Showing posts with label Greenpeace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greenpeace. Show all posts
Monday, September 22, 2008
Monday, January 07, 2008
Friday, December 21, 2007
The Lure of Sirens and Mermaids

Seduction and the Secret Power of Women: The Lure of Sirens and Mermaids
by Meri Lao
Since antiquity, Sirens and their mermaid sisters have maintained an ongoing affair of the heart with humanity’s greatest writers and artists. Sirens play important roles in the classical writings of Homer and Euripides, as well as in the modern works of James Joyce, Oscar Wilde, W. B. Yeats, and many others. Matching these writings with vibrant work from such artists as Peter Paul Rubens, Hieronymous Bosch, Edvard Munch, and RenĂ© Magritte, Meri Lao has created a feast for the eye. Exploring our 3,000-year-old relationship with Sirens, Lao reveals the secret of the power in their song: it is the sound of the subversive, luring us from the orderly conscious world down to the depth of the world of dreams, and the harder we try to ignore that singing, the more we desperately want to hear it.
Meri Lao composed the music for Federico Fellini’s masterpiece City of Women. She lives in Rome.

Labels:
Darryl Hannah,
Greenpeace,
Meri Lao,
Milo Minara
Thursday, October 18, 2007
Hundreds Nude on Glacier in Global Warming Protest
The nude volunteers posed for renowned installation artist Spencer Tunick on the Aletsch Glacier in Switzerland.
Read about it on the Greenpeace website.
Labels:
Aletsch Glacier,
Greenpeace,
Spencer Tunick,
Switzerland
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
Impacts of Climate Change on Nuclear Power Station Sites

12-03-2007
This review looks at the impacts that climate change will have on the coastal environment around a selection of power station sites, over the lifetime of both existing and proposed nuclear reactors, and examines the risks to which they would be exposed by rising tide levels, coastal erosion and storm surges. It also highlights the even more disastrous consequences that would ensue upon the loss of a significant area of land-based ice such as the Greenland ice shelf, which could result in a catastrophic global sea level rise.
This review looks at the impacts that climate change will have on the coastal environment around a selection of power station sites, over the lifetime of both existing and proposed nuclear reactors, and examines the risks to which they would be exposed by rising tide levels, coastal erosion and storm surges. It also highlights the even more disastrous consequences that would ensue upon the loss of a significant area of land-based ice such as the Greenland ice shelf, which could result in a catastrophic global sea level rise.
Labels:
Greenland,
Greenpeace,
Indian Point
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