publication is the Luquillo Experimental Forest, which could be a model for protecting and managing tropical forests worldwide.

This study examined landscape-scale forest dynamics in the Luquillo Experimental Forest (Puerto Rico). The analysis was based on vegetation maps created from aerial photographs taken in 1936 and 1989. Results of the study are contained in the paper:

  • Foster, D. R., M. Fluet and E. R. Boose. 1999. Human or natural disturbance: landscape-scale dynamics of the tropical forests of Puerto Rico. Ecological Applications 9: 555-572.

The Abstract from the paper is reproduced below:

"Increasingly ecologists are recognizing that human disturbance has played an important role in tropical forest history and that many assumptions concerning the relative importance of natural processes warrant re-examination. To assess the historical role of broad-scale human versus natural disturbance on an intensively studied tropical forest we undertook a landscape-level analysis of forest dynamics in the Luquillo Experimental Forest (LEF; 10,871 ha) in eastern Puerto Rico. Using aerial photographs (1936 and 1989), GIS, a model of topographic exposure to hurricane winds, and historical data, we sought to: (1) document historical changes in extent, cover and type of forest vegetation, (2) evaluate the distribution of land-use and hurricane impacts, (3) assess the contributions of these processes in controlling current vegetation patterns, and (4) relate these results to ongoing ecological, conservation and natural resource discussions.

"With over 1000 m of relief in the LEF, the broad vegetation zones of Tabonuco (<600 m a.s.l.), Colorado (600-900 m), Dwarf (>900 m), and Palm forest are determined by environmental gradients. However, over the past 60-100 years forest extent, cover, and type have been transformed: in 1936, 40% of the LEF was unforested or secondary forest and <50% had continuous canopy (>80% cover); in 1989, >97% was continuous forest. Secondary forest and agricultural lands in 1936 were replaced largely by Tabonuco and Colorado forest, which increased from 8% and 28% (1936) to 26% and 45% (1989).

 

There are two types of rainforests, tropical and temperate. Tropical rainforests are found closer to the equator where it is warm. Temperate rainforests are found near the cooler coastal areas further north or south of the equator.

 

"These broad-scale vegetation dynamics are best explained by a gradient of human land use, intense at low elevations and decreasing on steep, high terrain, which peaked historically around 1900 followed by a gradual decline in agriculture. GIS analysis and historical sources suggest that essentially all of the LEF was affected by human activity and that Tabonuco forest, which is the focus of LTER research, has been most substantially altered and is largely of secondary origin. Rapid reforestation following agricultural decline has obscured much of the past land use and confirms the resiliency of some tropical forests to intensive human disturbance. Impacts of earlier hurricanes (e.g., in 1928 and 1932), though not evident in the broad forest pattern in 1936, may be significant in explaining the distributions of Colorado and Palm forest. Damage from Hurricane Hugo in 1989 indicates that natural disturbance is increasingly important as land use de#lines and forest cover and height increase. However, this study and post-Hugo studies emphasize that land-use legacies are long-lasting and need to be considered in modern ecological studies and natural resource management. The subtle though persistent effects of historical human activities may have profound consequences for modern forest ecosystems in the tropics."

 

 

 

 

A New Africa - A New Rainforest - A New World 

Let us imagine, if we can, that how poignant it would be, if say in one million years time, some advanced alien culture was to visit this third rock from the Sun. Simply to explore a most insignificant solar system to find that there was scarcely, any actual evidence that the human animal had ever existed.

The planet Earth may truly be doomed as far as Humanity is concerned. But we still continue to race ever further nearer a point that may reach an Extinction Level Event. The Forests, especially the rainforests are our only life-line to oxygen but we destroy them like some marauding adversary. 

 

 

Santo Bains, a young innovative professor of Oxford University and his now famous revelations have been quoted in the House of Lords on this matter: 

Lord Avebury: My Lords, have the Government had an opportunity of evaluating the evidence made public in the "Equinox" programme on Channel 4 last week, (June 2001) based on the research of Dr Santo Bains at the University of Oxford? It revealed that at two points in the world's history there have been catastrophic releases of methane hydrates from the ocean floors which came at a certain point in the warming of the oceans, raising the temperature of the Earth by some 8 degrees. Does the Minister take this seriously? If so, should there be a far more drastic programme for the reduction in carbon emissions than we have seen so far? 

Santo Bains has said that:  

" The World would be a nasty place to live in without the Rainforests. "

 

Three thousand acres of life-giving, oxygen producing plants are eaten away by some circumstance every hour of every day. That is FIVE acres destroyed for financial gain every time this clock sweeps by. And it will NEVER Stop !!!!

FIVE ACRES OF RAINFOREST GONE AT EVERY SWEEP

WHY NOT WATCH WHILST A FEW HUNDRED TREES ARE CHOPPED DOWN

 

This web-site is about The Sahara Desert and a    $200-300 Billion    ecology  supposition that we could Terraform it and make it  into something most valuable for this planet Earth and the Global Environment. However, it may not be just useful, it might be imperative for all water-drinking creatures, and this Third Rock.

It maybe said that $200 - $300B is too much but we will soon discover within the decade that the most destructive, dreadful, negative World Trade Center  atrocity will cost at least $1,000,000,000,000.          And Why?

That is 1,000 Billion dollars. How stupid is the human animal to waste so much for so little return. Waste so much to have only more suffering entrenched on the human soul as their only reward.

Our part in the aid of Africa and the planet Earth, will be to create a new Ocean of Fresh water and a Rainforest to be new lungs for Mother Earth, to replace all that has been destroyed in the Natural World in the last 50 years. Create custom built cities, that are super energy efficient; models for the rest of the world to follow. Create New Age industries, for a New Africa to at last develop for itself in a way that many have hoped it would, for the last hundred years. 

Africa is the most blessed continent on Earth in terms of minerals, resources and hope. This continent and its people should be leading the world, not just accepting that that they are victims.

Moreover, many supporters of the Sahara Supposition from all around the globe, have said that there are many arid, barren patches that could be reclaimed. Australia and the USA are classic examples of this.

 

  Will We Last until the Year 2100 

 

 

SEE BIG RAINFOREST PICTURES BELOW

 

THE TAKERS TEST -  Every minute of every day millions of people make  a hot drink for themselves. Whether it is Tea, Coffee or Hot Chocolate, invariably the process needs WATER and some ENERGY source. Put up your hand, if you did not know this, and also that the planet's WATER and ENERGY sources are dwindling

Take the Test to see if you are an Environmental Taker !

This is how the TAKERS treat our planet. One dumped car is nothing.  In the scheme of things it does not matter, but if all the millions of cars that are scrapped each year ended up like this where would we be? The irony is that this vehicle is so old it is probably worth ten times more than when it was abandoned.

Take the Taker's Test !

 

This site is about a PROPOSAL to try and Terraform  the  Sahara Desert;  to reclaim  it  for  the benefit of  Humanity.

Desertification of the world spreads every day.   

This supposition will attempt to redress the balance.  

The futility of waste. Deserts are basically wastelands; most were once green and  flourishing rainforests.    All deserts grow a bit more each year. In theory, they may one day take over the whole planet, that is if other catastrophes do not beat them to it.

Click on AFRICA to see a really good MAP 

Click HERE to see the OLDEST MAP of AFRICA.

 

TheSahara.Net is a  PROPOSAL to  try and Terraform  the  Sahara Desert;   to  reclaim  it  for  the benefit of  the  Planet. To produce a new Rainforest and Ocean.

Desertification of the world spreads every day.    This will attempt to redress the balance, by replacing lost natural habitats. 

FIVE ACRES OF RAINFOREST GONE AT EVERY SWEEP

Sahara desert Facts  -  The Sahara Desert is a great desert area, North Africa, the West portion of the broad belt of parched land that extends from the Atlantic Ocean eastward past the Red Sea to Iraq. The entire desert, the largest in the world, is about 1600 km wide and about 5000 km long from East to West.

Losing Rainforest

Desertification of the World spreads every day.

 

The Earth's largest satellite, the Moon. The way the  environment is continually ravaged maybe in one thousand years time Earth will become more like the Moon.

 

Let us imagine, that say in one million years time, and if desertification continues on its same path. Will most of the planet Earth look like this? And that there is scarcely, any actual evidence that the primitive human animal had ever existed.

   

Let us imagine, if we can, how poignant it would be, if say in one million years time, some advanced alien culture was to visit this third rock from the Sun. Simply to explore a most insignificant solar system to find that there was scarcely, any actual evidence that the primitive human animal had ever existed.

The Sahara Supposition is a Proposal to  produce  an exciting  New Rainforest,  that will effect the whole Global Environment.  A Plan that may, with the help of everyone, reverse the present environmental damage.

Pictures of the Rainforest

The Sahara Supposition is a Proposal to  produce  an exciting  New Ocean of Fresh water,  that will effect the whole Global Environment.  A Plan that may, with the help of everyone, reverse the present environmental damage.

 

 

Without Photosynthesis we would not have oxygen to breathe OR proteins to eat. In sunlight green plants use this energy to produce oxygen and proteins through Photosynthesis. 

 

  It is said that a football pitch size, of healthy life-giving green is being destroyed every second and that during any year, a Rain Forest the size of Great Britain itself, is laid waste. This is mainly due to logging.

Great Britain presently releases up to 300 million tons of raw sewage into the seas around its coast each year. This Sahara strategy could be negotiated as an initially free service to encourage the halting of pollution to the Mediterranean Sea, local water tables and the Atlantic and Indian Oceans et al. However, an eventual charge for this disposal could go some way in paying for this facility in the long term. 

Almost 90% of the world’s fresh reservoirs are essentially locked away in the ice caps and there they must stay. 

In the major cities of India, due to rising population and ageing infrastructure, drinking water-pressure has halved in the last five years. It is predicted by some that it will run out, especially in Delhi, in the next ten years. This means that a city with millions of citizens will have  NO water. No water to wash with, no water to process food and serve industry, let alone to drink to stay alive.

The UK Lottery Organizers, Camelot have worked out that from the year 2000 to 2100 the British  public will  spend up to £530,000 Billion, ( Nearly $800,000 Billion), on the National Lottery.

What would the cost of Terraforming the Sahara Desert Cost ?

New York uses one and a half billion gallons of fresh clean water every single day, and this consumption rises every single day. The United Nations proclaims that by 2025 over 5 billion people will face fresh clean water problems and shortages. This compounds all the other ills that go with the intake of tainted drinking water. Nevertheless, you might say that 25 years is a long way away, so why worry.

 Experts predict that although water may eventually be our downfall, in that most of us may drown, they also envision that if there is a World War III, it could be waged over fresh supplies of the substance. Within twenty years, we foresee that most modern western homes will have some kind of purifying desalination system in their homes. The main wedding gift will traditionally become one of these units because people will soon realize that without clean drinking water we have nothing

In 1997, it was recorded that over 50% of the world’s population lacked proper sanitation and. over 20% lacked good drinking water The correct and moral use of this human waste will change this statistic forever and be a blueprint for the future. 

Experts predict that water may eventually be our downfall, because we have too little to drink or that we will drown in it, you chose. But how do we treat it? We treat it with total disrespect and take it totally for granted.

 

 

 

 

 

 “We ask, who is responsible for the destruction of our lives, our resources and the life of the next generation?”

-- Benyamin Tawaakng, indigenous Dayak leader jailed for organizing protests against oil palm plantation multinational PT London Sumatra (LonSum)

When World Wildlife Fund researchers discovered the world’s most biologically diverse area in a Sumatran lowland rainforest last February, their awe quickly gave way to outrage. The Indonesian government has designated this area a “production forest,” and logging there is already underway.

Throughout the 17,000-island Indonesian archipelago, forests are being felled at the record-setting rate of 2 million hectares (5 million acres) per year.  Lowland tropical forests, which are richest in biological diversity, are going fastest.  On the large island of Sulawesi, all lowland tropical forests are gone; if current trends continue Sumatra’s will be cleared by 2005 and Kalimantan’s by 2010.

What’s driving this unprecedented destruction? According to a new report by World Resources Institute, “Deforestation in Indonesia is largely the result of a corrupt political and economic system that regarded natural resources, especially forests, as a source of revenue to be exploited for political ends and personal gain…Indonesia today is a major producer of logs, sawn wood, plywood, wood pulp and paper as well as such plantation crops as palm oil, rubber and cocoa.  This economic development was achieved with virtually no regard for the sustainable management of forests or the rights of local people.”

As many as 65 million people (population estimates vary) live in Indonesian forests and depend on them for their livelihoods, combining shifting cultivation of rice and other food crops with fishing, hunting, and gathering of non-timber forest products such as rattan, honey and resins. They rely on the forests for medicinal plants and herbs, and their knowledge of local ecosystems is unique and irreplaceable.

Forest-dwelling peoples throughout Indonesia are organizing to defend the forests and their communities from a government that wants to turn all forests into sources of capital. One of the government’s main schemes to accomplish this is by converting natural forests into oil palm plantations. Oil palm plantations already cover more than 3 million hectares (7.5 million acres); a total of 30 million hectares (75 million acres) of natural forest are slated for conversion.  This is almost 1/3 of Indonesia’s remaining forests. 
“Conversion” is a euphemism for massive deforestation rife with corruption and human rights abuses. Some national and multinational companies have obtained licenses to plant oil palm having no intention to do so; they clear the forest solely for the timber profits and move on to clear more. After the disastrous forest fires of 1997-98 that sent smoke clouds around the globe, the Indonesian government accused 176 companies of illegally setting fires to clear brush; of these, 133 were oil palm companies. 
Typically, forest peoples are not consulted or informed about company plans; bulldozers suddenly tear through their forests and farms, wiping out rich biological and cultural diversity to establish huge monoculture plantations. As a crop, oil palm requires massive amounts of fertilizer and insecticides.  Soil erosion, loss of soil nutrients and watershed disruption result as the land is carved with drainage ditches. Threatened, harassed and jailed for their protests, indigenous Indonesians are appealing to world citizens to help them stop the injustices and the expansion of the oil palm plantations by cutting off the flow of international funds to the most abusive companies.  Who is the primary financial backer of these companies? The world’s largest financial institution and one of the most powerful corporations on the planet: Citigroup.  While major European banks have adopted investment criteria proposed by Indonesian and international NGOs, Citigroup has refused to do so.  At Citigroup’s annual meeting in April, indigenous Indonesians sent a message stating, “We have told you before, but no one from Citigroup has done anything to stop the bulldozing, the fires, the imprisonment of the people, the military abuse, or the loss of our lands and livelihoods.” 

This Global Response Action was issued at the request of and with information provided by Sawit (Oil Palm) Watch (www.sawitwatch.org); Telapak (www.telapak.org); and Rainforest Action Network (www.ran.org).

 HIT BUTTONS TO STOP SOUNDS

Rainforest loss - Why do we have Global Warming - How quickly is the rainforest destroyed - The Rainforest - luxuriant forest, generally composed of tall, broad-leaved trees and usually found in wet tropical uplands and lowlands around the Equator. Our Rainforests are dying every second of every day. Rainforests are diminished by around one acre each second. Who, how, why, when. Logging / chopping / chopped / trees / decline

Jungle Sounds

 

 

 

MAPS                    BIG PICTURES

 

     

R A I N F O R E S T

DIFFERENT TYPES OF TROPICAL FOREST

Roughly two thirds of all the world's forests are in the Tropics, the area between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn. Abundant growth is generally more prolific in the areas furthest away from the frozen poles. This huge area that encircles our planet is best known for its rainforests with the green flourishing, steamy jungles and towering trees, with dense lower levels of smaller trees, shrubs, and vines.

  

Tropical forests are surprisingly assorted.   In addition to the rainforest there are also mangroves, wet forests, dry forests, swamps and savannas and wetlands.  This long list however, gives only a slight indication of the true multiplicity of the Natural World of vegetation.  One study by the Food and Agriculture Organization, [ FAO ], a department of the the United Nations, considered over 20 countries in tropical America, and nearly 40 tropical Africa, and 15 in tropical Asia. They recognized a myriad of different types of tropical forests, such as, broadleaved trees, open and closed canopy forests,  and conifer forests, with closed forests and mixed forest grasslands, and declining forests where crop growing agriculture has made substantial inroads.

Pictures of the Rainforest

  

  

Pictures of the Rainforest

The major remaining areas of Tropical Rainforest are in Brazil, Indonesia, Congo and Malaysia. Rainfall generally exceeds 60 inches, that is about150 cm each year and can be as high as 400 inches or 1000 cm. Lowland rainforest are among the world's most fruitful of green plant natural production. Enormous trees can grow to 200 feet, that is 60 m in height, whilst supporting thousands of other species of plants and small animals. Mountain rainforest grows at high elevations where the climate is too windy and wet for most advantageous tree growth.

Mangrove forests grow in the swampy, tidal-regions; a no-man's land between water bodies and the shore. They are regularly considered part of the rainforest composite. Roots of mangrove trees help also to stabilize the shoreline and trap sediment and decaying foliage that play a part in this ecosystem production.

Dry Forests

Most huge areas of tropical Dry Forests are found in Australia, India, Central and South America, the Caribbean, Mexico, Africa, and Madagascar. Dry forests by virtue of their name receive low rainfall each year and this is around 15 inches or 38 cm. They are thus so named and accommodate species evolved to be acclimatized to meager rainfall. Trees of dry tropical forests are usually smaller than those in rainforests, and many lose their leaves during the dry season. Although they are still remarkably varied, dry forests often have fewer species than rainforests per se and plants are miniatures of larger cousins. We must ask ourselves what are the best conditions for well sustained life.

Pictures of the Rainforest

Savanna is a transitional group of trees between forest and grassland; the Savanna replaced many forests when the climate changed after the last ice-age. Here, vegetation struggle for moisture and nutrition and are often quite scattered and tend to be evolved to cope with grazing, dry periods and sporadic bushfires.

Pictures of the Rainforest

Bushfires are obviously much more widespread in the dry season but if fire does not happen, trees eventually will begin to grow again and the savanna is converted back to dry forest. Such is the fine line between survival and death, conversely with too much fire or grazing, dry forest becomes Savanna. 

Changes not only in environment but in the different types of environment are caused through a various number of reasons that takes in all elements of evolution. Humanity's hand in the unnatural destruction of the rainforest can only lead to humanity's own possible destruction, or at least a scenario very near to an Extinction Level Event.

  

The destruction of the Rainforest will vastly increase carbon dioxide levels, polluting the atmosphere . At present the Amazon and other forests along with the oceans just barely soak up all the fossil fuel carbons which we produce as it is. 

Extinction Level Event.

Countless Billions of tons of carbon dioxides are stored in a myriad of ways, one of the most significant is in the vegetation of the rainforest. But the gradual increase of the greenhouse gases will raise the temperature of the planet. 

[The year 2000 was a warmer year than 1998, which was the record then.]  

As the Earth's climate warms there is a great danger that the Rainforest will get less seasonal rain and actually go through a yet unforeseen unprecedented dry season.

If this happens the carbon-dioxide absorption process will stop; the vegetation Photosynthesis  will stop and leaves will fall and carbon dioxide levels will increase significantly, increasing Global Warming that will again make this new dry season longer, and BANG!!!       The balance will tip.

By 2050 scientists around the World have declared that the balance will be overturned and our home world will be thrust into a time when temperatures will be some 15 degrees hotter than now. Ice at the poles will melt and methane that lies at the bottom of deep cold oceans in a billion tons of sediment will be released adding to the increasing problem. In geological terms this consequence has been expressed as being INSTANTANEOUS.

Ironically, due to the raised temperatures, ocean currents will slow to nothing and this will place us into an Ice Age within 30 years. And Humanity will almost be wiped out.

 

On May 13, 2002, Indonesian President Megawati Sukarnoputri called for a temporary moratorium on logging in Indonesia in an effort to halt illegal logging and save what's left of the country's remaining forests. According to the World Bank, Indonesia will lose all of its forests in the next 15 years if the government does not act quickly and strongly against deforestation activities.

Three thousand acres of life-giving, oxygen producing plants are eaten away by some circumstance every hour of every day. That is FIVE acres destroyed for financial gain every time this clock sweeps by. And it will NEVER Stop !!!!

FIVE ACRES OF RAINFOREST GONE AT EVERY SWEEP.

According to the World Resources Institute, Indonesia has lost forty percent, or 64 million hectares, of its original forest cover in the last fifty years. The rate of deforestation is accelerating, from 1 million hectares destroyed each year in the 1980s to a current 2 million hectares' loss per year. Indonesia's lowland forests harbor the country's highest biodiversity and timber value. At current rates of forest loss, the region of Sumatra's lowland forest will be gone by 2005, and Kalimantan's lowland forest will have been devastated by 2010.Citigroup, North America's largest financial institution and RAN campaign target, is a key financial backer of Indonesian rainforest destruction via palm oil plantations and pulp and paper operations. It is business partners with Indonesian palm oil company, London Sumatra (Lon Sum), a company that has been implicated in bulldozing and burning vast areas of forests, as well as violating the human rights of indigenous peoples. Citi-group is also a top investor in Asia Pulp and Paper (APP), one of Indonesia's largest and most destructive pulp and paper operators. American consumers also play a central role in the destruction of Indonesian forests. Major forest products distributors such as Boise, Georgia Pacific, and Home Depot profit from Indonesian forests' devastation. Woods such as Lauan and Ramin from these forests permeate the American market in the forms of plywood, tool handles, flooring, and furniture.

 

VALUE OF TROPICAL FORESTS

All forests have some value, both economic and ecological. The Global Environment, factored with Ecology, which is the study of the relations of organisms to one another and to their surroundings, is the most important continuing situation that we have to take into account when thinking about the rainforest. But as a whole group, we do not;  Humanity's destruction of the world's natural eco-base will be our biggest repentance and it is not that far away when we will all realize this.

Three thousand acres of life-giving, oxygen producing plants are eaten away by some circumstance every hour of every day. That is FIVE acres destroyed for financial gain every time this clock sweeps by. And it will NEVER Stop !!!!

Three thousand acres of life-giving, oxygen producing plants are eaten away by some circumstance every hour of every day. That is FIVE acres destroyed for financial gain every time this clock sweeps by. And it will NEVER Stop !!!!

In the short term tropical rainforests are very important to the global economy. The rainforest covers just over 5% of the Earth's land area, but contain the greatest majority of the world's plant and animal genetic resources. The multiplicity of life is astounding and species run in the billions worldwide. 

It has been discovered that the rainforest of Puerto Rico, to name but one group, includes more than 550 species of trees in 70 different botanical families.

Spiderman

In any rainforest there is a diversity of other life forms, shrubbery, grasses, herbs, mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, insects, not forgetting bacteria and other micro-species. A rainforest, one inquiry suggested is that the tropical rainforest may contain as many as 40 million different kinds of plants and animals, most of which are scarily insects. Globally, if we could weigh all insects and all humans, it would be found that insects have up to FOUR times the massed body weight to that of humans. Come the Extinction Level Event, what species will remain to proliferate our planet?

Wood and Other Products

The main and most obvious reason that the rainforest is being cut down at about one acre each second is that it bestows upon us many valuable harvests, that include rubber, fruits, nuts, meat, rattan for making cane like furniture, medicinal products, floral greenery, timber, fire-wood, and beauty. Rainforest areas abound with such wealth and not only are they utilized by natives hunting and fishing, they also make available income and jobs, for hundreds of millions of people in small, medium, and large industries around the world.

Pictures of the Rainforest

Tropical forests are noted for their beautiful woods; four important commercial woods are mahogany, teak, melina, and okoume. 

Back to Top        

Indians.

Tropical forests are habitat for tribal hunter-gatherers and there have been many different tribes; they are usually called Indians or indigenous natives. Nobody knows for sure how or when these original inhabitants arrived, maybe they have always been there. There are upwards of a thousand or more forest tribes around the world and their lifestyle has been relatively unchanged for centuries. Many are now close to extinction. Circa 1900, Brazil had over one million Indians but today, there are less than 200,000. Nearly 100 of these human communities living in the rainforest have just disappeared;  that is one tribe per year.  They are usually hunter-gatherers or hunter-gardeners, and depend on the forests for their livelihood, water, fuel and other wealth. They build their homes from saplings, sticks, mud and leaves. They have their own religious beliefs and customs. 

Many medicines and drugs come from the tropical rainforests, found only in plants found there. Some of the best known are, quinine, a drug used for malaria; curare, an anesthetic and muscle relaxant that can paralyze, and sometimes used in surgery; and rosy periwinkle, a treatment for Hodgkin's disease and leukemia. Research has identified many other potential chemicals that may have future value in treating many other maladies such as arthritis, hepatitis, insect stings, fever, coughs, and colds. Many more maybe there but are still undiscovered. Think how many new species of plants have been destroyed by deforestation and think what potential those chemical bearing plants might have had.

Pictures of the Rainforest

Environmental Benefits

Tropical rainforest does more than counter to local climatic conditions; rainforest also influence the climate. Through transpiration, the massive amount of vegetation in rainforests restore huge amounts of water back into the atmosphere. This increases precipitation and humidity, and also cools the air for miles around. Using the process of photosynthesis tropical forests replenish the air by breathing in carbon dioxide and breathing out oxygen. By changing carbon they help keep the atmospheric carbon dioxide levels low and actually and ironically work against the global "greenhouse" effect.

  

photosynthesis The chemical process by which green plants synthesize organic compounds from carbon dioxide and water in the presence of sunlight. It occurs in the *chloroplasts (most of which are in the leaves) and there are two principal series of reactions. In the light reactions, which require the presence of light, energy from sunlight is absorbed by *photosynthetic pigments (chiefly the green pigment *chlorophyll) and converted into chemical energy. In the ensuing dark reactions, which can take place either in light or darkness, this chemical energy is used in the production of simple organic compounds from carbon dioxide and water. Further chemical reactions convert these compounds into chemicals useful to the plant. Photosynthesis can be summarized by the equation:

CO2 + 2H2O ? [CH2O] + H2O + O2

Since virtually all other forms of life are directly or indirectly dependent on plants for food, photosynthesis is the basis for all life on earth. Furthermore virtually all the atmospheric oxygen has originated from oxygen released during photosynthesis.

Pictures of the Rainforest

Forests also regulate water flow in streams and rivers. Trees slow down the potential deluge of tropical downpours. They hold the water in abeyance, stored in their trunks and leaves but also on the leaves themselves. water is also slowed down by soaking into the soil, when trees are cleared, rainfall runs off the land more quickly, contributing to floods and greater erosion.

DEFORESTATION

Prior to the dawn of agriculture about 8,000 years BC, forests and open woodland covered about 15 billion acres of the land globe. Over these millennia over 30% of natural forest has been lost. According to a 1982 study by FAO, about  30 million acres of tropical forests are cut each year; this is nearly an acre every second.

Three thousand acres of life-giving, oxygen producing plants are eaten away by some circumstance every hour of every day. That is FIVE acres destroyed for financial gain every time this clock sweeps by. And it will NEVER Stop !!!!

FIVE ACRES OF RAINFOREST GONE AT EVERY SWEEP

Reasons for Deforestation

There are many reasons why the rainforest is being depleted at such a phenomenal rate. The first is logging for timber; rainforest to the greater extent has taken many decades to grow and a huge tree holds a lot of very value wood. But you cannot use a tree in its original state it has to be trimmed and processed. Raw wood trimmed into an appropriate shape can be sold off very lucratively and all the waste material can be used for fuel for burning. The space left can be turned into agricultural land and used to grow crops but usually it is used to grow grass. Cattle are then grazed on this land to grow beef, but the cattle can be voracious as there are usually too many cattle to the acre than is resourceful and the land can be eventually laid bare. The land is then left fallow and falls into a dry savanna like state. It is very difficult and would take much needed money and time to return these areas back to rainforest.

Pictures of the Rainforest

Pictures of the Rainforest

Forced change to a sedentary agricultural state is an even greater threat to tropical forests. Today immense areas that once supported the rainforest are now mostly occupied by poor farmers and ranchers or by commercial farmers who produce sugar, cocoa, palm oil, and other products.

In many equatorial countries there is a serious shortage of firewood. For millions of rural poor, some survival depends on finding enough wood to cook the daily meal. Every day more of the forest is destroyed, and the distance from home to the wood fuel increases. Not only do people endure by having to spend much of the time in the just searching for fuel, but the whole area suffers also. 

Harm is greatest in dry tropical forests where firewood collecting converts more forest to savanna and grasslands.

Pictures of the Rainforest

Pictures of the Rainforest

The international demand for tropical hardwoods runs at around ten billion dollars each year. This just exacerbates an ever growing problem. It even resembles the poacher who kills a great elephant just to steal its ivory tusks. 

We are stealing trees for wood, and that is killing a planet.

Endangered Wildlife

The Rainforest is a naturally intertwined ecosystem of foliage and flora based around the tree. A multi-system that has evolved in accord over millions of years. The worldwide loss of the rainforest encompassing thousands of species of birds, insects and animals that are threatened with extinction is an obscenity at the very least. 

 

Orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus) are totally dependent on small and isolated piece of land within the tropical forest that still remain in Borneo and Sumatra, Indonesia. Orangutans live most of their lives perched in the forest canopy where they feed on leaves, figs, nuts and other fruit, and insects. Old large trees of the forest support woody vines that serve as aerial ladders, this allows the animals to move about, build their nests, and forage for food. When the old forests are cut, orangutans disappear.

Pictures of the Rainforest

The largest of all primates, the gorilla, is one of man's closest relatives in the animal kingdom. Too large and clumsy to move about in the forest canopy, the gorilla lives on the forest floor where it forages for a variety of plant materials. Loss of tropical forests in central and west Africa is a major reason for the decreasing numbers of mountain gorillas (Gorilla gorilla). Some habitat has been secured, but the future of this gentle giant is in grave danger as a result of habitat loss and poaching.

Pictures of the Rainforest

 

POACHING

The destruction of the Rainforest through logging seems bad enough when it comes to the reduced habitat for wildlife. But consider poaching, many tons of endangered animals such as the gorillas, monkeys, porcupine and small deer are killed in the rainforest every day in Africa for food. We think that this is an obscene practice but then those of the rich West live only a short distance from a supermarket, so it is hard for the rainforest poacher to empathize with our thoughts on extinct animal life.

Every part of the Tiger is used.

Poachers, or forest bush-meat hunters, kill wild endangered animals indiscriminately; they do it to make money, but also to feed many people who would otherwise have no meat at all to eat. It is easy for us just to say that they should not do this but if we care, countries of the West should make other arrangements to feed this population with other meats.

The Sahara Supposition is akin to a New Noah's Ark and goes to the very root of its implications and ambitions.    Today, Rainforests and Oceans are either being destroyed at an inconceivable rate or are being polluted on a scale that in point of fact increases every day. The Sahara Supposition wishes to reclaim relatively an otherwise unused area that will replace only a small part of the Natural World that has been destroyed in the Global Environment in the last 30 years by Humankind. 

It would want to take to this area as many species of foliage as necessary, and replant them, and nurture them in an area that will be free of human destruction.

It would want to take to this area as many species of animal, especially rainforest animals and protect them and make them free of poachers.

The jaguar (Leo Onca), a resident of the Southwestern United States and Central and South America, is closely associated with forests. Its endangered status is the result of hunting and habitat loss. 

Pictures of the Rainforest

 Back to Top

The Puerto Rican parrot (Amazona vittata), a medium-sized, green bird with blue wing feathers, once inhabited the entire island of Puerto Rico and the neighboring islands of Mona and Culebra. Forest destruction is the principal reason for the decline of this species. Hunting also contributed. Today, only a few Puerto Rican parrots remain in the wild and their survival may depend on the success of a captive breeding program.

In addition to species that reside in tropical forests year round, others depend on such forests for part of the year. Many species of migrant birds journey 1,000 miles or more between their summer breeding grounds in the north and their tropical wintering grounds. These birds are also threatened by tropical forest destruction.

This website will shows how current forest practices can help stem the tide of forest annihilation while providing valuable forest products for people. The tropical forests of Puerto Rico, which were abused for many decades, were already badly depleted by the late nineteenth century. Widespread abandonment of deficient over stressed agricultural lands has allowed natural reforestation and planting programs to create a patchwork of private, Commonwealth, and Federal forests across the Sahara Desert.

Three thousand acres of life-giving, oxygen producing plants are eaten away by some circumstance every hour of every day. That is FIVE acres destroyed for financial gain every time this clock sweeps by. And it will NEVER Stop !!!!

 

Greenpeace Page on Green Gold

The wood is mahogany, but it's also known as "green gold". For good reason. One log earns an astonishing $130,000 by the time companies like Stickley furniture transform it into the solid mahogany dining tables for sale in such places as family destination Colonial Williamsburg.

 

     

©  1999-2009     Roy G Symonds / Foogle.Biz

 

 

  All suburls are, © copyright of Foogle Business 2009  SITE MAP OF FOOGLE BUSINESS - www.foogle.biz - What, Who, Where, When, Why, Which, Will, How, Do

 

DOWNLOAD REAL PLAYER FREE
DOWNLOAD QUICKTIME FREE
DOWNLOAD MEDIA PLAYER FREE

shockwave       

 

Foogle Business - Click Here to get to our Main Index Page - Learn More, Be More

 

      

 

STD's - These bacterial and viral infections are related to sex, but of course have historically been associated with oral-sex and the vagina. In most all cases though they can cause some form of bodily infection and are transmitted through some form of sex. HIV/ AIDS is also listed below. Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs) can often be transmitted even though both partners firmly believe they are infection free. The incubation period of a disease, is the period of time between infection and the appearance of symptoms. So during the incubation period, partners can transfer a virus or bacteria without even knowing. John Winston Lennon, an icon of idealism, creativity and hope, was born on October 9, 1940 to a dysfunctional, working-class Liverpool family. He was born during an air raid from the German Air Force, in WWII. So pleased that he and his mother had survived, they chose his second name as Winston, after the great war-leader Churchill. Click Here To Listen To A Fine Collection of Classic Pieces by Fine Classical Composers Elvis was born Jan. 8, 1935, in Tupelo, Miss., U.S. He died Aug. 16, 1977, in Memphis, Tenn. His name in full was Elvis Aaron Presley or more correctly, Elvis Aron Presley, the popular singer widely known as the King of Rock and Roll. He was one of rock music's most dominant performers from the mid-1950s until the present day and forever. Questions about dogs, photos, pictures, pix, pup, puppies, canines, k9, resources, American Cocker Spaniel, Afghan Hound, Airedale Terrier, Alaskan Malamute, Australian Shepherd, Basenji, Basset Hound, Bearded Collie, Beagle, Bernese Mountain Dog, Bichon Frise, Border Collie, Border Terrier, Borzoi, Boston Terrier, Bouvier Des Flandres, Boxer, Boykin Spaniel, Brittany Spaniel, Bulldog, Bull Terrier, Cairn Terrier, Chihuahua, Chow Chow, Collie, Dachshund, Dalmatian, Doberman, English Cocker Spaniel, English Setter, English Springer Spaniel, Great Dane, German Shepherd Dog, German Short Hair Pointer, Golden Retriever, Great Pyrenees, Greyhound, Irish Setter, Irish Terrier, Jack Russell Terrier, King Charles Spaniel, Keeshond, Labrador Retriever, Lhasa Apso, Maltese, Mastiff - English, Munster Lander, Newfoundland, Norwegian Elkhound, Old English Sheepdog, Papillon, Pembroke Welsh Corgi, Pekingese, Pomeranian, Poodle, Pug, Rhodesian Ridgeback, Rottweiler, Saluki, Samoyed, Saint Bernard, Schnauzer, Scottish Terrier, Shar Pei, Shetland Sheepdog, Shih Tzu, Siberian Husky, Staffordshire Bull Terrier, Vizsla, Weimaraner, West Highland Terrier, Wire Fox Terrier, Wheaten Terrier, Whippet, Yorkshire Terrier. TERMS - Terms and Conditions of ALL our Websites - PLEASE READ OUR TERMS . Lionel Ritchie TERMITES - any of the cellulose-eating social insects that constitute the order Isoptera. Cellulose in this case refers to wood. Termites have for millions of years been eating the majority of fallen trees, dead trees and rotting trees, from all around the world. It is said that the world would be totally covered in a ten meter pile of rotting timber, if it was not for the Termite.
NEW ICE-AGE BY 2080 - READ IT HERE ! ! MITES - Any of about 20,000 species of tiny arthropod invertebrates belonging to the subclass Acari  - sometimes Acarina, or Acarida, of the class Arachnida.  Mites live in varied habitats: in brackish water, in fresh water, in hot springs, in soil, on plants, and as parasites on and in animals. Parasitic forms may live in the nasal passages, lungs, stomach, or deeper body tissues of animals. Some mites are carriers of human and animal diseases. Plant-feeding mites cause damage by feeding on leaf tissues or by transmitting viral diseases.  Mites are small, often microscopic in size—the smallest being about 0.1 mm (0.004 inch) in length and the largest being about 6 mm (0.25 inch)—and they usually have four pairs of legs. In general, they breathe by means of tracheae, or air tubes; in many species, however, respiration takes place through the skin ASTEROIDS - also called minor planet, or planetoid, any of a host of small rocky bodies, about 1,000 km or less in diameter, that orbit the Sun primarily between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. It is because of their small size and large numbers relative to the nine major planets that asteroids are also called minor planets. The two designations are frequently used interchangeably, though dynamicists, astronomers who study individual objects with dynamically interesting orbits or groups of objects with similar orbital characteristics, generally use the term minor planet, whereas those who study the physical properties of such objects usually refer to them as asteroids. LISTEN TO VIRGIN RADIO UK - CLICK HERE ANTS - any member of the approximately 8,000 species of the insect family Formicidae - order Hymenoptera. Ants occur worldwide but are especially common in hot climates. All ants are social in habit; i.e., they live together in organized colonies, and they range in size from 2 to about 25 millimeters, about 0.08 to 1 inch. Their color is usually yellow, brown, red, or black. A few genera, e.g., Pheidole of North America, have a metallic luster. AIDS - Acquired Immuno Deficiency Syndrome, a fatal transmissible disease of the immune system, caused by the Human Immuno-deficiency Virus  - HIV.    Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome was allegedly first recognized in Zaire, in 1976. Three thousand acres of life-giving plants are still eaten away by some circumstance every hour of every day.   That is FIVE ACRES at every sweep of this clock.        -        CAN YOU HELP?  Greenhouse Effect   -   An effect occurring in the atmosphere because of the presence of certain gases - Greenhouse Gases - water vapor, carbon dioxide, methane, ozone, and nitrous oxide, that absorb infrared radiation. Short-Wave Light and ultraviolet radiation from the sun are able to penetrate the atmosphere and warm the earth’s surface. This energy is re-radiated as infrared radiation, which, because of its longer wavelength, is absorbed by such substances as carbon dioxide, instead of passing through. The overall effect is that the average temperature of the earth and its atmosphere is increasing - the so-called Global Warming or ultimately the Global Ending Syndrome. THE TAKERS TEST -  Every minute of every day millions of people make  a hot drink for themselves. Whether it is Tea, Coffee or Hot Chocolate, invariably the process needs WATER and some ENERGY source. Put up your hand, if you did not know this, and also that the planet's WATER and ENERGY sources are dwindling
Forest Land - Forest covered with trees and undergrowth. Over 20% of the Earth's land-surface is forest, providing valuable oxygen, timber, and habitats for wildlife. Northern coniferous forests consist largely of pine, spruce, and firs.  The World is Starving - 50,000 people die every day due to the lack of food, drugs and medical care. Sahara desert Facts  -  The Sahara Desert is a great desert area, North Africa, the West portion of the broad belt of parched land that extends from the Atlantic Ocean eastward past the Red Sea to Iraq. The entire desert, the largest in the world, is about 1600 km wide and about 5000 km long from East to West. TRAINING YOUR BIG DOG - How To Train Your Big Dog The Taliban - Persian Tālebān  - Students.  Also spelled Taleban. An  ultra conservative political and religious faction that emerged in Afghanistan in the mid 1990s following the withdrawal of Soviet troops, the collapse of Afghanistan's communist regime, and the subsequent breakdown in civil order. The faction took its name from its membership, which consisted largely of students trained in Madrasah's Islamic religious schools, that were established for Afghan refugees in the1980s in northern Pakistan Lucifer  - In Christian tradition, the leader of the angels expelled from heaven for rebelling against God. Known thereafter as Satan (Hebrew: adversary) or the Devil, he presides over the souls condemned to torment in Hell. He is identified with the serpent that tempted Eve (Genesis 3.1–6) and the great red dragon cast out of heaven by Michael (Revelation 12.3–9). The exact nature of Lucifer’s sin was much debated; the commonest view is that his sin was pride. John Lennon - The Beatles - Why Not Use  SURF & LISTEN  - Click On POP ! Health Problems??   We have many pages on a variety of ailments. ALLERGIES - ANTHRAX - ATHLETES FOOT - MALARIA - MENINGITIS - MRSA - SMELLY FEET - ACNE
SITE MAP OF FOOGLE BUSINESS - www.foogle.biz - What, Who, Where, When, Why, Which, Will, How, Do - Student information - Teacher Information - Parent Information - Research with Foogle. MRSA - PLEASE NOTE THAT MRSA IS NOT A DISEASE. IT IS THE NAME OF A BACTERIA THAT WE NO LONGER HAVE AN ANTIBODY THAT CAN KILL IT.         IF ALLOWED INTO THE BODY OF A MAMMAL, IT CAN BRING ON MANY PROBLEMS AND CONDITIONS. THESE CONDITIONS HAVE ALTERNATE NAMES AND SOMETIMES MRSA IS NOT EVEN MENTIONED. PREVIOUS TO THE MRSA STRAIN THESE CONDITIONS WERE CLEARED UP QUITE EASILY WITH PENICILLIN ETC. BUT NOT ANYMORE. READ ON! He was born Samuel Leroy Jackson on the 21st of December, 1948, in Washington DC. His father left when he was very young, moving to Kansas City, Missouri, leaving Samuel to be raised by his mother, Elizabeth, and his grandparents, in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Granddad was a janitor, while Elizabeth worked in a factory (later she'd be a supply buyer for a state mental institution). MALARIA - A serious, acute and chronic relapsing infection in humans, characterized by periodic attacks of chills and fever, anemia, enlargement of the spleen - splenomegaly, and often fatal complications. Malaria also is found in apes, monkeys, rats, birds, and reptiles. It is caused by various species of protozoa, a one-celled organism - called Sporozoans, that belong to the genus Plasmodium. These parasites are transmitted to humans by the bite of various species of mosquitoes belonging to the genus Anopheles . Mosquito  -  A small flying biting insect that could be described as a type of Fly. It lives worldwide, especially in the tropics. It has long legs and a slender abdomen, Culex Forma. In most species the males feed on plant juices or nectar. The females puncture the skin with a long proboscis, to suck the blood of mammals, quite often transmitting serious diseases, including Malaria, Dengue Fever, Encephalitis and Yellow Fever. The mosquito is not strictly a parasite. Hay fever An allergy to pollen, which leads to sneezing, a streaming nose, and inflamed eyes. Treatment involves taking antihistamines or, in severe cases, steroids.  -  ALLERGIES -  hypersensitive reaction by the body to foreign substances - antigens,  that in similar amounts and circumstances are harmless within the bodies of other people. World Trade Center - A complex of several buildings around a central plaza in New York City that in 2001 was the site of the deadliest terrorist attack in American history. The complex—located at the southwestern tip of Manhattan, near the shore of the Hudson River and a few blocks northwest of Wall Street—was built by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey as a central facility for businesses and government agencies involved in international trade. Until the 2001 attack, it was notable for its huge twin towers, each of which had 110 stories. The roof of One World Trade Center reached to 1,368 feet (417 meters), and Two World Trade Center was 1,362 feet (415 meters) tall. Designed by Minoru Yamasaki and officially opened in 1972, the towers were the world's tallest buildings until surpassed in 1973 by the Sears Tower in Chicago. (See Researcher's Note: Heights of Buildings.) Each of the twin towers had 97 passenger elevators, 21,800 windows, and roughly an acre (0.4 hectare) of rentable space per floor. An observation deck was situated on the 107th floor of the south tower (Two World Trade Center), and a television-broadcasting mast 360 feet (110 meters) high was attached to the north tower (One World Trade Center). SMELLY FEET - Most of the body sweats to keep us cool, and help remove some waste products from the body. Every square cm of the sole of the foot and the palms of your hands have about over 500 sweat pores, totalling 250,000 little holes, that is more than other part of the body, even more that under the arm-pits.
CULVER CITY, CA May 19, 2005 – Topher Grace has joined the cast of Spider-Man® 3, it was announced by director Sam Raimi and producers Laura Ziskin and Marvel Studio's Avi Arad.   Grace will join Tobey Maguire, Kirsten Dunst, James Franco, and Thomas Haden Church in the blockbuster franchise.  Spider-Man 3 is scheduled for release on May 4, 2007, and will reunite returning cast members with director Sam Raimi and producers Ziskin and Arad, the successful filmmaking team responsible for the first two films. Fleas have been around for millions of years - a fossilized flea found in Australia is said to be 200 million years old. It does not differ significantly from today's fleas. Different species can be found from the Arctic Circle to the Arabian deserts - even penguins have fleas which counteract the cold by ensuring that their growth into adulthood coincides with the time when penguins are sitting firmly on their eggs, thereby keeping both fleas and their young in a warm environment! Huntington's Disease is due to a dominant and faulty genetic disorder on chromosome 4.  The consequence of the fault with this gene starts around or just before middle age,  and leads to a gradual physical, mental and emotional change in its victim. Huntington's Disease was named after the American, Dr. George Huntington, as in 1872 he was the first person to document an accurate description of the symptoms and the route of the disease.  -  The loss of these cells causes intense symptoms and eventually death. As the condition advances, it becomes more difficult for the patient to walk and speak. Memory and intellectual functions continue to decline, until the end. By far of the majority of patients are placed in hospices for special care. THE LOUSE - also called the Body Louse -Pediculus Humanus, one of the most common sucking lice, found wherever human beings live. There are two sub-species of the common human louse: Pediculus Humanus Capitis, the Head Louse, and P. Humanus Humanus, the body louse, or cootie. The body louse is an important carrier of epidemic typhus; other louse-borne human diseases are trench fever and relapsing fever World Light - The Earth's Street Lights seen by a NASA satellite - CLONE - also spelled clon population of genetically identical cells or organisms that are derived originally from a single original cell or organism by asexual methods. Cloning is fundamental to most living things, since the body cells of plants and animals are clones ultimately derived from the mitosis of a single fertilized egg. More narrowly, a clone can be defined as an individual organism that was grown from a single body cell of its parent and that is genetically identical to it. COCKROACHES - Dictyoptera  - An order of insects comprising the cockroaches - suborder Blattaria) and the mantids - suborder Mantodea, occurring mainly in tropical regions. Cockroaches are oval and flattened in shape; some have a single well-developed pair of wings, folded back over the abdomen at rest, while in others the wings may be reduced or absent. They are usually found in forest litter, feeding on dead organic matter, but some species, e.g. the American cockroach - Periplaneta Americana, are major household pests, scavenging on starchy foods, fruits, etc. In most species the females produce capsules - the (oothecae containing 16 - 40 eggs. These are either deposited or carried by the female during incubation.
Asthma is not a new phenomenon, as its recent insurgence would suggest.  - Asthma-like symptoms were first recorded around 3500 years ago in an Egyptian manuscript called the Ebers Papyrus. And a word with similar roots as Asthma was also seen in Homer's Iliad. The word comes from the Greek and means Labored Breathing. The word Asthma was first used to describe an illness 500 years later by the famous Greek physician, and father of Medicine,  Hippocrates. The Romans also recorded this condition and used various remedies to try and cure it. ALL ABOUT BREEDING YOUR DOG - How To Breed Your Dog BEDBUG - Any member of the approximately 75 species of nocturnal insects of the family Cimicidae - order Heteroptera,  that feed by sucking the blood of humans and other warm-blooded animals. The reddish brown, or mahogany adult is broad and flat. It is only 4 to 5 mm, less than 0.2 inch long. The greatly withered, scaly vestigial wings are inconspicuous and non-functioning. You know they are about, when you see you have mysterious bite marks - small red dots. You can also see small  telltale black marks, on sheets and mattresses.  Bedbugs also have a  distinctive oily odor, that results from a secretion of scent from their stink glands. Health Problems??   We have many pages on a variety of ailments. ALLERGIES - ANTHRAX - ATHLETES FOOT - MALARIA - MENINGITIS - MRSA - SMELLY FEET - The June Bug - Cotinus Nitida  - Linnaeus - Really a Flying Beetle -  " I'm coming to get you!! "     -      Cotinus Nitida - The June Bug, also called May Beetle, or July Bug - Any insect of the genus Phyllophaga, belonging to the widely distributed, plant-feeding subfamily Melolonthinae - family Scarabaeidae, order Coleoptera. These red-brown / green or even orange beetles commonly appear in the Northern Hemisphere during warm spring evenings and are attracted to lights. The heavy-bodied June beetles vary from 12 to 25 mm - 0.5 to 1 inch,  and have shiny wing covers (elytra). They feed on foliage and flowers at night, sometimes causing considerable damage. June beetle larvae, called white grubs, are about 25 mm long and live in the soil. They can destroy crops, like, corn [maize], small grains, potatoes, strawberries, and they can kill lawns and pastures by severing the grasses from the roots. TICK  -  A widely distributed parasitic arachnid  -  related to Spiders and Scorpions, that sucks the blood of mammals, reptiles and  birds, and may transmit such diseases as Typhus, Lymes Disease and Relapsing Fever. Its round body can be as small as a millimeter, or up to 30 mm long, with eight bristly legs. After feeding, the adults drop off the host and lay eggs on the ground. The larvae attach themselves to a suitable victim, feed, then drop off and molt into nymphs, which repeat the procedure. They have been compared to being similar to the Mite. An insect is a six legged creature, but all of this sized organisms once came from the same ancestor. Athlete's Foot is a skin condition caused by a fungus, that typically occurs between the toes. This picture is the classic condition, and very common. It is also at a stage where it is being restrained, not cured, only by being kept reasonably clean.  WE HAVE A CURE.
Meningitis is an infection of the clear plasma-like fluid of a person's spinal cord and the same fluid that surrounds the brain. Meningitis is sometimes referred to as Spinal Meningitis. Meningitis is usually caused by a viral or bacterial infection; itis mean inflammation, so the infection causes an inflammation of these areas. PILES - Hemroids and their symptoms are one of the most common afflictions in the Western world. In fact, hemroids can occur at any age and can affect both women and men. Because the presence of hemorrhoidal tissue is normal - it acts as a compressible lining which allows the anus to close completely. Unfortunately, hemroids tend to get worse over time, and disease should be treated as soon as it occurs. Clostridium Difficile, is now recognized as the chief cause of HAI - Diarrhea in the US and Europe, and not only in hospitals but also in nursing homes and other facilities for long term care. Initial recognition of this disease began in the 1970s, with reports of a serious, sometimes lethal colitis, characterized by the formation of pseudo-membranous plaques. The cause was identified as Clostridium Difficile in 1978.  Allergy    -   An abnormal reaction by the body to certain substances, including pollen, dust, certain foods and drugs, fur, moulds, etc. Normally all foreign substances (antigens) entering the body are destroyed by antibodies. Allergic people, however, become hypersensitive to certain antigens (called allergens), so that whenever they are encountered in future they stimulate not only the normal antibody reaction but also the abnormal symptoms of the allergy, such as sneezing and skin rashes. Allergic conditions include hay fever, some forms of asthma and dermatitis, and urticaria. Treatment includes the use of antihistamines and corticosteroids and desensitization. The human papilloma virus - HPV,  causes several different types of warts, which are the most common type of skin infection. In some cases, the HPV virus dies within 1 or 2 years, and warts simply disappear.    Verrucas, also called Warts,  well-defined small growth of varying shape on the skin surface, caused by a virus. The wart is composed of an abnormal proliferation of cells of the epidermis; the overproduction of these cells is caused by the viral infection. The most common type of wart is a round, raised lesion having a dry and rough surface; flat or threadlike lesions are also seen. Warts are usually painless, except for those in pressure areas, such as the plantar warts, or Verrucas, that occur on the sole of the foot. They may occur as isolated lesions or grow profusely, especially in moist regions of the body surface. Worms, some say, have been around in one form or shape for about 600 million years. We actually share some DNA with all worms. There are perhaps up to 35,000 different types of these legless invertebrates, that we call worms. Some scurry about on the surface of the land, some live just beneath, whilst others bury themselves deep into the Earth's surface. Many live in the sea, and some have been found deep down on the bottom. Some are so small you cannot see them with the naked-eye, others are so big, they could be snakes. An Earthworm can live for ten years, living and eating in our gardens. They have no eyes, or ears and never sleep. Pound for pound, as they are made of mostly muscle they can be 1,000 times stronger than the strongest man, so next time you call a person a worm, think. Acne can affect people from ages 9 through to middle-age. Acne can show up as any of the following; congested pores, whiteheads, blackheads, pimples, pustules, or cysts - deep pimples, spots. These blemishes occur wherever there are many oil or sebaceous glands, mainly on the face, chest, and back. Acne is commonly referred to in slang as zits.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

© Foogle Business 2000 - 2009