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    10X12 Backyard Storage Shed – How to Build Storage Shed on the Cheap – Video - November 10, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    10X12 Backyard Storage Shed - How to Build Storage Shed on the Cheap
    10X12 Backyard Storage Shed - How to build a storage shed on the Cheap: http://idealshedplans.com Most 10x12 storage shed plans that are in the market vary in style, shape and cost. While...

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    Residents in Bristol urged to check sheds and garages for missing woman - November 10, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

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    PEOPLE in the Bishopworth area of Bristol are being urged to check their garden sheds and outhouses for a missing woman.

    Police say concern is growing for missing 60-year-old Alison Gardiner who was last seen on Saturday morning.

    A spokesman for Avon and Somerset police said: As Alison faces her second night away from home, we are urging people to check garden sheds, outbuildings and garages.

    We believe she may be sheltering in an outhouse building in the Bishopsworth or the surrounding area and would urge people to check outside buildings and sheds before it gets dark.

    Alison was last seen in the Eastridge Drive area at about 9am on Saturday.

    She is white, about 5ft 6ins tall of large build. She has short dark brown hair and wears glasses. When she went missing she was wearing a beige coloured coat with fur trim and indigo (blue/purple) coloured jeans and black shoes.

    Concern is growing for Alison because she has not taken medication she requires since Friday.

    She has not been well recently and may appear a little withdrawn or depressed.

    The spokesman added: We believe because she is walking she may still be in the Bishopsworth area and are urging people in that area to check sheds, garden outbuildings and garages.

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    Residents in Bristol urged to check sheds and garages for missing woman

    North Wales Police warn Conwy and Denbighshire residents to secure their sheds this winter - November 10, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    POLICE have issued a warning for North Wales residents to secure their sheds ahead of winter.

    As people pack away their garden furniture and equipment for another year, officers in Conwy and Denbighshire rural are urging residents to ensure their sheds are secure and not as risk of potential thefts.

    District Inspector Gareth Jones, of North Wales Police, said: Generally people will use their garden sheds to store a range of items including lawn mowers, strimmers, tools and sometime bikes - goods which collectively are worth a considerable amount of money.

    Check the buildings regularly and remember to security mark all valuable items. Should you become a victim of burglary it will be harder for the offender to pass or sell on your goods if they are security marked so you will stand a better chance of being re-united with your property.

    While the need to tend gardens generally decreases as winter approaches, the changes in season can often make no difference to the opportunist thief who will look to steal anything of value particularly items that are easily portable.

    Id encourage anyone who sees any suspicious activity in the area to please contact police immediately on 101, added DI Jones.

    For more information contact officers at the Community Safety Department on 101.

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    Get over 12,000 Professional Shed and Garden House Plans Instantly! – Video - November 9, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Get over 12,000 Professional Shed and Garden House Plans Instantly!
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    New research sheds further light on field dressing, processing game - November 9, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Before spying that buck stepping into the open, before counting the points, before resting the sights behind the shoulder, releasing the safety and slowly squeezing the trigger, have a science-based plan for what you'll do after it drops.

    The moment the heart stops pumping purifying blood through the muscles, harmful bacteria begins to grow.

    The animal is now a carcass intended for consumption, lying on the ground and pooling blood. It will be field dressed in unsanitary conditions that would be illegal for a professional meat processor. Fatty tissue will start to go bad as soon as it's exposed to air, and the knife and bloody hands can spread meat-tainting contaminants. Open to the environment, the carcass will be dragged through the woods and transported in temperatures that might accelerate bacterial growth.

    That's the case with all wild meats, not just venison. But despite the chance of minor to severe health risks or biting into an unpleasant flavor, researchers report that in the past 25 years better educated hunters have gotten better at handling wild game.

    At Penn State University, new research in wild food preparation refutes some traditional field dressing practices, confirms emerging theories and identifies new ways to keep wild meat clean and improve its plate appeal.

    In 2000 in Pennsylvania, an outbreak of E. coli poisoning was traced to the consumption of venison. The outbreak was among factors that led to a research paper published in the Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation. Without enough hunter-shot venison to provide a viable sample, the research was conducted mainly on farm-raised meat-producing animals including red deer and white-tail deer.

    Cathy Cutter, a professor in Penn State's Department of Food Science who contributed to the report, said it contains good advice for hunters. For about 10 years, the school has hosted a non-credit Venison 101 class to teach hunters how to get the most out of their meats.

    "There have been a number of outbreaks from venison jerky that was not properly cooked or dried," said Cutter. "The way we [handle] venison is not ideal.

    "It's more difficult to do this when there's grass and snow and ice and you're trying to process out in the open. E. coli can survive some processing."

    Cutter teaches what she calls "the three Cs" -- clean, cold, cross-contamination and cooking. Food safety starts when the animal hits the ground.

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    New research sheds further light on field dressing, processing game

    Somerset & Dorset Bath Green Park Sheds – Video - November 7, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Somerset Dorset Bath Green Park Sheds
    Bath Green Park Locomotive sheds A 7mm model of the Somerset Dorset Railway in the 1950 #39;s/1960 #39;s period in the making.

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    Revitalised Ed Cowan sheds batting shackles - November 7, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Strike rate: Ed Cowan is going on the attack with the bat. Photo: Philip Gostelow

    Being a resolute opener got Ed Cowan into the Test team - but by the end of last season it had sapped almost all the enjoyment he had savoured from playing the game over the past decade.

    The NSW-born Tasmanian never relished the constant public depictions of him as the dour opener who served as the yang to David Warner's yin, because he felt it sold him short as a batsman. As he digested the 2013-14 season, however, he conceded it was warranted. His record of 662 runs at 38.94 was solid but his strike rate of 42.88 of was the third lowest of the Sheffield Shield's top 30 run-scorers, in front of only Cameron Bancroft and Scott Henry.

    Simply, batting "had become a bit of a grind - making runs was hard work".

    "I think I'd faced 300 more balls than I had in any other shield season, but I ended up with 300 fewer runs than my best year. That to me says I just wasn't scoring, I was surviving," he said.

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    Cowan is not an inherently defensive player; it is just that he has been ever since he was on the radar of Australian selectors. When the now 32-year-old moved from NSW to Tasmania five and a half years ago it brought a change in approach "came about from batting on a pretty green Bellerive wicket where driving was really out of the question, unless you enjoy doing crosswords".

    "I sort of manufactured a technique to score runs at home that involved cutting and pulling and locking into a front-foot defence. I held my bat up high so I could drop my bat into the line of the ball and play a perfect forward defence, but I couldn't drive the ball, let alone swing at the ball."

    Cowan's response, devised while he was simultaneously electing whether to stay in Hobart or return to Sydney to better suit his family and also creating his fledgling Tripod Coffee business in what little spare time he had, was to attempt to turn back the clock a decade in terms of his batting philosophy, albeit complemented by "the mental skills of 10 years of first-class cricket".

    "My technique had become a bit of a caricature of what it was reputed to be ... but I've flipped that on its head, I've changed my thinking. Now, rather than 'how is this bowler going to get me out?' it's 'how am I going to attack him?' That's come about through not only through a shift in thinking but having the mechanics to do that," he said.

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    Sounding Rocket Sheds New Light On Surprising Cosmic Glow - November 7, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Image Caption: This is a time-lapse photograph of the Cosmic Infrared Background Experiment (CIBER) rocket launch, taken from NASA's Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia in 2013. The image is from the last of four launches. Credit: T. Arai/University of Tokyo

    Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com Your Universe Online

    An experiment designed by astronomers at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and carried into space on a NASA sounding rocket has detected a diffuse cosmic glow that appears to represent more infrared light than is produced by the known galaxies in the universe, officials at the US space agency announced on Thursday.

    The researchers detected the surplus of infrared light in the dark space between galaxies, and they believe that the glow is from orphaned stars that had been ejected from galaxies. Furthermore, the Caltech researchers, who reported their findings in the journal Science, could redefine the scientific definition of a galaxy to indicate that they do not have set boundaries but are vast and interconnected.

    The observations were obtained from NASAs Cosmic Infrared Background Experiment (CIBER) rocket, and according to the agency, they are helping to settle an ongoing debate about whether this background infrared light (which had previously been detected by the Spitzer Space Telescope) originated from streams of far-flung stars that are too distant to be observed individually, or if it comes from the first galaxies to form in the universe.

    [ Watch the Video: NASA Rocket Experiment Finds Flood Of Cosmic Light ]

    In the new study, Caltech physics professor Jamie Bock, senior postdoctoral fellow Michael Zemcov and their colleagues report that the best explanation is that the cosmic light came from stars that had been ejected from their parent galaxies and flung out into space as those galaxies collided and merged with other galaxies. These previously undetected stars could actually reside in what was thought to be dark spaces between galaxies, they added.

    We think stars are being scattered out into space during galaxy collisions, Zemcov, lead author of the study and an astronomer at NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, said in a statement. While we have previously observed cases where stars are flung from galaxies in a tidal stream, our new measurement implies this process is widespread.

    Image Above: This graphic illustrates how CIBER team measures a diffuse glow of infrared light filling the spaces between galaxies. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

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    Sounding Rocket Sheds New Light On Surprising Cosmic Glow

    BHP Sheds Oil Field Deutsche Bank Values at $450 Million - November 6, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    A decision by BHP Billiton Ltd. (BHP), the worlds biggest mining company, to give up its stake in a U.S. oil field in the Gulf of Mexico has puzzled analysts at Deutsche Bank AG who valued it at $450 million.

    Stampede was a good enough project for BHP and we were surprised to learn that BHP walked away from its 20 percent stake, analysts led by Anna Mulholland and Paul Young wrote yesterday in a report. The analysts said they only realized the asset had been shed after BHPs former partners -- Chevron Corp. (CVX), Statoil ASA (STL), Nexen Inc. and the operator Hess Corp. (HES) -- last week announced a $6 billion plan to develop it.

    BHPs withdrawal in April was disclosed on page 76 of the Melbourne-based companys annual report on Sept. 25. We decided not to proceed with the Stampede development project as we are focused on the higher-return opportunities within our portfolio, BHP said in an e-mailed response to questions.

    The worlds three-biggest mining companies BHP, Rio Tinto Group and Glencore Plc are cutting spending on new projects as commodities prices tumble and as pressure mounts from some shareholders to return cash.

    The withdrawal from Stampede, combined with BHPs announcement last month that its seeking to sell its Fayetteville shale-gas assets in Arkansas, appears to be based on the drive to reduce group capex, with value now being sacrificed to maximize free cash flow, Deutsche Bank said.

    Chevron, Statoil, Nexen and Hess each own 25 percent of the field after BHPs holding was split among them. Stampede is projected to produce 80,000 barrels of oil a day from 2018 with recoverable resources of more than 300 million barrels of oil equivalent.

    BHP had held the stake since the discovery in 2005, which at the time was the deepest well drilled in the Gulf of Mexico at more than 34,000 feet (10,363 meters).

    Chevron, the second-largest U.S. oil and gas producer, last week described Stampede as a long-term development opportunity that will deliver value to shareholders.

    We also had the same opinion of the project, Deutsche Bank said.

    BHP spent $20 billion in 2011 on shale assets in the U.S., getting its foothold in U.S. plays in Arkansas, Louisiana and Texas. It operates two fields in the Gulf of Mexico, Shenzi and Neptune, and has interests in three others. Production from those fields was the equivalent of 36.1 million barrels of oil in fiscal 2014.

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    DNA sheds light on Neanderthal mixing - November 6, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    A genome taken from a 36,000-year-old skeleton has helped scientists shed new light on interbreeding between humans and Neanderthals.

    The ground-breaking study of DNA recovered from a fossil of one of the earliest known Europeans - a man who lived in western Russia - shows that the genetics of the earliest inhabitants of the continent survived the last ice age, helping form the basis of the modern-day population.

    Known as the Kostenki genome, the DNA also contained evidence the man shared, as with all people of Eurasia today, a small percentage of Neanderthal genes, confirming previous findings which show a period when Neanderthals and the first humans to leave Africa for Europe briefly interbred.

    This means that, even today, anyone with a Eurasian ancestry - from Chinese to Scandinavian and North American - has a small element of Neanderthal DNA.

    But despite Western Eurasians going on to share the European landmass with Neanderthals for another 10,000 years, no further periods of interbreeding occurred, the study said.

    Robert Foley, a University of Cambridge professor, questioned whether Neanderthal populations were quickly dwindling and whether modern humans still encountered them.

    "We were originally surprised to discover there had been interbreeding," Foley said.

    "Now the question is, why so little?

    "It's an extraordinary finding that we don't understand yet."

    Lead author Eske Willerslev said the work revealed the complex web of population relationships in the past, generating for the first time a firm framework with which to explore how humans responded to climate change, encounters with other populations, and the dynamic landscapes of the ice age.

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