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  • 11
    Apr
    2013
    9:30pm, EDT

    Utah copper mine suspends operations after large landslide

    Photos by Ravell Call / The Deseret News via AP

    The Kennecott Copper Bingham Canyon Mine sits quiet after a landslide on April 11, 2013, in Bingham Canyon, Utah. Kennecott has suspended mining inside one of the world's deepest open pits as geologists assess a landslide the company says it anticipated for months.

    The Salt Lake Tribune reports:

    "We started noticing movement in that part of the mine in February," Rio Tinto-Kennecott spokesman Kyle Bennett said, indicating at that time the mine’s wall was slipping a fraction of an inch each day.

    As the slipping continued and began to accelerate in the following weeks, Kennecott moved workers out of the area, utility lines were rerouted and the modular building that housed the mine monitoring equipment was relocated to safer ground. Kennecott also closed its visitors center for the rest of the year.

    Bennett said the company has not yet determined the exact size of the slide. He said mining experts would be evaluating the slide area and its impact on future operations.

    Dump trucks sit under debris in the Kennecott Copper Bingham Canyon Mine after a landslide in Bingham Canyon, Utah.

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    20 comments

    Those trucks look like Tonka Toy's in comparison.

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    Explore related topics: landslide, environment, mining, us-news, utah, featured
  • 11
    Mar
    2013
    12:45pm, EDT

    Volunteer crews chase their dreams in a desert Mars

    Jim Urquhart / Reuters

    Members of the Crew 125 EuroMoonMars B mission return after collecting geological samples for study at the Mars Desert Research Station in the Utah desert on March 2. The mission is meant to simulate what explorers will face during an eventual mission to the Red Planet.

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    NASA says it could be another 20 years before humans touch down on Mars, but in a sense, the Mars Society has been exploring the red planet for more than a decade — in Utah.

    The nonprofit society's Mars Desert Research Station, near Hanksville, Utah, has been home to 126 crews since the Mars-style habitat was erected in 2002. The idea behind the experimental station is to test the tools and techniques that could come into play during eventual human expeditions to the real Red Planet. Each expedition crew consists of roughly a half-dozen volunteers who spend about two weeks in the Utah desert, conducting real research on a make-believe Mars.


    Utah's desert is one of several locales around the world that are thought to be sufficiently Mars-like to teach researchers about the far more extreme conditions on the cold, dry planet. Other locales for Mars simulations include the Canadian Arctic, Antarctica, Norway's Svalbard Peninsula, caves on the Italian island of Sardinia, and even a lab in Russia.

    The crew members for such simulations range from NASA researchers to students who hope to walk on Martian soil someday. Another would-be Marsonaut is Reuters photographer Jim Urquhart, who has long yearned to take pictures of the Mars Desert Research Station and its crew. "I had tried for years to go, but my story pitches never made the cut," he said Monday in a blog posting. This month, Urquhart finally got the green light from his editors, in part because "science and space exploration have become sexy again," he said.

    Urquhart came away impressed by the volunteer astronauts. "I kept thinking to myself that this group of six embodies so much of what I wish I could become," he said. "They were passionate and chasing their dreams."

    Check out these pictures — and Urquhart's blog posting — for more about his visit to Mars in the Utah desert.

    Jim Urquhart / Reuters

    The night sky whirls above the Mars Desert Research Station outside Hanksville, Utah, in a long-exposure photo. The station is designed to reflect the type of habitat that would be constructed on the Red Planet for future explorers.

    Jim Urquhart / Reuters

    Csilla Orgel, a geologist, collects samples for study in the Utah desert.

    Jim Urquhart / Reuters

    Members venture out in their simulated spacesuits to collect samples.

    Jim Urquhart / Reuters

    Crew members return to the Mars Desert Research Station after a simulated Marswalk.

    Jim Urquhart / Reuters

    Crew members prepare a meal inside the Mars Desert Research Station. The mock astronauts wear simulation spacesuits when the venture outside, but work in shirt sleeves when they're inside the habitat.

    Slideshow: Month in Space: February 2013

    Get a look at the moon's glories, interplanetary vistas and other outer-space highlights from February 2013.

    Launch slideshow

     

    47 comments

    MDRS is answering a lot of questions that we need to study in depth before we send humans to Mars, and doing it with much less expenditure than NASA would have poured into the same endeavor. For example, given a suit of the same relative weight and bulk as the kind that will probably be used on Mars …

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    Explore related topics: space, mars, science, us-news, utah, featured, cosmic-log, tech-science, mars-society, mdrs
  • 11
    Jan
    2013
    8:51pm, EST

    Rick Bowmer / AP

    Winter weather hits the West

    Steve and Linda Peterson walk through the snow, Jan. 11, in Salt Lake City, Utah. Close to a foot of snow fell in Salt Lake City early Friday.

    Comment

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  • 18
    Dec
    2012
    7:02pm, EST

    Survivalists prepare for Mayan apocalypse, nuclear war or any disaster

    Jim Urquhart / Reuters

    Phil Burns demonstrates the air purifying SCape Mask at his home in American Fork, Utah, Dec. 14, 2012. While most "preppers" discount the Mayan calendar prophecy, many are preparing to be self-sufficient for threats like nuclear war, natural disaster, famine or economic collapse.

    EDITOR’S NOTE: All images made available to NBC News on Dec. 18.

    Jim Urquhart / Reuters

    Phil Burns inventories a backpack full of survival supplies at his home in American Fork, Utah, Dec. 14.

    Jim Urquhart / Reuters

    Employees construct a bunker at Utah Shelter Systems in North Salt Lake, Utah, Dec. 12. Shelter prices range from $51,800 to $64,900.

    Jim Urquhart / Reuters

    Hugh Vail inventories food storage at his home in Bountiful, Utah, Dec. 10.

    Jim Urquhart / Reuters

    Hugh Vail cuts firewood at his home in Bountiful, Utah, Dec. 10.

    Jim Urquhart / Reuters

    Mike Porenta prepares to ship emergency camp stoves at American Prepper Network's warehouse in Sandy, Utah, Dec. 10.

    Related content:

    • Mayan Apocalypse Is Unlike Other Doomsdays
    • 5 Mayan Apocalypse Myths Debunked
    • JELL-O to Save the World From Mayan Apocalypse
    • VIDEO: Police seal off 'Doomsday' mountain in France

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    129 comments

    While I'm all for using common sense and not living recklessly, this is obviously a form of mental illness. Building a bunker to survive a nuclear war? Good luck with that? What will the fallout take to dissipate? 10,000 years? Think you can store enough food? Enough water? Who'd want to live in …

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    Explore related topics: us-news, utah, doomsday, survival, mayan-apocaplyse
  • 14
    Nov
    2012
    7:49pm, EST

    A rare look at daily life of polygamists in Utah

    All images by Jim Urquhart / Reuters

    Girls play on a trampoline near a home built into a rock at the Rockland Ranch community outside Moab, Utah, Nov. 2, 2012.

    Jim Urquhart, Reuters — The "Rock," as it is referred to by the approximately 100 people living there in about 15 families, was founded about 35 years ago on a sandstone formation near Canyonlands National Park in Utah. Polygamy was a part of the teachings of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and was brought to Utah by faithful Mormons in the late 1840s. The mainstream Mormon church abandoned the practice in 1890, but an estimated 37,000 Mormon fundamentalists continue the practice today and believe plural marriage brings exaltation in heaven.

    EDITOR’S NOTE, Nov. 15: This post was originally headlined "Mormons practice faith from Utah cavern." It has been updated to more specifically reflect the small fundamentalist community depicted in these photographs.

    Enoch Foster, a fundamentalist Mormon practicing polygamy, prays before a meal with his first wife Catrina Foster, second from left, and several of his 13 children from two wives in their home blasted from a rock wall at the Rockland Ranch community outside Moab, Utah, Nov. 2.

    Fundamentalist Mormons, some of whom are monogamous and others who practice polygamy, harvest the community garden along with their children at the Rockland Ranch community outside Moab, Utah, Nov. 3.

    Bradee Barlow, a fundamentalist Mormon practicing polygamy, holds her newborn daughter Lucy while she shops at the store room at the Rockland Ranch community outside Moab, Utah, Nov. 2.

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    63 comments

    Love how MSNBC likes to twist things around and deceive people. They are like the devil. They put this on the front page like it's real news and display it like this is how all Mormons are. The title doesn't say "Fundamentalists". Stupid.

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  • 3
    Nov
    2012
    1:00am, EDT

    Captured Nevada bighorn sheep to boost herds in Utah

    Julie Jacobson / AP

    In this Oct. 31, 2012 photo, twenty-five captured big horn sheep await transport to Utah in a trailer near Henderson, Nev. In an attempt to help repopulate areas of southern Utah, fifty sheep from the River and Muddy mountains in southern Nevada are being captured for relocation to Grand Staircase National Monument.

    Julie Jacobson / AP

    After examining a big horn sheep for injury and illness biologists from the Nevada Division of Wildlife carry the animal to a trailer for transport to Utah.

    Julie Jacobson / AP

    A helicopter gently lowers the animals to the ground for biologists to examine, near Henderson, Nev. In an attempt to help repopulate areas of southern Utah, fifty sheep from the River and Muddy mountains in southern Nevada are being captured for relocation to Grand Staircase National Monument.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures
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    1 comment

    Nice in depth editorial that I know has in use lots of work and sure will progress.

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    Explore related topics: nevada, us-news, utah, bighorn-sheep, animal-tracks
  • 3
    Jul
    2012
    11:16pm, EDT

    Wildfires continue to burn in Western states

    George Frey / Reuters

    A house is surrounded by a burnt landscape, as a helicopter flies above after dropping water on the Quail Fire in Alpine, Utah, July 3, 2012. The fire started on Tuesday afternoon and spread quickly through the eastern end of Alpine and then up the mountain side. It is still out of control.

    George Frey / Reuters

    A plane drops slurry on the Quail Fire in Alpine, Utah, July 3, 2012.

    George Frey / Reuters

    Trees go up in flames above homes at the Quail Fire in Alpine, Utah, July 3, 2012.

    Andy Carpenean / AP

    A sudden wind shift draws smoke back over the top of Sheep Mountain as the Squirrel Creek fire spreads Tuesday, July 3, 2012 near Woods Landing, Wyo.

    msnbc.com reports: As firefighters continue fighting the devastating Waldo Canyon blaze in Colorado, FBI agents are investigating what could have triggered the blaze, which forced more than 30,000 people from their homes.

    Elsewhere in the state, lightning was to blame. But more typically, humans start wildfires. In 2011, humans started six times more fires than did lightning, scorching 5.36 million acres, according to government statistics.

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    Slideshow: Scorched forests in Colorado

    /

    The worst fire season in recent history is taking its toll with large fires burning thousands of acres in Colorado while others consume areas in Montana, Utah, New Mexico and Wyoming.

    Launch slideshow

    4 comments

    Kind of like when I used to live in Cal. and the people would build these huge homes on the edge of the canyons. Well due to the fact the natural landscape was stripped bare and get a couple of days of heavy rain they couldn't figure out why their home with the BMW in the garage slid to the bottom t …

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    Explore related topics: fire, wyoming, wildfire, us-news, utah
  • 26
    Jun
    2012
    6:25am, EDT

    Communities devastated by massive Utah wildfire

    Lynn DeBruin / AP

    Tammy Lance of Payson, Utah, swaddles a kitten after finding the litter alive under a burned-out truck in the Oaker Hills neighborhood in Sanpete County, Utah, on Monday, June 25, 2012. The area was devastated by a wildfire that started Saturday.

    Scott G. Winterton / The Deseret News via AP

    An air tanker drops fire retardant while battling a blaze near Mt. Pleasant, Utah, on June 25, 2012. Firefighting officials say they have 10 percent containment on a fire that's threatening about 300 homes in Sanpete County and has burned structures, although they say it's not clear how many structures were burned or what kind they are.

    The Wood Hollow wildfire in Utah spread to nearly 39,000 acres Monday, The Deseret News reports:

    Firefighters in Sanpete County had hoped to reach 20 percent containment of the Wood Hollow Fire by late Monday. Mandatory evacuation orders remained in place, although officials acknowledged that not all residents left their homes.

    More than 200 homes were evacuated Sunday, including the subdivisions of Oaker Hills, Elk Ridge, Indian Ridge, Panorama, Big Hollow and Hideaway Valley — areas that were a mixture of summer cabins, primary residences and horse and livestock properties. Read the full story.

    Wildfires leave Colorado tourism high and dry

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Lynn DeBruin / AP

    A stream of melted aluminum from a burned-out car is visible on the ground in the Oaker Hills neighborhood on June 25, 2012.

    Lynn DeBruin / AP

    Cody Emerine surveys some of the destruction after a wildfire swept through the Oaker Hills neighborhood on June 25, 2012. The Wood Hollow Fire has destroyed at least two dozen homes but was only 15 percent contained by late Monday night.

    Lynn DeBruin / AP

    Tammy Lance comforts one of the rescued kittens on June 25, 2012. Lance's cabin in the Oaker Hills neighborhood was destroyed but she and her husband found the kittens alive under a burned-out truck nearby.

    Lynn DeBruin / AP

    Chunk Lance comforts neighbor Kellie Sanderson on June 25, 2012, after they viewed an area in central Utah that was devastated by a wildfire. Lance's cabin in the Oaker Hills neighborhood was destroyed but Sanderson's survived.

     

    Comment

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  • 4
    Jun
    2012
    1:37pm, EDT

    Air tanker crash kills 2 at site of Utah wildfire

    Photos by Scott G Winterton / AP

    The crash scene of a heavy air tanker is seen from the air, June 4, 2012, near Hamblin Valley Utah. The P2v Heavy air tanker crashed Sunday afternoon, killing pilots Todd Neal Tompkins and Ronnie Edwin Chambless, both of Boise, Idaho.

    The crash and fire are seen from the air Monday.

    The Associated Press reports:

    An air tanker dropping retardant on a remote wildfire along the Utah-Nevada line crashed Sunday afternoon, killing both crew members, authorities said.

    The pilots were fighting the 5,000-acre White Rock Fire, which began burning Friday night after a lightning strike in eastern Nevada. The fire spread across the Utah line Saturday night, but most of the blaze remained in Nevada, about 150 miles northeast of Las Vegas.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

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    Forest fires continue to rage in the Southwest, where two pilots were killed over the weekend when the air tanker they were flying crashed near the Utah-Nevada border. An hour later, another air tanker was forced to make a belly landing outside Reno, Nev., when landing gear malfunctioned. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    1 comment

    Sorry to hear that.

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  • 3
    May
    2012
    12:01pm, EDT

    EPA orders Utah to cut haze across national parks

    Ethan Miller / Getty Images

    An aerial view of sandstone formations May 2, in Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah.

    AP reports -- SALT LAKE CITY -- A U.S. Environmental Protection Agency order will require two of Utah's oldest coal-fired power plants to improve control of pollution that has drastically reduced visibility across a region that includes five national parks and redrock wilderness.

    Pollution controls at a pair of PacifiCorp power plants in Emery County "do not comply with our regulations," EPA Regional Administrator James Martin wrote earlier this week in the 79-page order. He signed out the 34- and 42-year-old plants for improvement, rejecting Utah's less stringent pollution controls but upholding broader efforts by the state to reduce haze across southern Utah.

    PacifiCorp said it was already upgrading pollution controls at the Hunter and Huntington power plants and planned more improvements by 2014 that would bring them into compliance with the new requirements.

    Read the full story.

    Ethan Miller / Getty Images

    An aerial view of sandstone formations May 2, in Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah.

    Slideshow: America's national parks

    Nearly 400 national parks can be found all across America, and feature breathtaking vistas, rock formations millions of years old, and more.

    Launch slideshow

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    329 comments

    Yeah, Lou. You'd much prefer lead in your drinking water and air you can see before you breathe it, right?

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  • 11
    Feb
    2012
    3:24pm, EST

    Hundreds gather to mourn Powell brothers

    Ted S. Warren / Pool via Getty Images

    Chuck Cox, right, reaches out to touch the casket bearing his grandsons, Charlie Powell and Braden Powell, as he walks with his wife Judy Cox during a funeral service the two boys on Feb. 11, in Tacoma, Wash. The boys died Feb. 5, when their father, Josh Powell, set fire to the home he was living in while they were visiting. Powell had been a person of interest in the 2009 disappearance of his wife Susan.

    Dean J. Koepfler / The News Tribune via AP

    A casket with the bodies of Charlie and Braden Powell, ages 7 and 5, is wheeled into Life Center Church in Tacoma, Wash., Feb. 11.

    Hundreds of mourners gathered at a church Saturday to remember two young boys killed when their father burned their house to the ground with himself and his sons inside.

    Sunday's murder-suicide arson, which claimed the lives of Josh Powell and his sons, Charles, 7, and Braden, 5, capped a grim family saga that began more than two years ago with the disappearance of the boys' mother, Susan Powell, under suspicious circumstances in Utah. -- By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Read the full story.

    Related content from PhotoBlog: Fire at Washington home kills husband, sons of missing woman

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Dean J. Koepfler / The News Tribune via AP

    Mourners hug before a memorial service for Charlie Powell, 7, and Braden Powell, 5, at the Life Center Church in Tacoma, Wash., Feb. 11. The family of missing Utah woman Susan Powell is holding a public funeral for her two sons, nearly a week after their father killed them in a gas-fueled blaze. Hundreds of people are attending the Saturday service. Many are wearing purple and blue ribbons in memory of 7-year-old Charlie and 5-year-old Braden. Family members and the boys' teachers are scheduled to speak. The boys' remains are in one coffin adorned with flowers. They were killed in a fire set by their father, Josh Powell, when they went to visit him Sunday at his home in Graham, Wash.

    1 comment

    + +

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    Explore related topics: washington, explosion, us-news, utah, josh-powell, susan-powell, braden-powell, charlie-powell
  • 5
    Feb
    2012
    9:28pm, EST

    Fire at Washington home kills husband, sons of missing woman

    Ted S. Warren / AP

    The smoldering remains of a house, left, where an explosion killed Josh Powell and his two sons, Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012, is shown from the air in Graham, Wash. The explosion occurred moments after a Child Protective Services worker brought the two boys to the home for a supervised visit. Powell's wife Susan went reportedly missing from their West Valley City, Utah, home in December 2009.

    John Froschauer / AP

    Eliana and her mother Jennifer Bakley hug while Melissa Phillips look over the smoldering remains of a house near Fredrickson, Wash., Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012, where, according to a sheriff's spokesman, three bodies were were found. The bodies are believed to be Josh Powell and his two sons. The explosion occurred moments after a Child Protective Services worker brought the two boys to the home for a supervised visit.

    John Froschauer / AP

    Pierce County Sheriff's deputies and Graham Firefighters work around the smoldering remains of a house near Fredrickson, Wash., Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012, where, according to a sheriff's spokesman, three bodies were were found. The bodies are believed to be Josh Powell and his two sons. The explosion occurred moments after a Child Protective Services worker brought the two boys to the home for a supervised visit.

    msnbc.com staff and news services:

    Authorities say the husband of a missing Utah woman intentionally set his Washington home on fire Sunday, killing him and his two young sons shortly after the boys were brought to the home by a social worker for a supervised visit.

    Neighbors had reported hearing an explosion, but Pierce County sheriff's spokesman Ed Troyer said Josh Powell's home was destroyed by a fast-moving fire that blew out several windows and was aided by some sort of accelerant. Read the full story.

    17 comments

    We have been watching this story closely here in Utah. The fact that he had any access to these children after what happened with his wife, and his father, is in itself a crime! They knew this would happen. Susan's family stated it, and now it has happened. Too many times this @!$%#e happens. WAY TO …

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