Showing posts with label rock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rock. Show all posts

Sunday, February 11, 2018

Nature interpretive Trial at Dauphin Island

Water for Life
Life on Earth is dependent on clean water. Water quality is defined as the stability of water for a particular use. A definition of good water is different for drinking water than for a lake. Because water is so important for life, we monitor different chemicals, and physical and biological characteristics and work to ensure good water quality. 

Water, Water Everywhere
Water in the ground, called groundwater, is an important source of water on Earth. The ground is different in different places, and some ground materials hold water better than others. An aquifer is an area of ground that holds water well/. Water moves into the ground from rain, snow melt, or other sources. Then it sins until it gets to a layer it can’t move through. This layer might be clay or certain kinds of rock.
Water can fill aquifers, where deep water might remain for hundreds of years, and shallow water can flow to places where it reaches the surface, like ponds, lakes, and springs. 
There is much more freshwater in the ground than on Earth’s surface, and groundwater is drawn out using wells. 

Water Quality=Quality of Life
To evaluate a pond’s ability to support life, we might measure characteristics like the following: dissolved oxygen(DO)-because fish and most other aquatic animals breathe DO: PH-if pHis too far from neutral, either acidic or basic, organisms may be unable to survive; water temperature-warmer water holds less oxygen, so animals might avoid areas of high temperature. In this pond, at certain times, we might also check salinity (the salt concentration).
Freshwater has a salinity of  0 ppt (parts salt per thousand parts water). When Dauphin Island is hit by a hurricane, saltwater may wash over parts of the island and enter the pond or the groundwater. This can affect the island’s human population, who use groundwater in their homes, and also the animals that live in the pond.
These are just a few examples of water qualities that might affect those using the water. 

At Gaillard Lake, you can see where the water table becomes a like surface. When you look at the lake, can you tell oxygen, pH, temperature, or salinity levels? Does the water look dirty?
You may not be able to determine levels by looking, but if you pay attention, you might notice hints bout a lake's water quality. Can you find a diversity of fish, turtles, alligators, frogs, or insects in the water? Are birds feeding from the lake? These signs suggest good water quality, but they are not definitive-sometimes animals are forced to use poor-quality lakes. Water cooler is not a definite marker either - this lake is often a brown color, like tea. This is natural. It is from tannins that leach out of soaking leaves or pine needles.

Aquatic invertebrates are used to assess water quality. Some, like those seen above  (larvae of left to right: caddisfly, stonefly, and mayfly) have a low tolerance for pollution. If they are found in a sample, the water quality is likely good. Others, like the pouch snail and mosquito larva at left, have a high tolerance for pollution. If a sample has mostly animals like these, and very few of those from the first group, water quality is likely poor. 


In the U. S., for water intended for human use, there are established standards, for acceptable levels of dissolved or suspended matter, like bacteria, heavy metals, and others that are potentially harmful. Our municipal water usually follows a path such as this one: water is withdrawn from a natural source: filtered and sterilized; piped into our homes; flushed down our drains; filtered, treated, and the solid waster is taken to one disposal site, while the water is released back to a natural location. Water used in homes on Dauphin Island is groundwater from the island (it is not piped in). Processed water is stored in the water tower seen at right. 

Nature Interpretive Trial at Dauphin Island
Nature Interpretive Trail 
Audubon Bird Sanctuary Trail
These yellow sections of the trail to the Gulf and around the lake include several signs to help the visitors better understand and appreciate the unique environment of the Audubon Bird Sanctuary.
Mike Henderson Project Supervisor. Additional identification by Ralph Havard, McCune Dudley, and John Porter 
Signs construction/installation-Greg Vesely, Candy Ladnier, Anthony Young
Please Help Protect your park
The Dauphin Island Park & Beach and Alabama State Lands 
Department of Conversation and Natural Resources
Funding for this project in part by the Coastal Zone Management Act 1972

As amended, administered by the Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 

Foreign Invasion 
Organisms that arrive in an ecosystem where they did not evolve are called exotic, non-native, or alien. Of those, the ones that harm their new ecosystem are invasive. There are several species on Dauphin Island. A few of them are highlighted below. 

Infiltration 
Plants, animals, and other organisms are moved from their native lands in different ways. These pathways of introduction often involve humans who accidentally or intentionally move them.
A few examples include the release of exotic pets: escape from aquaculture operations; spread from garden plantings; transport in ships ballast water: and transport of fruits and vegetables. As humans move more people and goods around the world, there is more potential for moving organisms into places where they cause harm. 
Setting in: Once they are in a new place, some organisms settle in more successfully than others. Certain factors allow an introduced species to become invasive:
They are adaptable-they can survive in a range of climates, habitats, and soil types; they eat a wide variety.
They reproduce quickly and have lots of offspring. 
They spread out to new areas
Few animals will eat them in the new habitat. 
They competed aggressively for resources. 

How does this affect us?
Biodiversity is the variety of life. It can be defined at different levels, from diversity within a species to that in a particular forest, to that of the entire Earth. The higher the biodiversity for a given area, the healthier the species or ecosystem because it is more resilient to disease or disturbance, such as fire or flood. 
Humans need healthy ecosystems for many reasons. We are healthier with a diversity of organisms for food and medicine. Functioning ecosystems provide important services such as water filtration, oxygen production, and nursery habitat. 

Invasive species threaten biodiversity either by directly killing native species or by taking resources from them so they die or stop breeding. 
Reptiles and Amphibians of the Dauphin Island Bird Sanctuary
Reptiles and Amphibians of Dauphin Island Bird Sanctuary
Galliard Lake and Tupelo Swamp
Cottonmouth 
2-4 feet
AKA water moccasin. This poisonous aquatic snake is thick-bodied and will gape to show its white mouth lining when threatened.

Common Snapping Turtle
6-15 inches. 
Often confused with the less-common alligator snapping turtle, these turtles are not aggressive, unless removed from the water.

American alligator
4-8 feet 
Individuals of this large shy aquatic species periodically “raft” to the island from the rivers north of Mobile.

Florida Smooth Softshell 
6-15 inches
With its flat, leathery shell, this turtle is easy to dust from others. Its death includes crawfish, insects, fish, and frogs. 

Central Newt
2-4 inches
This reclusive salamander prefers quiet pools without fish. The left, a terrestrial intermediate stage, can be found under rotting wood. 

Pig Frog
2-6 inches
This large frog inhabits permanent bodies of water, surrounded by vegetation. 
Their mating call is a distinct, loud, and resonant grunt.

Lists sixes are typical of Dauphin Island representatives
The project was led by Brian Jones, funded by Mobile Bay NEP, and made possible by Dauphin Island Park and Beach Board.
All photographs by Brian Young (“except the alligator photo by Boon Harada) 
Nature Interpretive Trial at Dauphin Island 
Nature Interpretive Trial at Dauphin Island 
Nature Interpretive Trial at Dauphin Island 

Monday, January 30, 2017

Touring Caves and Caverns

Luray Caverns with Lora is known for its profuse variety of formations and unsurpassed natural color.
Luray Caverns, originally called Luray Cave, is a commercial cave just west of Luray, Virginia, the United States, which has drawn many visitors since its discovery in 1878. The underground cavern system is generously adorned with speleothems such as columns, mudflows, stalactitesstalagmitesflowstone, and mirrored pools.
Visited Luray Caverns on 12/19/2012. 
Forbidden Caverns Sevier
One of the most popular attractions in Sevier County is the Forbidden Caverns, they are an underground cave that stretches a half-mile.
Visited Forbidden Caverns 9/29/2014
Forbidden Caverns Sevier County Tennessee 
Cathedral Caverns Grant, Alabama
8/13/2014 
Fantastic Caverns Springfield MO 
8/13/12012
Fantastic Caverns Springfield MO
Fantastic Caverns is a show cave located in Springfield, Missouri. Fantastic Caverns is the only cave in North America to offer a complete ride-through tour, which lasts 55 minutes and is held in a Jeep-drawn tram. The trams drive along the path left behind by an ancient underground river. Tram occupants are encouraged to touch a particular section of low-ceiling dead stalactites
Cathedral Caverns Grant, Alabama 
Cathedral Caverns State Park is a publicly owned recreation area and natural history preserve located in Kennamer Cove, approximately 5 miles (8.0 km) northeast of Grant and 7 miles (11 km) southeast of Woodville in Marshall County, Alabama. The state park's main feature, first known as Bats Cave, was developed as a tourist attraction in the 1950s. Cathedral Caverns was declared a National Natural Landmark in 1972 and opened as a state park in 2000
Desoto Caverns
4/19/2009
Desoto Caverns 
Desoto Caverns
DeSoto Caverns is a series of caves and a tourist attraction located in ChildersburgTalladega County, Alabama. Located in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains, it is touted as "Alabama's Big Cave". 
Mammoth Cave Bowling Green Ky
7/23/2007
Mammoth Cave National Park is a U.S. national park in central Kentucky, encompassing portions of Mammoth Cave, the longest cave system known in the world. Since the 1972 unification of Mammoth Cave with the even longer system under Flint Ridge to the north, the official name of the system has been the Mammoth-Flint Ridge Cave System. The park was established as a national park on July 1, 1941.
Lost Sea Entrance 
8/29/2006
Lost Sea Cave Sweetwater Tennessee 
Your Lost Sea adventure begins with a guided tour of the caverns. This involves a ¾ mile round-trip walk on wide sloping pathways. While touring the caverns and underground lake our guides will tell of the cavern’s exciting and colorful history. They will also explain the fascinating geological development of the immense cavern rooms and rare formations. At the bottom of the cave, you will board a glass-bottom boat for an exciting trip on the Lost Sea, America’s Largest underground lake.
Marvel Cave
Marvel Cave is a National Natural Landmark located just west of Branson, Missouri, on top of Roark Mountain in Stone County. The cave was known by the Osage Indians in the early 16th century after a tribe member fell through the cave's main entrance, a sinkhole. There is evidence that in 1541 the Spanish explored the cave, but the first recorded expedition was in 1869, led by Henry T. Blow. The unofficial Stone County chapter of Bald Knobbers, a local group of vigilantes, was rumored to have taken people to the top of Roark Mountain, and thrown them in the sinkhole.
Marvel Cave at Silver Dollar City
11/11/2001
Ruby Falls 
8/9/2009
Ruby Falls
Ruby Falls is a 145-foot high underground waterfall located within Lookout Mountain, near Chattanooga, Tennessee


Friday, June 10, 2016

King Biscuit Time Helena, Arkansas

The Sound of Soil and Soul
The music of the Arkansas Delta is the music of America. With roots in the gospel or "church music," the blues, jazz, country, and rock n'roll flowed from the rich, fertile landscape bordering the lower Mississippi River and spread out across the country and the world. Follow the Arkansas Delta Music Trail to experience the sounds that shaped the land, its people, and the nation.

KFFA 1630 HELENA 

King Biscuit Time
"King Biscuit Time" first aired live on November 21, 1941, on Helena, Arkansas's KFFA 1360 AM radio. Since that time, the program has become the longest-running daily blues radio show in the United States, as well as an influential platform for up-and-coming blues performers. The award-winning program has aired more times than the "Grand Ole Opry" and has outlasted "American Bandstand" by at least a generation. Legendary bluesman Sonny Boy Williamson was the original host of King Biscuit Time, playing live with Robert Perkins and James Peck Curtis in the KFFA studio. The show was named after King Biscuit Flour, distributed throughout the Arkansas Delta by Interstate Grocer Company. The company agreed to sponsor a radio production for Sonny Boy and his band in exchange for live commercials for King Biscuit Flour.
King Biscuit Time was the first regular radio show to feature blues and has influenced generations of delta blues and
rock n' roll artists whose sounds are based on the raw energy of Sonny Boy Williamson's music. The daily programming of Sonny boy Williamson, Pinetop Perkins, Robert Jr, Lockwood, and other Delta blues legends laid the foundation for the blues, rock, pop, and hip-hop music of today.

Award-winning "Sunshine" Sonny Payne has hosted the show since 1951 and has been a presence on King Biscuit Time since its inception in 1941. A recognized blues musician in his own right Payne welcomes visitors to the live broadcast each week at noon. In keeping with tis tradition of broadcasting live music from the studio, King Biscuit Time still welcomes artists in the studio almost weekly, and the show's record-setting 15,000-plus broadcasts document the formation of a truly American form. Under Sunshine Sonny's direction, King Biscuit Time was awarded the prestigious George Foster Peabody Award in 1992, which recognizes outstanding achievement in the field of radio and broadcast journalism.

The Delta Cultural Center became "home" to King Biscuit Time in the early 1990s, and the show is broadcast live daily from a special studio in downtown Helena and streamed around the world via KFFA's website,www.kffa.com 
King Biscuit Time with Sonny Sunshine Payne
Listening to Biscuit time with Sonny Sunshine Payne at KFFA 1360 AM
King Biscuit Time Sonny Payne St
Longest Running Blues Show
The music of the Arkansas Delta is the music of America. With roots in the gospel or "church music,"
the blues, jazz, country, and rock n'roll flowed from the rich, fertile landscape bordering the lower Mississippi River and spread out across the country and the world. Follow the Arkansas Delta Music Trail to experience the sounds that shaped the land, its people, and the nation.
KFFA 1360 Helena

King Biscuit Time

"King Biscuit Time" first aired live on November 21, 1941, on Helena, Arkansas's KFFA 1360 AM radio. Since that time, the program has become the longest-running daily blues radio show in the United States, as well as an influential platform for up-and-coming blues performers. The award-winning program has aired more times than the "Grand Ole Opry" and has outlasted "American Bandstand" by at least a generation.
Legendary bluesman Sonny Boy Williamson was the original host of King Biscuit Time, playing live with Robert Perkins and James Peck Curtis in the KFFA studio. The show was named after King Biscuit Flour, distributed throughout the Arkansas Delta by Interstate Grocer Company. The company agreed to sponsor a radio production for Sonny Boy and his band in exchange for live commercials for King Biscuit Flour.
Pass the biscuits! It's King Biscuit Time!
King Biscuit Time was the first regular radio show to feature blues and has influenced generations of delta blues and rock n' roll artists whose sounds are based on the raw energy of Sonny Boy Williamson's music. The daily programming of Sonny Boy Williamson, Pinetop Perkins, Robert Jr. Lockwood, and other Delta blues legends laid the foundation for the blues, rock, pop, and hip-hop music of today.
Tell it! Sing It! Shout it!
The King Biscuit Blues Festival
Award-winning "Sunshine" Sonny Payne has hosted the show since 1951 and has been a presence on King Biscuit Time since its inception in 1941. A recognized blues musician in his own right, Payne welcomes visitors to the live broadcast each week at noon. In keeping with its tradition of broadcasting live music from the studio, King Biscuit Time still welcomes artists in the studio almost weekly, and the show's record-setting 15,000-plus broadcasts document the formation of a true American art form. Under Sunshine Sonny's direction, King Biscuit Time was awarded the prestigious George Foster Peabody Award in 1992, which recognizes outstanding achievement in the field of radio and broadcast journalism.
King Biscuit Time
Radio Station
K.F.F.A. & W.R.O.X
KING Biscuit Flour
Sonny Boy
Meal
The Delta Cultural Center became "home" to King Biscuit Time in the early 1990s, and the show is broadcast live daily from a special studio in downtown Helena and streamed around the world via KFFA's website, www.kffa.com 
Listen
King Biscuit Time
over
K.F.F.A HelenaW.R.O.X. Clarksdale Miss
12:15 Monday thru Friday
King Biscuit Flour Sonny Boy Meal
Arkansas Delta Music Trail
Paid for with a combination of state funds and regional tourism promotion association funds
www.deltabyways.com
The Biscuit
The King Biscuit Blues Festival is the largest free blues festival in the south and one of the best-loved blues festivals in the world, attracting tens of thousands of fans to historic Helena in the heart of the Delta each October for three days and bights music multiple stages.
From its outset in 1986, the Festival has been a collaborative effort between Main Street Helena, a non-profit group dedicated to the revitalization of downtown Helena, and the Sonny Boy Blues Society, a volunteer-based group dedicated to the preservation of Delta Blues.

"Da Biscuit," as it's affectionately known, is not devoted exclusively to blues from the Delta. Rather, in celebration of the Delta as a birthplace of the blues, the Festival showcases blues of all styles and from all regions of the country. 












2024 Apr 27, Car & Tractor Show, Tee-Ball Game, Art Museum and Sisters

Hubby and I  rode to Killen Park for the Killen Log 877 Classic Car Show which featured bikes, jeeps, classic cars, and new cars. Cahaba Shr...