Jump to October 2011 archive page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 ... 18
  • 87,000 without power after Colorado snowstorm

    Colorado got a harsh introduction to winter overnight as 10 inches of heavy, wet snow snapped limbs and knocked out power to 87,000 people.

    Snow falling at a rate of up to 2 inches per hour blanketed areas near Denver on the Front Range and Eastern Plains, according to the National Weather Service and Xcel Energy.

    V. Richard Haro / Fort Collins Coloradoan via AP

    Joe Reyes ducks under a tree that fell on his car follwing a snow storm in Fort Collins, Colo., on Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2011.

    Mark Fox / Summit Daily News via AP

    Snow continues to fall as Bevan Frost walks through Frisco, Colo., on his way to skiing backcountry on Wednesday, Oct. 26. Up to 2 feet of snow was forecast for parts of Colorado's mountains.

    Paul Aiken / The Daily Camera via AP

    Mitch Buthod of the Boulder Forestry Dept. clears large limbs in Boulder, Colo., on Wednesday, Oct. 26.

    Read more on the impacts of the storm in our full story. DenverPost.com also has a good slideshow of photos from the storm.

    Show more
  • Large quantities of munitions found in area south of Sirte, Libya

    Philippe Desmazes / AFP - Getty Images

    Crates containing tank shells litter the desert near ammunition storage bunkers located in the desert, 62 miles south of Sirte, October 26, 2011.

    Philippe Desmazes / AFP - Getty Images

    Piles of ammunition is seen stored in a bunker 62 miles south of Sirte on October 26, 2011.

    Philippe Desmazes / AFP - Getty Images

    A Libyan man looks at a missile in a wooden crate in an ammunition storage bunker about 62miles south of Sirte on October 26, 2011, where at least 80 ammunition bunkers are believed to be located.

    Looks like they had plenty of ammunition left even after nine months of fighting.

  • Libyan family returns to Sirte to discover what little is left of their home

    Youssef Boudlal / Reuters

    A child stands in the middle of her room, damaged during fighting between pro and anti-Gaddafi fighters, after her family returned to their home in Sirte, October 26, 2011.

    Youssef Boudlal / Reuters

    A family inspects their house, which they had left due to fighting between pro and anti-Gaddafi fighters, upon their return to Sirte October 26, 2011.

     

  • Francois Lenoir / Reuters

    Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron arrives at the European Union summit in Brussels, October 26, 2011. The European Union's leaders are meeting to work out a comprehensive deal to resolve the euro zone debt crisis and find a way to give the region's bailout fund greater firepower.

    Britain's PM David Cameron arrives looking serious for the EU summit

    Serious problems, call for serious attitude. Looks like Cameron has it.

    More on the summit.

  • Flash floods and mudslides cause havoc in Italy

    Fabio Muzzi / AFP - Getty Images

    People try to cross a street as water runs through in Monterosso, one of the villages that make up the Five Lands after overnight floods, Oct. 26.

    Riccardo Dalle Luche / EPA

    Residents view cars piled up after heavy floods in Aulla, Massa Carrara, Italy, on October 26. At least five people were killed in overnight rains and flooding in Italy's northwestern and central regions of Liguria and Tuscany, officials said.

    Fabio Muzzi / AFP - Getty Images

    A man walks on mud and debris between broken cars in a street of Monterosso, one of the five villages that make up the Five Lands after overnight floods, on Oct. 26, in the Spezia region. The areas worst hit by the floods in Italy were the Spezia region and the picturesque Five Lands tourist destination.

    Luca Zennaro / EPA

    A distraught woman surveys the scene of devastation in front of a destroyed house in Brugnato, Liguria, Wednesday, Oct. 26, after torrential rain caused flooding and landslides in Liguria and Tuscany. At least seven people have been reported missing. Phone lines have been brought down and there have been power cuts in some areas.

    Heavy rains caused sudden flooding in Liguria and Tuscany in northwest Italy. In the hardest hit area of 'Cinque Terre' (or Five Lands), towns were cut off as roads were washed away. At least nine people were killed and more were still missing. Full story.

  • Nations' birth rates rise and fall: Philippines welcomes 200 babies an hour

    Cheryl Ravelo / Reuters

    Babies lie on a bed in the maternity ward of the government run Dr. Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital in Manila on June 1, 2011. The ward, the busiest in the country, sees an average of 60 births a day. The Philippines' population growth rate of around 2.0 percent is above Southeast Asia's average of around 1.7 percent, with an estimated 200 babies born every hour.

    The world population is going through a growth spurt, but its pace varies widely from country to country due in large part to differences in birth rates. Some nations see declines while others see sharp increases.

    The United Nations Population Fund estimates the world population will reach 7 billion on Oct. 31.

    Women on average are having 2.5 babies each, according to UN data. That’s still above the population replacement level of 2.1 but just half of the five babies apiece they averaged in 1950, when the world population was 2.6 billion. It reached 6 billion in 1998.

    In the Philippines, with a population of 101.8 million, the 2011 birth rate is 3.19 babies per woman, says the CIA World Fact Book. Hospitals estimate about 200 births an hour across the country.

    Cheryl Ravelo / Reuters

    Women await weigh-ins during prenatal checks at the Dr. Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital in Manila on June 6, 2011. The Philippines lacks a national policy on birth control and access to modern family planning methods frowned upon by the powerful Catholic Church. Those factors and others led to the country's population ballooning to more than 100 million, according to various government and private sector estimates. The Philippines is the second-most populous nation in the region after Indonesia.

    Cheryl Ravelo / Reuters

    A woman uses her cell phone while her baby lies on top of her inside the maternity ward of the Dr. Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital in Manila on June 1, 2011.

    The world’s highest birth rate is in Niger, at 7.60 children per woman, according to the World Fact Book; the lowest is Macau, at 0.92. The United States rate is 2.06.

    These rates affect a nation's population, which also changes due to longevity rates, immigration and other factors.

    "Fertility begins to decline slowly in most developing countries, and then it declines fast, around three to four children, and then it slows down again," Gerhard Heilig, the UN chief of population estimates and projections, told Life's Little Mysteries.

    Cheryl Ravelo / Reuters

    The maternity ward of the Dr. Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital in Manila is crowded on June 1, 2011.

    As the world hits a population milestone, Western Europe, Japan and Russia are experiencing low birth rates and aging populations leading to economic squeezes and population declines.

    Money-tight Spain, with a 1.47 birth rate, can no longer afford $3,000-per-newborn government grants that were used to encourage families to boost the nation's birth rate.

    In Japan, with a 1.21 birth rate, fewer working-age people will be around to support the elderly. Russia, at 1.42, faces a similar problem and has seen its population fall 6 percent since the mid-1990s.

    Cheryl Ravelo / Reuters

    A baby lies on a scale inside the maternity ward of the Dr. Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital in Manila on June 1, 2011.

    China’s birth rate has fallen to 1.5 under three decades of strict family planning rules that limited urban families to one child and rural families to two.

    India, the world’s second-most populous country behind China, has a 2.6 birth rate expected to keep its population rising for years to come.

    - msnbc.com editors Natalia Jimenez and Jim Gold, with wire service reports.

    See more posts and images related to the seven billion population milestone

  • Painting tombstones in Spain in preparation for All Saints Day

    Jon Nazca / Reuters

    People paint a tombstone at the cemetery of Casabermeja, near the southern Spanish city of Malaga, October 26, 2011, in preparation for All Saints Day.

    Jon Nazca / Reuters

    A man paints a tombstone at the cemetery of Casabermeja, near the southern Spanish city of Malaga, October 26, 2011. Catholics will mark All Saints Day on November 1 by visiting cemeteries and graves of deceased relatives and friends.

     I couldn't decide which one I liked better. Maybe the photographer couldn't either. What about you?

  • Bangkok braces for more water and potentially weeks of flooding

    Altaf Qadri / AP

    Flood victims leave from flooded areas in a truck in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2011.

    Nicolas Asfouri / AFP - Getty Images

    People talk about the floods next to the Chao Praya river in Bangkok, on October 26, 2011. Thailand's premier warned nervous Bangkok citizens that incoming floods could last for four weeks, as waters inched nearer the city center on the eve of an emergency five-day holiday.

    Joan Manuel Baliellas / AFP - Getty Images

    Pedestrians walk past a flood protection barrier made of sandbags in the financial district of Bangkok on October 26, 2011.

    Chaiwat Subprasom / Reuters

    A woman rests after being evacuated to a shelter set up at the Sports Science Centre in Bangkok from an area affected by the floods October 26, 2011.

    More evacuations took place as the water continued to rise. Downtown Bangkok was filled with sandbags awaiting the rising water. The mayor warned the flooding could last up to a month.  Full story.

  • Camera shootout: iPhone 4S, iPhone 4 and HTC Amaze

    John Brecher / msnbc.com

    Daylight on a cloudy day as shot by Canon G10, HTC Amaze, iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S.

    By John Brecher

    As part of a joint product test with msnbc.com's Gadgetbox blog, I tested three cellphone cameras: iPhone 4S, iPhone 4, and HTC Amaze, a phone marketed for its photographic capabilities. 

    For comparison, I shot the same stuffed animals in four lighting situations: 

    • Daylight (cloudy)
    • Indoor fluorescent lights
    • Very dim LED lamp (exposure f/2.8 at 1/2.5 second, ISO 400)
    • Built-in flash

    I included a Canon G10 in the mix, because while we definitely want to know what the best phone camera is, the ultimate question is whether a phone can replace a good point-and-shoot camera.

    A few easy conclusions: Overall, the iPhone 4S is decidedly better than the iPhone 4. In low light, both old and new iPhones are better than the HTC Amaze.

    In terms of image quality, the iPhone 4S looks almost as good as the G10 in all but very low light conditions. Some of this is subjective — you may or may not prefer the iPhone's color saturation, for example.

    As someone who's ruined plenty of shots by blowing out the highlights, I can say that the iPhone's smaller sensor does hinder it in some ways. Look for the abrupt transition from detailed to blown-out highlights on the 4S and iPhone 4 shots, compared to the far smoother highlight handling of the G10. 

    There's more to a camera, though, than the image quality it produces. It's also a matter of handling. It's great that iPhones running iOS5 let you use the volume key as a shutter button. HTC's Amaze also has a hard button. Tapping a touchscreen interface can introduce more camera shake.

    Also, If you do want to override automatic white balance and exposure, a dedicated camera is the easiest and best tool. There are apps and tweaks for iPhone and other phones, but it involves a lot of tap-dancing with your fingers. And if you're trying to shoot lots of images in rapid succession, it's faster to use a real camera.

    Still, the iPhone 4S comes the closest to putting run-of-the-mill point-and-shoots out of business. Your dedicated camera had better be high performance, like the Canon PowerShot S100, or somehow qualitatively different, to make it worth carrying along. 

    As for the test pictures, you can see our daylight comparative results above and the rest below. There's no HDR and no use of post-processing in Photoshop other than resizing. All cameras were shot on auto for white balance, exposure and focus. 

    John Brecher / msnbc.com

    Daylight on a cloudy day as shot by Canon G10, HTC Amaze, iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S.

    John Brecher / msnbc.com

    Overhead fluorescent lights indoors as shot by Canon G10, HTC Amaze, iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S.

    John Brecher / msnbc.com

    Overhead fluorescent lights indoors as shot by Canon G10, HTC Amaze, iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S.

    John Brecher / msnbc.com

    Built-in flash indoors as shot by Canon G10, HTC Amaze, iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S.

    John Brecher / msnbc.com

    Built-in flash indoors as shot by Canon G10, HTC Amaze, iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S.

    John Brecher / msnbc.com

    Very dim indoor light as shot by Canon G10, HTC Amaze, iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S. Exposure was f/2.8 at 1/2.5 second at ISO 400 on Canon G10.

    John Brecher / msnbc.com

    Very dim indoor light as shot by Canon G10, HTC Amaze, iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S. Exposure was f/2.8 at 1/2.5 second at ISO 400 on Canon G10.

    John Brecher has been a professional photographer for 15 years, and has shot for msnbc.com for the last five.

  • Giuseppe Lami / Ansa via Reuters

    Claudio Barbato, left, a member of the opposition FLI party, fights with Fabio Ranieri. right, from the Northern League in Parliament in Rome October 26, 2011. The Italian deputies exchanged blows in parliament on Wednesday as tensions over a tough economic reform program came to a head.

    Tensions over economic reform lead to blows at Parliament in Rome

    You don't see this every day.

    Reuters reports:

    At least two deputies from the Northern League, a member of the ruling center-right coalition, fought with members from the opposition FLI party of speaker Gianfranco Fini. Two deputies grabbed each other by the throat as other parliamentarians rushed to separate them.

    The parliamentary sitting was suspended for several minutes after the fight, which broke out because of sarcastic remarks on television by Fini alleging that the wife of League leader Umberto Bossi had retired at 39.

    Bossi has steadfastly refused to make more than slight concessions to Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi on the League's objections to changing Italy's generous pension system as part of reforms demanded by European leaders.

    "There is a climate of violence and intolerance," said Amedeo Ciccanti from the centrist UDC party. "We need to calm down because Italians are more irritated than us about this." Full story.

    According to the Washington Post a deal was reached.

    Pressed hard by the EU, Premier Silvio Berlusconi averted a government collapse and reached a deal with allies on emergency growth measures in time for an EU summit on saving the euro.

    Berlusconi and Northern League leader Umberto Bossi reached a compromise on raising Italy’s retirement age in late-night parliament talks Tuesday. Continue reading...

  • Occupy Atlanta protesters removed from their encampment

    David Goldman / AP

    Protestors link arms across Peachtree Street as police move in to make arrests after Mayor Kasim Reed revoked his executive order allowing the protestors to camp out in Woodruff Park early Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2011 in Atlanta.

    David Goldman / AP

    Protestors yell as police move in to arrest those refusing to leave after Mayor Kasim Reed revoked his executive order allowing the Occupy Atlanta protestors to camp out in Woodruff Park Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2011 in Atlanta.

    David Goldman / AP

    A protestor of the Occupy Atlanta demonstration is arrested after refusing to leave Woodruff Park early Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2011 in Atlanta.

    About 50 protesters were arrested after refusing to leave Woodruff Park in Atlanta.  Full story.

  • Cricket fighting a popular pastime in China

    Today's weird sport is cricket fighting. ChinaCulture.org explains the long history of this Chinese tradition

    Liu Jin / AFP - Getty Images

    Enthusiasts watch a cricket fight during a competition in Beijing. Cricket fighting, a Chinese tradition dating back more than a thousand years to imperial times, remains a popular pastime for many men who gather every autumn to watch their insects fight in specially designed glass enclosures.

    Liu Jin / AFP - Getty Images

    Two crickets fight during a competition in Beijing.

     

     

  • Orange County Fire Authority via AP

    Officials and rescue personnel gather around a man who became stuck in a tree Tuesday Oct. 25 in Laguna Hills, Calif. Orange County deputies found the man stuck up to his chest inside a narrow hole in the trunk, which extended about four or five feet underground.

    Deputies free man stuck inside hollow tree trunk

    I'm sure he has some perfectly reasonable explanation for his predicament.

    AP reports:

    LAGUNA HILLS, Calif. — Authorities in Southern California say they rescued a man stuck inside a hollow tree trunk by following the sounds of his screams down into a creek bed.

    The Orange County Register reports that Orange County sheriff's deputies found the man stuck up to his chest inside a narrow hole in the trunk, which extended about four or five feet underground.

    The newspaper says firefighters took about 90 minutes to free him once they found him Tuesday morning.

  • B&W Pantex via Reuters

    Workers examine a B53 nuclear bomb at the B&W Pantex nuclear weapons storage facility outside Amarillo, Texas, in this handout photograph taken and released on October 25, 2011. The United States dismantled the oldest nuclear bomb in its Cold War arsenal -- and one of the most powerful it ever built -- on Tuesday as part of President Barack Obama's nuclear security policy. Built at the height of the Cold War in 1962, the bomb was designed to be dropped onto a target by a massive B-52 Stratofortress strategic bomber.

    Most powerful US nuclear bomb dismantled

    Full story.

  • Dylan Armstrong sets shotput record at Pan American Games

    Can you think of a better name for a shot putter?

    Previous PhotoBlog posts on the games.

    Julie Jacobson / AP

    Canada's Dylan Armstrong competes during the shot put at the Pan American Games in Guadalajara, Mexico, Tuesday, Oct. 25. Amstrong won the gold medal and set a new Pan American record with 21.30m.

    Julie Jacobson / AP

    Noah Bryant, of the United States, applies chock on his neck during the shot put competition at the Pan American Games in Guadalajara, Mexico, Tuesday, Oct. 25.

    Mike Ehrmann / Getty Images

    Lerone Clarke of Jamaica reacts after winning the gold medal in the men's 100m final during Day 11 of the XVI Pan American Games at Telmex Stadium on October 25 in Guadalajara, Mexico.

    Al Bello / Getty Images

    Christopher Devon Brown of the Bahamas leaves the starting block to compete in the men's 400m semifinal during Day 11 of the XVI Pan American Games at Telmex Stadium on October 25 in Guadalajara, Mexico.

    Henry Romero / Reuters

    Cuban left fielder Alfredo Despaigne breaks his bat during the bronze medal baseball game against Mexico at the Pan American Games in Lagos De Moreno, Jalisco October 25.

     

     

  • Twin-balloon airship hits high frontier

    JP Aerospace

    A camera on the remote-controlled Tandem airship captures the view from almost 100,000 feet up.

    An unmanned twin-balloon airship rose to nearly 100,000 feet over the weekend — marking the latest milestone for an all-volunteer group that's aiming to send balloon-borne payloads into space.

    "The big aerospace firms have been trying to do this for decades, spending hundreds of millions of dollars," John Powell, president of California-based JP Aerospace, said today in a news release. "We've spent about $30,000 and the past five years developing Tandem."


    The remote-controlled Tandem airship was launched from Nevada's Black Rock Desert on Saturday, rose through extreme turbulence at an altitude of 40,000 to 60,000 feet, and reached the 95,085-foot mark, Powell said. A pilot on the ground used remote control to turn on two electric-powered, 6-foot-long propellers and guide the craft through a series of maneuvers. At the end of the mission, one of the balloons burst and the other balloon was released. Tandem descended to a soft landing, eased down by a row of five parachutes, Powell said.

    Research balloons have risen to heights in excess of 135,000 feet (42 kilometers), but JP Aerospace claims that Tandem set an altitude record for a powered, steerable airship. "The highest before ours was the Army's sounder / HiSentinel, that went to 74,000 feet a few years ago," Powell told me in an email.

    The entire Tandem craft weighed 80 pounds, with the balloons accounting for 20 pounds of that weight.

    Powell said Tandem is being developed as a "high-altitude backhoe" that can be used as a launch platform for small research rockets, a mothership for hypersonic craft, a construction platform for high-altitude research stations and a precursor for JP Aerospace's "Airship to Orbit" program.

    JP Aerospace

    The Tandem airship has two balloons that are separated by a 30-foot-long carbon-fiber truss. The 6-foot-long propellers are designed to work in the thin atmosphere at an altitude of 20 miles.

    More about balloons and near space:


    Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding me to your Google+ circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

  • Old machines preserved at "birthplace of the Internet" at UCLA

    Kleinrock Internet Heritage Site and Archive via Reuters

    UCLA computer scientists are pictured in the birthplace of the Internet at the original location of the first ARPANET node, at 3420 Boelter Hall in UCLA in this undated photograph provided by UCLA. UCLA professor Leonard Kleinrock and his team used the Interface Message Processor, IMP, the packet-switching node used to interconnect participant networks to the ARPANET to send the first message, the letters LO to Standford Research Institute on October 29, 1969. The UCLA Department of Computer Science and Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science have collaborated in creating the Kleinrock Internet Heritage Site and Archive (KIHSA) with the center recreating the lab at its original site in 3420 Boelter Hall, moving the IMP back to the room from which that first message was sent.The recreated lab will open October 29 with a reunion of the computer scientists responsible for the first message.

    Fred Prouser / Reuters

    UCLA's Interface Message Processor (IMP) (R) is pictured in the birthplace of the Internet, at 3420 Boelter Hall, the original location of the first ARPANET node at UCLA in Los Angeles, California June 2, 2011. UCLA professor Leonard Kleinrock and his team used the IMP, the packet-switching node used to interconnect participant networks to the ARPANET to send the first message, the letters LO to Stanford Research Institute on October 29, 1969.

    Fred Prouser / Reuters

    A teletype similar to one used to communicate with the Sigma 7 computer which was connected to UCLA's Interface Message Processor (IMP) in the birthplace of the Internet, at 3420 Boelter Hall, the original location of the first ARPANET node at UCLA in Los Angeles, California May 3, 2011.

    Fred Prouser / Reuters

    Distinguished Professor of Computer Science at UCLA Leonard Kleinrock is seen in the birthplace of the Internet, at 3420 Boelter Hall in UCLA, July 27, 2011. Kleinrock developed the mathematical theory of packet networks, the technology underpinning the Internet which was used in the transmission of the first message, the letters LO, to Stanford Research Institute on October 29, 1969.

    Read more about the "birthplace of the Internet" and Leonard Kleinrock.

  • Elizabeth Ruiz / EPA

    A couple rests at a beach in Cancun, Mexico, 25 October 2011. Tropical storm Rina powered up to hurricane speed 25 October as it headed toward the Mexican east coast resort cities of Cozumel and Cancun, carrying wind blasts of 160 km per hour.

    Heavy clouds in the sky above Mexico's coast as Hurricane Rina approaches

    Mexican authorities set up emergency shelters and cruise ships shifted course on Tuesday as Hurricane Rina strengthened off the Caribbean coast on a projected track that would carry it whirling through Cancun and the resort-filled Mayan Riviera, Mexico's most popular tourist destination.

    Rina's maximum sustained winds have increased to 105 mph (165 kph), said the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami, making it a Category 2 storm. Forecasters predict it will strengthen as it nears the Mexican coast Wednesday night before rolling over the island of Cozumel, a popular dive spot and cruise-ship port, then along the coast to Cancun.

    The area, dotted with Mayan ruins, also includes Playa del Carmen, another popular spot for international tourists.

    Read more...

  • Six years and $700 million later, the Bolshoi Theater is set to open

    Maxim Shipenkov / EPA

    A view of the main hall of the renovated Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow, Russia, Oct. 8 The reconstruction and restoration works of the Bolshoi Theatre took six years; the Grand Opening is scheduled for Oct. 28.

    Anton Golubev / Reuters

    The foyer of Moscow's Bolshoi theatre Oct. 24.

    Maxim Shipenkov / EPA

    The main hall of the renovated Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow, Oct.8.

    Natalia Kolesnikova / AFP - Getty Images

    The so-called 'Czar's Box' in the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow, on Oct. 8. The restored Moscow landmark built in the 1820s is due to reopen on October 28.

    Anton Golubev / Reuters

    Visitors walk in the newly refurbished foyer of Moscow's Bolshoi theatre Oct. 24. Moscow's historic theatre is set to reopen with a gala performance on Friday after six years of closure for renovation.

    Natalia Kolesnikova / AFP - Getty Images

    People take photos in front of the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow, on Sep. 27.

    I went to this theater once before the refurbishing and I thought it was beautiful then. I can't imagine how exciting it must be for Moscow residents to see this wonderful place restored and reopened after such a long time. The theater, home of the famous Bolshoi Ballet, has survived three fires,  bombing during WWII and at one time was set over an underground river. Full story.

    More facts about the theater.

  • Tunisians protest first election results

    Zacarias Garcia / EPA

    Tunisians shout slogans during a demonstration aganist what they call 'an election fraud' in front of the press center in Tunis, October 25, 2011.

    Zohra Bensemra / Reuters

    A demonstrator holds a banner during a protest against the Islamist Ennahda movement in Tunis October 25, 2011. Tunisia's moderate Islamist party was preparing to lead a coalition government Tuesday after its election win sent a message to the region that once-banned Islamists are challenging for power after the "Arab Spring." With election officials still counting ballots from Sunday's vote -- the first since the uprisings which began in Tunisia and spread through the region -- the Ennahda party said its own tally showed it won and several of its biggest rivals conceded defeat.

    Full story on the election results in Tunisia.

    Reuters analysis: Democracy can work for Arab Islamists

  • Matt Dunham / Pool via AP

    Cranes stand beside the Indian-born British artist Anish Kapoor's 'Orbit' tower, left, beside the main 2012 Olympic stadium as the Canary Wharf business district is seen, background, from the balcony of a structurally completed apartment at the Olympic Village in the Olympic Park in east London, Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2011. So far 2,300 apartments at the Olympic Village have been completed and the final number will be 2,818.

    Anish Kapoor's 'Orbit' tower nears completion in London

    .

  • 7 billion people tax the world's environment

    David Gray / Reuters

    A garbage collector walks atop a massive pile of garbage at the Bloemendhal dump in central Colombo, Sri Lanka, on April 23, 2009.

    Will the sheer scale of 7 billion people living on the planet doom human existence to extinction?

    Not likely, many scientists say, but they do worry about how many people a disturbed and soiled Earth will support.

    The United Nations Population Fund predicts not only that the planet’s population will reach 7 billion by Oct. 31, but another billion will be here by 2025, and the total will reach 10 billion before the end of the century.

    China Daily via Reuters

    A worker cleans away dead fish at a lake in Wuhan, central China's Hubei province, on July 11, 2007. More than 110,000 pounds of fish died due to pollution and hot weather, local media reported.

    Beawiharta Beawiharta / Reuters

    Deforestation is evident on Indonesia's Sumatra island on Aug. 5, 2010. Indonesia, like Brazil, is on the front line of efforts to curb deforestation, a major contributor to mankind's greenhouse gas emissions that scientists blame for heating up the planet.

    All those people will need water, food, clothing, shelter, energy – all of which take resources to create or distribute and which can foul the environment as they’re processed and used up.

    In 1798, when the world’s population was close to 1 billion, British-born economist Thomas Malthus wrote, "The power of population is so superior to the power of the Earth to produce subsistence for man, that premature death must in some shape or other visit the human race."

    Malthus did not take into account the then-coming industrial age and people’s inventions and ingenuity that meant more efficient use of Earth’s resources. However, population growth could be catching up to problems it creates.

    Reinhard Krause / Reuters

    Cars jam a Beijing road on Jan. 15, 2008. More than 400,000 new cars, or more than 1,000 a day, hit the roads in China's capital in 2006, state media said.

    Asahi Shimbun / Reuters

    Medical staff use a Geiger counter to screen a woman for possible radiation exposure at a public welfare center in Hitachi City, Japan, on March 16, 2011. The woman tested negative for radiation exposure after she was evacuated from an area within 12.4 miles of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, which leaked radiation when it was badly damaged by a massive earthquake and tsunami on March 11.

    Modern scientists warn that the Earth’s climate is warming and access to clean water is dwindling. Oil spills contaminate beaches and oceans; poisons leach from dumped waste into soil and water; the burning of fossil fuels pumps more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than it can absorb.

    New energy sources will be needed as known sources of fossil fuels are depleted or remain locked away.

    Reuters

    A man works at the site of a rare earth metals mine at Nancheng county, China, on Oct. 20, 2010. China reportedly produced 118,900 metric tons of rare earth in 2010, well above the 89,200 metric ton official production quota. The production figure exceeded 96 percent of global output, The Wall Street Journal reported .

    Pawel Kopczynski / Reuters

    Steam emerges from the cooling towers of Vattenfall's Jaenschwalde brown coal power station near Cottbus, Germany, on Dec. 2, 2009.

    "Hunger and poverty are challenges we all face together - we must act now," said Pierre Ferrari, president of Heifer International, which provides cows, goats, water buffalo and other livestock to thousands of people in more than 50 countries. The charity focuses on helping the poor become self-sufficient and urges the people it helps to go on to train others.

    "Our global agricultural system can feed 7 billion people today," Ferrari said. "It is a matter of equity and distribution."

    "The real issue to be faced is the next 30 years when another 2 billion people will be with us," he said. "It is forecasted that the global food supply will need to double to meet the needs of the global population.  The small holder farmer (650 million of them) produces 70 percent of the world food today."

    Heifer is an example of a non-government organization that works to improve agricultural productivity.

    But will such efforts be enough?

    "The constraints of the biosphere are fixed," Harvard University sociobiologist Edward O. Wilson wrote in his 2002 book, "The Future of Life."

    As reported by Life’s Little Mysteries, Wilson predicted the Earth’s resources could be stretched to support a population of 10 billion, just about where UN population estimators say growth will level out by the end of the century.

    - msnbc.com editors Natalia Jimenez and Jim Gold, with wire service reports.

    See more posts and images related to the seven billion population milestone

    Michael B. Watkins/U.S. Navy via Reuters

    Oil is seen on the surface of the Gulf of Mexico in an aerial view of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill off the coast of Mobile, Alabama, on May 6, 2010.

  • Thailand calls holiday to allow escape from floods

    It's not your typical vacation. Reuters reports Thailand has announced a five-day holiday, making way for people to escape rising floodwaters near Bangkok.

    Thialand's prime minister warned that Bangkok could be flooded with nearly five feet of water if flood barrier walls are compromised.

    Reuters

    A Thai army helicopter drops food to people isolated by floods in the province of Ayutthaya near Bangkok on Oct. 25. Thailand is experiencing the worst flooding in 50 years.

    Christophe Archambault / AFP - Getty Images

    A gas station employee talks on her mobile phone as she sits in a plastic container amid floodwaters near the Chao Phraya river after an embankment ruptured overnight, flooding another area in central Bangkok on Oct. 25.

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters

    People commute on a flooded highway in a suburb in Bangkok on Tuesday, Oct. 25.

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    A Thai Dhammakaya monk takes a rest from working to fortify the flood wall as he looks over the rising floodwaters at Khlong Rapi Pat on Oct. 25, on the outskirts of Bangkok, Thailand. The flood gate is one of the most critical of the last fortifications preventing flood waters from the North to flow into Bangkok. Around 350 people have died in flood-related incidents since late July according to the Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation.

     

  • Protesters fired upon in Yemen

    Hani Mohammed / AP

    A Yemeni wounded protestor is carried from the site of clashes with security forces in Sanaa, Yemen, Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2011.

    Marwan Naamani / AFP - Getty Images

    A 14-year-old wounded Yemeni pro-reform protester is treated at a makeshift hospital near Sanaa's landmark Change Saqure on October 25, 2011, after government troops opened fired on tens of thousands of protesters.

    Latest reports are that at least two were killed when pro-government forces fired upon thousands of protesters in Sanaa near Change Square. Full story

Jump to October 2011 archive page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 ... 18