24/7 News Coverage
July 05, 2018
WATER WORLD
The tow-an-iceberg plan being floated to ease Cape Town drought



Cape Town (AFP) July 3, 2018
It is a plan as crazy as the situation is desperate - towing an iceberg from Antarctica to Cape Town to supply fresh water to a city in the grip of drought. Earlier this year, Cape Town came within weeks of shutting off all its taps and forcing residents to queue for water rations at public standpipes. The cut-off was narrowly averted as people scrambled to reduce their water usage and Autumn rains saved the day. But the threat is expected to return to the coastal South African city again next ... read more

CLIMATE SCIENCE
In a warming world, could air conditioning make things worse?
Madison WI (SPX) Jul 04, 2018
As climate change continues to push summer temperatures ever higher, the increased use of air conditioning in buildings could add to the problems of a warming world by further degrading air quality ... more
AFRICA NEWS
Research shows plants in Africa 'green up' ahead of rainy season
Southampton UK (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
A study led by the University of Southampton has shown the greening up of vegetation prior to the rainy season in Africa is more widespread than previously understood. Geographers from Southam ... more
EARTH OBSERVATION
Airbus and Planet join forces to bring new geospatial products to market
Toulouse, France (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
Airbus and Planet have entered into a partnership to facilitate access to each other's data and the co-development of new geospatial solutions, by establishing a framework agreement to explore oppor ... more
WOOD PILE
Southeast Asian forest loss greater than expected, with negative climate implications
Princeton NJ (SPX) Jul 04, 2018
Researchers using satellite imaging have found much greater than expected deforestation since 2000 in the highlands of Southeast Asia, a critically important world ecosystem. The findings are import ... more
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WATER WORLD
Gulf Stream eddies as a source of iron
Zurich, Switzerland (SPX) Jul 04, 2018
Minuscule sea creatures like cyanobacteria need large amounts of trace elements such as zinc and iron. In the world's oceans, however, the latter is often in short supply. This is true of large stre ... more
ICE WORLD
Study identifies which marine mammals are most at risk from increased Arctic ship traffic
Seattle WA (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
In August 2016, the first large cruise ship traveled through the Northwest Passage, the northern waterway linking the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The following year, the first ship without an icebr ... more
FARM NEWS
Ancestral people of Chaco Canyon likely grew their own food
Cincinnati OH (SPX) Jul 04, 2018
Researchers think they have a better understanding for how ancient North Americans thrived for centuries in northwestern New Mexico's arid desert. A multidisciplinary team of experts from the ... more
ABOUT US
Ukraine's Roma under attack in wave of hate crimes
Lviv, Ukraine (AFP) July 1, 2018
Blood-stained clothes, shoes and kids' toys lie scattered in several old tents where a Roma man was murdered in an attack on a forest camp in western Ukraine last week. ... more
FLORA AND FAUNA
Study reveals source of parrots' high intelligence
Washington (UPI) Jul 3, 2018
Neuroscientists in Canada have identified the neural circuit responsible for parrots' impressive intelligence. ... more
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FLORA AND FAUNA
Gabon's unique 'orange crocodiles' intrigue scientists
Libreville (AFP) June 28, 2018
The West African state of Gabon is famous for its biodiversity but in a galaxy of spectacular finds, one stands out: orange crocodiles. ... more
ABOUT US
Lithuanians seek identity in their pagan roots
Vilnius (AFP) July 2, 2018
Dancing around a blazing fire with garlands of wildflowers in their hair, members of Lithuania's Romuva neo-pagan community mark the summer solstice, as the Baltic state undergoes a revival of its pre-Christian beliefs. ... more
WOOD PILE
I.Coast to invest 1 billion euros to replenish forest cover
Abidjan (AFP) July 2, 2018
The world's top cocoa producer Ivory Coast said Monday it would invest nearly one billion euros over 10 years to replace forests that were razed to grow the bean. ... more
FROTH AND BUBBLE
Seattle bans plastic straws, but US still has a long way to go
Washington (AFP) July 3, 2018
Seattle has become the first major US city to ban plastic straws and utensils in its eateries, a victory for environmentalists that will be tough to replicate elsewhere in the United States. ... more
FARM NEWS
Iraq's treasured amber rice crop devastated by drought
Diwaniyah, Iraq (AFP) July 3, 2018
Standing on his farm in southern Iraq, Amjad al-Kazaali gazed sorrowfully over fields where rice has been sown for centuries - but which now lie bare for lack of water. ... more


Agonising rescue ahead for Thai cave boys as nation rejoices

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Thai boys need hope, exercise to survive cave ordeal: experts
Paris (AFP) July 3, 2018
Weakened by nine days without food, 12 boys and their football coach trapped in a Thai cave are fighting threats to their health ranging from muscle degeneration and malnutrition to possible infection, experts said Tuesday. ... more
24/7 News Coverage



FIRE STORM
Californian wildfires spreading rapidly
San Francisco (AFP) July 3, 2018
A Californian wildfire that began on the weekend has rapidly spread across 70,000 acres (28,000 hectares), authorities said Tuesday, with a growing number of areas affected by mandatory evacuation orders. ... more
DEMOCRACY
Malaysia's Najib: from powerful PM to graft suspect
Kuala Lumpur (AFP) July 3, 2018
From prime minister of Malaysia two months ago to key suspect in a massive corruption scandal, Najib Razak's stunning fall from grace has been swift and hard. ... more
WOOD PILE
How mangroves help keep the planet cool
Baton Rouge LA (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
Coastal scientists have developed a new global framework to more accurately assess how mangroves along different types of coastlines from deltas to lagoons store carbon in their soil. They found tha ... more
ABOUT US
Chimpanzees start using a new tool-use gesture during an alpha male take over
Leipzig, Germany (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
"Leaf clipping is a special behaviour. It is a rare example of tool-use in a communicative context and has been proposed to be cultural, varying in its meaning in different social groups of chimpanz ... more
SHAKE AND BLOW
Bali's Mount Agung spews orange lava in fresh eruption
Jakarta (AFP) July 2, 2018
A volcano on the Indonesian island of Bali erupted Monday, belching a plume of ash 2,000 metres (6,500 feet) high as bright orange lava cascaded from its summit. ... more
24/7 Nuclear News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage



Thailand cave rescue: What now for the boys?
Mae Sai, Thailand (AFP) July 3, 2018
The rescuers dubbed it "mission impossible" but they defied the odds to locate the 12 boys and their football coach deep in a cave complex. However the hard part may yet be ahead: getting them out safely. Here are a few ways the hungry and weak boys could get out, none easy options. Could they dive out? In theory yes: but it is an extremely difficult task. Cave diving is already ver ... more
+ Libyan navy says 63 missing in new Mediterranean shipwreck
+ Thai boys need hope, exercise to survive cave ordeal: experts
+ Agonising rescue ahead for Thai cave boys as nation rejoices
+ Facial recognition was key in identifying US shooting suspect
+ Artificial intelligence accurately predicts distribution of radioactive fallout
+ Thai rescuers establish base deep inside cave where boys trapped
+ Libya navy bemoans lack of EU support over migrants
Clearing out space junk, one step at a time
Toulouse, France (SPX) Jun 26, 2018
Since the start of the space age, mankind has left its mark on the orbital pathways overhead...and not always for the better. Today, some 7,000 tonnes of artificial debris - a mass equivalent to the Eiffel Tower - orbit the planet. This detritus, ranging from remnants of defunct or broken-up spacecraft to discarded rocket stages, whizzes by at a dizzying 8 km per second - a speed at which ... more
+ Smarter, faster algorithm cuts number of steps to solve problems
+ New, safer waterproof coating invented by MIT scientists
+ Probing nobelium with laser light
+ Hope for new catalysts with high activity
+ Electronic skin stretched to new limits
+ Scientists use a photonic quantum simulator to make virtual movies of molecules vibrating
+ Indian Space Agency to teach foreign students how to build satellites


Global surface area of rivers and streams is 45 percent higher than previously thought
Chapel Hill NC (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
Researchers from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Texas A and M University used satellite images, on-the-ground measurements and a statistical model to determine how much of the earth is covered by rivers and streams. They found that global river and stream surface area is about 45 percent greater than what was indicated by previous studies. Rivers and streams are a majo ... more
+ Water compresses under a high gradient electric field
+ The tow-an-iceberg plan being floated to ease Cape Town drought
+ Great white spotted off Spain in decades first: marine group
+ Gulf Stream eddies as a source of iron
+ New water pollution protests hit southwest Iran
+ Scientists use hydrophone to listen in on methane seeps in ocean
+ US touts 'enduring' Pacific presence as carrier visits Manila
Study identifies which marine mammals are most at risk from increased Arctic ship traffic
Seattle WA (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
In August 2016, the first large cruise ship traveled through the Northwest Passage, the northern waterway linking the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The following year, the first ship without an icebreaker plied the Northern Sea Route, a path along Russia's Arctic coast that was, until recently, impassable by unescorted commercial vessels. In recent decades parts of the Arctic seas have beco ... more
+ Climate change sinking Arctic archeological treasures
+ Researchers discover volcanic heat source under glacier
+ UTMN scientists confirm the high speed of Siberia development
+ OMG, the water's warm! NASA study solves glacier puzzle
+ Antarctic ice sheet is melting, but rising bedrock below could slow it down
+ New study explains Antarctica's coldest temperatures
+ NASA study solves Greenland glacier mystery


Utah soil's slippery grip on nutrients
Salt Lake City UT (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
Lawns in the Salt Lake Valley up to 100 years old are not yet saturated in the nutrient nitrogen, which is added by fertilizer, according to a new study from University of Utah researchers. The result is surprising, since previous studies in the Eastern U.S. suggested that fertilized soil would become saturated with nitrogen within a few decades. Something different is happening in Salt La ... more
+ Iraq's treasured amber rice crop devastated by drought
+ Study links shrinking bee population, climate change
+ China drops tariffs on soybeans for some Asian nations
+ Ancestral people of Chaco Canyon likely grew their own food
+ Mesopotamians were drinking beer from individual vessels 3,500 years ago
+ Early detection of 'olive tree leprosy' with drones
+ Nestle suspended from 'sustainable' palm oil body
Japan quake battered most powerful microscopes
Tokyo (AFP) June 29, 2018
Two of the world's most powerful microscopes suffered severe damage from a deadly earthquake that hit the western Japanese city of Osaka, causing delays in cutting-edge cell and atomic-level research, a scientist said Friday. The two damaged units, both with price tags of 2.3 billion yen ($20 million), at Osaka University may not come back online until next year. One 12-metre-high (40-fe ... more
+ Bali's Mount Agung spews orange lava in fresh eruption
+ Cyclone barrels towards Japan's Okinawa
+ Four dead, hundreds evacuated as torrential rains hit Romania
+ The ancient giants of Yosemite, under a billion stars
+ Guatemala asks US to help its migrants after volcano eruption
+ 'Ring around bathtub' at giant volcano field shows movement of subterranean magma
+ Thousands of tourists stranded as Bali volcano eruption closes airport


Research shows plants in Africa 'green up' ahead of rainy season
Southampton UK (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
A study led by the University of Southampton has shown the greening up of vegetation prior to the rainy season in Africa is more widespread than previously understood. Geographers from Southampton, working with scientists at Lancaster University, used remote sensing data (satellite imagery), sourced over a 16 year period (2000-2016), to examine when plants in the continent began and finish ... more
+ Locals lose out in Rwanda's second-hand clothes war
+ Pursuing poachers, and tourism, to boost Mozambique's conservation
+ Amid thaw, Ethiopia and Eritrea leaders plan to meet
+ Kenya's Lake Turkana put on World Heritage danger list
+ Threats, reforms and challenges: A momentous week for Ethiopia
+ Gambia leader meets victims' families after deadly protest
+ Death toll from Gambia protest rises to three
Chimpanzees start using a new tool-use gesture during an alpha male take over
Leipzig, Germany (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
"Leaf clipping is a special behaviour. It is a rare example of tool-use in a communicative context and has been proposed to be cultural, varying in its meaning in different social groups of chimpanzees", explains Ammie Kalan, the lead author of the study. Since leaf clipping is relatively rare, little is known about it. "Although only three adult males were observed to begin leaf clipping ... more
+ Ukraine's Roma under attack in wave of hate crimes
+ Lithuanians seek identity in their pagan roots
+ Rethinking the orangutan
+ Orangutans have been adapting to humans for thousands of years
+ Study examines the ancient roots of team sports
+ Cranium of a four-million-year-old hominin shows similarities to that of modern humans
+ Cambodia finds 33 surrogate mothers in raid on illegal business


Climate models fail to account for CO2's impact on life, scientists say
Washington (UPI) Jun 29, 2018
Increasingly, climate scientists are calling for climate models to focus more on CO2 levels and less on temperature. In a new study, researchers from the University of Exeter contend warming could slow even as a rise in CO2 accelerates. Not only do current models mostly ignore this reality, study authors suggest they also fail to account for CO2's myriad impacts on biology - on life. / ... more
+ In a warming world, could air conditioning make things worse?
+ Dutch unveil ambitious law to cut greenhouse gases
+ Latvia declares state of disaster over drought
+ China unveils new climate goals for 2020
+ Ocean's heat cycle shows that atmospheric carbon may be headed elsewhere
+ Drought haunts farmers in Poland, Baltic states
+ Drought-hit Iraq suspends farming of key crops
Tiny cameras snap pictures of Great Lake
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jul 04, 2018
These two images of Lake Superior and surrounding area show the first data downlinked from the CubeSat Multispectral Observation System (CUMULOS) cameras. The image on the left, taken by a short-wavelength infrared camera, captures a larger area of the lake and shows strong contrast between land and water features. The narrower field of view image on the right taken by the payload's ... more
+ First laser light for GRACE Follow-On
+ Scientists offer solution to Gaia hypothesis
+ Airbus and Planet join forces to bring new geospatial products to market
+ Climate change is making night-shining clouds more visible
+ Keeping Delhi cool, one ice block at a time
+ ECOSTRESS Launches to Space Station on SpaceX Mission
+ Using massive earthquakes to unlock secrets of the outer core


World's first animals caused global warming
Exeter UK (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
The evolution of Earth's first animals more than 500 million years ago caused global warming, new research shows. Some 520-540 million years ago, animal life evolved in the ocean and began breaking down organic material on the seafloor, leading to more carbon dioxide and less oxygen in the atmosphere. In the 100 million years that followed, conditions for these earliest animals becam ... more
+ Continental microbes helped seed ancient seas with nitrogen
+ What caused the mass extinction of Earth's first animals?
+ Yosemite granite 'tells a different story' story about Earth's geologic history
+ Why life on Earth first got big
+ Fossil reveals new species of ancient marine lizard
+ Two new creatures discovered from dawn of animal life
+ T. rex could not stick out its tongue: study
Path to zero emissions starts out easy, but gets steep
Washington DC (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
Carbon dioxide emissions from human activities must approach zero within several decades to avoid risking grave damage from the effects of climate change. This will require creativity and innovation, because some types of industrial sources of atmospheric carbon lack affordable emissions-free substitutes, according to a new paper in Science from team of experts led by University of California Ir ... more
+ Green electricity isn't enough to curb global warming
+ European Commission: Luxembourg tax laws benefited ENGIE
+ Hong Kong consortium makes $9.8 bn bid for Australia's APA
+ 'Carbon bubble' coming that could wipe trillions from the global economy
+ Trump readies new plan to aid coal and nuclear power
+ Carbon dioxide emissions drop from U.S. power sector
+ Study highlights environmental cost of tearing down Vancouver's single-family homes


Atomic movie of melting gold could help design materials for future fusion reactors
Menlo Park CA (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
Researchers at the Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory have recorded the most detailed atomic movie of gold melting after being blasted by laser light. The insights they gained into how metals liquefy have potential to aid the development of fusion power reactors, steel processing plants, spacecraft and other applications where materials have to withstand extreme conditio ... more
+ New experimental results from the largest and most sophisticated stellerator
+ Buildings as power stations - data shows they work: They generate more energy than they consume
+ Paving the way for safer, smaller batteries and fuel cells
+ Turbocharge for lithium batteries
+ Sodium- and potassium-based batteries hold promise for cheap energy storage
+ The first experimental discovery in the world of the propagation of plasma turbulence
+ Rutgers-led research could lead to more efficient electronics
Study reveals source of parrots' high intelligence
Washington (UPI) Jul 3, 2018
Neuroscientists in Canada have identified the neural circuit responsible for parrots' impressive intelligence. The circuit is similar to the neural structure credited with providing primates their enhanced intelligence, an example of convergent evolution. "An area of the brain that plays a major role in primate intelligence is called the pontine nuclei," said Cristian Gutierrez-I ... more
+ Science hope for threatened koalas
+ Gabon's unique 'orange crocodiles' intrigue scientists
+ Lynxes in Europe are still in trouble, study shows
+ EU court rules Malta wild bird traps illegal
+ Australian feral cats kill a million reptiles a day: study
+ Sri Lanka arrests villagers for killing leopard
+ Dozens of last blue macaws to be reintroduced to Brazil
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Thousands march in Hong Kong as restrictions grow
Hong Kong (AFP) July 1, 2018
Protesters marched through central Hong Kong on Sunday in one of the city's major annual pro-democracy rallies as organisers said the event was coming under unprecedented pressure from authorities. Beijing has become increasingly intolerant of signs of dissent in semi-autonomous Hong Kong since massive pro-democracy rallies in 2014 brought parts of the city to a standstill and led to the eme ... more
+ US plans beefed up scrutiny of Chinese investments: Bloomberg
+ Chinese police break up protest of military veterans
+ Dominican Republic names ambassador to China
+ China pledges $100 million in military aid to Cambodia
+ Chinese parents-to-be seek more fertile ground abroad
+ Nepal PM to seek investment on first official China trip
+ Malaysia power shift hits China infrastructure drive
How mangroves help keep the planet cool
Baton Rouge LA (SPX) Jul 03, 2018
Coastal scientists have developed a new global framework to more accurately assess how mangroves along different types of coastlines from deltas to lagoons store carbon in their soil. They found that previous studies have underestimated the blue carbon levels in mangroves by up to 50 percent in some regions and overestimated levels by up to 86 percent in others. Their study published recently in ... more
+ I.Coast to invest 1 billion euros to replenish forest cover
+ Southeast Asian forest loss greater than expected, with negative climate implications
+ 'Green gold': Pakistan plants hundreds of millions of trees
+ Illegal logging threatens DR Congo forest, say investigators
+ Envisioning a future where all the trees in Europe disappear
+ Palm oil giant still linked to Indonesia logging: Greenpeace
+ Loss of Earth's intact forests speeds up: scientists


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