Stuff I Wrote Elsewhere

New Mexico and Colorado are about to enter Rio Grande Compact Article VII restrictions. That means Elephant Butte, the big reservoir down south, is too low, and we’re prohibited from upstream storage. The meat:

In flirting with Rio Grande Compact restrictions, New Mexico finds itself in what has become a familiar situation, with the state’s water supplies barely able to cover agricultural and municipal needs.


That is very different from the period from the late 1970s to the mid-1990s. A wetter climate, combined with a smaller population and lower demands, meant Elephant Butte had twice as much water as needed to prevent the compact’s drought restrictions.

Johnston Alive

Members of the European Parliament have been told Alan Johnston is alive:

Members of the European Parliament have been told by Palestinian leaders that the kidnapped BBC correspondent, Alan Johnston, is alive.

A 12-member delegation of MEPs were given the assurances in a meeting with Palestinian Deputy PM Azzam al-Ahmad in the West Bank city of Ramallah.

Mr Azzam also told them the Palestinian security services knew what they had to do to secure the reporter’s release.

Mr Johnston was seized at gunpoint in Gaza City on 12 March.

I Guess It Depends on Where You Are

Farm Group Says Rain Ends SA Drought:

The South Australian Farmers Federation senior vice-president says recent rains mean the drought is as good as over and he expects farmers to start seeding as soon as the ground is dry enough.

April Rains Fail to End NSW Drought:

Despite a wet April in some parts of NSW, drought continues to grip most of the state, this month’s rainfall figures show.

A reminder that Australia’s a big place, I guess, and that definitions of drought and not-drought vary.

Water in the Desert

You’re looking at one of the largest tributaries in the Middle Rio Grande – the discharge from Albuquerque’s sewage treatment plant. I don’t know the exact numbers, but we’re putting something in the neighborhood of 60,000 acre feet of water per year into the river. Currently, this is largely Pleistocene groundwater being mined from the city’s aquifer – used once, then dumped in the river to augment its flow.

Big Toe – Artist


Big Toe Artist

Originally uploaded by heinemanfleck.

In addition to his scientific background, Big Toe spent two semesters studying art at the Sorbonne, during which time he spent a good deal of time at the Musee d’Orsay in Paris, where several of Van Gogh’s self-portraits clearly influenced his current work. Today was his day off, but I dropped by Inkstain World Headquarters this afternoon to pick up some papers and found him at work on this. Something of a polymath, I guess.

Big Toe Reads Thermometers


Big Toe Reads Thermometers

Originally uploaded by heinemanfleck.

Staff climatologist Big Toe reading the thermometers today in the Inkstain World Headquarters weather station. His first assignment is to analyze data from the IWH thermometers as relates to the official National Weather Service readings. We are attempting to resolve uncertainties about the “urban heat island effect.”

Today’s IWH high was 81. At the Weather Service, the high was 73. Big Toe has concluded, based on this data point, that the urban heat island effect is real.

Building a Fence at the Loading Dock

It’s bad enough when the science establishment charges for access to the loading dock, but Shelley Batts’ experience is even worse. Intrigued by a paper in The Science of Food, she blogged it, including a graph and data table from the paper. For which sin she was threatened with legal action for violation of copyright. The whole notion of “fair use” under U.S. copyright law is so murky that you should distrust anyone who claims they can actually tell you what it is. But, fair use or not, this is just dumb. (Hat tip Avelino. Loading dock jargon discussed previously here.)

Update: Happy resolution.

On China

Down in the comments, Slinger points to Peter Ford’s Christian Science Monitor story on China’s greenhouse gas reduction noises:

While still insisting on their right to industrialize hundreds of millions of Chinese out of poverty, Chinese leaders are showing the first tentative signs of readiness to accept mandatory emissions-reductions targets. And they are setting themselves all kinds of green goals.

As the world’s No. 2 greenhouse-gas culprit – closing in on the 6 billion tons of CO2 produced by the US annually – China is under pressure both from other nations and from its own scientists’ predictions of a potentially catastrophic future if global warming is not curbed.

“Climate change has become a huge challenge to China’s social and economic sustained development,” Zheng Guoguang, head of the China Meteorological Administration, said Monday. “China is determined to mitigate and respond to climate change as a responsible nation.”

(As an aside, Peter Spotts and the other Monitor staffers do an excellent job on this topic, and they’ve recently set up a site to collect their work. New Mexicans who click through will see the fabulous moustache of our own snowpack guy Richard Armijo.)