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  • Chinese fighter planes bomb frozen river

    ChinaFotoPress via Getty Images

    A fighter plane drops bombs to break up ice floating at the Ordos section of the Yellow River on March 22 in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region of China. As the temperature picked up in early March, 225 kilometers of the frozen section of the Yellow River in Ningxia partly thawed and started to flow downstream towards Inner Mongolia. Workers are busy breaking up the ice so it will not block approaching ice runs and lead to flooding.

    ChinaFotoPress via Getty Images

    A section of the Yellow River which flows through Ordos is seen on March 22 in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region of China.

    I've seen several examples in the last couple of months of military hardware being used to affect weather conditions. Take a look back at these recent posts about Russian forces shelling a snow-covered mountain to prevent avalanches and the Chinese military firing an anti-aircraft gun at clouds to ease drought conditions.

  • Go Takayama / AFP - Getty Images

    17-year-old evacuee Shoko Igarashi hugs her dog, who will have to be looked after by friends while Shoko goes into a shelter in Koriyama, 60km west of the Fukushima nuclear power plant, on March 23.

    Japanese evacuee and her dog to be parted

    Let's hope that Shoko and her dog will not be separated for long, and that they will eventually be able to return home.

    Follow the latest developments in Japan and see more images in our slideshow.

    Find out how you can help victims of the Japanese quake.

  • Stickwork by artist Patrick Dougherty

    Brent Drinkut / AP

    Stephanie Straight, a freshman at St. Joseph's College, works on a natural materials sculpture by artist Patrick Dougherty in front of Pao Hall at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind. Tuesday, March 22, 2011.

    North Carolina-based artist Patrick Dougherty has gained an international reputation for his natural-wood structures and has created hundreds of monumental, site-specific sculptures around the world. His work is constructed from saplings gathered from local sources and shaped into massive, swirling forms as high as 40 feet. In his work, Dougherty combines his carpentry skills with his love for nature. In the early 1980s he began incorporating primitive techniques of building and experimenting with tree saplings as construction material.

    You can see more installations by Dougherty from his website.

  • Skill demonstrations by Saudi special forces during graduation ceremony

    Fahad Shadeed / Reuters

    A Saudi special forces soldier dressed in camouflage takes part in a skill demonstration before a graduation ceremony near Riyadh March 22, 2011.

    Fahad Shadeed / Reuters

    Saudi special forces soldiers smash a concrete block placed on the chest of a fellow soldier during a skill demonstration before their graduation ceremony near Riyadh March 22, 2011.

    Fayez Nureldine / AFP - Getty Images

    Saudi special forces members of an anti-terror unit display their skills on March 22, 2011 in the Dorma region, 100 kms west of the capital of Riyadh.

     

  • Colombian police seize more than $2.5 million in counterfeit bills

    Luis Robayo / AFP - Getty Images

    A Colombian police officer holds a 100 US dollar counterfeit bill, on March 22, in Cali, department of Valle del Cauca, Colombia. The National Police seized 2,560,000 dollars in counterfeit notes.

    Luis Robayo / AFP - Getty Images

    A Colombian police officer holds forged 100 US dollar bills, on March 22.

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  • Water use photographed around the globe for World Water Day

     

    Henry Romero / Reuters

    A worker fills tanks with water outside homes,on the outskirts of Mexico City March 22, 2011. The United Nations' (U.N.) World Water Day is held on March 22 every year to increase people's awareness of water's importance in environment, agriculture, health and trade.

    Anindito Mukherjee / EPA

    An Indian boy rows his makeshift raft over the polluted water of River Yamuna in New Delhi, India, on March 12. Yamuna is one of the most polluted rivers in the world, especially around Delhi, which dumps about 57 per cent of its waste into the river according to media reports. The official United Nations statement for World Water Day reads: This year, UN-Water chose the theme Water and Urbanization under the slogan Water for Cities: Responding to the Urban Challenge. The objective of WWD 2011 is to focus international attention on the impact of rapid urban population growth, industrialization and uncertainties caused by climate change, conflicts and natural disasters on urban water systems.

    Noah Seelam AFP - Getty Images

    A woman carries a jar of potable water, collected from a government water supply tanker, at a residential colony in Hyderabad on March 22.

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    A Nepalese worker digs around 30 feet under ground while making a well for water source in Kathmandu, Nepal, on March 15.

    Mast Irham/ EPA

    An Indonesian worker takes garbage out of a polluted river in Jakarta, Indonesia.

    Pervez Masih / AP

    Pakistani women villagers leave their homes in search of water in the suburbs of Hyderabad, Pakistan on Tuesday, March 22.

    David Gray / Reuters

    A man fills a container with water from a make-shift tap located next to a construction site and polluted canal in Beijing on March 22. China is now the world's second largest economy, but hundreds of millions of its people still rely on fouled water that will cost billions of dollars to clean. Growing cities, overuse of fertilizers, and factories that heedlessly dump wastewater have degraded China's water supplies to the extent that half the nation's rivers and lakes are severely polluted.

     

  • Demonstrators gather on the steps of the Alabama Statehouse to call for closure of intellectual disability center

    Dave Martin / AP

    Demonstrators representing the group People First gather on the steps of the Alabama Statehouse in Montgomery, Ala., Tuesday, March 22, 2011. The group held a rally calling for the closure of the the W.D. Partlow Developmental Center in Tuscaloosa, a state residential facility for people with intellectual disabilities.

    Here's a story about the potential closure of this facility.

  • Panoramic image: Schools become makeshift relief centers in tsunami damaged Minamisanriku, Japan

    The producers making these panoramic images for PhotoBlog have decided to begin covering relief efforts in Japan. I understand their decision. At some point the destruction is overwhelming, and you want to pay more attention to the survivors and those who are helping.

    I’m struck by the smiling faces of the children in this image. I think kids are stronger than we give them credit for.

    In tsunami-stricken Minamisanriku, where more than 8,000 people are still missing, many survivors have taken refuge in school gymnasiums. This panoramic shows the conditions in Shizugawa Elementary school on March 19, 2011. There is a sense of safety, but many basic needs are still not being met. (Koki Uemura / Sankei Shimbun / MSN Japan)

    Stephen Morrison / EPA

    Sugawara Haruto, center, plays with other children at Sezugawa Secondary School, which has been set up as an evacuation center and is now home to more than 280 people, in Minamisanriku.

    KYODO / Reuters

    An "SOS" signal is written on the sports field of a high school after the magnitude 9.0 earthquake and tsunami struck Minamisanriku.

    See more panoramic images from the disaster in Japan.

    See ongoing coverage of the disaster in Japan in PhotoBlog and in our slideshow.

  • Penguins coated in oil after tanker runs aground

    Trevor Glass / AP

    Oil coats rock hopper penguins on the island chain of Tristan da Cunha. Thousands of the endangered penguins have been covered in oil after a cargo ship ran aground and broke up on a remote British South Atlantic territory, officials and conservationists said Tuesday. The shipwreck also threatens lobster fisheries.

    LONDON (AP)— Thousands of endangered penguins have been coated with oil after a cargo ship ran aground and broke up on a remote British South Atlantic territory, officials and conservationists said Tuesday.

    The shipwreck also threatens the lobster fishery that provides a livelihood to one of the world's most isolated communities.

    The Malta-registered MS Olivia was grounded on Nightingale Island in the Tristan da Cunha chain last week. The ship had been traveling from Brazil to Singapore and contained 1,500 metric tons (1,650 tons) of crude oil and a cargo of 60,000 metric tons (66,000 tons) of soya beans.

    The ship's 22 crew members were rescued before it broke in two.

    Trevor Glass / AP

    The Malta-registered MS Olivia rests where she grounded on Nightingale Island in the Tristan da Cunha chain in the south Atlantic Ocean. The ship was traveling from Brazil to Singapore and contained 1,650 tons of crude oil.

    Tristan da Cunha's conservation officer, Trevor Glass, said oil was encircling Nightingale Island and called the situation "a disaster."

    The territory's British administrator, Sean Burns, said more than half of about 500 birds gathered by rescue workers had been coated in oil. An environmentalist at the scene estimated that 20,000 penguins might be affected.

    Tristan da Cunha is home to some 200,000 penguins, including almost half the world's total of northern rockhopper penguins. The bird is classed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources.

    Located midway between Africa and South America — more than 2,800 kilometers (1,700 miles) from the nearest land — Tristan da Cunha is home to about 275 people who rely on rock lobster fishing for their livelihood.

    Burns said he had temporarily closed the area around Nightingale and nearby Inaccessible Island to fishing.

    "We are concerned about the potential impact (the spill) may have on the spawning grounds," Burns said. "The lobster fishery is what Tristan depends on. The revenue keeps this island afloat."

    Richard Cuthbert, a research biologist with Britain's Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, said the wreck was "potentially disastrous for wildlife and the fishery-based economy of these remote islands."

    He said that alongside the threat to penguins and sea life, there was a risk rats from the ship could come ashore and eat the chicks and eggs of native seabirds.

    "Nightingale is one of two large islands in the Tristan da Cunha group that are rodent-free," Cuthbert said. "If rats gain a foothold, their impact would be devastating.

    The islands' remoteness was complicating clean-up efforts. Tristan da Cunha is usually accessible only by boats that sail nine times a year from Cape Town. Nightingale Island has no fresh water, so the penguins will have to be transported to the main island for cleaning.

    A salvage tug from South Africa carrying a seabird specialist arrived in Tristan da Cunha on Monday and was assessing the environmental damage.

    Officials said they hoped to bring another vessel carrying a penguin-cleaning team from Cape Town to the islands.

    The British government said it was very concerned about the situation, but said it was too early to know what the economic and environmental damage to the islands would be.

     

     

  • Erosion and toxins from farm runoff leaves the Salton Sea in California contaminated and abandoned

    Jim Lo Scalzo / EPA

    A dead oak tree glows under a full moon in a salt pan on the southern end of the Salton Sea near Niland, California, USA, Jan. 20. Erosion and high toxicity levels from farm runoff has left the Salton Sea increasingly contaminated, and lake-side towns all but deserted.

    Jim Lo Scalzo / EPA

    An abandoned building sits in a salt pan near Bombay Beach, California, on January 20. Erosion and high toxicity levels from farm runoff has left the nearby Salton Sea increasingly contaminated, and lake-side towns like this one all but deserted.

    Jim Lo Scalzo / EPA

    The trunks of dying palm trees rise from from the shores of Salton Sea Beach, California, on Jan.19. Erosion and high toxicity levels from farm runoff has left the Salton Sea increasingly contaminated, and lake-side towns like this one all but deserted.

    Jim Lo Scalzo / EPA

    Dead tilapia float in the Salton Sea near Salton Sea Beach, California, in January 2011. Erosion and high toxicity levels from farm runoff has left the Salton Sea increasingly contaminated, causing massive fish die-offs, and lake-side towns to become all but deserted.

    While these images were taken in January by photographer Jim Lo Scalzo we're seeing them now for the first time:

    From the European Pressphoto Agency:

    Deep in the desert of southern California sits one of the worst environmental sites in America, a former tourist destination that has turned into a toxic soup: the Salton Sea.

    The sea was born by accident 100 years ago, when the Colorado River breached an irrigation canal; for the next two years the entire volume of the river flowed into the Salton Sink, one of the lowest places on Earth. The new lake became a major tourist attraction, with resort towns springing up along its shores. Yet with no outflow, and with agricultural runoff serving as its only inflow, the sea’s waters grew increasingly toxic. Farm chemicals and ever-increasing salinity caused massive fish and bird die-offs. Use of the sea for recreational activities plummeted, and by the 1980s its tourist towns were all but abandoned.

    The skeletons of these structures are still there; ghost towns encrusted in salt. California officials acknowledge that if billions of dollars are not spent to save it, the sea could shrink another 60 percent in the next 20 years, exposing soil contaminated with arsenic and other cancerous chemicals to strong winds. Should that dust become airborne, it would blow across much of southern California, creating an environmental calamity.

  • US fighter jet crashes in eastern Libya

    A U.S. military jet crashed in Libya after an equipment malfunction but its two crew members ejected and are safe and back in American hands, the U.S. military said Tuesday.

    Suhaib Salem / Reuters

    People look at a U.S. Air Force F-15E fighter jet on Tuesday, March 22, after it crashed on Monday night near the eastern city of Benghazi, Libya. The jet crashed after an apparent mechanical failure but its crew were safe, a spokesman for the U.S. military Africa Command said on Tuesday.

    Both crew members used parachutes to eject from the F-15E Strike Eagle jet at high altitudes and sustained minor injuries, Vince Crawley, a spokesman for the Africa Command, told The Associated Press.

    The airmen were separated because they ended up in different areas, he said, adding that the crash was likely caused by mechanical failure and not hostile fire.

    Suhaib Salem / Reuters

    The wreckage of a U.S. Air Force F-15E fighter jet on March 22. It crashed near the eastern city of Benghazi on March 21.

    Continue reading or view more images from Libya in our slideshow.

  • The royal carriage awaits

    Dominic Lipinski / EPA

    Carriage Restorer Dave Evans cleans the 1902 State Landau carriage at the Royal Mews in central London, UK on March 21. The coach will be used to carry Prince William and Kate Middleton on their wedding day, 29 April, as long as the weather is good.

    After their wedding ceremony on April 29, Kate Middleton and Prince William will ride in an open-topped 1902 State Landau horse-drawn carriage for the procession back to Buckingham Palace, unless inclement weather leads them to use the famed "Glass Coach," which has a fixed roof to keep rain at bay.

    The 1902 State Landau, housed at the Royal Mews near Buckingham Palace, was built for King Edward VII for use at his coronation. It is typically used by the queen to meet foreign heads of state on official visits to Britain. Prince Charles used it to travel to St. Paul's Cathedral for his 1981 wedding, leaving the cathedral with Princess Diana.

    Read more about the wedding plans or watch Michelle Kosinski's special report for NBC's TODAY:

    Though Kate Middleton is breaking tradition by arriving in a car to her nuptials, she and her royal husband will be shown off like jewels in a post-wedding carriage ride to the reception. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.

  • Libya's rebel youth: a ragtag, highly enthusiastic but highly undisciplined force

    Ryan Lucas of AP reports from Zwitina, Libya: Coalition forces bombarded Libya for a third straight night Monday, targeting the air defenses and forces of Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi, stopping his advances and handing some momentum back to the rebels, who were on the verge of defeat just last week.

    But the rebellion's more organized military units were still not ready, and the opposition disarray underscored U.S. warnings that a long stalemate could emerge.

    Anja Niedringhaus / AP

    Libyan rebels retreat as mortars from Moammar Gadhafi's forces are fired on them on the frontline of the outskirts of the city of Ajdabiya on March 22.

    Finbarr O'Reilly / Reuters

    Ismail, 18, a high school student who has joined the Libyan rebellion, poses for a portrait in a burned out building of a military base in the rebel headquarters of Benghazi on March 14.

    Among the rebels, as well, there was a realization that fighting could be drawn out. Mohammed Abdul-Mullah, a 38-year-old civil engineer from Benghazi who was fighting with the rebel force, said government troops stopped all resistance after the international campaign began.

    "The balance has changed a lot," he said. "But pro-Gadhafi forces are still strong. They are a professional military and they have good equipment. Ninety percent of us rebels are civilians, while Gadhafi's people are professional fighters."

    Finbarr O'Reilly / Reuters

    A rebel fighter carries his weapon outside the northeastern Libyan town of Ajdabiyah on March 21.

    Finbarr O'Reilly / Reuters

    Mohammed, 18, a high school student who has joined the Libyan rebellion, poses for a portrait in a burned out building of a military base in the rebel headquarters of Benghazi on March 14. Countless young Libyan males have quit school or work to join the ranks of rebels fighting Moammar Gadhafi's 42-year rule.

    Disorganization among the rebels could also hamper their attempts to exploit the turn of events. Since the uprising began, the opposition has been made up of disparate groups even as it took control of the entire east of the country.

    Regular citizens — residents of the "liberated" areas — took up arms and formed a ragtag, highly enthusiastic but highly undisciplined force that in the past weeks has charged ahead to fight Gadhafi forces, only to be beaten back by superior firepower. Regular army units that joined the rebellion have proven stronger, more organized fighters, but only a few units have joined the battles while many have stayed behind as officers struggle to get together often antiquated, limited equipment and form a coordinated force.

    Finbarr O'Reilly / Reuters

    Rebel fighters rest outside the northeastern Libyan town of Ajdabiyah on March 21. A wave of air strikes on Monday hit Gadhafi's troops around Ajdabiyah, a strategic town in the barren, scrub of eastern Libya that rebels aim to retake and where their fighters said they need more help to take the battle to the enemy.

    Continue reading and view more images in our slideshow.

  • Earthquake and tsunami-destroyed town held graduation ceremony for junior high

    Hiroto Nomoto / AP

    A graduation ceremony is held at gym turned shelter at a junior high school in the March 11 earthquake and tsunami-destroyed town of Otsuchi, northern Japan Tuesday, March 22, 2011.

    Tetsuya Kikumasa / AP

    Students react as a guest speaker delivers message at the graduation ceremony in the March 11 earthquake and tsunami-destroyed town of Yamada, northern Japan Tuesday, March 22, 2011.

    Tetsuya Kikumasa / AP

    Students react as they receive a certificate at the graduation ceremony in the March 11 earthquake and tsunami-destroyed town of Yamada, northern Japan Tuesday, March 22, 2011.

     

    Click here to see our continuing visual coverage of the disaster in Japan.

     

  • Panoramic image of the destruction in Kesennuma, Japan

    A ship stands among the ruins of a residential district in Kesennuma, Japan. It was washed inland from a nearby port when the tsunami hit Kesennuma on March 11th. (Kota Kiriyama / Sankei Shimbun / MSN Japan)

    Chris McGrath / Getty Images

    Firefighters search through the rubble next to the large grounded cargo ship in Kesennuma, on March 21, 2011.

    See more panoramic images from the disaster in Japan.

    See ongoing coverage of the disaster in Japan in PhotoBlog and in our slideshow.

  • Celebrating the equinox at the pyramids of Teotihuacan in Mexico

    Alex Cruz / EPA

    Hundreds of people are seen taking part on the Spring Equinox at the Teotihuacan archeological zone in Teotihuacan, Mexico, on 21 March 2011. According to some beliefs, on this day the ancestral spirits and the cosmic forces are invoked to purificate the body and the soul. EPA/Alex Cruz

    Ronaldo Schemidt / AFP - Getty Images

    A hot air balloon flies over the Sun Pyramid at the Teotihuacan archaelogical site during the Teotihuacan Hot Air Balloon Festival in San Juan de Teotihuacan, State of Mexico, on March 21, 2011. The festival is being held on the spring equinox.

     

  • Kena Betancur / Reuters

    A woman walks past a cosmetics stand amid a pile of smouldering garbage in Port-au-Prince March 21, 2011. The United Nations urged Haitians on Monday to calmly wait for the first results due next week of Sunday's presidential run-off, saying the earthquake-battered nation's democratic future was at stake.

    Scene of everyday life as Haitians wait for election results

    At first glance it wasn't clear to me which items are garbage and which are for sale - sorting it out makes the picture interesting.

  • Lost in the flood: Common household items tell stories of personal loss in the Tsunami

    This post is similar to Meredith Birkett’s post from a few days ago. It’s a series of pictures made in Japan by Getty Images' Chris McGrath. They show some of the everyday things that were swept up in the tsunami and deposited along the northeast coast of Japan. For me, these pictures are sadder than the big, wide photographs of destruction.

    Chris McGrath / Getty Images

    A trophy and a squid are seen amongst the rubble on March 21, 2011 in Minamisanriku, Japan. The 9.0 magnitude earthquake struck offshore on March 11 at 2:46pm local time, triggering a tsunami wave which engulfed large parts of north-eastern Japan, and also damaging the Fukushima nuclear plant. The death toll continues to rise with numbers of dead and missing exceeding 20,000.

    A book is seen floating in water on March 21, 2011 in Minamisanriku, Japan.

    An elephant ornament is seen amongst the rubble in Kesennuma, Japan.

    A womens purse in Motoyoshi, Japan.

    Money and a comic book in Minamisanriku, Japan.

    A childs toy is seen amongst the rubble on March 20 in Rikuzentakata, Japan.

    A dolls head is seen amongst the rubble on March 21, 2011 in Motoyoshi, Japan.

    Click here to see more visual coverage of the disaster in Japan.

  • Amr Abdallah Dalsh / Reuters

    Pro and anti-Gadhafi (R) protesters fight on the street in front of the Arab League headquarters in Cairo on Monday, March 21.

    Libya conflict: Scuffle outside the Arab League headquarters in Cairo

    Reuters reports that a group of protesters angry about international intervention in the war in Libya started a scuffle and blocked the path of U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon, as he left a meeting at the Arab League in Cairo.

    For more on the situation in Libya read here. Slideshow here.

  • Afghan New Year: VP calls on militants to lay down arms

    Ahmad Nazar / AP

    Afghans carry balloons to sell, as they walk towards the Sakhi Shrine on occasion of Nawroz, a new year ceremony, in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Monday, March 21.

    Massoud Hossaini / AFP - Getty Images

    Afghan horsemen compete for a goat carcass during a game of Buzkashi to celebrate Nowruz in Mazar-i Sharif, the center of Afghan New Year's or Nowruz celebrations, in northern Afghanistan on Monday. According to Getty, Nawroz, the festival to celebrate new year starts on March 21 which is being celebrated in Turkey, Central Asian republics, Iraq, Iran, Azerbaijan as well as war-torn Afghanistan and coincides with the astronomical vernal equinox. Hundereds of thousands Afghanistan's people gather from all around of the country in Mazar-i Sharif to celebrate new year.

    Musadeq Sadeq / AP

    Afghan women walk down of a mountain after watching the rising of holy mace outside the Sakhi Shrine on the occasion of Nawroz, a new year ceremony in Kabul on Monday.

    Dar Yasin / AP

    Aishya, an Afghan girl poses for picture on a mountain top on the occasion of Nawroz, the New Year ceremony, held at the Sakhi shrine in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Monday.

    According to the AP, in a speech today marking the Afghan new year, Vice President Abdul Karim Khalili called on militants to lay down their weapons because the nation would never return to the days of hardline Taliban rule.

    Full story here. Slideshow here.

  • Panoramic image of the damage in Natori, Japan

    Natori was a densely populated coastal town of 72,000 people. It suffered critical damage from the earthquake and tsunami on March 11. Rescue workers reached Natori on March 14. They found few survivors because the town was nearly wiped off the map. The Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear power plant is located 30 miles to the south, and the remaining residents of Natori are concerned about leaking radiation. (Masaki Furumaya / Sankei Shimbun / MSN Japan)

     

    Mark Baker / AP

    A man checks a list of names at an evacuation center in Natori, Japan on March 18, 2011.

    Yegor Trubnikov / Reuters

    People walk among the debris of buildings wrecked by last week's earthquake and tsunami in Natori, Japan on March 20.

    See more panoramic images from the disaster in Japan.

    Click here to see our continuing visual coverage of the disaster in Japan.

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