Piranhas bite toes off swimmers in Brazil

Thousands of flesh-eating piranhas have infested a river beach popular with tourists in western Brazil and have bitten at least 15 unwary swimmers, authorities said Wednesday.

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Officials in the city of Caceres in Mato Grosso state said this is the first time they have had a problem with piranhas at the Daveron beach on the Paraguay river, where the aggressive fish began schooling about two weeks ago.

"People have got to be very careful. If they're bitten, they've got to get out of the water rapidly and not allow the blood to spread," firefighter Raul Castro de Oliveira told Globo TV's G1 website.

Elson de Campos Pinto, 22, was bitten Sunday.

"I took a dip in the river and when I stood up, I felt pain in my foot," Pinto told G1. "I saw that I had lost the tip of my toe. I took off running out of the river, afraid that I would be further attacked because of the blood. I'm not going back in for a long time."

City officials said the beach will remain open because it's an important draw for tourists in Brazil's Pantanal region, known for its ecotourism.

Each September, Caceres hosts what local officials bill as Brazil's biggest fishing festival, a weeklong event that draws 200,000 people for fishing tournaments and concerts.

Gonzaga Junior, a spokesman for the city government, said he didn't think the piranha attacks would hurt that event since it is many months away.

He tried to put the best face on the problem.

"Everyone knows there are piranhas in the region and have always taken the necessary precautions," he said. "What is different this time is that they've appeared where they never appeared before."

The city has seen far fewer people than normal use the beach recently because of the piranha attacks. It was deserted Tuesday, a national holiday in Brazil, normally a heavy beach day.

Officials have put up large signs warning swimmers about the piranhas, reading in blood red letters: "Attention swimmers. Area at risk of piranha attacks. Danger!"

Local fisherman Hildegard Galeno Alves said that when he throws out a fishing net near the beach of late he catches numerous piranhas.

"I come here with my kids and I always see blood on the river banks," he told G1. "The worst is that the attacks are in shallow water, next to the bank."

Despite making his living off the river, Alves left no doubt about his feelings for the water.

"I would never even think of going in there," he said.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45328989/ns/world_news-americas/

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Tebow, Broncos top Jets 17-13 on last-minute drive (AP)

DENVER ? Tim Tebow's 20-yard touchdown run with 58 seconds left capped a 95-yard drive and sent the Denver Broncos to a 17-13 victory over the stunned New York Jets on Thursday night.

Tebow saw the blitz and outflanked safety Eric Smith around the left edge, then cut back and bulled his way past other Jets into the end zone.

The Broncos (5-5) are 4-1 since Tebow replaced Kyle Orton.

The Jets (5-5) lost their second heart-breaker in four days. Mark Sanchez's desperation pass toward the end zone was batted down as time expired.

Nick Folk's 45-yard field goal broke a 10-10 tie with 9:14 remaining, and the Broncos found themselves facing a daunting task when they got the ball back with 5:54 left at their own 5.

New York safety Jim Leonhard could have throttled Denver's winning drive on the first play when he wrapped up Eddie Royal in the end zone on a throw to the right flat, but Royal wiggled free for 8 yards.

Tebow ran just twice for 11 yards until the final drive, when he carried seven times for 58 yards in a performance reminiscent of his miracle in Miami, when he was ineffective for 55 minutes, then led the Broncos to two TDs in the final 5 minutes of a game Denver won in overtime.

After completing just two passes in a win at Kansas City four days earlier, Tebow completed 9 of 20 passes for 104 yards Thursday night.

"I said before, I trust him. I trust him with everything," teammate Von Miller said about Tebow. "No matter how many interceptions he throws, no matter how many touchdowns he throws. I'm going to ride him to the end. I hope he shut up a bunch of his critics today."

Before Denver's unorthodox option offense prevailed again, it appeared the Jets were going to win this one thanks to an oddball touchdown ? left guard Matt Slauson's fumble recovery for a touchdown.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111118/ap_on_sp_fo_ne/fbn_jets_broncos

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UGA researchers develop 'super' yeast that turns pine into ethanol

[ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 17-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Joy Doran-Peterson
jpeterso@uga.edu
706-542-4115
University of Georgia

From forest to fuel tank

Athens, Ga. Researchers at the University of Georgia have developed a "super strain" of yeast that can efficiently ferment ethanol from pretreated pine -- one of the most common species of trees in Georgia and the U.S. Their research could help biofuels replace gasoline as a transportation fuel.

"Companies are interested in producing ethanol from woody biomass such as pine, but it is a notoriously difficult material for fermentations," said Joy Doran-Peterson, associate professor of microbiology in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences.

"The big plus for softwoods, including pine, is that they have a lot of sugar that yeast can use," she said. "Yeast are currently used in ethanol production from corn or sugarcane, which are much easier materials for fermentation; our process increases the amount of ethanol that can be obtained from pine."

Before the pinewood is fermented with yeast, however, it is pre-treated with heat and chemicals, which help open the wood for enzymes to break the cellulose down into sugars. Once sugars are released, the yeast will convert them to ethanol, but compounds produced during pretreatment tend to kill even the hardiest industrial strains of yeast, making ethanol production difficult.

Doran-Peterson, along with doctoral candidate G. Matt Hawkins, used directed evolution and adaptation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a species of yeast used commonly in industry for production of corn ethanol, to generate the "super" yeast.

Their research, published online in Biotechnology for Biofuels, shows that the pine fermented with the new yeast can successfully withstand the toxic compounds and produce ethanol from higher concentrations of pretreated pine than previously published.

"Others before us had suggested that Saccharomyces could adapt to harsh conditions. But no one had published softwood fermentation studies in which the yeast were pushed as hard as we pushed them," said Doran-Peterson.

During a two-year period, Doran-Peterson and Hawkins grew the yeast in increasingly inhospitable environments. The end result was a strain of yeast capable of producing ethanol in fermentations of pretreated wood containing as much as 17.5 percent solid biomass. Previously, researchers were only able to produce ethanol in the presence of 5 to 8 percent solids. Studies at 12 percent solids showed a substantial decrease in ethanol production.

This is important, said Doran-Peterson, because the greater the percentage of solids in wood, the more ethanol that can be produced. However, a high percentage of solids also places stress on the yeast.

"Couple that stress with the increase in toxic compounds, and the fermentation usually does not proceed very well," she said.

Pine is an ideal substrate for biofuels not only because of its high sugar content, but also because of its sustainability. While pine plantations account for only 15 percent of Georgia's trees, they provide 50 percent of harvested timber, according to Dale Greene, professor of forest operations in UGA's Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources. The loblolly pine that Doran-Peterson and Hawkins used for their research is among the fastest growing trees in the American South.

"We're talking about using forestry residues, waste and unsalable timber," said Peterson, "Alternatively, pine forests are managed for timber and paper manufacturing, so there is an existing infrastructure to handle tree-farming, harvest and transportation for processing.

"The basic idea is that we're trying to get the yeast to make as much ethanol as it can, as fast as it can, while minimizing costs associated with cleaning or washing the pretreated pine. With our process, no additional clean-up steps are required before the pine is fermented," she said.

###

The research was funded by grants from C2 Biofuels LLC and the U.S. Department of Energy. Their paper is available online at http://www.biotechnologyforbiofuels.com/content/4/1/49/.

Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain AJP50 is patent pending (PCT/US2009/043358) University of Georgia Research Foundation.

For more information about bioenergy research at UGA, see http://bioenergy.uga.edu/ and http://bff.uga.edu/solutions/category/biofuels/.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 17-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Joy Doran-Peterson
jpeterso@uga.edu
706-542-4115
University of Georgia

From forest to fuel tank

Athens, Ga. Researchers at the University of Georgia have developed a "super strain" of yeast that can efficiently ferment ethanol from pretreated pine -- one of the most common species of trees in Georgia and the U.S. Their research could help biofuels replace gasoline as a transportation fuel.

"Companies are interested in producing ethanol from woody biomass such as pine, but it is a notoriously difficult material for fermentations," said Joy Doran-Peterson, associate professor of microbiology in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences.

"The big plus for softwoods, including pine, is that they have a lot of sugar that yeast can use," she said. "Yeast are currently used in ethanol production from corn or sugarcane, which are much easier materials for fermentation; our process increases the amount of ethanol that can be obtained from pine."

Before the pinewood is fermented with yeast, however, it is pre-treated with heat and chemicals, which help open the wood for enzymes to break the cellulose down into sugars. Once sugars are released, the yeast will convert them to ethanol, but compounds produced during pretreatment tend to kill even the hardiest industrial strains of yeast, making ethanol production difficult.

Doran-Peterson, along with doctoral candidate G. Matt Hawkins, used directed evolution and adaptation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a species of yeast used commonly in industry for production of corn ethanol, to generate the "super" yeast.

Their research, published online in Biotechnology for Biofuels, shows that the pine fermented with the new yeast can successfully withstand the toxic compounds and produce ethanol from higher concentrations of pretreated pine than previously published.

"Others before us had suggested that Saccharomyces could adapt to harsh conditions. But no one had published softwood fermentation studies in which the yeast were pushed as hard as we pushed them," said Doran-Peterson.

During a two-year period, Doran-Peterson and Hawkins grew the yeast in increasingly inhospitable environments. The end result was a strain of yeast capable of producing ethanol in fermentations of pretreated wood containing as much as 17.5 percent solid biomass. Previously, researchers were only able to produce ethanol in the presence of 5 to 8 percent solids. Studies at 12 percent solids showed a substantial decrease in ethanol production.

This is important, said Doran-Peterson, because the greater the percentage of solids in wood, the more ethanol that can be produced. However, a high percentage of solids also places stress on the yeast.

"Couple that stress with the increase in toxic compounds, and the fermentation usually does not proceed very well," she said.

Pine is an ideal substrate for biofuels not only because of its high sugar content, but also because of its sustainability. While pine plantations account for only 15 percent of Georgia's trees, they provide 50 percent of harvested timber, according to Dale Greene, professor of forest operations in UGA's Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources. The loblolly pine that Doran-Peterson and Hawkins used for their research is among the fastest growing trees in the American South.

"We're talking about using forestry residues, waste and unsalable timber," said Peterson, "Alternatively, pine forests are managed for timber and paper manufacturing, so there is an existing infrastructure to handle tree-farming, harvest and transportation for processing.

"The basic idea is that we're trying to get the yeast to make as much ethanol as it can, as fast as it can, while minimizing costs associated with cleaning or washing the pretreated pine. With our process, no additional clean-up steps are required before the pine is fermented," she said.

###

The research was funded by grants from C2 Biofuels LLC and the U.S. Department of Energy. Their paper is available online at http://www.biotechnologyforbiofuels.com/content/4/1/49/.

Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain AJP50 is patent pending (PCT/US2009/043358) University of Georgia Research Foundation.

For more information about bioenergy research at UGA, see http://bioenergy.uga.edu/ and http://bff.uga.edu/solutions/category/biofuels/.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-11/uog-urd111711.php

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US soldier pleads not guilty to bomb plot charges (AP)

WACO, Texas ? After pleading not guilty Thursday to six new charges alleging that he intended to blow up a restaurant full of Fort Hood troops, a handcuffed soldier tossed a rolled-up paper toward courtroom seats before his attorney quickly grabbed it.

"Press release," Pfc. Naser Jason Abdo said before tossing the piece of paper as he was being led in shackles out of the federal courtroom in Waco. It's unclear what, if anything, was written on the paper, and there is a gag order preventing attorneys from discussing the case publicly.

Earlier, Abdo answered "sure do" when U.S. Magistrate Jeff Manske asked if he understood the charges, and said "sure do have none" when asked if he had questions about the charges. Before the hearing started, Abdo turned around frequently in his seat at the defense table and smiled at the members of the media seated in the courtroom gallery, the Waco Tribune-Herald reported.

He was arrested in July at a Killeen motel a few miles from the Texas Army post. Abdo, who was AWOL from Kentucky's Fort Campbell, planned to detonate two bombs in a restaurant full of Fort Hood soldiers and then shoot anyone who survived, authorities allege.

Abdo was indicted on three federal charges in August and six others last week, including attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction. That charge carries a maximum life sentence.

Prosecutors have said they plan to try Abdo first on the new charges, which carry longer possible prison terms. They include attempted murder of officers or employees of the United States, two counts of possession of a firearm in furtherance of a federal crime of violence, and two counts of possession of a destructive device in furtherance of a federal crime of violence.

After Abdo's arrest, investigators said they found a handgun, an article entitled "Make a bomb in the kitchen of your Mom," and the ingredients for an explosive device, including gunpowder, shrapnel and pressure cookers. An article with that title appears in an al-Qaida magazine. He told authorities he planned to make two bombs and detonate them in a restaurant frequented by Fort Hood soldiers, according to documents filed in the case.

At his first court appearance the day after his arrest, a defiant Abdo shouted "Nidal Hasan, Fort Hood 2009!" as he was led out of the Waco courtroom, an apparent homage to the suspect in the worst mass shooting ever on a U.S. military installation.

But Abdo had spoken out against the Fort Hood shooting rampage last year as he made a public plea to be granted conscientious objector status, earlier citing his Muslim beliefs to avoid serving in Iraq or Afghanistan. Abdo, 21, later was approved as a conscientious objector, but that status was put on hold after he was charged with possessing child pornography. He went absent without leave from Fort Campbell in early July.

Hasan, an Army psychiatrist whose trial is set for March at Fort Hood, faces the death penalty or life in prison if convicted of 13 counts of premeditated murder and 32 counts of attempted premeditated murder.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111117/ap_on_re_us/us_awol_soldier

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Lakes may lurk beneath chaos on Europa

Liquid water pockets underlie fractured ice on Jupiter moon?s surface, a study concludes

Web edition : 4:09 pm

Beneath its glossy veneer, Europa?s frozen crust might be carved into something resembling Swiss cheese, with enormous cavities of liquid water tucked into the rock-hard ice.

One of the buried lakes on Jupiter?s watery moon, lurking a few kilometers below a region called Thera Macula, contains at least as much water as the U.S. Great Lakes, scientists report online November 16 in Nature.

These hidden Europan reservoirs would explain jumbled, chaotic surface features that have puzzled scientists for more than a decade. The existence of such cavities implies vigorous mixing of materials between Europa?s frigid surface and the sloshing ocean hiding beneath ? a tantalizing prospect for scientists considering whether life could evolve on the jovian moon.

?It would be great if these lakes harbored life. But even if they didn?t, they say that Europa is doing something interesting and active right now,? says planetary scientist and study coauthor Britney Schmidt of University of Texas at Austin.

Schmidt and her colleagues uncovered the lakes while considering how chaotic regions on Europa, such as Conamara Chaos, might form. The team compared archival images of these tangled terrains with similar landforms on Earth: fractured, collapsing Antarctic ice shelves and icy caps perched atop subglacial Icelandic volcanoes. Interacting water and ice craft these terrestrial jumbles, and similar processes can explain observations on Europa.

The team ?took an array of related processes and shuffled them in new, extraterrestrial ways,? says glaciologist Ted Scambos of the National Snow and Ice Data Center, who likens Europan chaos-crafting to an ?upside-down-cake? version of earthly events.

On Europa, warm, pure ice rises through the crust, eventually reaching a frozen ice layer contaminated with surface sludge. That dirty layer then thaws, forming a lens-shaped lake, and cracks the weakened ice above it. Then, water pushing up through the cracks fractures and rearranges the surface on top. ?Fracturing catastrophically disrupts the ice in the same way that it causes ice shelves to collapse on Earth,? Schmidt says.

Eventually, the pocket refreezes, raising the mussed terrain above surrounding areas.

Busted-up regions like Conamara and Thera Macula cover roughly 50 percent of Europa, meaning that the moon?s crust might host many enormous lakes within a few kilometers of the surface. Preliminary estimates suggest that the pocket beneath Thera Macula could remain liquid for as long as 300,000 years. And if the earthly comparison holds, these chaotic regions could be forming quite quickly. ?On Earth, when an ice shelf collapses, it takes hours to days to weeks for the main event,? Schmidt says. ?But the ice shelf continues to evolve for months, even years afterwards.?

The team?s hypothesis merges two conflicting theories explaining these puzzling terrains, says Robert Pappalardo, a planetary scientist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. ?It?s a very exciting model that seems to explain most of the observations as we understand them,? he says. The watery cavities could be potential targets for a future life-seeking lander, but Pappalardo says scientists need to pinpoint exactly where the buried lakes are. ?We want to go to some place that?s been in recent contact with water below, so we can test whether there?s life there today,? Pappalardo says.

The lakes might boost Europa back into the extraterrestrial spotlight, since they imply that the moon is actively sending materials from the surface ? such as oxygen ? into its ocean, potentially seeding the brine with compounds needed for life. ?You?re taking the surface of Europa, which is plated with whatever the Jupiter system can throw at it,? and mixing it catastrophically,? says Don Blankenship, study coauthor and geophysicist at the UT Austin. ?Then putting it down a few kilometers. It?s like a washing machine.?


Found in: Earth

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/336186/title/Lakes_may_lurk_beneath_chaos_on_Europa

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Matchmaker, matchmaker: Pettis, Shields, Lauzon get next bouts

Matchmaker, matchmaker: Pettis, Shields, Lauzon get next bouts

This week has seen the UFC come up with several upcoming bouts as the Rio, Super Bowl weekend and Japan fight cards start to fill up.

UFC 142 in Brazil: Siyar Bahadurzada revealed via Twitter that he will take on Erick Silva. Silva destroyed Luis Ramos in just 0:40 at UFC 134. Bahadurzada will be making his UFC debut after putting together a record of 20-4 in Europe, Japan and Brazil. Mike Massenzio and Rousimar Palhares have also been added to this card.

UFC 143 in Las Vegas: Featherweights Erik Koch and Dustin Poirier will fight on Super Bowl Weekend. Poirier asked for the bout which will pit two rising stars against each other.

UFC 144 in Japan: Anthony Pettis and Joe Lauzon will meet on Feb. 26. Both lightweights are coming off wins, with Pettis taking out Jeremy Stephens and Lauzon submitting Melvin Guillard.

Jake Shields will try to put his tough 2011 behind him with a bout against Yoshihiro Akiyama. Shields lost to Jake Ellenberger in September just weeks after losing his father. This will be Akiyama's first fight at welterweight.

In his first fight since losing in a title fight to Anderson Silva, Yushin Okami will meet Tim Boetsch in Okami's native Japan.

Who will win these fights? Tell us in the comments or on Facebook.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/Matchmaker-matchmaker-Pettis-Shields-Lauzon-?urn=mma-wp9508

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Video: GOP still won?t fully endorse Romney

Latisse for your dome? Drug thickens thin hair

Latisse, which in its earliest, unsexiest incarnation existed solely as a glaucoma treatment, is best known as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved wonderdrug that can grow and darken your poor listless lashes. Now, it's being tested for a new use: growing hair on your head.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/45295091#45295091

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"Breaking Dawn" sees its stars looking to new horizons (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) ? As "Twilight" fans gear up for the emotional rollercoaster of weddings, babies and battles that is "Breaking Dawn - Part 1", the movie's three stars are beginning to look to new horizons.

"The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1", opening in U.S. theaters on Friday, sees young lovers Bella Swan (Kristen Stewart) and vampire Edward Cullen (Robert Pattinson) finally marry in a wedding that has the "Twilight" fan-verse in a frenzy.

But wedded bliss doesn't last long for the young couple after Bella finds herself pregnant with a vampire baby that is slowly killing her. Back home, werewolf Jacob Black, played by Taylor Lautner, faces conflict within his own tribe as he chooses to protect Bella and her unborn child.

"Lots of milestones are crammed into this one and there's a very accelerated bit of life lived in this movie," said Stewart.

The end to the "Twilight" movie series eventually plays out when "Breaking Dawn - Part 2" reaches theaters in the summer of 2012. But with filming already wrapped up, Pattinson, Stewart and Lautner already are emotional about the end of the saga that turned them into worldwide stars and good friends.

"I'll never have anything like that again in any other aspect of moviemaking," said Stewart, 21. "It's a very shared love, but to share that with so many people, it is just so unique and it's so rare."

Lautner, 19, said the trio had become very close since making the first "Twilight" movie, released in 2008.

"We've gone through a lot with each other," he said. "We have a lot of fun making the movies, and it was definitely a bummer when it all finished."

But the young stars already have begun to move on. Lautner took a turn as an action hero in "Abduction" earlier this year, and he stars in the movie version of upcoming young adult sci-fi novel "Incarceron".

NO MORE WHITE FACE

Stewart, in 2010, played rock singer Joan Jett in "The Runaways" and a teenage prostitute in "Welcome To The Rileys". She will next be seen in the classic beat generation drama "On The Road," and in the lead role for 2012 fantasy "Snow White and the Huntsman."

For Pattinson, 25, there's one thing he won't miss as "Twilight" draws to an end.

"Putting a bunch of white face make-up on so you notice all the wrinkles you're getting. After awhile, it's kind of depressing," the British actor said. "I'm looking forward to not seeing that anymore."

Pattinson branched out in circus romance "Water for Elephants" opposite Reese Witherspoon earlier this year and has two other movies under his belt -- "Bel Ami", in which he plays a young Parisian seducer, and "Cosmopolis".

He is still surprised by fan response to the first three "Twilight" movies based on the best-selling novels by Stephenie Meyer. Combined, the three films have made more than $1.8 billion at worldwide box offices.

"I'd be curious how long it would go on for if we just kept making sequels. That would be so strange if it went on for ten years or something," Pattinson said.

"Breaking Dawn", directed by Bill Condon and produced by independent studio Summit Entertainment, has generated mixed reviews.

Todd McCarthy at The Hollywood Reporter criticized the "dirge-like" pacing and "banal" script. But Variety's Justin Chang said Stewart and Pattinson "have merged so completely with their roles and each other that the sight of the duo's matrimonial bliss -- delicately shaded by that sense of transience and loss that attends even happy life transitions -- delivers a genuine emotional payoff."

(Editing by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111115/film_nm/us_breakingdawn

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New website shows how safe you are from a nuclear disaster (Yahoo! News)

Would a nuclear weapon be pointed at your home town? Find out now

For most of us, it's easy to go about our daily routines with the assurance that the world's nuclear missiles are safely in the hands of responsible individuals. However, if a nuclear apocalypse were?just around the corner, do you know just how safe your home would be? A new website ? aptly named Would I Survive A Nuke? ? offers a glimpse into that unsettling scenario, providing a personalized look at your survival chances.

Upon loading the site, you are prompted to input your location and select the type and number of nuclear devices you want mapped out. Operating on the assumption that any nuclear attack would target the largest cities first, the site lets you choose what size cities you think would be worth hitting, ranging from a population size of 100,000 to greater than 1 million. Once you've made all your grim decisions, your chances of survival are laid out in front of you.

If you're at ground zero, you have no chance of walking away, but the survival probability increases the further you are from highly-populated cities. However, even if you live nowhere near a probable impact zone, the site is quick to remind you that your quality of life will be greatly impacted anyway, due to the fact that neighboring cities are now in ruins. Of course, if you choose "dinosaur-ending meteor" from the list of bombs, you'll quickly see that nowhere is safe.

This article originally appeared on Tecca

More from Tecca:

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/techblog/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_technews/20111114/tc_yblog_technews/new-website-shows-how-safe-you-are-from-a-nuclear-disaster

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