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  • 20
    Mar
    2013
    3:13pm, EDT

    Billionaire Jeff Bezos recovers Apollo rocket engines from ocean floor

    Slideshow: Moon rocket engines recovered

    Click through scenes from Bezos Expeditions' recovery of historic Saturn 5 rocket engines from the Atlantic Ocean floor.

    Launch slideshow

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    Follow @b0yle


    Salvagers backed by billionaire Jeff Bezos have recovered components from the Saturn 5 rocket engines that powered NASA's Apollo moon missions off the launch pad, more than four decades after they hurtled down to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean.

    Amazon.com's founder reported on the successful three-week sea salvage operation on his Bezos Expeditions website. "What an incredible adventure," he wrote.

    "We've seen an underwater wonderland — an incredible sculpture garden of twisted F-1 engines that tells the story of a fiery and violent end, one that serves testament to the Apollo program," Bezos said Wednesday.


    Almost a year ago, Bezos announced that deep-sea sonar scans had located the first-stage engines that were used for the historic Apollo 11 launch in 1969 — the launch that sent astronauts on their way to the moon's surface for the first time. The first stage of the three-stage Saturn 5 was jettisoned once its fuel was spent, and fell into the Atlantic.

    It took months to plan the recovery expedition — and three weeks ago, Bezos and the salvage team headed out into the Atlantic on the Seabed Worker, a ship that has previously played a role in recovering sunken treasures.

    "While I spent a reasonable chunk of time in my cabin emailing and working, it didn't keep me from getting to know the team," Bezos wrote. Much of his posting was given over to thank-yous for the team members. 

    The chilly ocean waters preserved the hardware in "gorgeous" condition at a depth of more than 14,000 feet, Bezos said. He noted that it was difficult to make out the serial numbers on the hardware. Confirmation of the Apollo 11 connection will have to wait until the parts are more closely examined.

    Engine parts from the Apollo moon effort's Saturn 5 rockets have been in the ocean since the 1960s, but after a year of trying, Amazon.com's Jeff Bezos has brought them to the surface. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    Remotely operated vehicles recovered enough components to fashion displays of two flown F-1 engines. Bezos said the ship was now on its way back to Cape Canaveral, Fla., to offload the artifacts. Bezos Expeditions said the restoration would take place at the Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center.

    "The upcoming restoration will stabilize the hardware and prevent further corrosion," Bezos said. "We want the hardware to tell its true story, including its 5,000 mile per hour re-entry and subsequent impact with the ocean surface. We’re excited to get this hardware on display where just maybe it will inspire something amazing."

    Even before the expedition, Bezos and NASA worked out where the artifacts would be going. The first option would go to the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum in Washington, NASA spokesman Bob Jacobs told NBC News in an email. The second engine would be offered to the Museum of Flight in Seattle, the hometown for Bezos and Amazon.com.

    "While we have no role in the restoration, we are providing assistance to help identify the hardware through our various history offices and field centers," Jacobs said.

    Although Bezos made his billions in the dot-com world, he's had a longstanding interest in spaceflight as well: His rocket venture, Blue Origin, has been working on a launch system for suborbital as well as orbital passenger flights with NASA's backing. Last year, Bezos donated a 5-ton Blue Origin lander prototype to the Museum of Flight.

    In a statement, NASA Administrator Charles Bolden praised the recovery of the engines as a "historic find."

    "We look forward to the restoration of these engines by the Bezos team and applaud Jeff’s desire to make these historic artifacts available for public display," Bolden said. "Jeff and his colleagues at Blue Origin are helping to usher in a new commercial era of space exploration, and we are confident that our continued collaboration will soon result in private human access to space, creating jobs and driving America’s leadership in innovation and exploration."

    A salvage operation backed by billionaire Jeff Bezos has brought up historic Saturn 5 rocket components from the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean, using remotely operated vehicles. Watch scenes from the recovery effort.

    Follow @CosmicLog

    More space history:

    • Timeline: NASA's Glory Days
    • NASA tests engine from Apollo 11 rocket
    • Moon looms again as future destination

    Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    52 comments

    It's his money...he can spend it the way he wants.

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  • 3
    Aug
    2012
    10:04am, EDT

    Brazil backslides on protecting the Amazon

    Nacho Doce / Reuters

    An elderly woman rests next to her grandchild in a hammock inside their house in the village of Pimental in Itaituba, in the state of Para, on May 26. In the 19 months since Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff took office, longstanding rules that curtail deforestation and protect millions of square kilometers of watershed have been rolled back. She issued an executive order to shrink or repurpose seven protected woodlands, making way for hydroelectric dams and other infrastructure projects, and to legalize settlements by farmers and miners. These photos were received by NBCNews.com on Aug. 3 as part of a Reuters special report.

    Nacho Doce / Reuters

    An aerial view shows illegal deforestation close to the Amazonia National Park in Itaituba, state of Para, on May 25.

    Below is an excerpt from a Reuters special report: Brazil backslides on protecting the Amazon

    Reuters -- Last year President Dilma Rousseff authorized a change that ceded much responsibility for environmental oversight to local officials. Of 168 Ibama, Brazil's widely respected federal environmental agency, field offices operating a few years ago, 91 have been shuttered, according to Ibama employees. Ivo Lubrinna says Ibama agents used to fine him and other miners for violations. Now, he leads a team that inspects wildcatting sites. So far, he says, he has levied few fines.

    The shift to local control is one of many changes implemented under Rousseff's administration that, taken together, constitute an all-out retreat from nearly two decades of progressive federal environmental policy.

    In the 19 months since Rousseff took office, longstanding rules that curtail deforestation and protect millions of square kilometers of watershed have been rolled back. She issued an executive order to shrink or repurpose seven protected woodlands, making way for hydroelectric dams and other infrastructure projects, and to legalize settlements by farmers and miners.

    And she has slowed to a near halt a process, uninterrupted during the previous three administrations, of setting aside land for national parks, wildlife reserves and other "conservation units."

    Read the full story.

    Related links:

    • 60 dams in Brazil's Amazon? Controversy spills over into 'Earth Summit II'
    • 20 years later, will world make good on 'broken promises'?
    • Slideshow: Dams rising across Brazil's Amazon
    • Slideshow: Brazil's balancing act

    Nacho Doce / Reuters

    A boy walks on the Trans-Amazonian highway in Itaituba, in the state of Para, on May 24.

    Slideshow: Dams rising across Brazil's Amazon

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    The Belo Monte dam is among 60 Brazil plans to build in its Amazon region to help power its growing economy. But the vision also has its critics.

    Launch slideshow

     

    16 comments

    Brazil is not alone in this backsliding in environmental issues. Canada, the US, Japan and others are also undoing or relaxing legislation and oversight. Big corporate lobbies are more valued. Pity.

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  • 19
    Jun
    2012
    3:06pm, EDT

    Deforestation threatens Brazil's Amazon rainforest

    Mist rolls through a deforested section of the Amazon rainforest on June 8, 2012 in Para state, Brazil.

    photos and reporting by Mario Tama / Getty Images

    The Amazon, home to 60 percent of the world’s largest forest and 20 percent of the Earth’s oxygen, remains threatened by the rapid development of Brazil. The area is populated by over 20 million people and challenged by deforestation, agriculture, mining, a governmental dam building spree and illegal land speculation.

    More than one million hectares of wood have disappeared in protected indigenous reserves between 1987 and 2011, according to the Brazilian government. More than 242 square kilometers in the reserve have already been destroyed according to the National Institute for Space Research (INPE), which tracks rainforest destruction by satellite.

    A truck transports illegally harvested Amazon rainforest logs near protected indigenous land on June 10, 2012 near the Arariboia Indigenous Reserve, Maranhao state, Brazil.

    Workers load charcoal, produced from illegally harvested Amazon rainforest wood, into a truck on June 8, 2012 in Rondon do Para, Brazil.

    Illegal wood charcoal is used to power smelters producing pig iron to make steel for industries including U.S. auto manufacturing, according to Greenpeace. Illegal charcoal camps can result in slave labor and the destruction of rainforest on protected indigenous lands. Over 2,700 charcoal camp workers were liberated from conditions akin to slavery between 2003 and 2011, according to Greenpeace. 

    A worker sweats as he works for $40 per truckload of charcoal.

    Slideshow:

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    The Amazon rainforest has meant prosperous times for many in Brazil, but environmental and cultural disaster for others.

    Launch slideshow

    Read more about Brazil and the Rio Earth Summit

    See more of Brazil’s environmental balancing act

    See more of Mario Tama's work

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    3 comments

    Who wants to watch full videos of a reports about deforestation in Brazil (Amazon forest), see this VOD site of GloboTV. Is a Flagrant of Amazon deforestation in real time with chips and hidden cameras on trees, a june/2012 project, during Rio+20 event! Share! Let's end this shame: Part 1: Part 2:  …

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  • 15
    Jun
    2012
    3:54pm, EDT

    Activists protest dam project in Amazon basin of Brazil

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    Residents affected by the Belo Monte dam protest by spelling out "Pare Belo Monte," meaning "Stop Belo Monte," at the Belo Monte construction site on June 15, 2012. Activists, indigenous people, fishermen and coastal community members removed a strip of earth to restore the flow of the Xingu River as a protest against the construction near Altamira, Brazil.

    By Mario Tama, Getty Images
    Belo Monte will be the world’s third-largest hydroelectric project and will displace up to 20,000 people while diverting the Xingu River and flooding as much as 230 square miles of rainforest. The controversial project is one of around 60 hydroelectric projects Brazil has planned in the Amazon to generate electricity for a rapidly expanding economy. The Brazilian Amazon, home to 60 percent of the world’s largest forest and 20 percent of the Earth’s oxygen, remains threatened by rapid development.

    The Amazon is currently populated by over 20 million people and challenged by deforestation, agriculture, mining, a governmental dam building spree, illegal land speculation including the occupation of forest reserves on indigenous land.

    Over 100 heads of state and tens of thousands of participants and protesters will descend on Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, later this month for the Rio+20 United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development.

    Reuters

    Activists dig on the barrier of a construction site for the Belo Monte Dam project at Vitoria do Xingu, near Altamira Brazil on June 15, 2012.

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    A woman prepares food on the Xingu River near the site where the Belo Monte dam complex is under construction. The project will displace up to 20,000 people.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    Comment

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  • 15
    May
    2012
    3:11pm, EDT

    Yawalapiti tribe living traditionally in the Amazonian jungle of Brazil

    Ueslei Marcelino / Reuters

    Yawalapiti youth chief Anuia (front) leads a dance in the Xingu National Park, Mato Grosso State on May 7. In August the Yawalapiti tribe will hold the Quarup, which is a ritual held over several days to honour in death a person of great importance to them. This year the Quarup will be honouring two people - a Yawalapiti Indian who they consider a great leader, and Darcy Ribeiro, a well-known author, anthropologist and politician known for focusing on the relationship between native peoples and education in Brazil.

    Ueslei Marcelino / Reuters

    Yawalapiti tribe members catch fish in the Xingu National Park.

    Ueslei Marcelino / Reuters

    Yawalapiti men wrestle in the Xingu National Park, Mato Grosso State.

    Ueslei Marcelino / Reuters

    Yawalapiti children play over the Xingu River.

    Ueslei Marcelino / Reuters

    An aerial view of the Yawalapiti village is seen in the Xingu National Park.

    Ueslei Marcelino / Reuters

    An aerial view of a portion of the Xingu National Park that is deforested from agriculture and logging is seen in Mato Grosso State.

    Reuters photographer Ueslei Marcelino describes his time visiting the "village of joy:"

    The mood was one of celebration. The Yawalapiti, one of the 14 tribes living inside the Xingu National Park, were preparing a new “quarup,” a ritual held over several days to honor in death a person of great importance to them. In its original form, the quarup was a funeral ritual intended to bring the dead back to life. Today, it is a celebration of life, death and rebirth. From the very oldest to the very youngest, all the members of the Yawalapiti tribe participate in the preparations.

    The Yawalapiti are living in new times. During the meetings of tribal leaders that I observed, they demonstrated a preoccupation with preserving their culture and with the devastation of the Xingu’s forests. They discussed policies that could be implemented in a new project called Xingu+50, in reference to last year’s 50th anniversary of the creation of Xingu National Park.

    Aritana, the Yawalapiti cacique, who immediately struck me as witty, serene and wise, told me that a man should be like a good, old tree; he should give fruit throughout his lifetime, and towards the end produce a huge shadow to shelter others.

    Without a doubt, it was a great experience to live with the Yawalapiti for a few days. They made me ponder my own coexistence with mankind in my corner of the world in urban Brasilia, and our relationship with nature.

    Read more...

    See more images from the Amazon Basin in PhotoBlog.

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

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  • 8
    Dec
    2011
    2:16pm, EST

    Brazil's national police look for illegal extraction of wood as country eases rules limiting deforestation

    Lunae Parracho / AFP - Getty Images

    A member of the Public Security National Force --a national police elite unit-- walks through on the Amazonic forest reserve of Trairao, west of Para state, northern Brazil, looking for illegal deforestation places, on Dec. 4. The Brazilian authorities are conducting the 'Capitao do Mato' operation from Nov. 18 to Dec. 8, to fight the illegal extraction of wood in the national forest reserves of Trairao and Riosinho do Afrisio.

    Reuters reports:

    Brazil's Senate passed a landmark reform of the country's land law on Tuesday, infuriating environmentalists who say it could spark a new wave of deforestation in the Amazon region.

    The new so-called Forest Code relaxes requirements on the amount of forest coverage farmers must maintain on their properties, a change that producers in the agricultural powerhouse say is needed to end years of legal uncertainty.

    Lunae Parracho / AFP - Getty Images

    Aerial view of an illegal wood extraction site at the Amazonic forest reserve of Trairao, western Para state, northern Brazil on Dec. 4.

    The Senate approved the basic text of the bill late Tuesday, leaving dozens of proposed amendments to be voted on later.

    The government says environmentalists' fears are mostly unfounded and that strict enforcement of the new rules will result in the restoration of 24 million hectares of forest, equal to the size of the United Kingdom.

    Read the full story here.

    Lunae Parracho / AFP - Getty Images

    A Federal Police officer walks by planks at an illegal sawmill in Valdinei Ferreira Jango, near the Amazonic Forest reserve of Trairao, western state of Para, northern Brazil on Dec. 4.

    Lunae Parracho / AFP - Getty Images

    The couple Maria and Domingos Siva pose inside their house in Areias -- a settlement created to host Amazonic people alongside the BR163 national road -- near the Amazonic Forest reserve of Trairao, western state of Para, northern Brazil on Dec. 4.

    Lunae Parracho / AFP - Getty Images

    The main street of Areias -- a settlement created to host Amazonic people alongside the BR163 national road -- near the Amazonic Forest reserve of Trairao, western state of Para, northern Brazil on Dec. 4.

     

    1 comment

    All the people here who complain about being poor because they can't buy the latest iPad or new car (when they barely finished high school and work at a store) need to look at these pictures. Its called perspective.

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  • 17
    Aug
    2011
    8:37pm, EDT

    Google Street View hits the open waters to share environment in the Amazon

    Evaristo Sa / AFP - Getty Images

    Google team members sail a boat with a 360-degree camera system mounted on its top to record the "Street View for the Amazon" on the Negro River, around Tumbira Community, Amazonas State, on August 17. In partnership with Brazil's Amazonas Sustainable Foundation (FAS), Google's Street View for the Amazon project will capture 360-degree imagery of the Amazon's Negro River and the adjacent communities to share the environment and local culture with the world.

    Evaristo Sa / AFP - Getty Images

    A 360-degree camera system mounted on a boat on the Negro River.

    Evaristo Sa / AFP - Getty Images

    A Google team member rides a Trike with a 360-degree camera system on it on Aug. 17.

     

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  • 22
    Apr
    2011
    1:15pm, EDT

    Ricardo Moraes / Reuters

    A boy of the Kayapo tribe plays in front of his house on the second day of a medical expedition of the "Expedicionarios da Saude" (Brazilian Health Expeditions) in Kikretum community in Sao Felix, northern Brazil, April 22. The medical expedition of volunteer doctors comes twice a year to build a mobile hospital and provide clinical and surgical treatment for indigenous tribes and residents from different parts of the amazon rainforest.

    Boy on a swing in Brazil

    .

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  • 8
    Feb
    2011
    2:22pm, EST

    Indigenous people protest construction of enormous dam in Brazil's Amazon basin

    Here's a wikipedia article on the tribe, the dam project, and a story about the controversy.

    Eraldo Peres / AP

    A member of the Kaiapo tribe holds a poster showing a picture of Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff during a protest by indigenous communities against the construction of Belo Monte hydroelectric dam in front the National Congress in Brasilia, Brazil, Tuesday Feb. 8, 2011. A Brazilian environmental agency has given approval for initial work to begin on a massive hydroelectric dam planned for the heart of the Amazon jungle. The 11,000-megawatt project to dam the Xingu River, which feeds the Amazon, would be the third-largest such hydroelectric project in the world. The poster reads "Stop Belo Monte" and the number 604,317 refers to the number of people they say have signed a petition against the project." (AP Photo/Eraldo Peres)

    EVARISTO SA / AFP - Getty Images

    Natives from the Caiapo's tribe take part in a protest in front of the National Congress in Brasilia against the construction of the Belo Monte hydroelectric dam in the Amazonian Xingu River on February 08, 2011.

    Eraldo Peres / AP

    Kaiapo Indian Chief Raony has his face painted with traditional markings during a protest against the construction of Belo Monte hydroelectric dam in Brasilia, Brazil, Tuesday Feb. 8, 2011. A Brazilian environmental agency has given approval for initial work to begin on a massive hydroelectric dam planned for the heart of the Amazon jungle. The 11,000-megawatt project to dam the Xingu River, which feeds the Amazon, would be the third-largest such hydroelectric project in the world. (AP Photo/Eraldo Peres)

     

    1 comment

    Photo #3: Lip Service

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  • 28
    Nov
    2010
    10:31am, EST

    Matt Cardy / Getty Images

    Staff at the Amazon Swansea fulfillment center process orders as they prepare for what is expected to be their busiest Christmas on record on Nov. 26, in Swansea, Wales. The 800,000 square foot fulfillment center, the largest of Amazon's six in the United Kingdom and one of the largest in the world, is gearing up for 'Cyber Monday', which is Dec. 6, and is predicted to be the busiest online shopping day of the year. In 2009, Cyber Monday saw 2 million orders received at a rate of 23 orders per second.

    It's time to mail the boxes: Amazon fulfillment center gears up for Cyber Monday

    By Katie Cannon, Senior Multimedia Editor

    Wow, that's a lot of stuff to keep organized and flowing out the door.

    Comment

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  • 27
    Oct
    2010
    5:45pm, EDT

    Karl Csaba / Courtesy of World Wildlife Fund

    Avicularia braunshauseni, discovered in Brazil in 1999, belongs to a class of tarantulas that are known as "pinktoes" because of their characteristically colored foot pads. Avicularia tarantulas are not considered to be aggressive. They prefer to jump and flee as quickly as possible when threatened. They'll occasionally respond to a threat by launching a jet of excrement that can accurately hit a target 3 feet (1 meter) away.

    Scary ... or scared?

    See more new species from the Amazon

    Comment

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