View allAll Photos Tagged fossile
Clara Vondrich participates with other activists at a Chase Bank demanding an end to fossil fuel funding in conjunction with Jane Fonda’s Fire Drill Friday rally. JP Morgan Chase, a financial institution that is one of the largest sources of capital to the fossil fuel industry in their quest to drill oceans, frack our land and build more pipelines.
Ordre Phacopida, Sous-ordre Calymenina.
(Champ de 5 cm env.)
Le Petit-Beaumont (Manche) France. Ordovicien moyen.
Dans le dédale des caves voûtées d’une vieille bâtisse provençale, un passionné vous ouvre ses portes à la rencontre d’un monde fascinant disparu il y a plus de 100 millions d’années : ammonites, poissons, étoiles de mer côtoient des ichtyosaures, véritables géants des océans anciens.
Ordre Phacopida, Sous-ordre Phacopina, Super-famille Acastoidea, Famille Acastidae.
(Champ de 5 cm env.)
Château-Gaillard en Bain-de-Bretagne (I. et V.) France - Llandeilo
Bill McKibben, an American Environmentalist, holds a banner as he takes action at a Chase Bank demanding an end to fossil fuel funding in conjunction with Jane Fonda’s Fire Drill Friday rally. JP Morgan Chase, a financial institution that is one of the largest sources of capital to the fossil fuel industry in their quest to drill oceans, frack our land and build more pipelines.
Ordre Phacopida, Sous-ordre Calymenina.
(Champ de 2,5 cm env.) Le petit-Beaumont (Manche) France. Ordovicien moyen.
Räumung von Lützerath. Europa, Deutschland, Lützerath, 11.01.2023
Engl.: The eviction of Lützerath. Europe, Germany, Luetzerath, 1/11/2023
Stichwoerter: Aktivist, Braunkohle, Braunkohletagebau, Demo, Demonstration, Dorf, Energie, fossil, fossile, Klimakatastrophe, Klimawandel, Kohle, Kohleabbau, Kohlebagger, NRW, Protest, RWE, Strom, Tagebau, Umwelt, Klimaprotest, Umweltprotest, Garzweiler2, Protestcamp, Klimaaktivisten
Serie: Lützerath
Ordre Phacopida, Sous-ordre Phacopina, Super-famille Acastoidea, Famille Acastidae.
(Champ de 5 cm env.)
On the eve of the G20 Leaders' Summit, Extinction Rebellion activists used a series of unpermitted “guerrilla projections” to draw attention to the climate and health dangers of new fossil gas infrastructure. Fifteen grassroots activists beamed infrared footage of usually invisible methane leakage from Italian gas infrastructure onto the walls of the Tiber River in the heart of Rome.
Community members from nearby Civitavecchia co-led the action, criticizing the Italian government’s plans to build a new fossil gas plant in the city as they phase out coal. Methane is a greenhouse gas more than 100 times more potent than CO2 while in the atmosphere. “Natural gas” is more than 95% pure methane.
“Moving from coal to gas is like moving from unfiltered cigarettes to filtered. What our climate and communities need instead are for countries like Italy to quit building fossil fuel infrastructure entirely and start investing instead in renewable energy that supports local economies. Italy’s plans to replace the Enel coal-fired power plant in Civitavecchia with another climate-wrecking fossil fuel shows that their real interest lies in keeping Enel and Snam happy - not in reducing climate emissions,” said Neal Huddon-Cossar from XR Roma.
The case of Civitavecchia has become emblematic in Italy of the national government's climate and energy strategy that relies heavily upon the transformation of its existing coal infrastructure into fossil gas infrastructure. Of all countries in the EU, Italy is planning the largest expansion of fossil gas use in the electricity sector between 2018 and 2025.
“Investing in methane gas today means investing billions of euros that would directly harm public health and workers. The new gas plants do not create stable and lasting employment and expose local communities to serious health risks,” said Riccardo Petrarolo from No Fossil Fuels Civitavecchia.
The recent and ongoing release of infrared methane leakage images taken by the Clean Air Task Force in Europe is part of increased scepticism about EU public funding for new fossil gas infrastructure as a climate strategy.
“Methane in the atmosphere is rising at unprecedented rates. Emissions from the development and use of fossil gas are a major reason, and some research indicates increased emissions from fossil gas are the single largest cause of higher methane in the atmosphere globally over the past 10 to 15 years,” says Robert W. Howarth, PhD, global expert on methane emissions at Cornell University.
On the eve of the G20 Leaders' Summit, Extinction Rebellion activists used a series of unpermitted “guerrilla projections” to draw attention to the climate and health dangers of new fossil gas infrastructure. Fifteen grassroots activists beamed infrared footage of usually invisible methane leakage from Italian gas infrastructure onto the walls of the Tiber River in the heart of Rome.
Community members from nearby Civitavecchia co-led the action, criticizing the Italian government’s plans to build a new fossil gas plant in the city as they phase out coal. Methane is a greenhouse gas more than 100 times more potent than CO2 while in the atmosphere. “Natural gas” is more than 95% pure methane.
“Moving from coal to gas is like moving from unfiltered cigarettes to filtered. What our climate and communities need instead are for countries like Italy to quit building fossil fuel infrastructure entirely and start investing instead in renewable energy that supports local economies. Italy’s plans to replace the Enel coal-fired power plant in Civitavecchia with another climate-wrecking fossil fuel shows that their real interest lies in keeping Enel and Snam happy - not in reducing climate emissions,” said Neal Huddon-Cossar from XR Roma.
The case of Civitavecchia has become emblematic in Italy of the national government's climate and energy strategy that relies heavily upon the transformation of its existing coal infrastructure into fossil gas infrastructure. Of all countries in the EU, Italy is planning the largest expansion of fossil gas use in the electricity sector between 2018 and 2025.
“Investing in methane gas today means investing billions of euros that would directly harm public health and workers. The new gas plants do not create stable and lasting employment and expose local communities to serious health risks,” said Riccardo Petrarolo from No Fossil Fuels Civitavecchia.
The recent and ongoing release of infrared methane leakage images taken by the Clean Air Task Force in Europe is part of increased scepticism about EU public funding for new fossil gas infrastructure as a climate strategy.
“Methane in the atmosphere is rising at unprecedented rates. Emissions from the development and use of fossil gas are a major reason, and some research indicates increased emissions from fossil gas are the single largest cause of higher methane in the atmosphere globally over the past 10 to 15 years,” says Robert W. Howarth, PhD, global expert on methane emissions at Cornell University.
On the eve of the G20 Leaders' Summit, Extinction Rebellion activists used a series of unpermitted “guerrilla projections” to draw attention to the climate and health dangers of new fossil gas infrastructure. Fifteen grassroots activists beamed infrared footage of usually invisible methane leakage from Italian gas infrastructure onto the walls of the Tiber River in the heart of Rome.
Community members from nearby Civitavecchia co-led the action, criticizing the Italian government’s plans to build a new fossil gas plant in the city as they phase out coal. Methane is a greenhouse gas more than 100 times more potent than CO2 while in the atmosphere. “Natural gas” is more than 95% pure methane.
“Moving from coal to gas is like moving from unfiltered cigarettes to filtered. What our climate and communities need instead are for countries like Italy to quit building fossil fuel infrastructure entirely and start investing instead in renewable energy that supports local economies. Italy’s plans to replace the Enel coal-fired power plant in Civitavecchia with another climate-wrecking fossil fuel shows that their real interest lies in keeping Enel and Snam happy - not in reducing climate emissions,” said Neal Huddon-Cossar from XR Roma.
The case of Civitavecchia has become emblematic in Italy of the national government's climate and energy strategy that relies heavily upon the transformation of its existing coal infrastructure into fossil gas infrastructure. Of all countries in the EU, Italy is planning the largest expansion of fossil gas use in the electricity sector between 2018 and 2025.
“Investing in methane gas today means investing billions of euros that would directly harm public health and workers. The new gas plants do not create stable and lasting employment and expose local communities to serious health risks,” said Riccardo Petrarolo from No Fossil Fuels Civitavecchia.
The recent and ongoing release of infrared methane leakage images taken by the Clean Air Task Force in Europe is part of increased scepticism about EU public funding for new fossil gas infrastructure as a climate strategy.
“Methane in the atmosphere is rising at unprecedented rates. Emissions from the development and use of fossil gas are a major reason, and some research indicates increased emissions from fossil gas are the single largest cause of higher methane in the atmosphere globally over the past 10 to 15 years,” says Robert W. Howarth, PhD, global expert on methane emissions at Cornell University.
Fossilized tree log.
It is the result of a tree having turned completely into stone by the process of permineralization. All the organic materials have been replaced with minerals (mostly a silicate, such as quartz), while retaining the original structure of the wood. Unlike other types of fossils which are typically impressions or compressions, petrified wood is a three-dimensional representation of the original organic material. The petrifaction process occurs underground, when wood becomes buried under sediment and is initially preserved due to a lack of oxygen which inhibits aerobic decomposition. Mineral-laden water flowing through the sediment deposits minerals in the plant's cells; as the plant's lignin and cellulose decay, a stone mould forms in its place.
In general, wood takes less than 100 years to petrify. The organic matter needs to become petrified before it decomposes completely. A forest where the wood has petrified becomes known as a Petrified Forest.
From left, Greenpeace Executive Director Annie Leonard, and activists Miriam Friedrich, Aliyah Field, Zoe Buckley Lennox and Andreas Widlund, who climbed on board the Polar Pioneer at sea, speak at the "Seattle Draws The Line" rally in Seattle, Washington April 26, 2015. People gathered together to take a stand against dirty fossil fuel projects in the Pacific Northwest and everywhere.
Shell sees climate change as a gateway to new profits. This is exactly the type of long-term, dirty fossil fuels project—like oil trains and coal exports—that can’t go forward if we hope to stop the worst effects of climate change and leave a real legacy for future generations. Photo by Marcus Donner/Greenpeace
Ordre Phacopida, Sous-ordre Calymenina.
(Champ de 7 cm env.)
Château-Gaillard en Bain-de-Bretagne (I et V) France - Ordovicien Moyen.
Jeremy Hansen via Twitter le 16 juillet – J’ai trouvé ce fossile lors de ma promenade à Resolute. Quelqu’un peut m’aider à l’identifier?
Ordre Phacopida, Sous-ordre Calymenina.
(X 1 env.)
Le Petit-Beaumont (Manche) France - Ordovicien moyen.
About 65 million years ago, something caused the death of 70% of the species on Earth, including the ones of the large dinosaurs. Natural cataclysms are not very frequent but do still occur at an important rate on a geological scale. The new variable in the model is the human species. Are we going to be able to cause our own extinction?
Hace unos 65 millones de años algo causó la muerte del 70% de las especies sobre la tierra, incluídas las de los grandes dinosaurios. Los cataclismos naturales no son muy frecuentes pero sí ocurren con una frequencia mensurable en una escala geológica. El nuevo parámetro en el modelo es el de la especie humana. ¿Seremos capaces de producir nuestra propia extinción?
Fossile of a Triceratops at the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle in Paris.
View my images in DARCKR or Flickriver.
© Daniel Cano Ott. Todos los derechos reservados.
© Daniel Cano Ott. All rights reserved.
15 to 20 million years ago mammut trees covered this today desert-like area in western Lesbos, when it was hit by a giant volcanic eruption of the Ordymnos covering the trees under a rain of ashes. Hot springs fed each cells in the trunks with mineral water, hardening the structures so some of the more remote trunks are still 8m high. Not only trees 'survived' under these circumstances, even a worm was found perfectly in shape. Quite an amazing freak of nature.
Un peu abimée celle là, mais la belle est flou :-(
Voir où a été prise cette photo. See where this picture was taken. [?]
Räumung von Lützerath. Europa, Deutschland, Lützerath, 11.01.2023
Engl.: The eviction of Lützerath. Europe, Germany, Luetzerath, 1/11/2023
Stichwoerter: Aktivist, Braunkohle, Braunkohletagebau, Demo, Demonstration, Dorf, Energie, fossil, fossile, Klimakatastrophe, Klimawandel, Kohle, Kohleabbau, Kohlebagger, NRW, Protest, RWE, Strom, Tagebau, Umwelt, Klimaprotest, Umweltprotest, Garzweiler2, Protestcamp, Klimaaktivisten
Serie: Lützerath
Räumung von Lützerath. Europa, Deutschland, Lützerath, 11.01.2023
Engl.: The eviction of Lützerath. Europe, Germany, Luetzerath, 1/11/2023
Stichwoerter: Aktivist, Braunkohle, Braunkohletagebau, Demo, Demonstration, Dorf, Energie, fossil, fossile, Klimakatastrophe, Klimawandel, Kohle, Kohleabbau, Kohlebagger, NRW, Protest, RWE, Strom, Tagebau, Umwelt, Klimaprotest, Umweltprotest, Garzweiler2, Protestcamp, Klimaaktivisten
Serie: Lützerath
On the eve of the G20 Leaders' Summit, Extinction Rebellion activists used a series of unpermitted “guerrilla projections” to draw attention to the climate and health dangers of new fossil gas infrastructure. Fifteen grassroots activists beamed infrared footage of usually invisible methane leakage from Italian gas infrastructure onto the walls of the Tiber River in the heart of Rome.
Community members from nearby Civitavecchia co-led the action, criticizing the Italian government’s plans to build a new fossil gas plant in the city as they phase out coal. Methane is a greenhouse gas more than 100 times more potent than CO2 while in the atmosphere. “Natural gas” is more than 95% pure methane.
“Moving from coal to gas is like moving from unfiltered cigarettes to filtered. What our climate and communities need instead are for countries like Italy to quit building fossil fuel infrastructure entirely and start investing instead in renewable energy that supports local economies. Italy’s plans to replace the Enel coal-fired power plant in Civitavecchia with another climate-wrecking fossil fuel shows that their real interest lies in keeping Enel and Snam happy - not in reducing climate emissions,” said Neal Huddon-Cossar from XR Roma.
The case of Civitavecchia has become emblematic in Italy of the national government's climate and energy strategy that relies heavily upon the transformation of its existing coal infrastructure into fossil gas infrastructure. Of all countries in the EU, Italy is planning the largest expansion of fossil gas use in the electricity sector between 2018 and 2025.
“Investing in methane gas today means investing billions of euros that would directly harm public health and workers. The new gas plants do not create stable and lasting employment and expose local communities to serious health risks,” said Riccardo Petrarolo from No Fossil Fuels Civitavecchia.
The recent and ongoing release of infrared methane leakage images taken by the Clean Air Task Force in Europe is part of increased scepticism about EU public funding for new fossil gas infrastructure as a climate strategy.
“Methane in the atmosphere is rising at unprecedented rates. Emissions from the development and use of fossil gas are a major reason, and some research indicates increased emissions from fossil gas are the single largest cause of higher methane in the atmosphere globally over the past 10 to 15 years,” says Robert W. Howarth, PhD, global expert on methane emissions at Cornell University.
Ordre Phacopida, Sous-ordre Phacopina, Super-famille Acastoidea, Famille Acastidae.
(Champ de 6 cm env.)
Château-Gaillard en Bain-de-Bretagne (I. et V.) France - Llandeilo
ACCIONA -Español-
Un proyecto, un objetivo: CERO EMISIONES EN VELA TRANSOCEÁNICA.
Una compañía comprometida con el desarrollo y la sostenibilidad, con el reto de convertirse en la empresa sostenible de referencia y situarse a la vanguardia en la búsqueda de alternativas que combinen la innovación con el cuidado del entorno.
EL BARCO
El primer IMOCA 60 100% ENERGÍAS LIMPIAS y autosuficiente.
Concebido como un barco sostenible desde la primera pieza, el barco Acciona es tan competitivo como sus oponentes, pero sin necesidad de utilizar ningún tipo de combustible fósil.
ACCIONA -English-
A project, an objective: ZERO EMISSIONS IN TRANSOCEANIC SAILING.
THE SHIP
The first 100% SUSTAINABLE, SELF-SUFFICIENT IMOCA.
Conceived as a sustainable boat right from its outset, Acciona’s Boat is as competitive as they come, but it doesn’t need to use any kind of fossil fuel.
ACCIONA -Français-
Un projet, un objectif: ZÉRO ÉMISSIONS DANS LA VOILE TRANSOCÉANIQUE.
Une compagnie consacrée au développement et à la durabilité, ayant comme défi devenir l’entreprise durable de référence et se situer à l’avant-garde à la recherche d’autres alternatives qui combinent l’innovation en faisant attention à l’environnement.
LE BATEAU
Le premier IMOCA 60 100% ÉNERGIES RENOUVELABLES ET AUTOSUFFISANT.
Conçu comme un bateau durable dès la première pièce, le bateau Acciona est aussi compétitif que ses opposants, mais sans besoin d’utiliser aucun genre de combustible fossile.
On the eve of the G20 Leaders' Summit, Extinction Rebellion activists used a series of unpermitted “guerrilla projections” to draw attention to the climate and health dangers of new fossil gas infrastructure. Fifteen grassroots activists beamed infrared footage of usually invisible methane leakage from Italian gas infrastructure onto the walls of the Tiber River in the heart of Rome.
Community members from nearby Civitavecchia co-led the action, criticizing the Italian government’s plans to build a new fossil gas plant in the city as they phase out coal. Methane is a greenhouse gas more than 100 times more potent than CO2 while in the atmosphere. “Natural gas” is more than 95% pure methane.
“Moving from coal to gas is like moving from unfiltered cigarettes to filtered. What our climate and communities need instead are for countries like Italy to quit building fossil fuel infrastructure entirely and start investing instead in renewable energy that supports local economies. Italy’s plans to replace the Enel coal-fired power plant in Civitavecchia with another climate-wrecking fossil fuel shows that their real interest lies in keeping Enel and Snam happy - not in reducing climate emissions,” said Neal Huddon-Cossar from XR Roma.
The case of Civitavecchia has become emblematic in Italy of the national government's climate and energy strategy that relies heavily upon the transformation of its existing coal infrastructure into fossil gas infrastructure. Of all countries in the EU, Italy is planning the largest expansion of fossil gas use in the electricity sector between 2018 and 2025.
“Investing in methane gas today means investing billions of euros that would directly harm public health and workers. The new gas plants do not create stable and lasting employment and expose local communities to serious health risks,” said Riccardo Petrarolo from No Fossil Fuels Civitavecchia.
The recent and ongoing release of infrared methane leakage images taken by the Clean Air Task Force in Europe is part of increased scepticism about EU public funding for new fossil gas infrastructure as a climate strategy.
“Methane in the atmosphere is rising at unprecedented rates. Emissions from the development and use of fossil gas are a major reason, and some research indicates increased emissions from fossil gas are the single largest cause of higher methane in the atmosphere globally over the past 10 to 15 years,” says Robert W. Howarth, PhD, global expert on methane emissions at Cornell University.
Photo by Michael Danner
Räumung von Lützerath. Europa, Deutschland, Lützerath, 11.01.2023
Engl.: The eviction of Lützerath. Europe, Germany, Luetzerath, 1/11/2023
Stichwoerter: Aktivist, Braunkohle, Braunkohletagebau, Demo, Demonstration, Dorf, Energie, fossil, fossile, Klimakatastrophe, Klimawandel, Kohle, Kohleabbau, Kohlebagger, NRW, Protest, RWE, Strom, Tagebau, Umwelt, Klimaprotest, Umweltprotest, Garzweiler2, Protestcamp, Klimaaktivisten
Serie: Lützerath
Räumung von Lützerath. Europa, Deutschland, Lützerath, 11.01.2023
Engl.: The eviction of Lützerath. Europe, Germany, Luetzerath, 1/11/2023
Stichwoerter: Aktivist, Braunkohle, Braunkohletagebau, Demo, Demonstration, Dorf, Energie, fossil, fossile, Klimakatastrophe, Klimawandel, Kohle, Kohleabbau, Kohlebagger, NRW, Protest, RWE, Strom, Tagebau, Umwelt, Klimaprotest, Umweltprotest, Garzweiler2, Protestcamp, Klimaaktivisten
Serie: Lützerath
On the eve of the G20 Leaders' Summit, Extinction Rebellion activists used a series of unpermitted “guerrilla projections” to draw attention to the climate and health dangers of new fossil gas infrastructure. Fifteen grassroots activists beamed infrared footage of usually invisible methane leakage from Italian gas infrastructure onto the walls of the Tiber River in the heart of Rome.
Community members from nearby Civitavecchia co-led the action, criticizing the Italian government’s plans to build a new fossil gas plant in the city as they phase out coal. Methane is a greenhouse gas more than 100 times more potent than CO2 while in the atmosphere. “Natural gas” is more than 95% pure methane.
“Moving from coal to gas is like moving from unfiltered cigarettes to filtered. What our climate and communities need instead are for countries like Italy to quit building fossil fuel infrastructure entirely and start investing instead in renewable energy that supports local economies. Italy’s plans to replace the Enel coal-fired power plant in Civitavecchia with another climate-wrecking fossil fuel shows that their real interest lies in keeping Enel and Snam happy - not in reducing climate emissions,” said Neal Huddon-Cossar from XR Roma.
The case of Civitavecchia has become emblematic in Italy of the national government's climate and energy strategy that relies heavily upon the transformation of its existing coal infrastructure into fossil gas infrastructure. Of all countries in the EU, Italy is planning the largest expansion of fossil gas use in the electricity sector between 2018 and 2025.
“Investing in methane gas today means investing billions of euros that would directly harm public health and workers. The new gas plants do not create stable and lasting employment and expose local communities to serious health risks,” said Riccardo Petrarolo from No Fossil Fuels Civitavecchia.
The recent and ongoing release of infrared methane leakage images taken by the Clean Air Task Force in Europe is part of increased scepticism about EU public funding for new fossil gas infrastructure as a climate strategy.
“Methane in the atmosphere is rising at unprecedented rates. Emissions from the development and use of fossil gas are a major reason, and some research indicates increased emissions from fossil gas are the single largest cause of higher methane in the atmosphere globally over the past 10 to 15 years,” says Robert W. Howarth, PhD, global expert on methane emissions at Cornell University.
Photo by Michael Danner
Wegeputzter Naegeli bei der Einfahrt zur Uni-Parkgarage
Harald Naegelis neue Graffitis in Zürich: Ein Stadtrundgang auf Google Maps