Flipping The Bird: 8 Turkey-Free Thanksgiving Treats
November 22, 2011 by thegreenchildrenfoundation · View Comments
[ By Steve in Food & Health & Home & Garden & Uncategorized. ]

Thanksgiving without the turkey is like Groundhog Day without the… OK, bad analogy but you get my drift. Not everyone enjoys the basted beast, however, so it can be a real challenge trying to satisfy those who’d rather flip off the bird than eat it. These 8 twisted turkey-free Thanksgiving tricks & treats make for some great gobbling at any meatless meet & greet.
Tofurky
(images via: LilVeggiePatch)
One can’t pen a turkey-free Thanksgiving post without waving a wing at Turtle Island Foods, creator and manufacturer of Tofurky. Tofurky has expanded mightily since its debut back in 1980 and turkey-phobic holiday eaters can now choose from a range of holiday creations including Tofurky Giblet Gravy… giblet-free, naturally.
(images via: Vegan Product Reviews)
Tofurky… not just for Thanksgiving anymore! The Tofurky Italian Sausage & Fire Roasted Veggie Pizza does the original Tofurky roast one better by not including Italian Sausage. Make that two better: it’s made with non-dairy cheese.
Jones Cola Turkey & Gravy Soda
(images via: LJWorld and BevReview)
Who would inflict Turkey & Gravy flavored soda on an undeserving world? Jones Soda, that’s who. Jones rocked our worlds back in November of 2003 when they announced “Turkey & Gravy” soda in honor of Thanksgiving – we responded by crashing their website. Imbibers who sampled the Jones 2006 Holiday Pack also “enjoyed” complementary Thanksgiving-themed sodas such as Sweet Potato, Dinner Roll, Pea, and Antacid (urp).
(images via: LOL Products!)
How do you top Turkey & Gravy soda? With Tofurky & Gravy soda, of course! Not that the original brew included any turkey, mind you, but perhaps paranoid vegans were put off by the name before they could be put off by the taste. Regardless, Tofurky & Gravy flavored soda debuted in 2009 to a rousing chorus – of crickets.
Turkey Joints
(images via: Deectably Scrumptious and NowPublic)
Thinking of celebrating Thanksgiving Cheech & Chong style? Well break out the Turkey Joints and don’t even think of Bogarting ‘em! Turkey Joints are a unique candy-coated chocolate filled with a “marrow” of chocolate and ground Brazil Nuts. Sort of like an upscale version of those unique candy treats called Chicken Bones. You don’t have to have the munchies to enjoy Turkey Joints but, er, umm, what was I talking about?
Turkey-Flavored Doritos
(images via: The Taipei Kid and We Are Sub Rosa)
Speaking of the munchies (and the crunchies, for that matter), Doritos are your average gamer’s fave snack and they come in just about anyone’s fave flavor – even Flavor Flav’s fave flavor, which might possibly be Turkey. Doritos have become a worldwide phenomenon and you’ll find Roasted Turkey flavored Doritos in Taiwan. See, the chips look like little Christmas Trees and… hey, who designed this, Flavor Flav?? Above right are another type of Turkey Doritos: Doritos from Turkey! They don’t call turkey “turkey” in Turkey, by the way, they call it “Hindi”. The more you know!
(images via: Woman’s Day)
Lay’s is another global snack brand that has cleverly tuned their offerings to local cultural cuisine. Hmm, that doesn’t explain why Lay’s Turkey Potato Chips are sold in Mainland China. We’re not sure what Mainland Chinese are expecting from their snack foods, by the way, but it’s probably a lot worse than turkey.
Turkey Day Triple Fudge Ice Cream
(image via: Ice Cream Journal)
“Turkey Day Triple Fudge is designed to take the best parts of Thanksgiving dinner and unite them in a very rich, creamy, frosty dessert. It does that by combining super premium chocolate ice cream with morsels of real turkey covered in dark chocolate swirled with sweet potato, chocolate fudge and cranberry sauce.” Now hold yer horses, pilgrim, we said this post would be turkey-free and we meant it – there’s no actual turkey in Turkey Day Triple Fudge Ice Cream ’cause Turkey Hill doesn’t make any such thing. It’s just the twisted scribes at Ice Cream Journal pulling our drumsticks with a timely post dated March 31st, the day before… uh huh.
Thanksgiving Gumballs
(images via: BaronBob.com and Accoutrements)
How often have you dug into a plate of oven-roasted Thanksgiving turkey only to find it’s been overcooked, and you end up chewing and chewing and… the heck with that, eliminate the middleman (he’s a lousy cook anyway) and get yourself some Thanksgiving Gumballs! Available in Turkey, Cranberry and Pumpkin Pie flavors, they’re the greatest thing to come along since those ice cream pills 10-year-old Pia Zadora ate in 1964′s Santa Claus Conquers The Martians.
Turkey-Flavored Canned Veggies
(images via: Glory Foods, Cafe Press and Newgrounds)
Do your kids hate eating their vegetables? Yeah, well, Turkey-Flavored Collard Greens aren’t going to change their minds. Neither will Turkey-Flavored Turnip Greens for that matter. Maybe Glory Foods could try deep-frying their Collard Greens and Turnip Greens in chocolate sauce.
Wild Turkey Bourbon
(images via: Whisky Drinker, Twenty Twenty and J-Walk Blog)
What’s the best remedy for freeloading relatives, noisy young’uns and WAY too much rib-stickin’, calorie-laden food? Turkey of course! Er, Wild Turkey that is, Kentucky’s famous 101-proof bourbon and Hunter S. Thompson’s favorite tipple. That’s tipple, not triple – the only thing worse than leftover Thanksgiving turkey is a raging Wild Turkey hangover.
(images via: Taste of Bourbon, Food Service Geeks and The Vegan Epicure)
Wild Turkey offers a range of delicious sauces as well, and you’re not obligated to use them on turkey too. Actually meat itself is optional: The Vegan Epicure mentions an intriguing recipe for Vegan Fried Chicken with Wild Turkey Barbecue Sauce, shown above right. Finger lickin’ good indeed, and you’re cool with the Vegans as long as you only lick your fingers, not bite ‘em.
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(image via: BaronBob.com)
Staying in the spirit of the season is simple, even if the traditional main course turns you off faster than your s/o’s tryptophan-laced morning breath. Hey, Christmas still works without any actual elves, reindeer or chubby guys (Santa, not you), amiright? That’s where the incredible Inflatable Turkey comes in: blow it up, garnish it to the max and watch it glisten… while you and your grateful guests dig into buckets of hot wings, juicy t-bone steaks or an extra-large 7-topping pizza. Now if only they made an inflatable Tofurky…
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Farm Festivals - Getting to Know the Land
August 18, 2011 by thegreenchildrenfoundation · View Comments
In the heart of summer, festivals of all types abound. But this eco-conscious festival has something to teach the participants that they won’t soon forget: a deeper appreciation for the land.
Set amidst a swath of green fields just north of London, Real Farm Festival is taking place this weekend, 17–19 June, in an effort to promote more peaceful, self-sufficient and natural ways of living. The event at Church Farm, Hertfordshire, near Stevenage will provide an opportunity for people of any age to discover what it is really like to live a healthy, ‘green’ life and to see a modern farm in action.
“This summer there are many festivals on farms across the country but Real Farm Festival puts the farm at the heart of the event, reconnecting people, land and food,” said Neil Nayar, musical director of Real Farm Festival. “We’re having a party to bring normal folks out to the farm for a weekend to experience what modern farm life is like.”
“We want to bring together a new generation of people from a wide variety of backgrounds to hang out together for a weekend, share good times and also engage in a very important discussion for the future of farming.”
Scientists, philosophers and anthropologists including top organic scientist Prof. Martin Wolfe and biologist Rupert Sheldrake will share their views in a series of conversations entitled Question Time: The New Agrarianism. Real Farm Festival will also be building the first ever edible living room, as well as hosting 40 environmentally-conscious musicians.
Beth
Jewel of Japan: Gorgeous Sand Dunes Like Japanese Desert
July 20, 2011 by admin · View Comments
[ By Delana in Geography & Travel & History & Trivia & Nature & Ecosystems. ]

Japan boasts countless attractions to delight and entertain tourists, but there might not be any that are more unexpected than the Tottori Sand Dunes. The dunes, in Tottori Prefecture near Tottori City, are unlike anything else in all of Japan – and the area is so impressive that it would be easy to mistake it for a previously-unknown desert.

(all images via: Oddity Central)

The Tottori Sand Dunes have existed for approximately 100,000 years. They were formed by sediment from the Sea of Japan washing up onto shore and being blown into the dunes. Strong winds constantly rearrange the sand deposits, creating incredible desert-like formations that can reach heights of 90 meters. The unusual dunes draw an estimated two million visitors each year.

The weather at the dunes can be strange and unpleasant: the sand reaches temperatures of 65 degrees Celcius (nearly 150 degrees Fahrenheit) in the summer, making it impractical to walk around barefoot like one would at the beach. It also rains quite often, which can shatter the illusion of being in a desert but brings out adventurous sand-boarders and creates interesting patterns in the sand.

Although the dunes bring in plenty of tourists, they are in constant danger of disappearing. Human interventions like reforestation and protective concrete barriers have prevented new sand from being deposited in the dunes, causing them to shrink significantly. If you are planning a trip to Japan, be sure to stop by this incredible location before it is gone forever.
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Cold Comfort: 7 Amazing Antarctic Lakes
July 19, 2011 by admin · View Comments
[ By Steve in 7 Wonders Series & Nature & Ecosystems & Science & Research. ]

Lakes? In my frozen Antarctica? It’s more likely than you think, and their existence has nothing to do with global warming. This in-depth (brrr!) look at 7 amazing Antarctic lakes shows us the 7th continent still has a few tricks up its frosty sleeve.
Don Juan Pond
(image via: 77 Degrees South)
Don Juan Pond may sound romantic but visitors will find intimacy is the last thing on their minds – unless getting up close & personal with Mother Nature is your thing, you salty dog! Speaking of which, Don Juan Pond‘s hypersalinity is what keeps it from freezing over no matter how cold it gets, and (cue Larry David voice) Antarctica can get pretty, pretty cold. Scale is difficult to determine without trees, but note the red-coated researcher on the right in the above image.
(images via: Polar Night Images, Hassan Basagic and Los Alamos Mountaineers)
You think the Dead Sea is salty at 8 times the ocean’s salinity? Don Juan Pond laughs at your assumptions, being 18 times saltier than the sea. Forget about floating IN it, anyone brave enough to strip down and dip their tootsies might find they float ABOVE it!
(images via: The Resource Center and Walt Hamler)
Sadly, doing the Don Juan Pond flotation exercise is not an option. Scientists aren’t sure why, but over the past few decades Don Juan Pond has been steadily drying up to the point where it’s only a few inches deep. One might assume that its location in Antarctica’s Dry Valleys region doesn’t help the situation.
Organic Lake
(images via: Punnett’s Square, AAD and Liquida)
Located in eastern Antarctica’s Vestfold Hills, Organic Lake formed about 6,000 years ago and gets its name from the profusion of algae it hosts. These algae produce malodorous Dimethyl Sulfide as a gaseous waste product and they do so in abundance, as the 24.5 ft (7.5m) deep lake boasts the highest level of dissolved DMS of any lake on Earth. Blazing Saddles in a drop of water, that’s what they’ve got there.
(images via: AAD and Smaller Questions)
Organic Lake made the news recently when scientists testing its waters discovered the Organic Lake Virophage (above, lower left), a so-called “virus-eater” that preys on larger viruses that in turn infect the lake’s algae. Further research is being conducted to find out not only how OLV functions, but if the knowledge gained can assist medical professionals in devising new antiviral drugs and treatments for viral illnesses in humans.
Radok Lake
(images via: Swisseduc, ANARE Club and Schepps Media)
Alien-sounding Radok Lake can be found near (the unfortunately beaver-less) Beaver Lake at the foot of the Prince Charles Mountains. Although not especially large as lakes go – it’s about 4 miles (6.43 km) long – Radok Lake is 1,188 ft (362 meters) deep making it the continent’s deepest surface-exposed lake. One wonders what waits in the extreme depths of Radok Lake, dreaming with his hordes hidden in green slimy vaults… the awful answer being, of course, “Ph’nglui mglw’nafh Cthulhu R’lyeh wgah’nagl fhtagn.”
(image via: Swisseduc)
Radok Lake’s most exception feature – visually, at least – is the spectacular “ice tongue” of the Battye Glacier which stabs into the lake and floats upon its frigid, cerulean blue waters. If Lovecraft’s Great Old Ones ever loaded up the Prius with PBR and headed out for a weekend at the beach, this is where they’d likely end up chilling out.
Lake Vida
(images via: DRI and National Geographic)
Livin’ la Lake Vida loca? Try nada. Lake Vida is capped with ice over 60 ft (21 m) thick, precluding its use for recreational watersports even at the height of the Antarctic summer. It’s been so for thousands of years. Beneath that protective ice cap, however, lies a mysterious lacustrine ecosystem that’s basically humming along in sweet isolation… at a frigid (but still liquid) -13°C, no less.
(images via: BBC and Space Daily)
Lake Vida’s no Don Juan Pond but its kosher dill-level brine is still 7 times as saline as seawater. If it was stocked with herring, all you’d need were jars! In 2002, a research team from the University of Illinois at Chicago’s Peter Doran discovered halophile (salt-loving) cyanobacteria in ice cores drilled into Lake Vida 6 years earlier.
(images via: NASA/APOD, We Heart New York and Bloody Good Horror)
Upon being thawed, the microbes awoke from their 2,800-year-long slumber and carried on much as before. NASA has since set up a Meteorological Station on the shores of Lake Vida to, well, keep tabs on things. The station is unmanned… I guess they saw that movie too.
Lake Bonney

Lake Bonney, a freshwater lake located in the McMurdo Dry Valleys (which seem to have a lot of lakes), is 4.35 miles (7 km) long by about 1/2 mile (900 meters) wide. It was named for Thomas George Bonney, professor of geology at University College in London from 1877 to 1901, but naming it for William H Bonney (alias “Billy the Kid”) makes much more sense. Why? Because it’s fed by Blood Falls, a red-tinted plume of rusty water that pours out of the Taylor Glacier onto the lake’s surface!
(images via: Taylor Valley, Space.com and Astrobioblog)
Lake Bonney may soon be visited by autonomous submersible robot NASA calls “Endurance” (though I would’ve called it the “Pat Garrett”) that will explore the depths of Lake Bonney as practice for a future mission to Jupiter’s watery moon Europa. Hopefully the exploratory mission to Europa’s subsurface ocean will go ahead without any, er, holdup.
Lake Thomas
(images via: QSL)
Lake Thomas, found in the Dry (yes, I know) Valleys of Victoria Land, is a freshwater lake fed by glacial melt on Antarctica’s warmer summer days. Though Lake Thomas itself isn’t especially remarkable, it’s surrounded with some of the planet’s most eerie, inhospitable, otherworldly (yet beautiful) scenery. It’s going to be a popular place once global warming really kicks in.
(image via: Portland State University)
As is the case with many of the glacial meltwater lakes in the Dry Valleys region, the purity of the water in the frozen surface cap allows for a remarkable clarity shown off to full advantage by scientists and photographers alike.
Lake Untersee
(images via: Stampboards and WordlessTech, Dale Anderson)
Lake Untersee was discovered by the German Antarctic Expedition of 1938–39, which did little other than name upwards of 50 topographical features with German names and drop a dozen Nazi flag markers by air… or so they would like us to think! The lake itself is about 4 miles (6.5 km) long, 1.6 miles (2.5 km) wide, and up to 554 ft (69 m) in depth. Though permanently capped with ice up to 9.8 ft (3 m) even in the summer, it’s what lies beneath Lake Untersee’s surface that has aroused both shock and surprise.
(images via: TMP, Bibliotecapleyades and Fufor)
You thought there was going to be mention of a Nazi u-boat base and UFO hangar (or both), didn’t you? Sorry, fellow conspiracy theorists, no such luck. Instead, divers who braved the exceptionally alkaline water (the pH ranges from 9.8 and 12.1, like strong Chorox) discovered… life!
(images via: WordlessTech)
Yes, life, albeit in a very primitive form. Those odd, purplish humped objects seen in the image above are not the spawn of Shoggoths, but stromatolites: layered structures built up layer by layer over centuries by mats of cyanobacteria. Stromatolites are among the Earth’s oldest fossils, dating back 3.5 billion years… and here they are at the bottom of an Antarctic lake. Maybe ol’ HP was on to something after all.
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(image via: Cthulhu’s Holiday Photos)
Anglers anxious to reel in the first fish hooked in an Antarctic lake should cool their heels, as there are no viable fish populations in any of Antarctica’s many saline or freshwater lakes. Then again, many of these lakes have been isolated from the outer environment for thousands to millions of years and new discoveries concerning their ecologies continue to be made. So go ahead and bait a hook… but if something tugs on your line, let it go, man. Just let it go.
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Solar Plant Generates Power for 24 Hours
July 12, 2011 by admin · View Comments
While Americans celebrated U.S. history on the Fourth of July yesterday, a company in Spain celebrated an historic moment for the solar industry: Torresol’s 19.9 megawatt (MW) concentrating solar power plant became the first ever to generate uninterrupted electricity for 24 hours straight.
The plant uses a Power Tower design which features a field of 2,650 mirrors that concentrate sunlight onto a boiler in a central receiver tower. The plant also utilizes molten salt as a heat transfer fluid that allows it to generate electricity when there’s no sunlight. Recharge News reported on the milestone:
After commissioning in May, the plant was finally ready to operate at full-blast in late June and benefited from a particularly sunny stretch of weather, according to Diego Ramirez, director of production at Torresol. “The high performance of the installations coincided with several days of excellent solar radiation, which made it possible for the hot-salt storage tank to reach full capacity,” Ramirez explains.
Torresol says that the plant will provide electricity for about 20 hours each day on average, with numerous days in the summer seeing 24 hours of supply. How does that compare with a similar-sized photovoltaic plant? The 21.2 MW Solarpark Calaveron in Spain generates about 40 gigawatt hours (GWh) a year. This smaller 19.9 MW power tower plant will generate about 110 GWh per year.
Yesterday’s news is a big milestone for Power Tower technology, which is still very nascent compared to the more mature parabolic troughs. There are only a few operating commercial-scale plants around the world, and Torresol’s is the only one with molten salt storage.
Beth
Positive Quote Wednesday - on Summer
June 1, 2011 by admin · View Comments
Ah, summer, what power you have to make us suffer and like it. ~Russel Baker
A perfect summer day is when the sun is shining, the breeze is blowing, the birds are singing, and the lawn mower is broken. ~James Dent
If a June night could talk, it would probably boast it invented romance. ~Bern Williams
What is one to say about June, the time of perfect young summer, the fulfillment of the promise of the earlier months, and with as yet no sign to remind one that its fresh young beauty will ever fade. ~Gertrude Jekyll
In winter I get up at night
And dress by yellow candle-light.
In summer quite the other way
I have to go to bed by day.
~Robert Louis StevensonIn June, as many as a dozen species may burst their buds on a single day. No man can heed all of these anniversaries; no man can ignore all of them. ~Aldo Leopold
Oh, the summer night
Has a smile of light
And she sits on a sapphire throne.
~Barry CornwallIn the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer. ~Albert Camus
There shall be eternal summer in the grateful heart. ~Celia Thaxter
The summer night is like a perfection of thought. ~Wallace Stevens
In summer, the song sings itself. ~William Carlos Williams
Deep summer is when laziness finds respectability. ~Sam Keen
People don’t notice whether it’s winter or summer when they’re happy. ~Anton Chekhov
Summer has set in with its usual severity. ~Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Beth
Booming Industry: GM Recycling Oil Booms in Chevy Volt Parts
December 29, 2010 by thegreenchildrenfoundation · View Comments
[ By Delana in Energy & Fuel, Nature & Ecosystems, Transit & Auto. ]

It is anything but news that the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico was a truly devastating event. And though the well is now capped and the oil has stopped flowing, the environmental impact of the disaster will continue to be felt for many years and in many, many ways. Car-making giant GM is doing its small part in reducing the spill’s toll by recycling some of the booms used to trap oil into parts for its hybrid car, the Chevy Volt.

GM plans to use around 100,000 pounds of boom material in its innovative recycling scheme. But it is far from a solitary effort on GM’s part: a whole collection of organizations are involved in the plan. The boom material was collected by Heritage Environmental, then the oil and water were separated (via a high-speed spinning process) by Mobile Fluid Recovery. Lucent Polymers prepared the plastic before GDC, Inc. used it to produce radiator air deflectors for the Volt.

There should be enough materials available to produce radiator air deflectors for at least the first model year of Volts. There may even be enough for produce parts for other models, as well. If left to rot in landfills, the boom materials would take hundreds of years to even begin breaking down, so GM’s plan to give them new life does somewhat reduce the environmental fallout from the devastating BP spill.

The irony of using oil spill detritus to supply parts for cars which will ultimately perpetuate the use of petroleum products is not lost on GM or any of the other companies involved in the unusual plan. But when compared to using brand new, pre-consumer plastics, producing the needed parts from recycled oil booms is a smart move that might just win GM a few green credits in the hearts of environmentalists.
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Social Entrepreneurship in Cambodia
December 6, 2010 by · View Comments
Meet Rithy, one of the many social entrepreneurs and community leaders featured in The Responsible Nomad Guide to Cambodia. Rithy grew up on an island 30 km south of Phnom Penh. An IT and English college student, Rithy runs his own real estate business and allocates 10% of profits to start environmental and education projects on his island. Each Saturday you can join him on a bike ride to his village to enjoy the beautiful scenery and see his projects in action. A recent UNEP report estimates that up to 80% of tourism revenues in developing countries do not stay in the local economy. By using the entrepreneurs in our guide, you can not only get off the beaten path but also contribute to local economic and social development. Responsible Nomad connects you with hundreds of locally-owned businesses and socially-responsible establishments, and gives you the opportunity to make a difference. Responsible Nomad is coming this summer: www.responsiblenomad.com
Earl Phalem - NewDay Social Entrepreneurship Distinguished Speakers Series
November 23, 2010 by · View Comments
The NewDay Social Entrepreneurship Distinguished Speakers Series presents prominent leaders from across the field of social entrepreneurship to share their own experiences, challenges, insights, thoughts, and recommendations to students and the community. The speaker series provides the Tulane community an opportunity to meet and engage with some of the most remarkable people working in the area of social entrepreneurship today. Earl Martin Phalen, CEO of Reach Out and Read and Founder of Summer Advantage, USA Phalen, who was born into the foster care system, works to do all that he can to ensure that all children have access to a high-quality education and are given a fair chance to fulfill their potential, just as he was. Reach Out and Read, promotes early literacy skill development of children ages 0-5 and Summer Advantage USA ensures the academic and social development of school-aged children, ages 5-14. President Obama modeled federal legislation after his summer learning program. Phalen is a Mind Trust Fellow and Ashoka Fellow, and holds a BA from Yale University and a JD from Harvard Law School.
12 (More) Volatile Volcanoes That Are Ready to Blow
June 28, 2010 by admin · View Comments
[ By Steph in Geography & Travel, Nature & Ecosystems. ]

When Indonesia’s Mount Tambora erupted in 1815, the world got an all too vivid glimpse at just how far-reaching the damage can be. The largest volcanic eruption in the earth’s history killed 100,000 people and caused ‘The Year Without a Summer‘, crop-killing summer snow and freezing temperatures in the United States and Europe. Today, Iceland’s Mount Eyjafjallajökull is far from the only one to worry about.There’s an unusual amount of seismic activity happening everywhere from Washington State to North Korea, with 12 deadly volcanoes nearing potential eruption.
Katla Volcano, Iceland

(image via: earth magazine)
If you thought Iceland’s Eyjafjallajökull eruption was bad, you haven’t seen anything yet. Think of the Katla volcano as Eyjafjallajökull’s fiercer, angrier, more violent sister. A Katla volcano eruption would be ten times stronger and would shoot larger plumes of ash much higher in the air. Though experts feared that Katla might be set off by the eruption back in April, it hasn’t happened yet – but that doesn’t mean it won’t.
Mount Baekdu, North Korea

(image via: wikimedia commons)
Mount Baekdu is sacred to Koreans, deeply connected to their history – the legend goes that this volcanic mountain on the border between North Korea and China is the ancestral origin of their people. But it may soon be connected to a new, less positive legend; experts believe it’s going to erupt for the first time since 947 A.D. sometime between 2014 and 2015. Last time, the amount of ash created is estimated to have been 1,000 times that of the recent Iceland eruption.
Mayon Volcano, Philippines

(image via: wikimedia commons)
In December of 2009, residents of the central province in the Philippines got the warning: evacuate, because Mayon is going to blow any time now. Tens of thousands of people fled the area as Mount Mayon began to hiss steam and spew ash into the air and lava began to pour down the mountainside. Ultimately, the volcano didn’t erupt – not yet, at least. The warning level has been lowered since then, but experts say the danger is far from past, especially as volcanic earthquakes and rockfall events continue to occur.
Mount St. Helens, Washington, USA

(image via: wikimedia commons)
30 years ago, Mount St. Helens caused utter chaos in Washington State, killing dozens of people and decimating more than 200 square miles of forest. It erupted again in 2004 – much more mildly – but another eruption is just a matter of time, and there would be very little warning once it began. Scientists estimate that Mount St. Helens would send a plume of ash 30,000 feet into the sky within five minutes.
Yellowstone Volcano, Wyoming, USA

(images via: wikimedia commons)
When Iceland’s volcano erupted in April 2010, the most damage it did was to the airline industry as billions of dollars were lost to grounded flights. But, as CBS News puts it, “If the Yellowstone volcano has a major eruption, you won’t be thinking much about flying.” That’s because this gigantic little-known volcano, which lies under the surface of one of America’s most popular national parks, would level nearby towns and cover a huge portion of the central US with dozens of feet of ash if it erupted. Right now, the rock is about 5% molten, and it needs to reach 15% before an eruption – which could happen in a matter of days, but would have to be triggered by a major event about as likely as a mile-wide asteroid hitting the earth. The Yellowstone volcano is being carefully monitored by scientists, so we’ll likely know far ahead of time if this baby gets ready to blow.
Marsili Volcano, Italy

(image via: cnn.com)
As if Southern Italy didn’t have enough volcanic threats, there’s also the possibility of a nearby undersea volcano collapsing and causing a catastrophic tsunami. In that sense, the Marsili Volcano isn’t technically “about to blow” – but it could cause just as much damage. In fact, experts at the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology say that the volcano’s walls could crumble at any time, producing shock waves that could theoretically sink the whole of Southern Italy into the Mediterranean Sea. It’s not a matter of if, but when – however, that ‘when’ may not occur for hundreds of years.
Glacier Peak, Washington, USA

(image via: herald net)
Compared to the majesty of nearby Mount Rainier and Mount Baker, Washington State’s Glacier Peak seems like a mole hill. But buy a home in Snohomish County, and you’ll be forced to sign a document acknowledging your awareness of the fact that you’ll be living within the volcano’s reach. Glacier Peak is one of 18 U.S. Volcanoes listed as “very high threat”, but it has only three siesmometers and no GPS monitoring stations. Its last major eruption was about 1800 years ago, and when it erupts again, it will be far more violent than the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens.
Mount Vesuvius, Italy

(image via: wikimedia commons)
The 1 million people who live at the base of Mt. Vesuvius don’t need to be reminded of the horrors that another eruption of that infamous volcano would bring – they know all too well. Pompeii, completely annihilated in the year 79 B.C.E., is just minutes from the bustling metropolis of Naples, Italy. Yet another eruption killed 4,000 people in 1631, while a 1944 eruption took the lives of 26. Vesuvius is now considered Italy’s “biggest public safety problem”, though no one can predict when it will next awaken. Luckily, the chance of another Pompeii-sized eruption is only around 1 percent.
Ischia Volcano, Italy

(image via: wikimedia commons)
Not far from Mount Vesuvius, just a few miles away off the coast of Southern Italy, lies yet another volcano that could potentially erupt at any time – and while it’s far less known than Vesuvius, it may be even more dangerous. Ischia last erupted 700 years ago, and scientists say that it’s experiencing a build-up of magma that may be a disturbing hint at coming events.
Mount Merapi, Indonesia

(image via: wikimedia commons)
It’s a beautiful sight, towering over the surrounding flat lands with their jumbles of bright-roofed buildings. But Mount Merapi is also deadly, and capable of meting out an incredible amount of destruction. It has earned its place among the world’s most active volcanoes, with mild eruptions occurring every 2-3 years, larger ones every 10-15 years and exceptionally lethal eruptions happening every 40-60 years. In 1930, 1400 people lost their lives and 13 villages were destroyed; in 2006, the volcano threatened to blow but seismic activity calmed down within a couple weeks.
Nyiragongo, Democratic Republic of Congo

(image via: xinhuanet)
Just like its similarly volatile neighbor Nyamuragira, the volcano Nyiragongo – located in the Democratic Republic of Congo – is extremely active, having erupted at least 34 times since 1882. A major eruption in 2002 sent lava pouring into the streets of nearby towns. Another one is likely forthcoming: in June 2010, a massive plume of molten rock associated with volcanic activity was discovered heading toward the East African Rift upon which Nyiragongo sits.
Taal Volcano, Philippines

(image via: wikimedia commons)
In the Philippines, residents are on alert for a possible eruption of the Taal Volcano, which could blow for the first time since 1997. Located just 30 miles south of the densely populated capital city of Manila, Taal could cause significant upheaval in the region including fatalities. The volcano began hissing steam last year and many high-frequency volcanic earthquakes were detected in the third week of June 2010, with magma currently moving toward the surface.
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