Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Rock Energy?s Colo. gold mill kicks up ahead of schedule

Rock Energy Resources Inc. (RCKE.PK) said Tuesday that its gold mill in Colorado began months ahead of its original April start up date, sending in early cash flow.

Houston-based Rock Energy owns a 49 percent stake in the mine, called the Red Arrow mine. The company built a smaller mill that can process about 3 to 5 tons of gold ore a day. The mill may also tap into platinum and silver, too, but the company said it does not know how much is in the mine.

Rocky Emery, chairman and CEO of Rock Energy, said in a statement that the company has not yet budgeted for the $1.8 million of operating cash flow that the early start up will generate.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_61/~3/xgUg_UOhsPw/Rock-energy-colo-gold-mill-kicks-up-ahea.html

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Tuesday, January 10, 2012

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Source: http://androidcommunity.com/forums/f24/xxx-crimson-tide-vs-tigers-live-stream-ncaa-college-football-hd-tv-86504-new/

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Monday, January 9, 2012

Shelf-Preservation: Researchers Tap Century-Old Brain Tissue for Clues to Mental Illness

BOUNCY BRAIN: Old brains preserved in gelatinous celloidin promise new insights into mental illness. But first scientists must figure out how to extract their DNA. Image: University of Indiana/Indiana Medical History Museum

Among the bloodletting boxes, ether inhalers, kangaroo-tendon sutures and other artifacts stored at the Indiana Medical History Museum in Indianapolis are hundreds of scuffed-up canning jars full of dingy yellow liquid and chunks of human brains.

Until the late 1960s the museum was the pathology department of the Central Indiana Hospital for the Insane. The bits of brain in the jars were collected during patient autopsies performed between 1896 and 1938. Most of the jars sat on a shelf until the summer of 2010, when Indiana University School of Medicine pathologist George Sandusky began popping off the lids.

Frustrated by a dearth of postmortem brain donations from people with mental illness, Sandusky?who is on the board of directors at the museum?seized the chance to search this neglected collection for genes that contribute to mental disorders.

Sandusky is not alone. Several research groups are now seeking ways to mine genetic and other information hidden in old, often forgotten tissue archives?a handful of which can be found in the U.S., along with many more in Europe. Several technical hurdles stand in the way, but if these can be overcome, the archives would offer several advantages. Beyond supplying tissues that can be hard to acquire at a time when autopsies are on the decline, the vintage brains are untainted by modern psychiatric drugs and are often paired with detailed clinical notes that help researchers make more accurate post hoc diagnoses.

"There are probably a fair number of these collections around the country that grew out of state hospitals," says John Allman, professor of biology at the California Institute of Technology. "It is an untapped resource. If it were carefully planned and reasonably funded, it could become quite a valuable thing."

Celloidin solution
About a dozen facilities in the U.S. today receive postmortem brain donations from people with schizophrenia; collectively, they hold about 700 brains, according to Joel Kleinman, chief of the section on neuropathology at the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH). His institute's collection is one of the largest, with 232 brains. But getting access to these modern samples is not easy for everyone, he says. "These institutions collected them at great expense, and are not just going to give them up."

A few researchers have instead tapped into much older brain collections, especially for anatomical studies, such as measuring the relative size of white and gray matter or counting neurons. The National Museum of Health and Medicine in Silver Spring, Md., holds one such collection of old brains: thousands of decades-old human brain specimens, many of which originally came from Saint Elizabeth's Hospital, a psychiatric facility in Washington, D.C.

Many of the samples are preserved in celloidin, a hard, rubbery and highly flammable form of cellulose. "The benefit of working with celloidin is that tissue shrinkage is very minimal, and you can see [tissue and cell] structures very clearly under the microscope," says Archie Fobbs, neuroanatomical collection manager at the museum.

But using celloidin-covered samples for genetic analysis is much trickier, as Sandusky's team found out.

Their collection contains brain, heart, liver and spleen tissues from about 1,400 autopsies, 95 of which are labeled "dementia praecox," an antiquated diagnosis similar to schizophrenia. After death most patients' bodies were transferred to built-in metal ice chests located throughout the building, then autopsied within 24 hours.

Many of the samples fixed in celloidin also float in a liquid preservative that is probably formaldehyde or alcohol. If one scooped a gelatinous chunk out of a jar and tossed it against a wall, it would probably bounce like a rubber ball, Sandusky says.

In the summer of 2010 his team tried to break down the preservative with several different chemical concoctions, but to no avail. Frustrated, they put the study on hold and placed the samples on the backburner?or, rather, chilled them in a tank of liquid nitrogen at ?180 degrees Celsius.

But nine months later, in the summer of 2011, the researchers decided to take another stab at the analysis. When they retrieved the samples, the celloidin had broken down into little beads. After a few chemical washes, however, the researchers successfully extracted DNA from the tissues.

Sandusky does not know exactly why the method worked, and it has not yet been peer-reviewed. But he says the DNA is of high quality: "I was totally, totally shocked."

If verified by independent groups, Sandusky's technique would be useful because many old specimens, from brains to tumors to animals, are preserved in celloidin, according to Mary Herman, a neuropathologist at the NIMH who has been inspecting brains since 1962. By the 1970s most researchers switched to paraffin wax because celloidin's flammability makes it somewhat dangerous to work with.

The usefulness of celloidin-encased brains "depends on how well they've been cared for and preserved. Some maintenance is required," Herman says. Formaldehyde can be contaminated with bacteria, for example. "The quality of DNA in old celloidin specimens will require careful evaluation."

Diagnostic dilemma
As proof of principle, Sandusky is first screening the DNA for a handful of genetic glitches that researchers have already linked to schizophrenia in blood studies. So far, the search for the genetic culprits of mental illness has been inconclusive and disappointing, pushing researchers to gather as much data as possible, which is one reason old overlooked brain collections are so valuable. He also plans to look for RNA, which is produced when genes are turned on. Whereas DNA analysis reveals genetic mutations written into a person's genome, RNA analysis reveals which genes are actively overexpressed or underexpressed compared with the general population.

Several other experts, however, are skeptical that Sandusky will be able to extract RNA; the fragile molecule degrades more quickly than DNA does. "If DNA is like holding a rock, RNA is like holding a wine glass," says Carlo Colantuoni, an investigator at Lieber Institute for Brain Development in Baltimore.

The DNA could be interesting on its own, though. Researchers are learning that an individual's DNA is not always the same in blood cells and brain cells. For instance, sometimes large genomic deletions and duplications?called copy number variations, or CNVs?crop up in certain tissues after conception. Francine Benes, director of the Harvard Brain Tissue Resource Center, says she has found interesting CNV differences from one brain region to another in 20-year-old schizophrenia brains preserved in paraffin wax. These differences could reflect atypical brain development that might contribute to schizophrenia.

On the one hand, old clinical diagnoses do not line up with modern ones, which could make it difficult to compare data from old and new brains, according to several experts. On the other hand, century-old clinical records are often much more descriptive than modern ones. In the early 1900s patients were often confined to institutions and followed much more closely than are patients today, giving psychiatrists the chance to record intimate details. "For example, one record describes a female patient who, over the course of a couple of weeks, ate all of the fibers in a broom," Sandusky says.

"Some of the old cases are very good in terms of quality," says Manuel Graeber, chair of brain tumor research at the University of Sydney. In 1997 he found slides of 94-year-old brain tissue from the first described Alzheimer's patient stashed in a basement at the University of Munich. His team confirmed the telltale plaques and tangles of the disease and ran DNA tests on the tissue. "These were meticulous scientists. It's inspiring."

When the pathology building of the Indiana asylum opened in 1896, the Indianapolis Sentinel newspaper ran an announcement. In it, a local doctor described the purpose of the lab: "to gain a clearer insight into diseases of the mind, which must result in the cure of a much larger percent of cases than is now possible." That goal, at least, has been perfectly preserved.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=dc27c81b9a233551cd6828ba66e6bd17

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Sunday, January 8, 2012

French, Italian leaders meet as crisis rolls on

French prime minister Francois Fillon, right, greets his Italian counterpart Mario Monti prior to their meeting at the Hotel Matignon in Paris, Friday Jan. 6, 2012 (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere)

French prime minister Francois Fillon, right, greets his Italian counterpart Mario Monti prior to their meeting at the Hotel Matignon in Paris, Friday Jan. 6, 2012 (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere)

French prime minister Francois Fillon, right, shakes hand with his Italian counterpart Mario Monti prior to their meeting at the Hotel Matignon in Paris, Friday Jan. 6, 2012 (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere)

French Prime Minister Francois Fillon, right, shakes the hand of Italian counterpart Mario Monti, left, prior to their talks at the Hotel Matignon in Paris, Friday Jan. 6, 2012. (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere)

(AP) ? Grim economic news from across Europe greeted the leaders of France and Italy as they prepared to discuss in Paris on Friday the spiraling debt crisis that threatens to engulf both of their economies.

The crisis, which began as a problem of over-indebtedness in small, weaker countries, is now knocking at the door of core economies like Italy and France. It is pushing much of the region toward a new recession and is sending the euro ? which has been resilient over the past two years of the debt crisis ? to 16-month lows.

The interest rate, or yield, on Italy's 10-year bond rose above 7 percent again Friday, a level that has eventually forced other countries to seek bailouts. The problem is Europe cannot afford to rescue Italy as it has smaller economies.

Economic indicators also show that even the richer countries, like Germany, are no longer immune to the debt market jitters. Economic sentiment and retail sales are falling across the region, according to new data released Friday, while unemployment in the 17-nation eurozone is stuck at 10.3 percent.

European governments are trying to regain investors' confidence in their public finances, but doing so will be all the more difficult as their economies slow down or contract.

In Italy's case, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and other European leaders last year pressured Rome to adopt stringent austerity measures after its yield first rose above 7 percent. That forced out Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and brought in a technocratic government under economist Mario Monti that initially calmed investors.

But pressure is rising again, adding urgency to Monti's drive to pass the promised austerity measures.

Monti told a conference in Paris on Friday that Italy would meet its target of balancing its budget by next year and said that, if successfully managed, the crisis would eventually bring the 17 countries that use the euro closer together.

Stocks and bonds mostly fell on Friday while the euro dropped as low as $1.2681, its weakest since early September, 2010.

France, whose bond yields have also been rising steadily, though less dramatically than Italy's, faces the loss of its prized AAA credit rating. Any downgrade would have far-reaching consequences for Europe since Paris' credit rating is one of the bedrocks of the continent's bailout system.

In comments that could indicate what Sarkozy and Monti will discuss, French Finance Minister Francois Baroin told a conference in Paris on Friday that the first responsibility of Europe's leaders is to make good on promises to bring public debt and spending under control.

"We have to eliminate in the mind of the markets the existence of doubt on the question of unity in the eurozone," Baroin said. "There cannot be any doubt."

In a scramble to stem the crisis' march, European leaders pledged at a recent summit to hand sweeping powers over to Brussels, giving bureaucrats the power to send back irresponsible national budgets for revision. The routine violation in the past of European rules on overspending is partially responsible for over-indebtedness.

But Poland's finance minister warned Friday that such plans for closer ties among the countries that use the euro need democratic legitimacy before they can be put into place.

Finance Minister Jacek Rostowski told a conference in Paris that tighter eurozone integration is necessary, but that before vast powers are handed over to the EU executive, European citizens must have a say.

"For something that far reaching as far as national sovereignty to be accepted then there would have to be some form of deep democratic legitimization," he said. "That would either require a co decision with European Parliament or a majority of national parliaments or something like that."

In the interest of calming financial markets ? which can't wait for the kind of messy parliamentary votes and national referendums that have dogged the EU in the past ? leaders pledged to sign up to tighter integration at the summit. But many question whether such sweeping powers can be handed over without some kind of consultation with European citizens.

Rostowski also bemoaned that Britain didn't sign up to the new treaty proposed at the summit. All other EU countries did, though some have since expressed reservations.

"It would be catastrophic for the whole of Europe if the further integration of the eurozone, which we fully support, were to lead to division," he said.

Although the crisis has focused largely on the eurozone countries, financial turmoil was also growing on its fringes, in Hungary.

Market confidence in the country is fading quickly, as evident in a bond auction in which investors this week demanded 10 percent to lend it 12-month money. On Friday, Fitch Ratings downgraded Hungary's credit grade to junk status, as Moody's and S&P had already done.

The country has said it is open to negotiating a standby loan from the EU and IMF, but doubts remain about some of the government's policies. The uncertainty has sent the Hungarian currency, the forint, to all-time lows this week.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-01-06-EU-Europe-Financial-Crisis/id-6f843b320eb343ea946f4351fb9a25f7

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Global Study Finds Drug Abuse Highest in Richer Nations (HealthDay)

FRIDAY, Jan. 6 (HealthDay News) -- About 200 million people worldwide use illicit drugs each year, and use is highest in wealthier nations, a new study shows.

The researchers also found that the burden of health problems caused by illicit drug use in developed countries is similar to that caused by alcohol, but much less than that caused by tobacco.

Experts in the United States weren't surprised by the numbers, and said that more needs to be done to reduce Americans' dependence on illegal drugs.

The study "serves to confirm something addiction experts have known for some time -- that the extent of illicit drug use and abuse in developed countries like the United States has reached epidemic proportions," said Dr. Jeffrey T. Parsons, a professor in the department of psychology at Hunter College, in New York City.

The analysis of available data from a team of Australian researchers estimates that there are up to 203 million marijuana users, anywhere from 14 million to 56 million amphetamine users, 14 million to 21 million cocaine users, and 12 million to 21 million opioid users around the world.

The researchers also estimate that there are 15 million to 39 million "problematic users" of opioids (which include prescription painkillers such as Oxycontin or Vicodin), amphetamines or cocaine, and 11 million to 21 million people who inject drugs worldwide.

Marijuana use appears to be highest in Oceania (Australia/New Zealand), with up to 15 percent of those aged 15 to 64 using the drug, according to estimates made by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime. Amphetamine use was also highest in Oceania (2.8 percent of this age group), while use of heroin and other opioids was highest in the Near and Middle East (up to 1.4 percent). Cocaine use was highest in North America (1.9 percent).

There is no gold-standard method for estimating the true number of illicit drug users and no one method is ideal for all drugs or all countries, said Louisa Degenhardt, of the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre at University of New South Wales, Sydney, and the Burnet Institute in Melbourne, and colleague Wayne Hall of the University of Queensland Centre for Clinical Research in Brisbane.

Lack of data also means there are no estimates of the extent of use, or the health effects, of Ecstasy; hallucinogenic drugs; inhalants; or non-medical use of benzodiazepines such as valium or anabolic steroids.

The study, published Jan. 6, is the first in an addiction series appearing in The Lancet.

The toll on human health from illicit drug use is enormous. According to the investigators, the most recent (2004) data from the World Health Organization suggest that illicit drugs caused 250,000 deaths that year, compared with 2.25 million deaths from alcohol and 5.1 million deaths due to tobacco.

Years of life lost because of illicit drug use were 2.1 million, compared with 1.5 million for alcohol. That's likely because drug deaths generally affect younger people while deaths from alcohol (and tobacco) tend to affect middle-aged and elderly people, the researchers said.

Illicit drug use also caused 13 million years lost to disability (disability-adjusted life years, or DALYs).

Wealthy nations, including the United States, are lagging in efforts to beat back the scourge of drug abuse, experts said.

"Unfortunately, the U.S. has made little progress in the prevention and treatment of drug abuse in the past decade," Parsons said. "More research is needed on effective educational and prevention programs designed to reach young people before they begin to use/abuse illicit drugs," he added.

And expert Dr. Marc Galanter said that "it is important that we call attention to very serious drug abuse problems that still exist in the United States. For example, we are seeing recent increases in abuse of painkillers in the United States, as well as the abuse of MDMA [Ecstasy] by adolescents and young adults. Abuse of these particular drugs is not prevalent in less industrialized countries."

Galanter is director of the division of alcoholism and substance abuse at NYU Langone Medical Center/Bellevue, and a professor of psychiatry at the NYU School of Medicine, in New York City. He said that while drug abuse remains at serious levels, "we have made great progress in treatment in many areas, particularly, in the early recognition of alcohol abuse and alcoholism by the general public. This has led to people seeking help before problems become much more serious."

Still, Galanter said, "much more, however, needs to be done."

The new study also "puts substance use in a societal context," noted Dr. Bruce Goldman, director of Substance Abuse Services at the Zucker Hillside Hospital of the North Shore-LIJ Health System, in Glen Oaks, N.Y. "Social norms have a very powerful impact on drug use patterns," he said, and "we need to create norms where substance use and availability, especially for young people is not acceptable."

More information

The U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse has more about drug abuse and addiction.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/meds/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20120107/hl_hsn/globalstudyfindsdrugabusehighestinrichernations

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Saturday, January 7, 2012

Boats found after NSW tornado

Boats found after NSW tornado

Thursday January 5, 2012 - 23:40 EDT

Police say they have searched an area four times the size of Sydney Harbour after a reports of a mini tornado at a lake in central western New South Wales.

Tree branches and debris were strewn across the roads leading into Lake Burrendong, where a severe hailstorm swept through the area on Thursday afternoon.

Police, SES, volunteers and the rescue helicopter were called in to aid the search for four boats that failed to return to shore.

Did you see the tornado? Send

Acting Inspector Richard Morley for the Orana Local Area Command says all of the boats have been found and no-one was injured.

But he says the lake can become treacherous fast.

"The water can become very, very rough very, very quickly," he said.

"It's just one of those bodies of water I wouldn't want to be on in a thunderstorm."

- ABC

? ABC 2012

More breaking news

ABC News
Sydney Morning Herald
National Nine News
News Limited

Source: http://www.weatherzone.com.au/news/boats-found-after-nsw-tornado/19903

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Cheap Cable Management, Recipe Measurements, and Picasa Uploads [From The Tips Box]

Readers offer their best tips for cheaply wrangling their cables, measuring ingredients when cooking, and turning your phone into a retro gaming device.

Don't like the gallery layout? Click here to view everything on one page.

Every day we receive boatloads of great reader tips in our inbox, but for various reasons?maybe they're a bit too niche, maybe we couldn't find a good way to present it, or maybe we just couldn't fit it in?the tip didn't make the front page. From the Tips Box is where we round up some of our favorites for your buffet-style consumption. Got a tip of your own to share? Add it in the comments, email it to tips at lifehacker.com, or share it on our tips and expert pages.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/OD4B_0H4YBU/

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