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Keyword: migration

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  • Migrating Robins Can Get Woozy From Fermented Berries in Fla.

    02/23/2010 8:22:45 PM PST · by nickcarraway · 10 replies · 409+ views
    ScrippsNews ^ | 02/22/2010
    Robins migrating north for the spring are stopping off along Florida's Treasure Coast for some cocktails. "This time of year, expect to see some robins looking a little woozy," said Ken Gioeli, natural resources agent for the Cooperative Extension Service in Fort Pierce, Fla. The reason the robins' noses are turning as red as their breasts: fermented berries on Brazilian pepper bushes. The robins' trip north coincides with the berries ripening; and Gioeli said overripe berries on the plants "can be somewhat fermented." That may be especially the case this year because of the particularly cold weather. "In the same...
  • It's That Time of the Year!

    01/02/2010 1:07:44 AM PST · by SWAMPSNIPER · 16 replies · 533+ views
    self | Jan 02,2010 | swampsniper
    They're back, in from the frigid north. The Drakes get here first with just a few hens in the flights, and the rest of the hens follow a little later. The little bitty guys are Pied Billed Grebes, strong swimmers and divers. They can feed in deeper water than the Mallards who just stick their butts up and dabble in shallow water. Past the Grebes to the left there is a Red Eared Slider turtle coming up for air. There is no season such delight can bring, As summer, autumn, winter, and the spring. William Browne (c.1591–c.1645) "Variety"
  • Texas Shows Its Swagger in New Population Estimates

    12/28/2009 5:01:25 AM PST · by Kaslin · 12 replies · 832+ views
    Townhall.com ^ | December 28, 2009 | Michael Barone
    Every year roundabout Christmastime, the Census Bureau releases its population estimates for each state for the 12 months ending on July 1. The numbers look dry on a sheet of paper (or on an Excel spreadsheet on your computer), but they tell some vivid stories. The more so when they reflect, as the numbers for 2008-09 do, the effects of a sharp downward shift in the nation's economy. Given the recession, it's not a surprise that percentage growth, at 0.86 percent, was the lowest in this decade, just a tad below the rate in 2002-03, and well below the peak...
  • Census shows the states we flee

    12/28/2009 3:48:44 AM PST · by Scanian · 43 replies · 2,282+ views
    NY Post ^ | December 28, 2009 | Michael Barone
    Every year around Christmastime, the Census Bureau releases its population estimates for each state for the 12 months ending on July 1. The numbers look dry on a sheet of paper (or on an Excel spreadsheet on your computer), but they tell some vivid stories. The more so when they reflect, as the numbers for 2008-09 do, the effects of a sharp downward shift in the nation’s economy. Given the recession, it’s not a surprise that percentage growth, at 0.86 percent, was the lowest in this decade, just a tad below the rate in 2002-03, and well below the peak...
  • Biggest Losers: Where Americans Aren't Moving

    12/27/2009 9:22:48 AM PST · by Excuse_My_Bellicosity · 61 replies · 2,351+ views
    CNN via Yahoo ^ | 12/24/2009 | staff
    1. California Net loss: 98,798 residents For years more people have fled the Golden State than have arrived. In the year ended July 1, California was the country's biggest loser, with nearly 100,000 more residents leaving than moving in. Still, that was an improvement over earlier losses: In 2006 the net decline was 313,081. 2. New York Net loss: 98,178 residents Like California, New York is, historically, a major exporter of it citizens. The state depends upon foreign migration for its population growth. But also like California, New York's out-migration eased in the year ended July 1. In 2006, nearly...
  • South sees new pull via Census

    12/25/2009 10:15:03 PM PST · by Lorianne · 38 replies · 1,515+ views
    source cannot be posted | 24 December 2009
    Synopsis: 6 Southern states will gain seats in the US House of Reps after 2010 census. Texas will gain the most. Link below
  • Major Bird Swarm Over Sacramento California (cool nature video)

    12/23/2009 9:35:09 AM PST · by Tom Hawks · 10 replies · 811+ views
    This is a video of a half a million birds swarming over Sacramento California. I just want to know who estimated that there is a half a million. Are they sure there are not a million, or maybe only 100,000 instead? Well either way it is pretty cool, and reminds me of the movie by Alfred Hitchcock, "The Birds".Check out the video of the Birds over Sacrament here These following two paragraphs are from an article at "The Independent", and it is about the phenomenon called a murmuration; Winter must must be coming... because the starlings are flocking. Here are...
  • Migration: Geographies in Conflict

    12/01/2009 9:57:43 AM PST · by Arec Barrwin · 6 replies · 567+ views
    New Geography ^ | November 23, 2009 | Aaron Renn
    Migration: Geographies In Conflict by Aaron M. Renn 11/23/2009 It's an interesting puzzle. The “cool cities”, the ones that are supposedly doing the best, the ones with the hottest downtowns, the biggest buzz, leading-edge new companies, smart shops, swank restaurants and hip hotels – the ones that are supposed to be magnets for talent – are often among those with the highest levels of net domestic outmigration. New York City, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Boston, Miami and Chicago – all were big losers in the 2000s. Seattle, Denver, and Minneapolis more or less broke even. Portland is the only proverbially...
  • Potential Net Migration Could Change Nations (Singapore is the place most people want to migrate to)

    11/07/2009 7:48:53 PM PST · by SeekAndFind · 26 replies · 1,223+ views
    Gallup ^ | 11/6/2009 | Neli Esipova, Rajesh Srinivasan, and Julie Ray
    If all the adults worldwide who Gallup surveys show would like to migrate actually picked up and moved where they wanted, Gallup's Potential Net Migration Index (PNMI) suggests many developed countries could be overwhelmed and many developing countries could sit relatively empty. The Potential Net Migration Index is the estimated number of adults who would like to move permanently out of a country subtracted from the estimated number who would like to move into it, as a proportion of the total adult population. The results are based on nationally representative surveys of more than 260,000 adults worldwide. The higher the...
  • Leading Edge of the Migration

    10/10/2009 3:10:47 AM PDT · by SWAMPSNIPER · 27 replies · 877+ views
    self | October 10, 2009 | swampsniper
    We always have some of the various sandpipers around, but now the winter migrants are starting to trickle in. These are Greater Yellowlegs, Tringa melanoleuca
  • Presidential Determination No. 2009-15 of January 27, 2009

    09/12/2009 6:22:12 AM PDT · by kindred · 1 replies · 465+ views
    thefederalregister.com ^ | 2/4/09 | Federal Register: February 4, 2009 (Volume 74, Number 22)
    [[Page 6115]] Presidential Determination No. 2009-15 of January 27, 2009 Unexpected Urgent Refugee and Migration Needs Related To Gaza Memorandum for the Secretary of State By the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, including section 2(c)(1) of the Migration and Refugee Assistance Act of 1962 (the ``Act''), as amended (22 U.S.C. 2601), I hereby determine, pursuant to section 2(c)(1) of the Act, that it is important to the national interest to furnish assistance under the Act in an amount not to exceed $20.3 million from the United States Emergency Refugee and Migration...
  • Poor leave Calif. at higher rate than rich (Despite high Income Tax on rich!)

    07/10/2009 10:09:49 PM PDT · by greatdefender · 56 replies · 1,527+ views
    AP-Yahoo! ^ | 10 July 2009 | JULIET WILLIAMS
    SACRAMENTO, Calif. – The poor are more likely to leave California than the rich, despite concerns that the state's relatively high income tax rate is driving away the wealthy, a new study shows. The report released Friday by the Public Policy Institute of California determined the poorest 20 percent California residents are twice as likely to leave the state as the richest 20 percent. Factors such as cheaper rent and home prices outside the Golden State seem to edge out income taxes when people of all incomes decide whether to stay or go, said institute researcher Jed Kolko, who authored...
  • Traffic, schools, job loss cited as reasons for wanting to leave, LA Times poll finds

    07/10/2009 8:43:10 AM PDT · by Oldeconomybuyer · 15 replies · 781+ views
    LA Times ^ | July 10, 2009 | David Lauter
    About 40% of registered voters citywide told a Los Angeles Times poll that in the last two years they had “seriously thought about moving out of Los Angeles.” As The Times previously reported, the most commonly cited reason, by a large margin, was the cost of housing, cited by 46% of those who said they had thought about going.
  • (Overt Propaganda) Report: Climate change is a major driver in the migration of tens of millions

    06/10/2009 6:43:33 PM PDT · by George - the Other · 22 replies · 788+ views
    Associated Press ^ | June 10, 2009 | ARTHUR MAX
    BONN, Germany (AP) — Global warming is uprooting people from their homes and, left unchecked, could lead to the greatest human migration in history, said a report released Wednesday.
  • War and migration may have shaped human behaviour (Ya think?)

    06/06/2009 9:54:45 PM PDT · by neverdem · 13 replies · 686+ views
    Nature News ^ | 4 June 2009 | Dan Jones
    Demographic factors could be behind diverse aspects of social evolution. Did wars make us the species we are today?Wikimedia Commons Explanations of the evolution of human behaviour often invoke crucial biological changes and revolutionary cultural innovations. Now two papers in Science instead put demography — the size, density and distribution of populations — centre stage.Samuel Bowles, a behavioural scientist at the Santa Fe Institute in New Mexico, tackles the puzzle of how humans acquired such unrivalled altruistic behaviour towards unrelated individuals — tendencies that allowed humans to cooperate as groups and, ultimately, to colonize the planet. The answer, paradoxically, could...
  • Anthropologist advances 'kelp highway' theory for Coast settlement

    05/31/2009 12:09:51 AM PDT · by BGHater · 17 replies · 898+ views
    Vancouver Sun ^ | 28 May 2009 | Larry Pynn
    Migrating peoples were sophisticated in sea harvesting, Jon Erlandson says The Pacific Coast of the Americas was settled starting about 15,000 years ago during the last glacial retreat by seafaring peoples following a "kelp highway" rich in marine resources, a noted professor of anthropology theorized Wednesday. Jon Erlandson, director of the Museum of Natural and Cultural History at the University of Oregon, suggested that especially productive "sweet spots," such as the estuaries of B.C.'s Fraser and Stikine rivers, served as corridors by which people settled the Interior of the province. Erlandson said in an interview these migrating peoples were already...
  • Homo Erectus Crosses The Open Ocean

    05/15/2009 7:53:17 AM PDT · by BGHater · 23 replies · 2,373+ views
    Environmental Graffiti ^ | 06 May 2009 | Environmental Graffiti
    Imagine a group of Homo erectus, the earliest members of our family genus, living near a coastline on an Indonesia island and well aware of a lush island that is visible only a few miles offshore. One day while on the coast, a herd of elephants emerges from the nearby forest and crosses the beach. They enter the ocean and swim successfully to the offshore island. Could this be the experience that triggers a creative process in our ancestors who are watching nearby? Does their imagination and thinking include not only a desire to reach that island, but ideas about...
  • The Luxury City vs. the Middle Class

    05/13/2009 7:51:53 AM PDT · by AreaMan · 3 replies · 776+ views
    The American ^ | 13 Mat 2009 | Joel Kotkin
    AMERICAN.COM A Magazine of Ideas The Luxury City vs. the Middle Class By Joel KotkinWednesday, May 13, 2009 Filed under: Big Ideas, Culture, Lifestyle, Public Square The sustainable city of the future will rest on the revival of traditional institutions that have faded in many of today’s cities. Ellen Moncure and Joe Wong first met in school and then fell in love while living in the same dorm at the College of William and Mary. After graduation, they got married and, in 1999, moved to Washington, D.C., where they worked amid a large community of single and childless people.Like many...
  • Economy pushing migration eastward (RTE 66 Reverse ReduX)

    04/14/2009 1:05:08 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 12 replies · 711+ views
    San Bernardino Sun ^ | 4/14/09 | Andrew Edwards
    If John Steinbeck were alive today and had yet to pen "The Grapes of Wrath," it's not too hard to imagine the novelist telling the story of a family making its departure from California. Released 70 years ago today, Steinbeck's novel of the Great Depression told of the hardships endured by the Joads, an Oklahoma family that braved Route 66 in an ultimately fruitless search for prosperity in the Central Valley. Steinbeck's novel isn't the only story of those who have moved to California. Students learn of the Spanish missions and the Gold Rush. The nostalgia of Route 66 is...
  • Population Alarmists

    04/13/2009 6:01:02 PM PDT · by Kaslin · 24 replies · 729+ views
    IBD Editorials ^ | April 13, 2009
    Demography: The great British broadcaster Sir David Attenborough has become the latest in a long line of illustrious people to say we need to cut population growth sharply or face a grim future. Is he right?We have nothing against Attenborough, but in supporting Britain's Optimum Population Trust, a group that advocates reducing human numbers, he's put himself on the wrong side of one of the great questions of our time. Today's world population is about 6.8 billion, give or take a hundred million or so. By 2050, most estimates show the population will be about 9 billion — roughly a...