Toxic Moon dust by Grey Gallinger

io9 picked up on a research paper entitled Toxicity of Lunar Dust, which outlines the health risks of exposure to the dust and regolith found on the lunar surface. The paper makes many references to the Apollo missions and the negative health effects reported by the astronauts involved. It stresses the need for new manned missions to the Moon, but also makes clear the risk that dust posses towards astronauts and their equipment.

The formation, composition and physical properties of lunar dust are incompletely characterised with regard to human health. While the physical and chemical determinants of dust toxicity for materials such as asbestos, quartz, volcanic ashes and urban particulate matter have been the focus of substantial research efforts, lunar dust properties, and therefore lunar dust toxicity may differ substantially. In this contribution, past and ongoing work on dust toxicity is reviewed, and major knowledge gaps that prevent an accurate assessment of lunar dust toxicity are identified. Finally, a range of studies using ground-based, low-gravity, and in situ measurements is recommended to address the identified knowledge gaps. Because none of the curated lunar samples exist in a pristine state that preserves the surface reactive chemical aspects thought to be present on the lunar surface, studies using this material carry with them considerable uncertainty in terms of fidelity. As a consequence, in situ data on lunar dust properties will be required to provide ground truth for ground-based studies quantifying the toxicity of dust exposure and the associated health risks during future manned lunar missions.

Science fiction often uses the vacuum of space as the de facto risk associated with space travel, which has been proven to be much less violent than Hollywood has portrayed it. Lunar dust (and dust from other planetary bodies) may prove to be a more challenging danger that must be taken in to consideration prior to any manned missions back to the Moon (and probably Mars as well).

Canada's PM Stephen Harper faces revolt by scientists by Grey Gallinger

From The Guardian:

"The Harper government is the most environmentally hostile one we have ever had in Canada. Harper pulled Canada out of the Kyoto protocol, gutted the Fisheries Act (our strongest freshwater protection law), and hollowed out our environmental assessment legislation, making it easier for extractive industries to get licences to exploit," said Maude Barlow, a former UN advisor on water and chair of the Council of Canadians. "It is heartlessly shutting down a programme that costs very little to run given the incredible benefits it brings, in order to silence the voices who speak for water."

Canada is becoming increasingly polarized around environmental issues. There are those who believe that Canadians have a responsibility to protect and nurture the many natural wonders within our borders (and around the world), and then there are those who see only resources ready to be exploited for short term economic gain.

The right to healthy food by Grey Gallinger

Olivier De Schutter, the UN special rapporteur for food, recently visited Canada to speak with people across the country and assess peoples access to food. What he discovered was that despite being one of the world's strongest economies there are still a disproportionate number of people who do not have basic food security.

Olivier De Schutter, via CBC News:

We have in this country more than 800,000 households who are considered food insecure.... This situation is of great concern to me.

The Harper Government was on the defensive, using the opportunity to attack the United Nations rather than admit there is a growing problem here at home. Denying empirical data seems to be the party line for all social, scientific, and environmental issues across the country.

Despite what the current government's policy may be, the fact is that food security is becoming a real global issue. As the people directly affected by poor access to real food it we should take it upon ourselves to solve this issue. Today's print edition of the Globe and Mail1 has a spotlight on the public gardens in Kamloops, British Columbia, and the model of urban public food production. The article mentions the increased popularity of urban gardening projects across North America as a response to the lack of access to good food.

There are a number of documentaries about food politics, one that I've recently become aware of is Edible City, which looks at how urban communities have responded to the food crisis. You can watch Edible City for free on Vimeo.

I know of a couple community gardens and urban farmers in Winnipeg, but perhaps we need something even more ambitious. Instead of the proposed Asper park plan for Parcel 4 maybe the City should use the money to built a community organized public garden.


1This seems to be print only at the moment, I'll try to update the link if it gets posted online.

Got Milk? You Don't Need It by Grey Gallinger

Mark Bittman, writing for the New York Times:

Osteoporosis? You don’t need milk, or large amounts of calcium, for bone integrity. In fact, the rate of fractures is highest in milk-drinking countries, and it turns out that the keys to bone strength are lifelong exercise and vitamin D, which you can get from sunshine. Most humans never tasted fresh milk from any source other than their mother for almost all of human history, and fresh cow’s milk could not be routinely available to urbanites without industrial production. The federal government not only supports the milk industry by spending more money on dairy than any other item in the school lunch program, but by contributing free propaganda as well as subsidies amounting to well over $4 billion in the last 10 years.

I can't stand seeing deceptive milk ads everywhere. I'm especially annoyed when I see milk ads at hockey rinks and other sports venues where they attempt to reinforce the (factually incorrect) idea that milk is a healthy and necessary part of human nutrition.

Canada's top soldier says troops ready and eager for new overseas missions - Winnipeg Free Press by Grey Gallinger

Bill Graveland, writing for The Canadian Press:

When it comes to future missions for the Canadian Forces, Canada's top soldier has to battle to keep his eager troops satisfied with staying out of major combat zones for now.

Translation: we've so completely indoctrinated these people that they are no longer able to function in society and therefore must wage wars on foreign soil to keep them appeased.