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tv   [untitled]    November 15, 2010 5:30am-5:59am EST

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in the army the life level you see them is the most precious thing in the world. zone systems and terrorism with those who understand fully that you have to live a. real life stories from would need. to nineteen forty five don't. believe. the news today violence is once again flared up. these are the images the world has been seeing from the streets of canada. showing corporations rule the day.
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watching r.t. live from moscow these are the top stories made in china the impact in g. twenty summits lead to world was the feelings out the asian states has become the driving force of the global economy even behind the dominant powers of today. republican the u.s. congress are urging major spending cuts in almost every field while education and health care are likely targets them all to a billion dollars the finance budget seems set to stay together with america's ambitions. and an investigation into the cost of an organ trafficking network is underway it's bringing the spotlight on to other claims of hundreds of service and they are body parts removed and so we're drawing the cost of the war. up next join us as we uncover the natural treasures of the remote come talk about insulin in the far east of russia in our special report.
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will cain is terrified and fascinated people since the dawn of time. their eruptions are beautiful but liesel natural. and. you can chuckle can ensure it is in eastern russia this region has been called the land of stone tool chips and so please. there are a few places on the planet where you can see so many different locations. constantly into town chapters now and skate continues to be with century all the tonic timothy's on the ground.
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that come chopped up a climb up a volcano engine it begins to try. this is a military truck fitted with a wagon to transport people. drive a good game and uses it to bring tourists to the fruits of the thousand year old. volcano several times a month. people only recently started going up from a dead site. the only use to hunt deer before the ruction. like these people adjust every day tourists for their travel routes they chose the places where you don't need special mountaineering skills. they've each made at least one trip to the mountains but none the seventeen at the site of the so-called made just a solid option of told the trick. many years ago now. a fountains burst
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from cracks in the ground near the center of the ancient volcano. and. it takes a while to get to the epicenter of the theoretician the start of the ascent is a five hour cross-country drive from the nearest settlement. several dozen kilometers away from where the lava broke through the surface the dead forest begins. quite dry tree trunks don't stop like all comics like. it's all a reminder of the destructive forces which volcanoes possess. every tourist group ashore to make a quick stop here. from this point the aim of their extreme hike is already visible. the twin stratified volcanoes australian. sit on the horizon covered with fog. there are several low rising new focus on it cones nearby.
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ash and slag from these craters have covered several kilometers of the surrounding area. did one in the looking at the top of a tree it's actually just a small part of it this tree is completely buried twenty metres down just like all the others if you know about it but the depth of slag which is the rural that we're standing on could be up to sixty metres a bit to the left we can see a normal tree that hasn't been buried under so much slag if you look. almost six of july nine hundred seventy five fountains of lava began posting from cracks in the crust eight hundred. it is from the extinct crater of the people ski
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tell that chick ok no destroying everything in their way. geophysicists powerful talkative and predicted the exact place days and even time of that mighty eruption. stuff and they can chant cure instituto vulcanology the only one in the world at that time were ready they even managed to fully research and film it. in this picture young vulcanologist alexander of psionic of his researching the massive eruption of told patrick he was there two weeks after the eruption started. for the scene was just overwhelming of the time but also the light nor crashing down it was tremendous indeed i knew
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would a cloud of ash stretched for want to have thousand kilometers and fell into the ocean it looked as if the lightning was flying across that a cloud and striking into the ok no scone they all boarded up to make a terrible racket. the biggest concentration is situated on the pacific coast three hundred twenty eight of them are active and form the pacific ring of fire. as part of that there are twenty nine on the eastern coast of. this been insular as many volcanoes as the subduction zone is located here on the oceanic plate is moving beneath the continental plate and gradually sliding inside eleven naturally frictional causes frequent earthquakes large in situ cracks and
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so-called weakly zones occurred allowing the magma to come up to the surface. the locals call this mud port sculptor a zone where one of the earth's plates slides under another which is known as subduction is located deep below the mud pot. the magma melts mountain rocks forming gas on its way up wards it heats water mixes it with and throws it out in the form of liquid clay. the sculpture is just one of the many fantastical features to be found in one of the world's oldest volcano calderas it's located in the central part of camp chap because eastern volcanic belt this gigantic create a culture and is the caldera of the zone volcano. about three hundred thousand years ago three kilometer high composite co used to tower over a place of the present and so on and you know this structurally you know after
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a series of powerful eruptions the open no volcano gave forming a cult hero. the average height of its cliffs is four hundred meters in the diameter is more than twelve kilometers. news on caldera features unusual manifestations of molten volcanic activity there are hundreds of boiling and bubbling will pools and month pools here small volcanic cones hot lakes and areas with steam gas and hot water jets breaking through the ground. overholt lakes of the woods on caldera hostile to any advanced life forms but they are populated by special types of which produce oxygen making the water surface bubble. of the same time they prevent me thing and carbon dioxide from
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the underground waters from breaking the surface and rising into the atmosphere. is that there are very specific conditions of sauna and want to hear one can find many types of bacteria with absolutely different structures this is interest in a force. whose own is especially protected site within the crew not to reserve. your gain of loss of lives and works here monitoring the caldera. during the summer he accompanies excursions to protect tourists from the local bad as. the bad trail goes north and reaches down near. this crater filled with cold clear water is known as a mom. this one is about a kilometer in diameter it's in a cliffs a quite steep so there's barely any shoreline around the lake. just
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a narrow black ring of ash volcanic bombs masses of molten rock and scoria. here's a piece of volcanic glass i found by the lake it's very sharp is just the kind of thing that people use to scrape animal skins with before arnon steel were invented so very sharp and very hard this is a piece of hardened lava the last time was on a rock to was forty thousand years ago this time hasn't been long enough for grass to cover the forty thousand years he's an inch and. this group of tourists is exploring a new chapter in the history of kamchatka as eruptions one of their plans is to come to volcano comes the applause. the unspoken rules of climbing volcanoes are
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quite simple follow your guide closely don't stretch the chain if you cannot walk any further everyone else descends along with you. their aim is to reach the summit of the cone not far from the ancient volcano. you are about to start a difficult ascent to far from me following each other's steps be aware of show of rocks that may slip from under your feet and cause serious injuries or in some instances rocks or fallen from the slope above and hit people on the head on occasion the injuries are even being fatal. each cone is about fifteen hundred meters above sea level. these are the so-called new tell but equal came and. they appeared as a result of the eruption and nine hundred seventy five. was one of its four epicenters. from one of the cone tops there's
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a good view of the crater and the old canals of thick spurting lava. those were the liquid types of lab us a bird's of they covered more than thirty square kilometers it was worth it but if the forest was destroyed as well as the entire beautiful tundra that had been there about that well that other about. three weeks after the eruption one of the cone suddenly threw out a massive amount of lava. it travelled upwards from the depths of thirty kilometers. scientists say some three billion tons of erupted material in the form of rocks came from below the surface.
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all the while the molten pieces of lava noticeable coming bombs shot out from ructions. scientists had to carry out their research in extreme conditions. we were going right below the cone as we were selecting stone and chopping the samples are part rocks at times those volcanic bombs orlando knots they were falling from above like a cannon shot at it and we would look out and then duck and dodging all over the place to avoid them. today years after the eruption the tallest and widest wall of the volcanoes crater is a reminder of what was left since the lava streams broke out. the banks of these thickened rivers a painted in different hues. during the eruption rocks with a high concentration of copper sulfur and other elements appear each has
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a unique color of its and. the top of the cone is very hot the warmth is still rising from the depths of the earth. we brought these sticks here to set them on foil with the internal heat of this cone the temperature inside the fissure is nine hundred degrees so the state catches far in a matter of seconds. the first client ends at sunset and the first day of the mountain trip but there is a much longer more difficult and interesting way to the summit of postie tell budgets will kind of crater tomorrow. culture is that so much i was about to feel and i feel like for you have it really incredible the welfare state is a long lived the welfare state the system is broken and bankrupt with almost no
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winking responsibility. wealthy british style. that's not on. the. market why not canada why not what's really happening to the global economy with max cons are there are no holds barred look at the global financial headlines tune into kinds a report on r g. the landscape which includes the austrian. volcanoes looks more like the surface of the main. fake lava streams high rising cones
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after craters small funnels huge slag waists and fields of volcanic bombs. these are the results of numerous eruptions. of. course one can easily imagine that this landscape isn't part of the earth even if they don't know what happened on the moon at that time in the sixty's scientists had photos old dylan or surface therefore come charcoal was chosen as one of the testing areas for the first soviet lunar rover perhaps there really wasn't a better place on the planet for testing that equipment the. volcanic slag is almost identical to the hard sandy surface of the moon just like that the area has no bogs forests or grass but what it does have a numerous hills and hurdles. the first moon rover
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called luna hold one had eight wide wheels. this semi spherical profile prevented the vehicle from sliding sideways when moving along a hill and increased its cross-country capacity. the so-called southern heritage made a volcanic bombs placed in the way of the moon rover. the test was successful on the lunar was sent to the moon. the moon rovers test ground provides magnificent views over the two vocation knows the snowy almost vertical wall street take towers three thousand six hundred eighty two meters above sea level. nearby the adjacent gray edge of. can be seen it sits at a height of three thousand and eighty meters. the path is fifteen kilometers long anyone who's not sure they can make it follows in
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the guides wake during an uphill climb. the way they breathe tells the guide when he needs to slow down. tourists with the greatest stamina or at the end of the group. tourists here don't take frequent bridges so they don't lose their tempo. from a height of two thousand meters the panorama of the great tel budget fisher eruption comes into view. a chain of volcanic cones stretches to the horizon. in the olson of nine hundred seventy six a new eruption it could ten kilometers away from where love a burst through surfaced earlier that year. the great
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tell but you can rupture lasted for seventeen months. mountains were formed on the terrain of a vast sector of the camp chopped up an inch of that changed. the wild animals and birds that survived in that hellish atmosphere had to rely on humans for help we. the magma chamber below the ancient plus can tell. is now empty. in this picture it's clear to see it's crater filled with a hot lava lake. despite the fact the place has never erupted it's considered to be active like the need to tell batch of cocaine. they are active volcanoes this means that they are either at the stage of the eruption or they are displaying other types of action for instance so called. thermal activity six. tourists flying to the famous valley of guises
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by helicopter often see the few merola connectivities of local folk painters fumaroles an ordinary steams of volcanic gas and state. they burst down from bowl cannick house together with ash and particles of. the valley of guises ma is in the so-called zone of molten vulcanism hundreds of years ago narva berg. this canyon and two volcanoes emerged during the eruption. the valley of guises is between them the magma beneath still heats up the layers of rock and water streams thermal energy cracks the ground making curious forms of hydrothermal activity like steam pits pot holes in guises which are erupting in springs. scientists have
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defined their activity into four stages. water from a water bearing lay it seeps into the guy's a channel. it's then filled with boiling water pot of which begins to spill out. the guys is rising may stop spoiling the steam busts out of the remains of the channel after the guys eruption while the steam rises to the top. is often called the hot peninsula for its various forms of hydrothermal activity. this is one of the few places on the planet where conventional power technology is implemented. the geothermal power station is located to the food to. come. the grounds natural heat is schemes for producing electricity.
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only sixty specialists member station. is monitoring its automatic systems around the clock and fixing and now functions as soon as they occur. because they are in terms of environment protection it's a very clean production process take steam from below the surface and send a mixture of waste steam and water back into the earth. steam is filtered through droplets and small particles. drive a boat gushes through a very high speed from the separator into the turbine and spins the rotor blades. this generates an electromagnetic field. to create goes into this distribution unit . and after all transformations this equipment or eases the electrical power
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produced from the geothermal energy up to two hundred twenty volts and then it gets transmitted by power lines to consumers in the city. the potential is only major city. is situated close to two volcanoes. and. it was founded in seven hundred forty. scientists predict the possibility of an earthquake of seven or eight points on the richter scale with devastating effect. it could be triggered by something that. has passed the stage of forming a. gigantic. lotion occurred on a stop some thirty thousand years ago the western part of that or a polish come judge gate stands on deposits left over by the blast on a watch inskeep.
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good evening you are listening to the simple rules program on the radio today we are going to tell you how to prepare for natural disasters and stay in the light of now we're going to name just three simple rules which are all this easy to fail to report a thing to do right on time so that the quickest exit from the building in advance to find safe areas that have children and relatives to occupy them if necessary and finally keep all your documents together and an emergency back with missing water and warm feelings in an accessible place. it's scary leaving here really scary we always have our emergency back ready it hangs in the cooler the back contains our documents children's papers and the most essential things i still remember how we used to pack an emergency bag with documents and things but not a child who doesn't know about it we don't do this anymore. we've got you stayed by
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now and moreover the foreign tourists come here they like it. both candidates it's good that they exist. it would have been worse if there hadn't been any will cain is in fact a great cleaners they bring out all the negative energy of reproduced by people. it takes about five hours for trained tourists to climb the crater of the pasta ok no. when nearing the summit you have to walk several kilometers along a steep shop right. this is the hardest part of the ascent. but the desire to see the creative drives people to the woods and upwards. of three thousand and eighty me says the feeling of tiredness is beaten by the
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sight of the magnificent millennium old volcano. in these hard joni was worth it i'm now sitting on the brink of the crater and i'm looking at all this and thinking that i'm the only person in the world could be so very moment is lucky enough to play the flute at the height of three thousand meters. everyone has their own arms as to why volcanoes attract people some try to overcome their fear and prove that they can withstand this challenge many enjoy an extreme trip. simply curious and a brave enough to look inside one of nature's biggest and most destructive.
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hungry for the full story we've got it first hand the biggest issues get the human voice face to face with the news makers.
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