FULL BROADCAST | 2019 Gate River Run
The 2019 Gate River Run
The entire broadcast: Gate River Run 2018
Watch the entire News4Jax coverage of the Jacksonville's largest participatory sporting event.
GATE RIVER RUN 2015
The GATE River Run is the largest 15K race in the United States.
Over 22,000 runners in 2015.
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Fun at the Jax half marathon with St. Augustine adventures after
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Jacksonville Salute To Veterans 5k Run - Strengthening Communities - Chase
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Hundreds of Chase employees joined with W. W. Gay and others in the community for the 'Salute To Veterans' 5k run in Jacksonville, Florida. The 2nd annual race, which took place on Veteran's Day weekend 2013, honored Veterans and raised money to help bring a Naval Warship museum to downtown Jacksonville.
To learn more about Chase's commitment to Veterans, please visit ChaseMilitary.com
Chase is the U.S. consumer and commercial banking business of JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM), a leading global financial services firm with assets of $2.3 trillion and operations in more than 60 countries. We are the neighborhood bank for thousands of communities across the country. We serve approximately one of out of every six Americans through more than 5,500 bank branches; 18,000 ATMs; mortgage offices; online and mobile banking; as well as relationships with auto dealerships, schools and universities.
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Jacksonville Salute to Veterans 5k Run - Strengthening Communities - Chase
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FULL BROADCAST | 2019 Gate River Run
The 2019 Gate River Run
Tour de Pain
Runners took place in the annual Tour de Pain races throughout Jacksonville this weekend. Amanda Warford
Extreme exotics Jacksonville Florida 2018 !
Extreme exotics Jacksonville Florida 2018
2015 US Marine Corps 1/2 Marathon & 5K Start Jacksonville, FL
03 Oct 2015
Black Men Run at the Best Damn Race
Black Men Run Jacksonville at the Inaugural Best Damn Race Jacksonville
2 Million USA Homes may be UNDERWATER in the future due to Rising Sea Levels warn Scientists
The weather has been wet & wild for a while with a record number of cities seeing record levels of flooding and now Zillow and Climate Change Scientists have teamed up to report that about 2 million American homes might be underwater by 2100.
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There is no mention on the plus or minus margin of error. Or all the variables involved like inbound super jupiters or binary companions of the Sun coming in close for a hug. Or Magnetosphere problems or massive alien ships or celestial black swans and CERN mistakes.
The Cities that have the biggest risk are of course all along the coast. They always run the danger of tidal beach and shore erosion Or a mega tidal wave. Or getting swallowed by a sinkhole. Or eaten by an ocean monster.
The biggest cities in danger of being sunk according to the study are (in order):1 Florida 2 New Jersey 3 New York 4 South Carolina 5 Louisiana 6 Maryland 7 Massachusetts 8 North Carolina 9 Texas 10 Virginia 11 California 12 Hawaii 13 Washington 14 Georgia 15 Alabama 16 Connecticut 17 Maine 18 Oregon 19 Delaware 20 Rhode Island 21 Pennsylvania
Or something like that.
I don't recommend living on a coast right now.
Too many odd factors going on.
God bless everyone,
T
@newTHOR on twitter
The Article...
Climate Change and Housing: Will a Rising Tide Sink all Homes?
If sea levels rise as much as climate scientists predict by the year 2100, almost 300 U.S. cities would lose at least half their homes, and 36 U.S. cities would be completely lost.
One in eight Florida homes would be underwater, accounting for nearly half of the lost housing value nationwide.
The median value of a home at risk of being underwater is $296,296. The value of the average U.S. home is $187,000.
Typically when we talk about “underwater” homes, we are generally referring to negative equity. But there is, of course, a more literal way a home can be underwater: Rising sea levels, and the flooding likely to come with them, could inundate millions of U.S. homes worth hundreds of billions of dollars.
In fact, based on our calculations, it may turn out that actual water poses almost as much of a problem for the housing market in the future as negative equity has in the past.[1]
To quantify the impact of rising sea levels, we used maps released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) showing which parts of costal states will be underwater if sea levels rise by six feet.[2] Why six feet? Some estimates suggest sea levels will rise that much by the year 2100 if climate change continues unchecked. Using that data in conjunction with our database of information on more than 100 million homes nationwide, we determined which properties were at risk of being submerged (at least their ground floors) in the next century or so and what they’re currently worth.
Nationwide, almost 1.9 million homes (or roughly 2 percent of all U.S. homes) – worth a combined $882 billion – are at risk of being underwater by 2100. And in some states, the fraction of properties at risk of being underwater is alarmingly high. More than 1 in 8 properties in Florida are in an area expected to be underwater if sea levels rise by six feet, representing more than $400 billion dollars in current housing value. In Hawaii, almost 1 in 10 homes are at risk.
The numbers are even more alarming when looking at individual cities. Given the risk that Florida and Hawaii face, it should come as no surprise that Miami and Honolulu top the list of large cities with a significant number of properties at risk from global warming and subsequent rises in sea levels. But they’re not alone. More than 1 in 6 Boston homes are at risk, and New Yorkers may find almost 3 percent of homes in the city underwater if sea levels rise in line with climatologists’ predictions.
It’s important to note that 2100 is a long way off, and it’s certainly possible that communities take steps to mitigate these risks. Then again, given the enduring popularity of living near the sea despite its many dangers and drawbacks, it may be that even more homes will be located closer to the water in a century’s time, and these estimates could turn out to be very conservative. Either way, left unchecked, it is clear the threats posed by climate change and rising sea levels have the potential to destroy housing values on an enormous scale.
NOAA
Vera Apartments in Jacksonville, FL - veraluxuryliving.com - 2BD 2BA Apartment For Rent
JacksonVille Marathon
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Natural gas is a fossil fuel formed when layers of buried plants and animals are exposed to intense heat and pressure over thousands of years. The energy that the plants originally obtained from the sun is stored in the form of carbon in natural gas. Natural gas is a nonrenewable resource because it cannot be replenished on a human time frame. Natural gas is a hydrocarbon gas mixture consisting primarily of methane, but commonly includes varying amounts of other higher alkanes and even a lesser percentage of carbon dioxide, nitrogen, and hydrogen sulfide. Natural gas is an energy source often used for heating, cooking, and electricity generation. It is also used as fuel for vehicles and as a chemical feedstock in the manufacture of plastics and other commercially important organic chemicals.
Natural gas is found in deep underground rock formations or associated with other hydrocarbon reservoirs in coal beds and as methane clathrates. Petroleum is also another resource found in proximity to and with natural gas. Most natural gas was created over time by two mechanisms: biogenic and thermogenic. Biogenic gas is created by methanogenic organisms in marshes, bogs, landfills, and shallow sediments. Deeper in the earth, at greater temperature and pressure, thermogenic gas is created from buried organic material.
Before natural gas can be used as a fuel, it must undergo processing to remove impurities, including water, to meet the specifications of marketable natural gas. The by-products of processing include ethane, propane, butanes, pentanes, and higher molecular weight hydrocarbons, hydrogen sulfide (which may be converted into pure sulfur), carbon dioxide, water vapor, and sometimes helium and nitrogen.
Natural gas is often informally referred to simply as gas, especially when compared to other energy sources such as oil or coal. However, it is not to be confused with gasoline, especially in North America, where the term gasoline is often shortened in colloquial usage to gas.
Natural gas was used by the Chinese in about 500 B.C. They discovered the potential to transport gas seeping from the ground in crude pipelines of bamboo to where it was used to boil sea water.
In the 19th century, natural gas was usually obtained as a by-product of producing oil, since the small, light gas carbon chains came out of solution as the extracted fluids underwent pressure reduction from the reservoir to the surface, similar to uncapping a bottle of soda where the carbon dioxide effervesces. Unwanted natural gas was a disposal problem in the active oil fields. If there was not a market for natural gas near the wellhead it was virtually valueless since it had to be piped to the end user.
In the 19th century and early 20th century, such unwanted gas was usually burned off at oil fields. Today, unwanted gas (or stranded gas without a market) associated with oil extraction often is returned to the reservoir with 'injection' wells while awaiting a possible future market or to repressurize the formation, which can enhance extraction rates from other wells. In regions with a high natural gas demand (such as the US), pipelines are constructed when it is economically feasible to transport gas from a wellsite to an end consumer.
Another possibility is to export natural gas as a liquid. Gas-to-liquids (GTL) is a developing technology that converts stranded natural gas into synthetic gasoline, diesel, or jet fuel through the Fischer-Tropsch process developed in Germany prior to World War II. Such fuel can be transported to users through conventional pipelines and tankers. Proponents claim that GTL burns cleaner than comparable petroleum fuels. Major international oil companies use sophisticated technology to produce GTL. A world-scale (140,000 barrels (22,000 m3) a day) GTL plant in Qatar went into production in 2011.
Natural gas can be associated (found in oil fields), or non-associated (isolated in natural gas fields), and is also found in coal beds (as coalbed methane). It sometimes contains a significant amount of ethane, propane, butane, and pentane—heavier hydrocarbons removed for commercial use prior to the methane being sold as a consumer fuel or chemical plant feedstock. Non-hydrocarbons such as carbon dioxide, nitrogen, helium (rarely), and hydrogen sulfide must also be removed before the natural gas can be transported.
Tampa-Miami flight AA 250: Downtown Tampa, McDill AFB, Picnic Island, Everglades 2016-03-03
0:01-0:54 Inter-terminal train to F-Gates
1:30 Pushback from Gate 78 begins
2:53 Taxiing begins
9:15 Takeoff run begins on 19R
10:20 Downtown Tampa
10:50 South Tampa
11:25 Gandy Boulevard crossing, Tampa Bay
11:50 McDill AFB
12:10 Picnic Island Park, Tampa
13:00 Tampa Bay
13:50 Ruskin, Florida (L) & Little Manatee River & state park
14:35 Lake Parrish, Manatee County, Florida
15:26 Recorded post-takeoff flight information
16:10 Lake Manatee, Manatee County, Florida
16:20 SR 64 crossing Lake Manatee
16:55 SR 70 east toward Arcadia, Placid Lakes & Okeechobee
19:00 Interstate 75: south from Port Charlotte (L) across Peace River to Punta Gorda (R)
19:20 Punta Gorda Airport
19:20 Flight & Miami weather information from cockpit
22:15 Lehigh Acres, Lee County, Florida
24:00-25:00 Immokalee & Immokalee Airport, Collier County, Florida
24:30 Connecting gate numbers
27:10 Alligator Alley toward Broward County, Interstate 75, Florida
28:00-37:30 Florida Everglades
38:22 Ronald Reagan Turnpike & NW 41st Street, Doral, Florida
40:25 Touchdown on runway 8L
47:30 Parking at MIA Gate D9
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Jacksonville Bank Marathon 2014 Official Video
Video by Vantage Point Aerials of our Jacksonville Bank Marathon, Half Marathon and 5K!
Savannah, Georgia - Drive Over the Talmadge Memorial Bridge HD (2017)
The Talmadge Memorial Bridge is a bridge in the United States spanning the Savannah River between downtown Savannah, Georgia, and Hutchinson Island. It carries US 17/SR 404 Spur.