Louis J Sheehan
Louis J Sheehan Esquire
Louis J SheehanLouis J. Sheehan 2Louis J. Sheehan 3Louis J. Sheehan 4Louis J. Sheehan 5Louis J. Sheehan 6Louis J. Sheehan 7Louis SheehanLouis J. SheehanLouis J. SheehanLouis J SheehanLouis J Sheehan 5Louis J. Sheehan 6
October, 2008
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Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire 22945 Shadow
Friday, October 31, 2008 - 5:52 PM
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chevy 665.che.998 Louis J. Sheehan
Friday, October 31, 2008 - 5:52 PM
 Louis J. Sheehan.  I almost laughed out loud at the start of last night’s episode of Knight Rider. Mike Traceur sat in KITT’s driver’s seat, reading a dossier, and watching football as he cruised down some scenic highway—and why not, when he’s got a car that can drive itself. Which is when it hit me: I’ve been writing about Knight Rider for weeks without looking into where we are on the whole self-driving car thing! I mean, a car that drives itself has to come before a talking
launch 884.32 Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
Sunday, October 19, 2008 - 11:22 AM

Mars Science LaboratoryNASA’s next robotic Mars explorer may be meticulously designed to trundle over the Martian landscape, but it’s having trouble getting off the planet Earth. Huge cost overruns and technical difficulties may cause the $2 billion dollar [sic] Mars Science Laboratory to be delayed or canceled outright, members of a NASA advisory committee were warned on Oct. 2. “Our problem is enormous,” said Jim Green, director of the space agency’s Planetary Science Division, as project costs soar up to
ecosystems 554.0 Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
Sunday, October 19, 2008 - 11:14 AM
http://rpc.technorati.com/rpc/ping

In ecosystems across the country, the automobile has moved to the top of the food chain, meaning that thousands of moose, cougars, and bears are meeting their ends on asphalt. Now, the Colorado Department of Transportation is hoping that high-tech wild-life detectors might cut down on roadkill.

The testing site for the new detectors is a particularly deadly mile of Highway 160, where 70 percent of all reported collisions between 1999 and 2003 were

pika 3332.wq Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
Monday, October 13, 2008 - 8:09 AM
 Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire.  Pioneering ecologist Joseph Grinnell in 1914 began a seven year survey of the animals living in Yosemite National Park in California. Even then, human impacts such as the transformation of the Central Valley into an agricultural oasis were changing the landscape and the animals who lived there.

Nearly a century later, one cause for the transformation of California wildlife has come to overshadow all others: global warming. Now scientists have found
Kaministiquia 82200.4re Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
Thursday, October 09, 2008 - 8:37 AM
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire.  Analyses of trees and other organic material buried in a riverbank near Lake Superior’s northwestern shore shed new light on how much and when the lake level varied soon after the end of the last ice age.

Researchers have long known that the water level in Lake Superior has fluctuated, but pinning down the dates of those variations has been tough, says Matthew Boyd, a paleoecologist at Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, Ontario. Many techniques

jamestown 888332.6y Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
Sunday, October 05, 2008 - 9:12 AM

Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire.  Excavations in the 17th-century fort at Jamestown, Va., have yielded the grave of a high-ranking male colonist. Physical and historical evidence indicates that the man was one of the community's leaders, according to William Kelso, archaeology director of the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities' Jamestown Rediscovery project. http://louis9j9sheehan9esquire.blogspot.com

The most exciting possibility is that the grave, which included a

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