La mesa de luz

Blog de un esbirro de la edicion grafica

07 Feb 2012

La ola de frío siberiano


20:49 

MTI108 SALGOTARJAN (HUNGRÍA) 6/2/2012.- Imagen de un copo de nieve, en Salgotarjan, a 109 kms al noreste de Budapest, Hungrí­a, hoy, lunes, 6 de febrero de 2012. EFE/Peter Komka PROHIBIDO SU USO EN HUNGRÍA

Una ola de frío siberiano recorre Europa y comparto con vosotros esta edición gráfica con la nieve, el hielo y el frío como protagonista. En diciembre de 2010 ya hice otra edición sobre el mismo tema con el título de “La nieve cubre Europa”, si os quedáis con ganas de más nieve os lo recomiendo. También os invito a ver las ediciones gráficas sobre esta última ola de frío europea en The Big Picture de The Boston Globe y de In Focus de The Atlantic.

Two people walk through the snow-laden footpaths of Alexandra Park, north London on February 5, 2012. Heavy snow fell overnight across South East England, causing many roads to become blocked.  AFP PHOTO / LEON NEAL

An advertising hoarding of the Osborne bull in Burgos peeks out the side of a snowy escarpment as snow hits northern Spain on February 5, 2012. The Arctic cold snap that has hit Europe for over a week had claimed nearly 300 lives today, brought air travel chaos to London and dumped snow as far south as Rome and even North Africa.  AFP PHOTO / CESAR MANSO

A warning sign is seen on top of the Rosa Khutor Alpine Resort in the western Caucasian mountains near Krasnaya Polyana some 40 km outside of the Black Sea city of Sochi February 7, 2012. Rosa Khutor is hosting men’s and women’s downhill and super combined Alpine Skiing World Cup races over the next two weekend in preparation for the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympic Games. The weather conditions of the Olympic skiing venues are maritime and very likely to be similar to the 2010 Vancouver Olympics in the Whistler mountains.       REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay  (RUSSIA – Tags: SPORT SKIING ENVIRONMENT)

A lion cub plays with a snowball at the Belgrade Zoo on February 5, 2012. In Serbia, almost 70,000 people are still cut off from their villages and 32 municipalities have declared a state of emergency, mostly in the south and southwest of the country. So far, nine people have died of cold in the country. The snow, which stopped falling early today, is expected to start again overnight, with temperatures falling below minus 10 degrees Celsius.  AFP PHOTO / ALEXA STANKOVIC

A man walks past an ice covered car on the frozen waterside promenade at Lake Geneva in the city Versoix, near Geneva on early February 5, 2012. The death toll from the vicious cold snap across Europe has risen to more than 260, with the winter misery set to hit thousands of those seeking to escape it as air traffic was hit.    AFP PHOTO / FABRICE COFFRINI

A blue tit feeds in a garden covered by snow in Cesson-Sevigne, Western France on February 05, 2012.  AFP PHOTO DAMIEN MEYER

KLM planes are seen through a plane’s window during heavy snowfall at Schiphol airport on February 3, 2012 near Dutch capital Amsterdam. AFP PHOTO/ PATRICK BAZ

Gulls fly over a partly frozen lake in in Berlin on January 15, 2012. First snow of the year fell on the German capital, with temperatures around the freezing point.      AFP PHOTO / JOHANNES EISELE

A woman walks under snowfall on Istanbul’s Istiklal Avenue on January 30, 2012. Heavy snowfall blanketed Turkey’s commercial hub Istanbul, a city of 15 million, paralysing daily life, disrupting air traffic and land transport. Officials said almost 200 flights were cancelled due to the snow expected to continue until late tomorrow, according to the weather forecast.    AFP PHOTO / MUSTAFA OZER

Sculptor Nenad Vuckovic puts the finishing touches to his snow sculpture, in Belgrade, Serbia, Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012. Freezing weather is affecting huge areas of Europe disrupting traffic. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)

A man protects himself with an umbrella as he walks on a street covered with snow in Pamplona, northern Spain, Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012.  Freezing weather is affecting huge areas of Europe and the weeklong cold snap, the worst in decades in Eastern Europe, has killed more than a hundred people, many of them homeless, especially in countries such as Ukraine. (AP Photo/Alvaro Barrientos)

Snow covered land is seen in the town of Alexandria, northern Greece, Tuesday, Feb. 7, 2012.  Europeans across the continent have been battling more than a week of extreme weather, with thousands still trapped by snow in remote mountain villages and some hundreds dead after temperatures hit as low as minus 33 Fahrenheit (minus 36 Celsius); and European authorities now facing the prospect of flooding caused by melting snow. (AP Photo/Nikolas Giakoumidis)

A skier passes a snow-covered field in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, southern Germany, on February 3, 2012. Temperatures plunged to new lows in Europe where a week-long cold snap has now claimed more than 220 lives and forecasters warned that the big freeze would tighten its grip at the weekend. AFP PHOTO/CHRISTOF STACHE

Precipitation drops are seen on a window as a man walks in a street in Kabul on January 22, 2012. The death toll from heavy snowfalls and avalanches rose to at least 28, an official said today. Dozens more people have been injured or are trapped in their homes under up to three metres 10 feet of snow in remote Badakhshan province, where main roads have been cut, making it difficult for rescue workers to reach affected villages. AFP PHOTO/ Qais Usyan

A fence is covered with snow after a heavy snowfall in the Northern Spanish Basque village of Izoria, on February 2, 2012.  A cold snap kept Europe in its icy grip, pushing the death toll to 160 as countries from Italy to Ukraine struggled to cope with temperatures that plunged to record lows in some places.  AFP PHOTO / RAFA RIVAS

An unidentified pedestrian walks a dog through snow covered woodland outside York, north eastern England, as freezing weather hits the country Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012. Britain is digging out after heavy snow fell across the country, grounding planes and snarling roads and railways. Much of the U.K. remains under an amber warning _ the Met Office’s second most serious _ of icy conditions after up to 16 centimeters (6.3 inches) fell overnight. Some motorists spent the night in their cars amid treacherous highway conditions, and officials urged drivers on Sunday to stay off the icy roads. (AP Photo/PA, Anna Gowthorpe)  UNITED KINGDOM OUT  NO SALES  NO ARCHIVE

Several inches of snow is seen on top of a Royal Mail post box in London February 5, 2012. Heavy snow is forecast overnight across central and southern England, with a possibility of up to 15 cm (6 inches) could fall in the London area. Temperatures were also not expected to climb above minus 2 degrees Celsius (28 degrees Fahrenheit), leading to icy conditions. REUTERS/Russell Boyce (BRITAIN – Tags: ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY)

Snow covers boats on a frozen section of the Sava river in Belgrade, Serbia, Tuesday, Feb. 7, 2012. Serbian emergency officials said the army will use explosives to break up ice on the Danube and Ibar rivers to try to prevent the possibility of flooding.  (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)

A goose peers from its snow-covered cage at a park in Istanbul January 31, 2012. REUTERS/Murad Sezer (TURKEY – Tags: ANIMALS ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY)

Drift ice floats on the river Elbe on February 5, 2012 in Magdeburg, eastern Germany. The Arctic cold snap that has hit Europe for over a week had claimed nearly 300 lives by February 5, 2012, brought air travel chaos to London and dumped snow as far south as Rome and even North Africa.     AFP PHOTO / JENS WOLF    GERMANY OUT

Police officers carry bags with their food for the day as they walk through a snow covered  Hampstead Heath in London at the start of their morning shift, Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012.  (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

A rescue helicopter of the Helicopter Service RS, flies over an isolated village cut off by snow in eastern Bosnia and Herzegovina February 6, 2012. Europe’s bitterly cold weather killed another 33 people on Monday, with Bosnia recording its eighth victim after an 87-year- old woman died of hypothermia. Farmers were having problems feeding cattle because of the snow and milk production had dropped by 15 to 30 percent in the country, the Bosnia’s farmers association said.  REUTERS/Dado Ruvic (BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA – Tags: ENVIRONMENT TRANSPORT)

A detail shows freshly fallen snow on the iron work of the Eiffel Tower in Paris as sub-freezing winter temperatures continue in Europe February 5, 2012.     REUTERS/John Schults (FRANCE – Tags: ENVIRONMENT TRAVEL)

A robin (Erithacus rubecula)  sits next to icicles in a park in Weimar, eastern Germany, Tuesday Feb. 7, 2012.  Europe was hit by a cold spell with temperatures plummeting far below the freezing point.  (AP Photo/dapd/Candy Welz)

A crucifix on the Taubenberg mountain in Warngau is covered with snow on February 2, 2012. Snow and temperatures close to -14 degrees Celsius (7 degrees Fahrenheit) have hit parts of southern Germany in the last few days. German met office DWD expected the icy high pressure front from northern Russia to last well into next week.  REUTERS/Michael Dalder   (GERMANY – Tags: RELIGION TRAVEL ENVIRONMENT)

A photo taken on February 4, 2012 shows people looking at the ancient forum in Rome after a snowfall. A rare mantle of snow blanketed the historic center of Rome on February 3, forcing the closure of schools and tourist sites such as the Colosseum.    The snow covered palm trees, ancient Roman ruins and Baroque churches across the normally mild-weather Italian capital which has only seen one snowfall in the past 15 years in which the snow stayed on the ground for a whole day.  AFP PHOTO / FILIPPO MONTEFORTE

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01 Dic 2011

El rostro del SIDA


16:55 

An activist from a non-governmental organisation (NGO) lights candles during an AIDS awareness campaign on the eve of World AIDS Day in Agartala, capital of India’s northeastern state of Tripura November 30, 2011. REUTERS/Jayanta Dey (INDIA – Tags: SOCIETY HEALTH ANNIVERSARY)

Hoy 1 de diembre se celebra el día mundial contra el SIDA. El año pasado ya hice un post con el título de “Un día de lazos rojos contra el SIDA” en el que hacia un repaso a las imágenes de las celebraciones y actos que conmemoran este día de lucha que tiene como símbolo el lazo rojo. Eran todas fotografías como la que encabeza este post. Pero este año he decidido presentaros una serie de imágenes que muestran otra cara del SIDA alejado de los lazos rojos colgados en nuestras ciudades occidentales. Del mismo modo que en una entrega anterior hablaba del rostro del cólera en Haití, estos son los rostros del SIDA que se pueden ver en hospitales de China, Kenia, Sudafrica, México, Tailandia o Guatemala. Lugares donde se trata a los enfermos, muchos de ellos niños y bebés infectados que han perdido a sus padres por la enfermedad. Zonas donde la pandemia se expande gracias al hambre y la pobreza.

Algunas de estas imágenes pueden resultar duras para el lector pero no es más que el rostro del SIDA este 1 de diciembre de 2011.

A girl who lost her mother to HIV/AIDS looks out the window at Nkosi’s Haven, south of Johannesburg November 25, 2011. Nkosi’s Haven provides residential care for destitute HIV-positive mothers and their children, whether HIV-positive or not. Nkosi’s Haven is named after Nkosi Johnson, the young AIDS activist who passed away on International Children’s Day on June 1st 2001. December 1 is World AIDS Day. Picture taken November 25, 2011. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko (SOUTH AFRICA – Tags: HEALTH SOCIETY)

A man has a sample of blood taken by a nurse for testing at the HIV/AIDS ward of Beijing YouAn Hospital December 1, 2011. The number of new HIV/AIDS cases in China is soaring, state media said on Wednesday, citing health officials, with rates of infections among college students and older men rising. The Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention issued figures showing 48,000 new cases in China in 2011, the official Xinhua news agency said. China’s government was initially slow to acknowledge the problem of HIV/AIDS in the 1990s and had sought to cover it up when hundreds of thousands of impoverished farmers in rural Henan province became infected through botched blood-selling schemes. World AIDS Day is on December 1.    REUTERS/David Gray (CHINA – Tags: HEALTH ANNIVERSARY)

A girl laughs while taking her medication at Nkosi’s Haven, south of Johannesburg November 25, 2011. Nkosi’s Haven provides residential care for destitute HIV-positive mothers and their children, whether HIV-positive or not. Nkosi’s Haven is named after Nkosi Johnson, the young AIDS activist who passed away on International Children’s Day on June 1st 2001. December 1 is World AIDS Day. Picture taken November 25, 2011. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko (SOUTH AFRICA – Tags: HEALTH SOCIETY)

A nurse gives an infected patient medicine as she lies in her bed in the HIV/AIDS ward of Beijing YouAn Hospital December 1, 2011. The number of new HIV/AIDS cases in China is soaring, state media said on Wednesday, citing health officials, with rates of infections among college students and older men rising. The Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention issued figures showing 48,000 new cases in China in 2011, the official Xinhua news agency said. China’s government was initially slow to acknowledge the problem of HIV/AIDS in the 1990s and had sought to cover it up when hundreds of thousands of impoverished farmers in rural Henan province became infected through botched blood-selling schemes. World AIDS Day is on December 1. REUTERS/David Gray (CHINA – Tags: HEALTH ANNIVERSARY)

Information booklets are seen on a bench in the HIV/AIDS ward of Beijing YouAn Hospital December 1, 2011. The number of new HIV/AIDS cases in China is soaring, state media said on Wednesday, citing health officials, with rates of infections among college students and older men rising. The Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention issued figures showing 48,000 new cases in China in 2011, the official Xinhua news agency said. China’s government was initially slow to acknowledge the problem of HIV/AIDS in the 1990s and had sought to cover it up when hundreds of thousands of impoverished farmers in rural Henan province became infected through botched blood-selling schemes. World AIDS Day is on December 1. REUTERS/David Gray     (CHINA – Tags: HEALTH ANNIVERSARY)

A boy receives medication at Nkosi’s Haven, south of Johannesburg November 25, 2011. Nkosi’s Haven provides residential care for destitute HIV-positive mothers and their children, whether HIV-positive or not. Nkosi’s Haven is named after Nkosi Johnson, the young AIDS activist who passed away on International Children’s Day on June 1st 2001. December 1 is World AIDS Day. Picture taken November 25, 2011. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko (SOUTH AFRICA – Tags: HEALTH SOCIETY)

A terminally ill man rests at a hospice for those dying of AIDS, at Wat Prabat Nampu Buddhist temple in Lopburi province on the World AIDS day December 1, 2011.  REUTERS/Sukree Sukplang (THAILAND – Tags: SOCIETY HEALTH)

A baby boy lies in a cot at San Jose Hospice in Sacatepequez, about 45 km (27 miles) of Guatemala City, November 30, 2011. About 68 HIV-infected patients, between 44 days to 18 years old, receive free medical care at the hospice. Many of the children were found abandoned in markets, churches, fire stations, left neglected in hospitals or in some instances, brought in by their families who cannot afford to pay for their medical treatment. World AIDS day which falls on December 1 is commemorated across the world to raise awareness of the pandemic. REUTERS/Jorge Dan Lopez (GUATEMALA  – Tags: HEALTH SOCIETY)

Medicine for patients is prepared by a nurse at the HIV/AIDS ward of Beijing YouAn Hospital December 1, 2011. The number of new HIV/AIDS cases in China is soaring, state media said on Wednesday, citing health officials, with rates of infections among college students and older men rising. The Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention issued figures showing 48,000 new cases in China in 2011, the official Xinhua news agency said. China’s government was initially slow to acknowledge the problem of HIV/AIDS in the 1990s and had sought to cover it up when hundreds of thousands of impoverished farmers in rural Henan province became infected through botched blood-selling schemes. World AIDS Day is on December 1.    REUTERS/David Gray (CHINA – Tags: ANNIVERSARY HEALTH)

A nurse is seen through a door as she talks to an infected patient in the HIV/AIDS ward of Beijing YouAn Hospital December 1, 2011. The number of new HIV/AIDS cases in China is soaring, state media said on Wednesday, citing health officials, with rates of infections among college students and older men rising. The Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention issued figures showing 48,000 new cases in China in 2011, the official Xinhua news agency said. China’s government was initially slow to acknowledge the problem of HIV/AIDS in the 1990s and had sought to cover it up when hundreds of thousands of impoverished farmers in rural Henan province became infected through botched blood-selling schemes. World AIDS Day is on December 1. REUTERS/David Gray (CHINA – Tags: HEALTH ANNIVERSARY)

A patient eats a dose of generic HIV/AIDS drugs at a hospice for those dying of AIDS, at Wat Prabat Nampu Buddhist temple in Lopburi province on World AIDS Day December 1, 2011.  REUTERS/Sukree Sukplang (THAILAND – Tags: HEALTH SOCIETY)

A boy stands near towels hung out to dry in the yard of the San Jose Hospice in Sacatepequez, about 45 km (27 miles) of Guatemala City, November 30, 2011. About 68 HIV-infected patients, between 44 days to 18 years old, receive free medical care at the hospice. Many of the children were found abandoned in markets, churches, fire stations, left neglected in hospitals or in some instances, brought in by their families who cannot afford to pay for their medical treatment. World AIDS day which falls on December 1 is commemorated across the world to raise awareness of the pandemic. REUTERS/Jorge Dan Lopez (GUATEMALA  – Tags: HEALTH SOCIETY)

A patient receives a dose of generic HIV/AIDS drugs at a hospice for those dying of AIDS, at Wat Prabat Nampu Buddhist temple in Lopburi province on World AIDS day December 1, 2011.  REUTERS/Sukree Sukplang (THAILAND – Tags: HEALTH SOCIETY)

Nimrod plays on the swings during playtime at the Nyumbani Children’s Home for children with HIV, in Karen on the outskirts of Nairobi, Kenya, Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2011. The orphanage, which is heavily reliant on foreign donations, cares for over 100 children with HIV whose parents died of the disease and provides them with housing, care, and antiretroviral medicine to stem the progress of the disease. World AIDS Day is observed on December 1 each year and is dedicated to raising awareness of the AIDS pandemic caused by the spread of HIV infection. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis) KENYA OUT

Fidel, 11, center-right, and Christopher, 3, center-left, sit with others during a break for tea inside the house which they share, at the Nyumbani Children’s Home for children with HIV, in Karen on the outskirts of Nairobi, Kenya Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2011. The orphanage, which is heavily reliant on foreign donations, cares for over 100 children with HIV whose parents died of the disease and provides them with housing, care, and antiretroviral medicine to stem the progress of the disease. World AIDS Day is observed on December 1 each year and is dedicated to raising awareness of the AIDS pandemic caused by the spread of HIV infection. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis) KENYA OUT

An infant receives medication at Nkosi’s Haven, south of Johannesburg November 25, 2011. Nkosi’s Haven provides residential care for destitute HIV-positive mothers and their children, whether HIV-positive or not. Nkosi’s Haven is named after Nkosi Johnson, the young AIDS activist who passed away on International Children’s Day on June 1st 2001. December 1 is World AIDS Day. Picture taken November 25, 2011. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko (SOUTH AFRICA – Tags: HEALTH SOCIETY)

Syringes containing medicine for HIV-infected patients are seen at San Jose Hospice in Sacatepequez, about 45 km (27 miles) of Guatemala City, November 30, 2011. About 68 HIV-infected patients, between 44 days to 18 years old, receive free medical care at the hospice. Many of the children were found abandoned in markets, churches, fire stations, left neglected in hospitals or in some instances, brought in by their families who cannot afford to pay for their medical treatment. World AIDS day which falls on December 1 is commemorated across the world to raise awareness of the pandemic. REUTERS/Jorge Dan Lopez (GUATEMALA  – Tags: HEALTH SOCIETY)

A terminally ill man receives treatment at a hospice for those dying of AIDS, at Wat Prabat Nampu Buddhist temple in Lopburi on World AIDS day December 1, 2011.  REUTERS/Sukree Sukplang (THAILAND – Tags: HEALTH SOCIETY TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)

A boy is examined by a nurse at San Jose Hospice in Sacatepequez, about 45 km (27 miles) of Guatemala City, November 30, 2011. About 68 HIV-infected patients, between 44 days to 18 years old, receive free medical care at the hospice. Many of the children were found abandoned in markets, churches, fire stations, left neglected in hospitals or in some instances, brought in by their families who cannot afford to pay for their medical treatment. World AIDS day which falls on December 1 is commemorated across the world to raise awareness of the pandemic. REUTERS/Jorge Dan Lopez (GUATEMALA – Tags: HEALTH SOCIETY TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)

Tabitha Kioko, 40, a mother of three children who has had HIV since 2006, waits to receive medicine from a pharmacist at a clinic run by Medicins Sans Frontieres (Doctors without Borders) in the Kibera slum of Nairobi, Kenya, Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2011. World AIDS Day is observed on December 1 each year and is dedicated to raising awareness of the AIDS pandemic caused by the spread of HIV infection. (AP Photo/Khalil Senosi)

A boy looks at an image of the Virgin of Guadalupe at Hostel Domus Alipio in Mexico City November 30, 2011. Hostel Domus Alipio, run by Catholic priest Luis Figueroa and a group of volunteers, provides shelter, medication and therapy to orphans as well as women and children from low-income families affected by HIV and AIDS. December 1 is World AIDS Day.  REUTERS/Carlos Jasso (MEXICO – Tags: HEALTH SOCIETY)

A man lays in bed at the Hillcrest Aids Center Trust care center situated at Hillcrest on the outskirts of the city of Durban, South Africa, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011. A film opening on World AIDS Day Thursday that mixes live action and animation is taking viewers inside a soccer player’s body, showing how he becomes infected with HIV and spreads the virus. The cast and characters are Kenyan, Nigerian and South African, which producers hope will help the movie travel across the continent hardest hit by the disease. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam)

Blood samples are arranged for testing by a nurse in the HIV/AIDS ward of Beijing YouAn Hospital December 1, 2011. The number of new HIV/AIDS cases in China is soaring, state media said on Wednesday, citing health officials, with rates of infections among college students and older men rising. The Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention issued figures showing 48,000 new cases in China in 2011, the official Xinhua news agency said. China’s government was initially slow to acknowledge the problem of HIV/AIDS in the 1990s and had sought to cover it up when hundreds of thousands of impoverished farmers in rural Henan province became infected through botched blood-selling schemes. World AIDS Day is on December 1.    REUTERS/David Gray (CHINA – Tags: HEALTH ANNIVERSARY)

A girl lies on her bed at Hostel Domus Alipio in Mexico City November 30, 2011. Hostel Domus Alipio, run by Catholic priest Luis Figueroa and a group of volunteers, provides shelter, medication and therapy to orphans as well as women and children from low-income families affected by HIV and AIDS. December 1 is World AIDS Day. REUTERS/Carlos Jasso (MEXICO – Tags: HEALTH)

A pair of baby shoes and a soft toy are seen at a window of a dormitory at San Jose Hospice in Sacatepequez, about 45 km (27 miles) of Guatemala City, November 30, 2011. About 68 HIV-infected patients, between 44 days to 18 years old, receive free medical care at the hospice. Many of the children were found abandoned in markets, churches, fire stations, left neglected in hospitals or in some instances, brought in by their families who cannot afford to pay for their medical treatment. World AIDS day which falls on December 1 is commemorated across the world to raise awareness of the pandemic. REUTERS/Jorge Dan Lopez (GUATEMALA  – Tags: HEALTH SOCIETY)

Children attend a school class at the Nyumbani Children’s Home for children with HIV, in Karen on the outskirts of Nairobi, Kenya, Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2011. The orphanage, which is heavily reliant on foreign donations, cares for over 100 children with HIV whose parents died of the disease and provides them with housing, care, and antiretroviral medicine to stem the progress of the disease. World AIDS Day is observed on December 1 each year and is dedicated to raising awareness of the AIDS pandemic caused by the spread of HIV infection. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis) KENYA OUT

A mural in the shape of a tree is seen with the names of people who have died at the Hillcrest Aids Center Trust care center, situated at Hillcrest, on the outskirts of the city of Durban, South Africa, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011. A film opening on World AIDS Day Thursday that mixes live action and animation is taking viewers inside a soccer player’s body, showing how he becomes infected with HIV and spreads the virus. The cast and characters are Kenyan, Nigerian and South African, which producers hope will help the movie travel across the continent hardest hit by the disease. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam)

 

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18 Jun 2011

Las cenizas del volcán Puyehue


22:57 

FHPL14. ESPACIO, 12/6/2011.- Fotografía facilitada por la NASA hoy, domingo, 12 de junio de 2011, que muestra una imagen de satélite tomada por el espectroradiómetro de imágenes de resolución moderada (MODIS) en la que se aprecia una nube de ceniza de la erupción del complejo volcánico Puyehue-Cordón Caulle situado en el sur de Chile, que cruza el continente sudamericano a una altura de unos 12 kilómetros. La llegada a Australia de la nube de ceniza producida por la erupción del volcán chileno Puyehue-Cordón Caulle dejó hoy en tierra a varios miles de viajeros afectados por la cancelación de vuelos en la región.  EFE/NASA ***SÓLO USO EDITORIAL***

Hace 14 días que el volcán chileno Puyehue entró en erupción creando el caos en el transporte aéreo del cono sur. Tras la magnífica acogida del anterior post “El volcán Puyehue” donde mostraba las impactantes imágenes de la erupción, he decidido recopilar lo llegado a la redacción sobre las cenizas de este fenómeno geológico. Hoy estas cenizas han dado la vuelta a la tierra volviendo a Chile tras pasar por los cielos de Argentina, África y Australia. Las fotos realizadas desde los satélites reflejan a la perfección este viaje.

Espero que os guste esta edición gráfica sobre las cenizas del volcán Puyuhue y los trágicos y siniestros paisajes que han formado.

A cloud of ashes billows from the Puyehue volcano near Osorno, 870 km south of Santiago, on June 17, 2011. The ash cloud from a Chilean volcano that disrupted flights and stranded travelers as far away as Australia returned after its own round-the-world tour on Friday, civil aviation officials said. The cloud from the Puyehue volcano, high in Chile’s Andes, disrupted travel across South America, Australia and New Zealand for several days following its eruption on June 4, stranding thousands of travelers. TOPSHOTS   AFP PHOTO/ALVARO VIDAL

– RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE – MANDATORY CREDIT “AFP PHOTO / NASA MODIS” – NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS – DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS — This visible image was taken on June 8, 2011 at 18:30 UTC (2:30 p.m. EDT) by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument that flies aboard NASA’s Aqua satellite shows the plume from the Puyehue-Cordón Caulle volcano in Chile has expanded to the south and is now covering a much wider angle than earlier this week. The image shows the plume of ash now blowing to the east over Argentina in what almost appears to be a 90 degree triangle. Travel chaos from the Chile ash cloud spread to Western Australia on Wednesday with Virgin, Qantas and Jetstar suspending flights into and out of Perth. Several other international services from the city were also cancelled, including a South African Airlines flight to Johannesburg and Tiger Airways to Singapore.  AFP PHOTO / NASA MODIS RAPID RESPONSE TEAM

– RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE – MANDATORY CREDIT “AFP PHOTO / NASA MODIS” – NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS – DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS — A true-color image of a wide ribbon of brown volcanic ash passing over South Africa captured by the Moderate Resolution Spectroradiometer aboard the Terra satellite on June 12, 2011 and released by the NASA on June 15. The Puyehue-Cordón Caulle Volcano erupted on June 4, sending clouds of ash high into the atmosphere. Within 48 hours of eruption, the plume was measured at 15 kilometers (50,000 feet) above the Earth, high enough to pass above the weather that usually breaks up lower lying ash plumes. At this high altitude, the ash entered the jetstream, which carried it rapidly eastward. Travel chaos from the Chile ash cloud spread to Western Australia on Wednesday with Virgin, Qantas and Jetstar suspending flights into and out of Perth. Several other international services from the city were also cancelled, including a South African Airlines flight to Johannesburg and Tiger Airways to Singapore.  AFP PHOTO / NASA MODIS

The eruption at Chile?s Puyehue-Cordón Caulle Volcanic Complex sent clouds of ash high into the atmosphere, above the weather that usually breaks up such plumes. The CALIPSO satellite recorded the plume 15 kilometers (50,000 feet) above the Earth on the second day of the eruption, and the volcano continues to push ash into the atmosphere. At these high altitudes, the ash entered the jetstream and blew quickly eastward.This June 13, 2011 NASA Earth Observatory image captured by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on the Aqua satellite shows a concentrated plume that was visible more than half a world away over Australia and New Zealand. The  image shows the ash plume view  east over New Zealand and the South Pacific Ocean. The eruption of the Puyehue volcano, high in the Andes in southern Chile, entered a second week, spewing ash that has disrupted air travel on a scale unseen since the volcanic cloud over Iceland paralyzed Europe in 2010. AFP PHOTO/NASA/HANDOUT/RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE – MANDATORY CREDIT ” AFP PHOTO / – NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS – DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS

Divers of the Prefectura Naval Argentina inspect the Rio Limay covered with ash from Chile’s Puyehue-Cordon Caulle volcano chain at the mountain resort of San Carlos de Bariloche in Argentina’s Patagonia June 16, 2011. Some towns in Argentina’s Patagonia remain blanketed in volcanic ash. Airline activity is getting back to normal after days of chaos caused by a towering ash cloud, but Andean towns are covered in a thick, ashed blanket that is disrupting water and power supplies and raising fears over the key winter ski season that starts next month.   REUTERS/Chiwi Giambirtone (ARGENTINA – Tags: DISASTER ENVIRONMENT)

A vehicle belonging to Argentina’s border police (Gendarmeria Nacional) rides by a path covered by ash from Chile’s Puyehue-Cordon Caulle volcano chain, in Villa Llanquin hamlet, near San Carlos de Bariloche June 17, 2011. A volcano across the border in Chile erupted on June 4 after being dormant for decades, sending a towering cloud of ash into the air and forcing the cancellation of hundreds of flights as far away as Australia. Air traffic is gradually getting back to normal, but many residents of hard-hit Patagonian towns are without electricity and water, fearing for livestock left without grazing pasture and for the start of the southern hemisphere’s winter season.  REUTERS/Gendarmeria/Handout (ARGENTINA – Tags: DISASTER ENVIRONMENT ANIMALS) FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NOT FOR SALE FOR MARKETING OR ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS. THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. IT IS DISTRIBUTED, EXACTLY AS RECEIVED BY REUTERS, AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS

A road is blanketed with sand and volcanic ash from the Chilean Puyehue-Cordon Caulle volcano, are moored in Puerto Arauco on the Nahuel Huapi Lake, in Villa La Angostura, southern Argentina, Friday, June 17, 2011. The volcano started erupting on June 4 after remaining dormant for decades. (AP Photo/Federico Grosso)

ARG106 . VILLA LA ANGOSTURA (ARGENTINA), 16/06/2011.- Aspecto de un terreno cubierto por ceniza hoy, jueves 16 de junio de 2011, en Villa La Angostura (Argentina). La incesante caída de cenizas del complejo volcánico chileno Puyehue-Cordón Caulle en localidades del sur argentino dejará millonarias pérdidas para el paí­s, calcularon fuentes de distintos sectores de la economí­a. EFE/ANA MARIA ALVAREZ

ARG105 . VILLA LA ANGOSTURA (ARGENTINA), 16/06/2011.- Aspecto de una orilla del Lago Nahuel Huapi cubierto por ceniza hoy, jueves 16 de junio de 2011, en Villa La Angostura (Argentina). La incesante caí­da de cenizas del complejo volcánico chileno Puyehue-Cordón Caulle en localidades del sur argentino dejará millonarias pérdidas para el paí­s, calcularon fuentes de distintos sectores de la economía. EFE/ANA MARIA ALVAREZ

BAS23 . VILLA LA ANGOSTURA (ARGENTINA), 16/06/2011.- Aspecto de varios animales en un terreno cubierto por ceniza hoy, jueves 16 de junio de 2011, en Villa La Angostura (Argentina). La incesante caída de cenizas del complejo volcánico chileno Puyehue-Cordón Caulle en localidades del sur argentino dejará millonarias pérdidas para el país, calcularon fuentes de distintos sectores de la economía. EFE/ANA MARIA ALVAREZ

BAS03.VILLA LA ANGOSTURA (ARGENTINA), 16/06/2011.- Una mujer camina hoy, jueves 16 de junio de 2011, entre la ceniza arrojada desde el complejo volcánico chileno Puyehue-Cordón Caulle, en Villa La Angostura (Argentina). La incesante caí­da de cenizas del complejo volcánico en localidades turísticas del sur argentino dejará millonarias pérdidas para el paÃís. EFE/Julián Campos

BAS26 – BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA) 13/06/2011.- Vista de la puesta del sol con cenizas volcánicas dispersas en el aire en la ciudad de Buenos Aires hoy, lunes 13 de junio de 2011, cuando la nube de cenizas del complejo volcánico Puyehue-Cordón Caulle continúa afectando las condiciones climáticas de la capital argentina, por lo que las operaciones en los dos principales aeropuertos permanecen suspendidas. EFE/Cézaro De Luca

SCH05. PUYEHUE (CHILE), 07/06/2011.- Una señal de tránsito cubierta por ceniza volcánica expulsada por la erupción en el complejo volcánico Puyehue – Cordón Caulle es vista hoy, martes 7 de junio de 2011, en una carretera en Puyehue, en el límite fronterizo entre Chile y Argentina. EFE/Ian Salas

SCH02. PUYEHUE (CHILE), 07/06/2011.- Un hombre camina hoy, martes 7 de junio de 2011, en un camino afectado por la ceniza y las rocas expulsadas por una erupción en el complejo volcánico Puyehue – Cordón Caulle en Puyehue, en el lí­mite fronterizo entre Chile y Argentina. EFE/Ian Salas

The pier of Puerto Arauco at Nahuel Huapi Lake is seen covered by sand and volcanic ash from the Chilean Puyehue-Cordon Caulle volcano in Villa La Angostura, southern Argentina, Friday, June 17, 2011.  The volcano started erupting on June 4 after remaining dormant for decades. (AP Photo/Federico Grosso)

Footprints in volcanic ashes accumulated near the Puyehue volcano, close to Osorno, 870 km south of Santiago on June 7, 2011. Dozens of South American flights had to be scrapped Tuesday because of the huge cloud of volcanic ash spewing from a Chilean volcano, as fears grew of possible landslides near the eruption. So far 4,000 people have been evacuated from 22 rural Chilean communities surrounding the Puyehue volcano, which rumbled to life on Saturday after showing no activity since 1960, when it erupted following a magnitude 9.5 earthquake.  AFP PHOTO/CLAUDIO SANTANA

A boat and a bicycle remain covered with ash from Chilean volcano Puyehue, in Villa Llanquin a hamlet along route 40 on the banks of Limay river, 50 km from Bariloche, in the Argentine province of Rio Negro, on June 17, 2011. The ash cloud from Chile’s Puyehue volcano caused widespread travel chaos in the southern hemisphere since it erupted for the first time on June 4 after lying dormant dormant half a century.  AFP PHOTO/FRANCISCO RAMOS MEJIA

Horeses remain in a field covered by volcanic ash spew from Chilean volcano Puyehue, near Villa Llanquin, a hamlet along route 40 on the banks of Limay river, 50 km from Bariloche, in the Argentine province of Rio Negro, on June 17, 2011. The ash cloud from Chile’s Puyehue volcano caused widespread travel chaos in the southern hemisphere since it erupted for the first time on June 4 after lying dormant dormant half a century.  AFP PHOTO/FRANCISCO RAMOS MEJIA

Yachts covered by volcanic ash spew from Chilean volcano Puyehue on Lake Nahuel Huapi, at Villa La Angostura, in Neuquen, some 1600 km south-west of Buenos Aires, on June 16, 2011. Air New Zealand cancelled domestic flights across much of the South Island Thursday after the Chile ash cloud was detected at lower levels than previously recorded, the airline said. AFP PHOTO / Francisco Ramos Mejia

A man removes volcanic ashes from the roof in downtown Villa La Angostura, in Neuquen, some 1600 km south-west of Buenos Aires, on June 16, 2011, amidst ash spew from Chilean volcano Puyehue.  Air New Zealand cancelled domestic flights across much of the South Island Thursday after the Chile ash cloud was detected at lower levels than previously recorded, the airline said. AFP PHOTO / Francisco Ramos Mejia

A man stands on the banks of the ash-covered lake Nahuel Huapi, near San Carlos de Bariloche, Rio Negro, Argentina, on June 8, 2011, four days after the eruption of Chile’s Puyehue volcano, located 870 km south of Santiago in the Andes mountains. A vast cloud of ash spewing from a Chilean volcano disrupted air travel Wednesday across much of South America, as heavy rains around the eruption site prompted fears of mudslides. Rain mixed with volcanic ashes poured down on communities near the Puyehue volcano on Tuesday, raising fears that the weight of falling water and volcanic materials could cause mudslides and threaten dams in the area, some 870 kilometers (540 miles) south of the capital Santiago AFP PHOTO/FRANCISCO RAMOS MEJIA

A bird of prey commonly known as “chimango” feeds off the carcass of a hare on a road covered in volcanic ash from Chile’s Puyehue-Cordon Caulle volcano near Pilcaniyeu in southern Argentina, Tuesday June 14, 2011. Scientists say the volcano’s eruption has diminished, although they warn that ash likely will keep spewing out for at least several more days. (AP Photo/Photos Patagonia)

BAS06 – BARILOCHE (ARGENTINA), 12/06/2011.- Detalle de hoy, domingo 12 de junio de 2011, de un avión de la empresa LAN que permanece varado desde el pasado 7 de junio en el aeropuerto de Bariloche (Argentina), luego de las emanaciones del complejo volcánico chileno Puyehue-Cordón Caulle. La Dirección de Vialidad de Argentina inició trabajos para reconstruir el sector carretero del paso Cardenal Samorí entre Argentina y Chile, afectado este viernes por un alud provocado por intensas lluvias y las cenizas del volcán chileno. EFE/Luis Zabreg

Ash from a volcanic eruption in Chile’s Puyehue-Cordon Caulle chain cover parts of the water surface of the Nahuel Huapi Lake in the Argentine resort town of Villa La Angostura June 16, 2011. A volcano across the border in Chile erupted on June 4 after being dormant for decades, sending a towering cloud of ash into the air and forcing the cancellation of hundreds of flights as far away as Australia. Officials in Villa La Angostura, which lies 990 miles (1,600 km) southwest of Buenos Aires, have asked for the area to be declared an emergency zone to free up aid, and the Health Ministry has deployed psychologists to counsel anxious residents. REUTERS/Osvaldo Peralta (ARGENTINA – Tags: DISASTER ENVIRONMENT TRAVEL BUSINESS IMAGES OF THE DAY)

A window is partially covered with ashes near San Carlos de Bariloche, Rio Negro, Argentina, on June 7, 2011, three days after the eruption of Chile’s Puyehue volcano, located 870 km south of Santiago in the Andes mountains. Dozens of South American flights had to be scrapped Tuesday because of the huge cloud of volcanic ash spewing from a Chilean volcano, as fears grew of possible landslides near the eruption. So far 4,000 people have been evacuated from 22 rural Chilean communities surrounding the Puyehue volcano, which rumbled to life on Saturday after showing no activity since 1960, when it erupted following a magnitude 9.5 earthquake.  AFP PHOTO/FRANCISCO RAMOS MEJIA

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