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EARTH TECH.

Earth Tech. is about technologies that are earth friendly or are reflect the use of natural systems. The hope is to empower you and provide a forum where you can develop your ideas, form research and development groups and launch new enterprises.

Members: 42
Latest Activity: May 25, 2012

Eduen - Putting U in the middle of Eden

Dome it! is actually part of the Eduen Federation - a collection of sustainable companies, technologies, individuals and innovations working together under one umbrella. Eduen - Putting U in the middle of Eden.

The idea is to build experiential, ecological teaching villages around the world. Each village will have some of the same components like dome/gardens and waste mangement facillities, but they will differ depending on which services each location can bare. Eduen has a buffet of alternative health and energy choices to consider when community planning.

Here is the initial vision for the first 33 acre Eduen slated for Gresham, Oregon.

Discussion Forum

Vision for Earth Tech 1 Reply

I believe that by working with and respecting natural processes and cycles new technologies can be developed for the common good.  Some of these technologies exist already and some are being…Continue

Started by Russell F Cowgill. Last reply by John Francis Jun 7, 2011.

Four World Councils “Heritage Ambassador Team” for Native Am Community Festivals at NC/PA/MD/VA Geography with a Children’s Festival add-on ? 7 Replies

  Today, I did a quick internet search in my Virginia community to see how many “Native American Community Festivals” takes place in our region ! I must say I am startled at The amzing strong…Continue

Started by waldenthree coordinator. Last reply by Denise Martin Aug 9, 2010.

Dome it! for fresh foods 10 Replies

Our consciousness is directly related to our consumption and our consumption dictates business and politics on the planet. By eating fresh, whole, locally grown foods we can get closer to spirit and…Continue

Tags: eating, healthy, foods, fresh, domes

Started by Denise Martin. Last reply by Denise Martin Jun 22, 2010.

Make it Yours

There are so many things we can discuss and I fully intend for us to bring as much variety into the conversation as possible, at the same time, I know that there are areas of interest that you want…Continue

Started by Russell F Cowgill Jan 23, 2010.

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Comment by Carol Petersen on April 17, 2010 at 8:59am
Thanks Russell I am glad you jumped in here we need more life breath vision for our future. All friends come and let us build together.
love
Carol
Comment by Russell Cadotte on April 17, 2010 at 12:40am
It has taken me some time to get active here as there is a lot to catch up on here. There are several interesting ideas I've come across and some that I have spent time studying. This is one of the main ones, a home design that totally looks after the occupants and if built properly will last many generations with very little maintenance. I was given the book, Passive Annual Heat Storage many years ago when the Center was located in Montana, they promoted a a totally energy independent home design and then disappeared , they turned up in Bali, now I see they are located in Arizona. The design using a geodesic dome made with concrete is a very technology intensive "engineered" design that looks to be very expensive to build. I was working on a design that would make use of much less expensive and locally available materials, there are a few areas that need the help of a professional engineer so they would be adequate for structural integrity. I am going to dig up my work on this and post the material here in the coming days for further input. Does anyone know a structural engineer that could share some knowledge? This is the site, the book is listed on the left side, I need a new one, I loaned mine out and don't remember to whom.
http://www.earthshelters.com/Index.html
I believe the center could have raised the ire of energy companies who are unwilling to have ideas that are simple and affordable for people to gain independence and give them the boot, so they did their dirty work to suppress the technology. Check it out, let me know if any of you have the book,"Passive Annual Heat Storage"
Comment by Carol Petersen on April 16, 2010 at 8:33pm
Dear Earth Techies,
Check this out!
http://knol.google.com/k/water-fueled-car#Andrija_Puharich

Have a great weekend!
Carol
Comment by Carol Petersen on March 30, 2010 at 10:46am
Deaer Earth Tech family
Please look at this link.

http://www.ukela.org/rte.asp?id=5

For all my relations
Carol
Comment by Firewoman on March 7, 2010 at 12:30pm
Yvonne, that was absolutely cute and to the point...great....
Comment by Yvonne Marie Andres on March 7, 2010 at 12:13pm
Listen up! In less than a minute this rapid-fire animation tells you everything you need to know about how to get along on earth for the next million years! ☆Yvonne☆

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IHyH3MPgZDo
Comment by Russell F Cowgill on February 11, 2010 at 2:49pm
Thank you Chief Phil,
The Monsanto article illustrates how corporate interests function in a world that has no regard for anything beyond profit. Sadly government is complicit at the expense of the people and the environment. The power they have seems overwhelming yet there are a few who are pushing back. Informing us as you and Michael are doing is leadership of the highest order now that we know of this it is our obligation to make our voices heard!
Comment by Michael Koyoti on February 11, 2010 at 12:17pm
Phil,

Thanks for posting this frightening yet incredible story! Isn't it interesting that emerging and developing economic countries like India seem to grasp the GMO threat, while "developed" countries seem totally complacent to AgriBiz literally cramming GMO food down our throats.

The AgriBiz industry not only wants to control our food supply however, but have also developed very inefficient biofuel sources that compete directly with resources required to grow food. Ethanol derived from crops such as corn or sugarcane offer a very inefficient source of fuel and put a heavy burden on the land they are grown on. You can bet Monsanto and others are behind this. The large tracks of land are used to grow these inefficient crops for fuel creates even more food scarcity while conveniently creating the perception of urgency for engineered crops that claim to be more "efficient".

On a promising note, Puerto Rico has a very promising non-food based micro-algae biofuel project underway that I have provided some links to below.

The text excerpt below came from: http://replenishenergy.org

"Micro-algae are the World's most efficient renewable energy source. This bio-fuel can deliver 48,000 Megawatts of electricity per million dollars capital invested; compare to 470 for solar panels or 1,300 for wind turbines. Micro-algae also outperform all other land-based biomass with fourteen times greater fuel yield per acre than sugarcane ethanol, and two hundred times greater than soybean oil."

YouTube link to a video on the Puerto Rico Micro-algae project is below:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BqAzoS8YZ6Y&feature=player_embedded
Comment by Phil Lane Jr. on February 11, 2010 at 9:51am
Thursday, February 11, 2010
India Defies Monsanto, Says No to GMO Crops
We’ve followed the story of the slow but increasing and badly needed pushback against Monsanto’s predatory business practices, which force farmers to buy Monsanto seed annually, rather than re-use it. Worse, Monsanto seed has been genetically engineered so as to require the use of Monsanto herbicides and fertilizers.
And with (until recently) the seeds patent protected, farmers could be sued for having Monsanto genes in their crops. And with Monsanto having established a near monopoly in seeds, it has set prices so as to extract a higher percent of agricultural revenues than it could otherwise command. Needless to say, what is good for Monsanto is not at all good for farmers, as these excerpts from a Daily Kos post illustrates:
I am a small farmer, and I am deeply concerned about the broad power Monsanto and other seed companies wield. Their patents on life, unfair business practices, and aggressive genetic engineering of seed for commercial farming are making farmers dependent on their very expensive seed and killing the millennia-old practice of saving seed.
Since I was a child, the cotton business has been radically changed by developments like Round-Up Ready cotton. Farmers are forced by market pressures to adopt new practices, like using Monsanto seed, that are locking them into annual tithes to a monopolistic seed company. Monsanto, in particular, has forced hundreds of small seed companies out of the business with litigation and threats of litigation, and it’s no accident. Farmers are afraid to collect seeds at all, for fear that Monsanto will accuse them of patent infringement….
In visiting my husband’s family in Bangladesh, my brother-in-law complained about the lack of rice varieties available for consumption. In the past, hundreds of tasty varieties were available. Now only a very few with much less taste are on the market. These varieties, grown in the very unhealthy chemically dependent and unsustainable manner espoused by Monsanto to encourage the use of their many pesticides and herbicides, depletes the land and contaminate the waterways. Fish populations, on which the Bangladeshi population depends heavily for protein, are disappearing. Only the farm-raised varieties are in vast supply, those also being of less nutritional value and raised in polluted waters.
Monsanto’s hold on the seed market is especially problematic in that they also manufacture the chemicals with which the seeds are grown. This is forcing many farmers to use GMO seeds and unsustainable methods whether they want to or not. Neighboring farms (specifically, organic or those choosing to use non-GMO seeds) are having their seeds contaminated by the GMO varieties. Native varieties and hybrids, grown for 10,000 years and adapted to optimize local growing conditions, are bought up by Monsanto and removed from the market, denying options to farmers and consumers. Those not bought up are in danger of contamination by Terminator genes, which would lead to their extinction. The same way we protect animal species from extinction, we should protect plant species, especially the tens of thousands of food varieties, from companies like Monsanto that are consciously eliminating them. Would we allow genocide to occur in any other circumstance?
GMO crops have not been tested properly for safety. In India, farmers allowed their cattle to graze on GMO cotton plant stubble as they had grazed their cattle for millennia; all those cattle died within a few days. Many GMO varieties are neither better yielding nor requiring less fertilizer or water. They are designed to increase the use of Monsanto chemicals. These varieties are more expensive to grow, and the farmers are not allowed to save seed for the next year or the seeds have “Terminator” or “Traitor” genes to make new seeds sterile, causing them added expense. Monsanto’s methods are depleting the soil in areas already stressed.
I hope you will rein in these companies and start to restore a sense of fair play to agribusiness. Family farmers have enough to deal with without big chemical and seed companies holding them hostage.
The US courts have begun to whittle away at some of Monsanto’s efforts to monopolize seed production:
The Public Patent Foundation (PUBPAT) announced today that the United States Patent and Trademark Office has rejected four key Monsanto patents related to genetically modified crops that PUBPAT challenged last year because the agricultural giant is using them to harass, intimidate, sue – and in some cases literally bankrupt – American farmers. In its Office Actions rejecting each of the patents, the USPTO held that evidence submitted by PUBPAT, in addition to other prior art located by the Patent Office’s Examiners, showed that Monsanto was not entitled to any of the patents.
Monsanto has filed dozens of patent infringement lawsuits asserting the four challenged patents against American farmers, many of whom are unable to hire adequate representation to defend themselves in court. The crime these farmers are accused of is nothing more than saving seed from one year’s crop to replant the following year, something farmers have done since the beginning of time.
One study of the matter found that, “Monsanto has used heavy-handed investigations and ruthless prosecutions that have fundamentally changed the way many American farmers farm. The result has been nothing less than an assault on the foundations of farming practices and traditions that have endured for centuries in this country and millennia around the world, including one of the oldest, the right to save and replant crop seed.”
Raw Story describes the latest anti-Monsanto salvo, this by India :
India refused to grant permission Wednesday for the commercial cultivation of its first genetically modified (GM) food crop, citing problems of public trust and “inadequate” science.
Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh said he was imposing a moratorium on the introduction of an aubergine modified with a gene toxic to pests that regularly devastate crops across India.
“It is my duty to adopt a cautious, precautionary, principle-based approach and impose a moratorium on the release,” until scientific tests can guarantee the safety of the product, said Ramesh…
“I cannot go against science but in this case science is inadequate,” he added. “I have to be sensitive to public concerns.”
Indian regulators had approved the new aubergine back in October and its introduction would have made it the first GM foodstuff to be grown in India.
But the decision roused huge opposition and a broad spectrum of voices, including farmers, environmentalists and politicians of all stripes had urged the government to prevent its cultivation…
Ramesh said there was “no overriding food security argument” for the introduction of GM aubergines.
He said he had considered the views of different interest groups in making his decision but denied he had been pressured by members of his cabinet or by companies producing genetically modified crops.
“My conscience is clear. This is my decision and my decision alone,” he said.
India is one of the largest aubergine producers globally.
Reader John D, who pointed us to the piece, adds:
They are fighting Monsanto trying to patent the genes from their indigenous plants.
The history of GMO crops in India is like elsewhere. The first few years are great then they need more herbicide and more fertilizer to get yields and that drives the farmer into bankruptcy. India has had a rash of farmer suicides due to crop failures. They didn’t have this with indigenous seeds. The costs were much less and they could muddle through.
The concerns about safety are also legitimate. As Scientific American pointed out:
Unfortunately, it is impossible to verify that genetically modified crops perform as advertised. That is because agritech companies have given themselves veto power over the work of independent researchers.
…Under the threat of litigation, scientists cannot test a seed to explore the different conditions under which it thrives or fails. They cannot compare seeds from one company against those from another company. And perhaps most important, they cannot examine whether the genetically modified crops lead to unintended environmental side effects.
Research on genetically modified seeds is still published, of course. But only studies that the seed companies have approved ever see the light of a peer-reviewed journal. In a number of cases, experiments that had the implicit go-ahead from the seed company were later blocked from publication because the results were not flattering. “It is important to understand that it is not always simply a matter of blanket denial of all research requests, which is bad enough,” wrote Elson J. Shields, an entomologist at Cornell University, in a letter to an official at the Environmental Protection Agency (the body tasked with regulating the environmental consequences of genetically modified crops), “but selective denials and permissions based on industry perceptions of how ‘friendly’ or ‘hostile’ a particular scientist may be toward [seed-enhancement] technology.”
Some research recently raised questions on the adequacy of Monsanto’s research on the health of GMOs (a mere 90 days) and some small scale animals studies have found consumption of Monsanto GM products are associated with organ damage. One reader noted:
I am fairly well-qualified to comment on this, as both a PhD in genetics who has made hundreds of transgenic plant lines (albeit in Arabidopsis) and a former Nature editor.
I don’t doubt for a second that Monsanto has failed to adequately investigate the potential negative effects of BT toxin (MON 810 and MON 863) and bar (NK 603) overexpression and possible toxicity. This is even more warranted by the fact that these genes are being regulated by a strong viral promoter (CaMV35S) that is producing levels of these proteins that far exceed what would normally occur in a plant–even though these gene products don’t normally in plants. (Both genes are bacterial in origin.)
That’s a long winded way of saying concerns about Monsanto, from both a health and economic perspective, are far from alarmist.
More on this topic (What's this?)
Despite India’s Optimism, There May Be a Better Time to Buy (Money Morning, 2/10/10)
More to Offer (When Giants Fall, 1/19/10)
Monsanto Infects Our Food Supply with Mutated Seeds (Trends I'm Watching, 1/22/10)
Read more on Monsanto Company, Investing in India at Wikinvest
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Comment by Russell F Cowgill on February 11, 2010 at 7:49am
Thank you Michael, I have seen Geo Thermal energy at work in homes in Boise Idaho on Warm Springs Avenue and in the Idaho State Capital building. Those systems have been at work relyably for well over 100 years. They are so much a part of day to day life that almost no one pays any attention. That's why we need to draw attention to these natural systems as you are doing here.
 

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