July 31, 2013

When life drives you to a glass house: the Biosphere 2

the Biosphere 2.



i cannot ever stress enough how much this place blows my mind. i drive two hours and over 100 miles to see what i have always thought of as a temple of human dreams driving achievement.
 
 


i have always been a science geek, a science fiction enthusiast, a bit of a space exploration nerd and an engineering buff. i like seeing how things go from people talking about how awesome it would be, to drawing on a napkin, to finding the money and then building it. now the Biosphere 2 is a little bit of all of this, from a science fiction space colony on an alien world, to an engineering fete of mind boggling proportions, to a fertile ground of imagination what ifs.

 


ive always wonder as i walk the pathways if someday years down the line if generations removed from me someone is going to walk the paths of our first colony is a strange echo of a memory or maybe architectural child of the Biosphere 2. but if im honest the part of me that is in love with the movie The Thing and the Lovecraft Prophecies then runs wild and thinks of it as a survival or containment chamber of the things that shouldnt be disturbed.
 


Originally the love child of Ed Bass, a philanthropist, businessman and environmentalist, who committed to financing the construction and experiments of the Biosphere 2 in 1984. he did this as a way to experiment with the plausibility of settling on Mars, self contained ecosystems, green energy and environmental studies in sustainability.
 

 
 
the world looked on in 1991 as the environment was sealed with a crew of eight people consisting of Roy Walford, Jane Poynter, Taber MacCallum, Mark Nelson, Sally Silverstone, Abigail Alling (who replaced Silke Schneider), Mark Van Thillo, and Linda Leigh for the first 2 year mission. now i know some of you will think, 'huh, wasnt that a movie called biodome?' and then stoner humor will ensue. kind of. obviously hollywood needed a way to make money off of tits/violence/and a stretched connection to a current event.
 


at this point the public mind will remember the first mission as a failure- which it was not. the scientific data alone was a gold mine. what they did however learn, was that humans are shitty and will preen and politic over the stupidest shit. so while sealed in the group grew to have difficulties and formed cliques, and the outside groups involved in the management and financing of the experiment began to have trouble that would eventually boil over during the second mission.
 

 

 
i dont think ill go too deeply into the history simply because its all over the net in a much nicer form than i could write and far more scientific information about the experiment, habitats, diets, flora and fauna, sunlight, carbon and oxygen issues and of course, the infamous injury. so i will continue with my quickie with just enough to leave you curious to explore on your own.
 
 
 
 

the second experiment that sealed Norberto Romo, John Druitt, Matt Finn, Pascale Maslin, Charlotte Godfrey, Rodrigo Romo and Tilak Mahato was however a failure. But not entirely due to those inside. the financial and management team melted down due to many issues and forced a closure on the experiment. with their collapse Columbia University took over and the Biosphere 2 eventually passed from Columbias hands to the University of Arizona.
 
 
 

a few of the details i found most interesting during my multiple tours through the Biosphere include in no particular order...
many insects need ultraviolet light to survive- partially because its how they see and in some cases their body needs to absorb it just like humans need the vitamin d from the sun.
the crew quarters have their own small spiral staircases to their living lofts and have a stunning view of the area that they grew their food.
the air inside the Biosphere actually smells different from outside, and even more specialized inside from area to area.
the vegetable heavy diets that were high in nutrition and low in calories caused the scientists to lose over 10 percent of their body weight and though they were very healthy- they looked gaunt and were often fatigued.
to combat the chance of the expansion and contraction of the heated air within the Biosphere they created two giant 'lungs' that consist of humongous rooms at the end of a long and steep, very claustrophobic tunnel that leads into a chamber with a huge concrete disc suspended by a rummer diaphragm that will rise and fall with the internal pressure to regulate it so as to keep the glass walls from exploding from the pressure.
that chamber has a pool of water (to help cushion the drop of the concrete disc) that looks like a portal to hell or another dimension that Cthulu will emerge from- or at least giant tentacles that in my imagination the concrete disc is dropped onto to seal it off.
i want to live inside this Biosphere more than any other piece of real estate i have ever seen in my life but im bringing my cats and books with me if i can.

in conlusion. go, give them your money. its a small price to see science, the future of man and the dreams of life not limited to a single planet.

July 24, 2013

seeing Ghost(s...(b.c.)

a friend of mine introduced me to one of my all time favorite bands and i will be forever thankful. i am even more thankful for the time he bought a ticket for me to go see that band with him and his girlfriend.
we drove about two hours south of phoenixopolis to tucson- a town whos name apparently i cannot wrap my east coast mouth around and always pronounce it wrong when speaking to locals, and we spent the day exploring the Biosphere 2 (you should see it), the domes and downtown tucson.



ill do a post later about the Biosphere because i love that place and manage to visit it like once every three or four months and i think its a treasure. but right now im going to talk about Ghost. or well, Ghost b.c. when they tour here in the states due to some bullshit band than had the name before them and that no one ever heard of from back in the 70s or something.




Ghost was founded my what is probably a bunch of swedish guys, but no one is really sure since they place in full robes and masks without revealing their identities. the whole theme of the band is Papa Emeritus and the Nameless Ghouls are i guess a satanic cardinal and his faceless priests or servants. the showmanship and theatrical nature of how they performs is amazing. for people who are reading this that arent fans of metal music, dont worry. im sure Ghost isnt actually a bunch of satanists. its just music.

 
their sound is very blues, old rock, 70s showmanship and melodic. think Blue Oyster Cult, early Black Sabbath, ABBA, and a touch of Mercyful Fate. for the casual listener, remember- showmanship and concept. i personally love most of the music lyrically. i think its well written, poetic and flows amazingly with a clean, crisp sound. the guitarists are very talented, the drummer is spot on and the music flows. i especially love the covers they choose to do. who would have ever guessed ABBA or the Beatles could sound terrifying?


So i would highly recommend giving either album a listen. Opus Eponymous is their first and was what got me hooked, and Infestissumam is a well paced and executed sophmore album. ill leave you with a link to youtube for their Beatles cover.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PLFFUIZfX9Q

Antelope Canyon where the Soul whispers

i have traveled to a lot of places. i even had the luck of being born and raised in what is often referred to as one of the most beautiful places in America. when i have i was lost for words by the beauty of a place, i am making a very big statement. it honestly took me over a year to be able to construct full, adult sentences in regards to what i saw.


 



in northern arizona there is a place located near the city of page that is called Antelope Canyon. This canyon is on Navajo lands and has two parts, called  Tsé bighánílíní (and wikpedia tells me this means the place where water runs through the rocks) which is Upper Antelope Canyon. the other half is Lower Antelope Canyon, named Hazdistazí, (wikipedia says spiral rock arches).
 



 
 

now ill get the tour guide stuff out of the way. this is probably one of the most recognizable places photographed in America. youll see photos of this place everywhere. the canyon was formed by erosion and flash flooding. the upper canyon is level so if you have physical requirements for travel than youre in luck, plus walking through pure shafts of sunlight that kiss your soul as it resonates through what is one of the most spiritually touching locations in the world.



i would not call myself religious, but i do feel a connection to the universe. i drove four hours to stand in a sketchy looking parking lot in the shadow of what looked like a giant power plant from the future where blue skies met orange sands. after paying about the same amount for a ticket s i would a decent meal i was ferried onto a modified off roading truck along with a few other people and driven though a shallow wash.
 







i remember thinking during the ride that the picture i had seen really only had one thing in common with the area i was in. the dirt was orange and that it reminded me scifi renditions of mars. but then the truck pulled over and we were ushered to a crack in the face of a sharply angled orange sandstone wall. the crack in the canyon. what i didnt know at this moment was that i was about to have a moment of spiritual growth.

at this point ill just let the rest of the pictures talk. because unless youre there, youll never feel the heartbeat of the universe, God's kiss, the perfect moment, Om... call it what you will.