A Black Flash

Published: May 29, 2017, 2:41 a.m.

On this weeks episode of Expanded Perspectives the guys start the show off talking about how\xa0bee populations around the world have been in decline for years due to a number of reasons that make it extremely difficult to fix the problem. Urban development, insecticides, fungicides, illness, climate change, and many other factors have been determined to be responsible for the decline in bee populations. This week, the nonprofit Bee Informed Partnership and the Apiary Inspectors of America published their annual survey of 4,963 beekeepers in the United States and it seems that we still have a problem. But it was a slightly better year for our vital pollinating friends. Then, millions of Americans say they engage in extreme binge drinking \u2014 or downing at least eight to 10 drinks containing alcohol on a single occasion \u2014 and the behavior appears to be on the rise in the U.S., according to a new report.\xa0The findings are concerning because this high level of drinking is linked with health and safety risks, including an increased risk of injury or even death, according to the researchers, from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA).\xa0The study "reveals that a large number of people in the United States drink at very high levels and underscores the dangers associated with such 'extreme' binge drinking," George F. Koob, director of the NIAAA, said in a statement.\xa0The researchers analyzed information from more than 36,000 Americans ages 18 and older who completed a survey about their alcohol consumption in 2012 to 2013. The researchers asked the participants to report the maximum number of alcoholic drinks they consumed on a single day in the past year.\xa0Binge drinking was defined as consuming four or more drinks on a single occasion (for women), or five or more drinks on a single occasion (for men), while extreme binge drinking was defined as consuming double those amounts, or more.

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Then,\xa0for years, scientists have debated whether heavy inland snowfall on the vast East Antarctic Ice Sheet \u2014 Earth\u2019s largest \u2014 balances out the rapid melting in West Antarctica.\xa0Given enough snowfall, the continent might not yet be contributing to sea level rise.\xa0Most research shows the melt rate is so high that the continent is indeed losing ice. But in 2015, a group of NASA scientists published a controversial study that found Antarctica was instead gaining ice. The NASA team combined space- and land-based measurements and found so much snow dropping in East Antarctica that even with drastic melting elsewhere, the continent was adding some 80 billion tons of ice annually.\xa0It contradicted prominent previous findings \u2014 including reports from the U.N.\u2019s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The result drew global headlines and excited climate change skeptics. That\u2019s despite warnings from the study\u2019s lead author, NASA Goddard\u2019s chief cryospheric scientist Jay Zwally, who predicted that melting would outpace increased snowfall in a decade or two.\xa0Then,\xa0An Arizona witness traveling by train through Apache County reported watching and photographing six hovering, \u201ctwo-story\u201d objects beaming light to the ground level.

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After the break Cam brings up the incredible tale of "The Black Flash".\xa0Shadowy figures have long haunted the pages of history. From ghosts to goblins to things less mentionable, the human psyche has a habit of inventing monsters to inhabit the dark reaches of the unknown. Several such figures have been chronicled: the Halifax Slasher, the London Monster, and Spring-Heeled Jack, to name a few. Today, we\u2019ll be adding another cloaked and hooded terror to the rogue\u2019s gallery, this one known by a name straight out of a comic book: the Black Flash. All of this and more on this weeks episode of Expanded Perspectives!

\n Show Notes: \n Sponsors: \n Music:

All music for Expanded Perspectives is provided by Pretty Lights. Purchase, Download and Donate at\xa0www.prettylightsmusic.com.

\n Songs Used:
  • Pretty Lights vs. Led Zeppelin
  • Cold Feeling
  • At Last I Am Free
  • My Other Love