Wednesday 19 June 2013

A new subduction zone forming off Spain’s coast..........



A change in the tectonic plates off the coast of Spain means a future of earthquakes and heightened plate movement in the region.
A budding subduction zone offshore of Spain heralds the start of a cycle which will one day pull the Atlantic Ocean seafloor into the bowels of the Earth, a new study suggests.


  João Duarte is a research fellow at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, and he has been talking to OurAmazingPlanet magazine.

He explains that Subduction zones are key players in creating super-continents and opening and closing the Earth’s oceans.

 In a Subduction zone, one of the Earth’s tectonic plates dives beneath another, sinking into the earth’s mantel, which is the layer under the crust. As the crust disappears continents may collide, as has happened numerous times in the history of the planet.

Subduction zones have also led to the biggest earthquakes on the planet.
‘Passive margins’ is where the oceanic and continental crusts make a seamless transition. This is seen in Eastern North American and northern Europe.

But if the north of Europe is stable, it’s different story in the south. Off the SW Spanish coast the seafloor is folded and fractured and is leading scientists to think the earth’s crust could be in for a break.

João Duarte told OurAmazingPlanet, ‘We are precisely in the transition between a passive and active margin. The plate is breaking in two and starting to converge’.

He published that conclusion on June 6 when he and his colleagues placed their research in the Geology journal. It is the result of careful mapping of the underwater faults near Spain and to the west of Gibraltar in the zone called ‘the Southwest Iberia Margin’.

The zone has spawned several large earthquakes such as the 1755 tremor in Lisbon which killed more than 10,000 people, and team has now discovered active thrust faults throughout the supposedly passive margin.

Duarte says that means the margin is not passive anymore and is now being reactivated, i.e. a new convergent plate boundary is forming. This is the beginning of a subduction zone.

The researchers suspect that the new Iberian Subduction zone will get a little help from a tiny ultra-slow subduction zone beneath the Strait of Gibraltar which is attached to the African plate.
Over the next several million years this may roll out towards the Atlantic and merge with the Iberian zone to create an even bigger trench.

Subduction zones take millions of years to form, and they leave few clues as how the process works, most of the clues are left in the mantle.

Duarte says the embryonic subduction zone near Spain suggests that subduction spreads from ocean to ocean.

He and his team are now developing numerical models of subduction to better understand the forces in plate motion.

Making sense of the complex tectonics offshore of Spain and Portugal is also crucial for forecasting the region’s seismic hazard.

‘Despite twenty years of intense investigation, only now are we starting to understand the whole picture’, he said.





 LIVE SCIENCE

CREDIT: João Duarte/Geology                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     

Monday 17 June 2013

The Spanish Cabinet will deliver 20.1 million euros to the works of the A7 between Polopos and Albuñol........





The Council of Ministers has authorized the Ministry of Development to allocate EUR 20,141,171.76 more work on section of the A-7, Polopos-Albuñol, located in the province of Granada.

Among the actions planned include additional stabilization of slopes and embankments in some clearing of the main work, remedial measures in the tunnel of the Ramoncillos and improvement and restoration of roads.

The Cabinet has also approved an agreement that authorizes a new modified project, which involves a reduction of the contract budget of 95 072, 84 euros, and a modification of the approved amount in financial compensation, which decreases at 898,418.40 euros.

The modified also includes as a requirement of the Law on Public Procurement, updating the VAT of 18 percent to 21 percent, representing an increase of 4.6 million, and the additional budget review prices, the estimated value amounts to 29.2 million euros. It is anticipated, thus paying the price update before the end of this work, which governs the so-called 'German method'.



Sunday 16 June 2013

Hoy, domingo se celebra el VIII Festival Internacional Aéreo de Motril.........

 
Today, Sunday, is celebrated Air VIII International Festival Motril, framed the airspace of  Granada Beach.

The attendance of more than 30,000 spectators. As indicated by José Miguel Pérez Juárez, president of Orion and organizer of the event by the city of Motril, the air show is linked to an exhibition of aviation models, besides the III photo contest, with the participation of snapshots taken the same day Festival is held.

Perez Juarez has been reported that the organization has contacted various European embassies and the United States to participate in the big air show in which asitirán warplanes patrolling U.S., Holland, Belgium and France.

"For nearly three hours the audience will enjoy the aerial tricks about twenty civil and military aircraft, both acrobatic and historic" stressed the president of the association Orion.

 



The mayor Luisa Garcia Chamorro recalled that Motril is one of only five Spanish cities along with Vigo, Gijon, Barcelona and Cadiz hosts an air show of this magnitude, which is a benchmark in Europe for their uniqueness and this year for the first ever been included in the calendar of the European Council of Air Festivals.




This eighth edition comes loaded with expectations, also endorsed by the spectacular media coverage that won the last festival, which was echoed in publications such as 'Avion Review', 'General Aviation Pilot' aviation forums as Extracrew.com (largest portal aeronautical Spanish speaking) and almost all provincial media. "This appointment is already one of the most anticipated by Motril and visitors in the festival calendar of the city and one of our great interest since it enables those who come to know the excellence of our beaches, taste our products in business hospitality and especially to discover the closest and hospitable character of Motril, which is one of our greatest strengths, "the councilor has been reported.

 Perez Juarez has said, among the prominent presences figure Jorge Macias of Spain champion Alonso aerobatics unlimited mode-that just premiered in Motril a new form he calls "interactive", in which he draws figures in the sky after asking some of the children attending. 
Also attend Carlos Bravo, flight instructor and aerobatic pilot added to the Fundación Infante de Orleans (FIO), which will fly a beautiful historic aircraft






 

Saturday 15 June 2013

Gibralter's 5 Star Floating Hotel......




The Sunborn floating hotel arrived in Gibraltar this morning, June 11th.
This picture, taken at 08:00,  shows the Sunborn on a large transporter ship just off the Detached Mole.





The floating hotel will now spend some time in the dry docks undergoing some final works before being moved to Ocean Village where it will serve as a luxury hotel.




The floating  hotel will feature a panoramic restaurant with sun terraces and a glamorous outdoor bar and lounge as well as leisure and event facilities and entertainment spaces. 
Comprehensive banqueting, meeting and conference venues complete the impressive list of on-board facilities.

The Minister for Tourism Neil Costa said:
“We are delighted that Sunborn has chosen Gibraltar for their 5-star plus project, which will create many jobs locally, and we believe it will become an icon and attraction for Gibraltar.” 
He also said that the 5-star plus hotel and conference centre will be a significant addition to Gibraltar’s hospitality offering, targeting specifically the growing demand of luxury hotel and convention facilities.

Brian Stevendale, Director at Ocean Village, said:
 “We are very excited about this opportunity for Gibraltar. We recognize this is a massive investment.” 

   

Thursday 13 June 2013

Black Marks for the Costa del Sol.......



Tarifa,  on the Costa de la Luz ,has landed a massive black mark from Spain’s leading environmental group.





Its two main beaches Playa de los Lances and Valdevaqueros have received so-called ‘black flags’ from ecologistas en accion for plans to build a massive ‘macro urbanisation’ on virgin land beside them.

The pressure group’s annual coastal report slams the scheme, which comprises 350 villas and 1,400 hotel rooms over 71 hectares alongside Valdevaqueros beach.

Describing it as ‘unacceptable and unsustainable’, the project is to be built on land designated as a UNESCO biosphere reserve, alongside the Alcornocales Natural Park.

The report, which comes out alongside the annual Blue Flag awards, made for particularly damning reading for Andalucia this year.

In total the number of black flags issued is up dramatically to 80 (up from 64 last year), while there are also 97 so-called puntos negros, or black spots (up from 80 last year).

Marbella was awarded an incredible 20 black flags, in particular Linda Vista and Pinillo for recently legalising construction during the GIL era.

The town was singled out as being a ‘bad example for conservation’ with reference to its dunes and urban corruption.

Estepona meanwhile was awarded 14 black flags for its continual abuse of the law and even got a flag for its celebrated El Cristo beach for ‘toxic waste’.

In better news, it emerged that the outgoing ombudsman for Andalucia Jose Chamizo has insisted the Tarifa project did not go ahead.  (For now anyway).

He said the Junta was duty bound to protect the cultural and environmental values that were generally associated with Andalucia and that the beach was increasingly rare in the region.
Tourism, he went on, should favour a sustainable model that both protected the environment  and at the same time helped the local economy.


Saturday 1 June 2013

2,000 Tourists in just Two Days visit the Port of Motril!


There is no doubt that the arrival of two thousand tourists at the port of Motril in just two days was a tremendous  boost for the hospitality industry and commerce as well as an economic lever. 





 Thompson's cruise ship, the  'Thomson Dream' came yesterday to give joy to Motril and today arrived the ship,' Azamara Quest'.


 

It is the largest flood of tourists expected this year on the Costa Tropical. 
Of the passengers arriving yesterday,  223 hired excursions to the villages of La Alpujarra and to see the Alhambra, the rest moved on their own.

The area of ​​Tourism of the City of Motril, which moved to its technicians to the Port to cater to tourists, estimated were about eight hundred, almost entirely British, who came to the center and provided to the streets an unusual tourist city image, with maps, flip-flops and shorts.  

The cruisers of this boat belonged to a younger and more familiar, unlike passenger luxury boats which so far had focused the port of Motril. 

The municipal office of Tourism at the America Park yesterday attended  to some  465 of the cruisers. They mostly  requested information on places of interest and asked about shopping.  





Most tourists used the free shuttles from the Port Authority  to connect with the center although there were even those who chose to go to walk the distance from the port.  
The impression of Motril from tourists consulted by this newspaper was mostly good.