View allAll Photos Tagged Fracking,
Lori Metcalf of Bristol, Virginia speaks to the Phillip B. McCall and other members of the Washington County Board of Supervisors about her opposition to fracking. The Supervisors were to vote on allowing companies to be able to drill for gas. The Tuesday Meeting was standing room only with people for and against.
Jim Simpson hammers in signs against fracking during a protest on Tuesday in Abingdon, Virginia. The Washington County, Virginia, Supervisors' meeting on Tuesday was standing room only and overflow into the lobby area of the building with a TV and audio. The Supervisors' were to vote on letting gas companies use fracking to retreive gas. There has been a large number of residents against the method claiming polution and lost water wells from the drilling.
More gas development in Morgan County, Tennessee.
The white unmarked roads lead to bare patches - those bare patches are all gas wells.
These are screenshots from Google maps, used under fair use guidelines.
Photos at the 2015 Stop the Frack Attack National Summit in Denver, Holiday Inn - Stapleton
Photo credit: Roger Smith
Regardless of their stance on fracking, residents of the Marcellus Shale in Pennsylvania and southern New York all agreed that the fracking should be monitored. An interstate agency, the Susquehanna River Basin Commission, manages water resources within the watershed with an expansive monitoring network. Their 58 stations continuously monitor temperature, pH, specific conductance, dissolved oxygen and turbidity.
Read more about this giant monitoring effort: www.fondriest.com/news/susquehanna-river-monitoring-netwo...
Photos courtesy of the SRBC. The site map was created by Fondriest Environmental.
Photo citation: Ted Auch, FracTracker Alliance, 2020.
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These trailers are used in the controversial practice of hydraulic fracturing during oil and gas drilling. During ‘fracking’, hundreds of thousands of gallons of sand, water and chemicals are injected into the ground, to break apart rock and allow natural gas to flow to the well. The ingredients that make up the mix of water, sand and chemicals are mostly undisclosed, and a significant amount are not recovered, causing environmental and human health concerns. Hydraulic fracturing raises contamination concerns for ground and fresh water that feeds the rivers and reservoirs used by fisherman, agricultural farmers, cattle ranchers and local communities. It also threatens air quality as gases and chemicals migrate to the surface. When roadless areas are opened to oil and gas drilling, they are not only fragmented and turned into industrial zones, but also become at risk to the high costs associated with environmental clean-up processes, loss of good water sources and human and animal health issues.
Artist: Nelson Guda
Washington DC, April 29, 2017. On a hot April day tens of thousands marched to the White House in The People's Climate March 2017. A broad and diverse crowd showed their displeasure and dismay at President Donald Trump's anti-environment administration and policies. Later in the day a smaller group staged an action at The Trump Hotel.
Fotos von Jakob Huber/Campact
Frei zur Nicht-Kommerziellen Nutzung (siehe creative commons-Lizenz).
Für kommerzielle Verwendung wenden Sie sich bitte an jakob_huber@web.de
On May 23, 2011, Marcellus Protest picketed the Shale Play Tubulars Conference that took place at the William Penn Omni Hotel in Pittsburgh.
This textile/arpillera by Linda Adams shows citizens opposing fracking (hydraulic fracturing to release gas and oil).
Went to give the dog some food this morning and this is what I found.
They're currently living in a 10 gallon tank with some water and a dog biscuit until I can figure out what to do with them.
The right of way for a natural gas pipeline passes through farmland near the community of Mountain, W.Va. The pipeline runs beneath the smooth area in the lower right corner of the photo, crossing a small creek at the edge of the tree line. Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News. Aerial photography flight courtesy of SouthWings.
A natural gas pipeline passes along a ridge where trees were cut to make way near Blandville, W.Va. The pipeline is buried beneath the strip of green grass that runs diagonally through the photo. Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News. Aerial photography flight courtesy of SouthWings.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=fRndyBCCANk
" Vecchio Frack "
di Domenico Modugno
E' giunta mezzanotte
si spengono i rumori
si spegne anche l'insegna
di quell'ultimo caffè
Le strade son deserte
deserte e silenziose
un'ultima carrozza cigolando se ne va.
Il fiume corre lento
frusciando sotto i ponti
La luna splende in cielo
dorme tutta la città
Solo va
un uomo in frack.
Ha il cilindro per cappello
due diamanti per gemelli
Un bastone di cristallo
la gardenia nell'occhiello
E sul candido gilet
Un papillon, un papillon di seta blu.
Bonne nuit, bonne nuit, bonne nuit, bonne nuit,
buona notte
Va dicendo ad ogni cosa
ai fanali illuminati
Ad un gatto innammorato
che randagio se ne va.
E' giunta ormai l'aurora
si spengono i fanali
Si spegne a poco a poco tutta quanta la città
La luna si è incantata
sorpresa e impallidita
Pian piano scolorandosi nel cielo sparirà.
Sbadiglia una finestra
sul fiume silenzioso
E nella luce bianca galleggiando se ne va
Un cilindro
un fiore e un frack.
Galleggiando dolcemente e lasciandosi cullare
Se ne scende lentamente
sotto i ponti verso il mare
Verso il mare se ne va
Chi mai sarà, chi mai sarà
quell'uomo in frack.
Adieu adieu adieu adieu, addio al mondo
Ai ricordi del passato
Ad un sogno mai sognato
Ad un attimo d'amore che mai più ritornerà.