24/7 News Coverage
May 11, 2018
EARTH OBSERVATION
New research reveals how energy dissipates outside Earth's magnetic field



College Park MD (SPX) May 10, 2018
Earth's magnetic field provides an invisible but crucial barrier that protects Earth from the solar wind - a stream of charged particles launched from the sun's outer layers. The protective properties of the magnetic field can fail due to a process known as magnetic reconnection, which occurs when two opposing magnetic field lines break and reconnect with each other, dissipating massive amounts of energy and accelerating particles that threaten air traffic and satellite communication systems. Just ... read more

EARLY EARTH
Tiny fossils unlock clues to Earth's climate half a billion years ago
Leicester UK (SPX) May 10, 2018
An international collaboration of scientists, led by the University of Leicester, has investigated Earth's climate over half a billion years ago by combining climate models and chemical analyses of ... more
ICE WORLD
Geoscientists suggest 'snowball Earth' resulted from plate tectonics
Dallas TX (SPX) May 10, 2018
About 700 million years ago, the Earth experienced unusual episodes of global cooling that geologists refer to as "Snowball Earth." Several theories have been proposed to explain what triggered this ... more
ABOUT US
Can chimpanzee vocalizations reveal the origins of human language?
Washington DC (SPX) May 10, 2018
It's very difficult to determine when, how and why human language began. While fossil primates provide important clues about human evolution, the sounds they made and the soft tissue involved in mak ... more
WOOD PILE
Meta-analysis provides facts on mixed-species forest stand productivity for science and practice
Munich, Germany (SPX) May 10, 2018
Mixed forests are more productive than monocultures. This is true on all five continents, and particularly in regions with high precipitation. These findings from an international overview study, in ... more
24/7 Disaster News Coverage




24/7 Disaster News Coverage
24/7 Technology News Coverage
24/7 China News Coverage


Previous Issues May 10 May 09 May 08 May 07 May 04
Advertise at Space Media Network
WATER WORLD
Beavers do good work cleaning water
Exeter, UK (SPX) May 10, 2018
Beavers could help clean up polluted rivers and stem the loss of valuable soils from farms, new research shows. The study, undertaken by scientists at the University of Exeter using a captive beaver ... more
WATER WORLD
The far-reaching effects of ocean floors on the sea surface
Sapporo, Japan (SPX) May 10, 2018
Low rises on the ocean floor at a depth of 5,500 meters in the western North Pacific regulate surface flows and create sharp sea surface temperature (SST) fronts, which have tremendous effects on th ... more
FLORA AND FAUNA
Stowaway rats eradicated from British island territory
London (AFP) May 9, 2018
Two centuries after rats first landed on the British overseas territory of South Georgia on board sealing and whaling ships, a team of conservationists on Wednesday declared the island rodent-free. ... more
FLORA AND FAUNA
Fertile and long-living: Termite queen defies limits of biology
Washington (UPI) May 8, 2018
New research has revealed the genetic secrets behind the defiant longevity of termite queens. ... more
ABOUT US
East African cave yields evidence of innovations beginning 67,000 years ago
Washington DC (UPI) May 10, 2018
Archaeologists have recovered evidence of early cultural innovations dating to 67,000 years ago from a cave near the coast of East Africa. Until now, little was known about human history in Ea ... more
24/7 Disaster News Coverage
24/7 Technology News Coverage
24/7 China News Coverage



CLIMATE SCIENCE
Lives in the balance as UN debates climate finance
Bonn (AFP) May 9, 2018
Behind wrangling at UN climate talks over financial aid for poor countries dealing with increasingly extreme weather and bracing for worse to come, real-world projects that can save livelihoods - and sometimes lives - are queued up, waiting for approval and money. ... more
WEATHER REPORT
Lightning strikes kill dozens across Bangladesh and India
Dhaka (AFP) May 10, 2018
Dozens of Bangladeshis were killed in lightning strikes as pre-monsoon thunderstorms wreaked havoc across the South Asian country, an official said Thursday. ... more
EPIDEMICS
Hostility toward minorities can spread like a contagious disease
Washington DC (UPI) May 10, 2018
New research can help explain why inter-ethnic conflicts intensify so quickly. Social experiments suggest aggression expressed toward different ethnic groups is more likely to be imitated, all ... more
SHAKE AND BLOW
Strong 6.2-magnitude earthquake rocks Afghanistan: USGS Strong 6.2-magnitude earthquake rocks Afghanistan
Kabul (AFP) May 9, 2018
A strong 6.2-magnitude earthquake rocked northern Afghanistan on Wednesday, the US Geological Survey said, creating tremors felt as far away as Pakistan's capital Islamabad and Tajikistan's Dushanbe. ... more
DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Colombia truth commission to 'heal wounds' of war, president says
Bogota (AFP) May 8, 2018
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos installed a truth commission on Tuesday to shed light on crimes committed during the country's lengthy civil war, as agreed upon in a peace deal with the FARC guerrillas. ... more


China quake survivors relive trauma for tourists in city ruins

PILLAGING PIRATES
Three Mexican soldiers killed in ambush
Acapulco, Mexico (AFP) May 9, 2018
Three Mexican soldiers were killed in an ambush in the violent state of Guerrero, in a town whose mayor was also found murdered the same day, the defense ministry said Wednesday. ... more
24/7 News Coverage



FLORA AND FAUNA
In Japan-China ties, ibis outreach but no panda diplomacy
Tokyo (AFP) May 9, 2018
China has famously used its cuddly panda bears as a diplomatic tool, but to mark warming ties with Japan it is offering a distinctly more angular gift: two crested ibises. ... more
WATER WORLD
Australia hikes aid in Pacific as China pushes for influence
Sydney (AFP) May 9, 2018
Australia is refocussing its foreign aid programmes in a move to win hearts and minds in the island nations of the Pacific, as an increasingly assertive China flexes its muscles in the region. ... more
WOOD PILE
Peruvian Amazon undergoing deforestation at accelerating pace: official
Lima (AFP) May 8, 2018
The Peruvian Amazon lost nearly two million hectares (five million acres) of forest between 2001 and 2016, or more than 123,000 hectares (300,000 acres) a year, figures made public Tuesday by the ministry of the environment. ... more
SHAKE AND BLOW
Volcanic activity pauses at Hawaii crater but more eruptions expected
Leilani Estates, United States (AFP) May 8, 2018
Volcanic activity from Hawaii's Kilauea volcano paused on Tuesday, authorities said, while warning that more outbreaks should be anticipated. ... more
DISASTER MANAGEMENT
China resists push at UN for Myanmar probe of Rohingya attacks
United Nations, United States (AFP) May 8, 2018
China is resisting a British-led push at the UN Security Council to increase pressure on Myanmar to try those responsible for attacks on the Rohingya, according to a draft statement seen by AFP on Tuesday. ... more
24/7 Nuclear News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage



Colombia truth commission to 'heal wounds' of war, president says
Bogota (AFP) May 8, 2018
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos installed a truth commission on Tuesday to shed light on crimes committed during the country's lengthy civil war, as agreed upon in a peace deal with the FARC guerrillas. The commission will "help heal the wounds accumulated during more than 50 years of conflict," Santos said during a ceremony at the presidential offices. Even though the full truth ... more
+ China resists push at UN for Myanmar probe of Rohingya attacks
+ 17 dead in Myanmar jade mine landslide
+ Honduras regrets loss of US protection status for its nationals
+ India storm toll of death and devastation rises
+ Rescuers search for three Polish miners after deadly quake
+ Before the flood arrives
+ Landslide in northern China kills 9
China rejects US military claims of laser attacks on pilots
Beijing (AFP) May 4, 2018
China on Friday rejected US allegations that Chinese nationals shone military-grade lasers at American pilots in Djibouti, dismissing the claims as "inconsistent with facts". Beijing, which operates a naval base in the Horn of Africa country, denied Pentagon accusations that Chinese personnel have targeted US pilots in the country with the beams, resulting in minor injuries to airmen and cre ... more
+ DARPA taps MIT for research on high-value molecules
+ Atomically thin magnetic device could lead to new memory technologies
+ Improving 3-D printing of plastic parts
+ AF plans to accelerate defendable space with Next-Gen OPIR
+ Telephonics contracted for Coast Guard radar systems
+ Lasers in Space: Earth Mission Tests New Technology
+ Step aside Superman, steel is no competition for this new material


Spring brings phytoplankton blooms to North Sea
Washington (UPI) May 8, 2018
Spring has arrived in the North Sea, as revealed by new images of phytoplankton blooms. As winter gives way to spring, and more of the sun reaches the waters closer to the poles, warmth and solar energy fuel the growth of phytoplankton colonies. Phytoplankton blooms feature billions of the microscopic organisms, which turn sunlight and CO2 into sugars and oxygen. They anchor rich ... more
+ Australia hikes aid in Pacific as China pushes for influence
+ The far-reaching effects of ocean floors on the sea surface
+ Beavers do good work cleaning water
+ Weeds take over kelp in high CO2 oceans
+ Engineered polymer membranes could be new option for water treatment
+ Engineers upgrade ancient, sun-powered tech to purify water
+ Researchers levitate water droplets to improve contaminant detection
Geoscientists suggest 'snowball Earth' resulted from plate tectonics
Dallas TX (SPX) May 10, 2018
About 700 million years ago, the Earth experienced unusual episodes of global cooling that geologists refer to as "Snowball Earth." Several theories have been proposed to explain what triggered this dramatic cool down, which occurred during a geological era called the Neoproterozoic. Now two geologists at The University of Texas at Dallas and UT Austin suggest that those major climate changes ca ... more
+ Mission to study how melting polar ice affects regional sea levels
+ Why Antarctic snow melts even in winter
+ Are emperor penguins eating enough?
+ UK, US launch biggest-ever study of Antarctic glacier
+ Russian Arctic glacier loss doubles as temps warm
+ AWI researchers measure a record concentration of microplastic in Arctic sea ice
+ Shift in ocean circulation triggered the end of the last ice age


Seven chateaux and counting: Chinese billionaire is big in Bordeaux
Saint-Laurent-Des-Combes, France (AFP) May 4, 2018
Over the past decade Chinese investors have conquered dozens of chateaux in Bordeaux, France's famed wine-growing region. Some left after seeing their investments wither on the vine, but Peter Kwok, who has no fewer than seven vineyards to his name, says he is here for the long haul. The 69-year-old Hong Kong-based billionaire has been in southwest France for the past 20 years, recently ... more
+ Seven chateaux and counting: Chinese billionaire is big in Bordeaux
+ Wood you like a drink? Japan team invents 'wood alcohol'
+ Fish farming can help relieve pressures on land resources, study shows
+ EU to ban bee-killing pesticides
+ Mediterranean fears bitter future for citrus crops
+ South Africa wine production drying up in water crisis
+ How NASA and John Deere Helped Tractors Drive Themselves
Strong 6.2-magnitude earthquake rocks Afghanistan: USGS Strong 6.2-magnitude earthquake rocks Afghanistan
Kabul (AFP) May 9, 2018
A strong 6.2-magnitude earthquake rocked northern Afghanistan on Wednesday, the US Geological Survey said, creating tremors felt as far away as Pakistan's capital Islamabad and Tajikistan's Dushanbe. The quake struck at 1041 GMT near Afghanistan's border with Tajikistan in the Hindu Kush mountains at a depth of 111 kilometres (69 miles), the USGS said. It was the second earthquake to sha ... more
+ 6.0-magnitude quake hits off Papua New Guinea coast
+ New fissures open up near Hawaiian volcano as danger persists
+ Volcanic activity pauses at Hawaii crater but more eruptions expected
+ China quake survivors relive trauma for tourists in city ruins
+ Thousands flee after Hawaii quake triggers new volcano eruptions
+ Hawaii volcano destroys over two dozen homes, more threatened
+ Hundreds dead as floods wreak havoc in East Africa


Ex-Gambia generals deny desertion
Banjul, Gambia (AFP) May 2, 2018
Two renegade generals who followed ex-Gambia president Yahya Jammeh into exile pleaded not guilty on Wednesday to a charge of desertion brough by the military. General Umpa Mendy and General Ansumana Tamba sought refuge in Equatorial Guinea alongside Jammeh in January 2017 after his brutal 22-year rule came to an end. They were arrested at the beginning of the year, shortly after they re ... more
+ Lake Victoria biodiversity being 'decimated': conservationists
+ Double curse: After drought, Kenya's Dadaab refugee camps hit by floods
+ Pentagon addressing Niger attack issues: Mattis
+ In first for Tunisia, police and soldiers head to polls
+ Climate change not the key driver of human conflict and displacement in East Africa
+ Nuggets of contention: Chinese mine gold in Cameroon
+ Climate change mitigation project threatens local ecosystem resilience in
Can chimpanzee vocalizations reveal the origins of human language?
Washington DC (SPX) May 10, 2018
It's very difficult to determine when, how and why human language began. While fossil primates provide important clues about human evolution, the sounds they made and the soft tissue involved in making those sounds weren't preserved. But chimpanzees - one of our closest living relatives - provide important points of comparison for inferring the sorts of sounds our early ancestors may have ... more
+ East African cave yields evidence of innovations beginning 67,000 years ago
+ Study considers how humans first depicted animals in cave paintings
+ Revealing the remarkable nanostructure of human bone
+ What gorilla poop tells us about evolution and human health
+ Engraved Crimean stone artifact may demonstrate Neanderthal symbolism
+ Early humans in the Philippines 700,000 years ago: study
+ Genetic adaptations to diving discovered in humans for the first time


Earth's orbital changes have influenced climate, life for at least 215M years
Brunswick NJ (SPX) May 08, 2018
Every 405,000 years, gravitational tugs from Jupiter and Venus slightly elongate Earth's orbit, an amazingly consistent pattern that has influenced our planet's climate for at least 215 million years and allows scientists to more precisely date geological events like the spread of dinosaurs, according to a Rutgers-led study. "It's an astonishing result because this long cycle, which had be ... more
+ Lives in the balance as UN debates climate finance
+ In ancient rocks, scientists see a climate cycle working across deep time
+ Atmospheric CO2 levels in April hit highest average ever recorded
+ Total EU carbon emissions rise 1.8 percent last year: Eurostat
+ Dramatic action needed on climate change: UN
+ Scientists project a drier Amazon and wetter Indonesia in the future
+ Saskatchewan province goes to court to fight Canada carbon tax
China launches new Earth observation satellite for environmental monitoring
Taiyuan, China (XNA) May 10, 2018
China on Wednesday launched Gaofen-5, a hyperspectral imaging satellite, as part of the country's high-resolution Earth observation project. The Gaofen-5 satellite was launched off the back of a Long March 4C rocket at 2:28 a.m. Beijing Time from the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center in northern Shanxi Province. It was the 274th flight mission by a Long March carrier rocket. The satell ... more
+ NASA Spacecraft Discovers New Magnetic Process in Turbulent Space
+ Copernicus Sentinel-3B delivers first images
+ New research reveals how energy dissipates outside Earth's magnetic field
+ CryoSat reveals retreat of Patagonian glaciers
+ Moon holds key to improving satellite views of Earth
+ Twin spacecraft to weigh in on Earth's changing water
+ Earth's magnetic field is not about to reverse


Tiny fossils unlock clues to Earth's climate half a billion years ago
Leicester UK (SPX) May 10, 2018
An international collaboration of scientists, led by the University of Leicester, has investigated Earth's climate over half a billion years ago by combining climate models and chemical analyses of fossil shells about 1mm long. The research, published in Science Advances, suggests that early animals diversified within a climate similar to that in which the dinosaurs lived. This inter ... more
+ Ediacara Biota flourished in bacterially rich marine habitats
+ Cracking open the formation of fossil concretions
+ Scientists find the first bird beak, right under their noses
+ New evidence that volcanism triggered the late Devonian extinction
+ ASU team discovers a new take on early evolution of photosynthesis
+ Ancient footprints tell story of a giant sloth hunt
+ Plants play greater role than megaherbivore extinctions in ecosystem changes
Carbon taxes can be both fair and effective, study shows
Boston MA (SPX) Apr 11, 2018
Putting a price on carbon, in the form of a fee or tax on the use of fossil fuels, coupled with returning the generated revenue to the public in one form or another, can be an effective way to curb emissions of greenhouse gases. That's one of the conclusions of an extensive analysis of several versions of such proposals, carried out by researchers at MIT and the National Renewable Energy Laborat ... more
+ Trump rolls back Obama-era fuel efficiency rules
+ Lights out for world landmarks in nod to nature
+ Puerto Rico power grid snaps, nearly 1 million in the dark
+ Grids from Turkmenistan, Afghanistan and Pakistan could be connected
+ Coal phase-out: Announcing CO2-pricing triggers divestment
+ State utilities called to pass U.S. tax benefits to consumers
+ Magnetic liquids improve energy efficiency of buildings


3D batteries pack power into tiny footprints
Washington DC (SPX) May 04, 2018
Batteries might seem like they come in every shape and size that you can imagine. But as electronic devices become tinier and skinnier without reducing their power and energy demands, they challenge engineers to design batteries that can fit into smaller and smaller spaces without compromising on performance. Researchers in the United States have used non-traditional techniques to fashion one po ... more
+ Revealing the mysteries of superconductors
+ Chemists develop MRI-like technique to detect what ails batteries
+ A novel voltage peak in the metal nanowire-superconductor hybrid structure
+ Making new layered superconductors using high entropy alloys
+ Antimatter study to benefit from recipe for ten-fold spatial compression of plasma
+ Topological insulator 'flips' for superconductivity
+ A surprising new superconductor
Traumatised bears, wolves find solace at Greek sanctuary
Nymfaio, Greece (AFP) May 8, 2018
Orphaned as an infant, three-year-old Patrick takes a wary view of visitors. He crouches low, licks his claws and starts humming - a bear's equivalent of thumb-sucking. "It soothes him when he's stressed," says Melina Avgerinou, a caretaker at the Arcturos bear sanctuary in northern Greece. Patrick's tale is typical of many bears that have found refuge in the Arcturos sanctuary at Nymf ... more
+ Stowaway rats eradicated from British island territory
+ Should I stay or go? Birds migrate to save energy: study
+ Large predators are showing up in surprising places
+ Fertile and long-living: Termite queen defies limits of biology
+ S.African film-maker killed by giraffe
+ In Japan-China ties, ibis outreach but no panda diplomacy
+ Intense exercise can prove fatal to racehorses, study shows
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Former top Chinese Communist official jailed for life for bribery
Beijing (AFP) May 8, 2018
A former Chinese Communist Party official who was once tipped as a potential successor to President Xi Jinping was sentenced to life in prison for bribery on Tuesday, the latest senior cadre to fall in Xi's sweeping anti-corruption crusade. Sun Zhengcai, a former Politburo member and party chief of the southwestern mega-city of Chongqing, was found guilty of taking more than 170 million yuan ... more
+ Former top Chinese Communist official jailed for life for bribery
+ Crackdown shakes Chinese city's 'Little Africa'
+ Hong Kong pro-democracy lawmaker arrested over phone grab
+ China will continue to 'hold high the great banner of Marxism', Xi says
+ US scolds China over 'Orwellian' airline demands
+ Hong Kong youth groups reject PLA foot drill pressure
+ Chinese laureate's widow willing to 'die at home' in protest
May the Forest Be With You: GEDI Moves Toward Launch to Space Station
Greenbelt MD (SPX) May 07, 2018
A first-of-its-kind laser instrument designed to map the world's forests in 3-D is moving toward an earlier launch to the International Space Station than previously expected. The Global Ecosystem Dynamics Investigation - or GEDI, pronounced like "Jedi," of Star Wars fame - instrument is undergoing final integration and testing this spring and summer at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center i ... more
+ Meta-analysis provides facts on mixed-species forest stand productivity for science and practice
+ Peruvian Amazon undergoing deforestation at accelerating pace: official
+ China's native forests imperiled by proliferating tree plantations
+ Tribal protesters march on Brazil congress over land threats
+ Billions of gallons of water saved by thinning forests
+ Warming climate could speed forest regrowth in eastern US
+ Warming climate could speed forest regrowth in eastern US


Buy Advertising Media Advertising Kit Editorial & Other Enquiries Privacy statement
The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2018 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement