24/7 News Coverage
April 05, 2019
ICE WORLD
NASA Begins Final Year of Airborne Polar Ice Mission



Greenbelt MD (SPX) Apr 05, 2019
This is the last year for Operation IceBridge, NASA's most comprehensive airborne survey of ice change. Since the launch of its first Arctic campaign in spring 2009, IceBridge has enabled discoveries ranging from water aquifers hidden within snow in southeast Greenland, to the first map indicating where the base of the massive Greenland Ice Sheet is thawed, to detailed depictions of the evolving Arctic sea ice cover and the thickness of the overlying snow. Now, for the first time since its inaugur ... read more

FIRE STORM
A polymer added to fuel could have saved the twin towers, researchers say
Washington (UPI) Apr 4, 2019
Scientists at Caltech have developed a new type of polymer that prevents fuel from misting during an explosion. The breakthrough could decrease the amount of damage caused by industrial accidents and terrorist attacks. ... more
FIRE STORM
Seoul declares national disaster as winds fan giant forest fire
Seoul (AFP) April 5, 2019
A giant forest fire swept across swathes of South Korea Friday, as authorities declared a rare national disaster, deploying 900 fire engines and tens of thousands of personnel to bring it under control. ... more
AFRICA NEWS
S.Sudan holds breath as fragile peace faces crucial test
Udier, South Sudan (AFP) April 3, 2019
Chol Deng, her husband and five children sit, exhausted, under a tree, having journeyed back to South Sudan five years after fleeing their corpse-strewn hometown Malakal. ... more
ROBO SPACE
'Edtech' boom transforms how Indian kids learn
Mumbai (AFP) March 31, 2019
From a multi-billion-dollar education startup to wired-up mannequins, technology is helping to revolutionise the way Indian schoolchildren are learning - provided their parents can afford it. ... more
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FROTH AND BUBBLE
Children in South Asia hardest hit by air pollution, says study
Hong Kong (AFP) April 3, 2019
Air pollution will shorten the life expectancy of children born today by an average of 20 months and will have the greatest impact in south Asia, according to a study published Wednesday. ... more
OIL AND GAS
Rich and poor united in desperate quest for water in Venezuela
Caracas (AFP) April 3, 2019
Crippling power blackouts are subjecting Venezuelans to a second phase of deprivation - massive water shortages that make no distinction in income or social class, forcing rich and poor alike to wait in long lines for drinking water, while some hoist it from sewers to be able to flush their toilets. ... more
SOLAR DAILY
Renewable Energy Now Accounts for a Third of Global Power Capacity
Abu Dhabi, UAE (SPX) Apr 03, 2019
The decade-long trend of strong growth in renewable energy capacity continued in 2018 with global additions of 171 gigawatts (GW), according to new data released by the International Renewable Energ ... more
EXO WORLDS
Building blocks of DNA and RNA could have appeared together before life began on Earth
La Jolla CA (SPX) Apr 03, 2019
Scientists for the first time have found strong evidence that RNA and DNA could have arisen from the same set of precursor molecules even before life evolved on Earth about four billion years ago. ... more
SHAKE AND BLOW
California should have had a major earthquake by now, geologists warn
Washington (UPI) Apr 3, 2019
California's three most historically active faults haven't slipped in a century, a hiatus unprecedented over the last 1,000 years, according to a new study. ... more
24/7 Disaster News Coverage
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WATER WORLD
Sierra Leone bans industrial fishing for a month
Freetown (AFP) April 1, 2019
Sierra Leone has banned industrial fishing in its territorial waters for a month from Monday in a move to try to shore up stocks that was applauded by environmental activists. ... more
EARLY EARTH
Fossil fly with an extremely long proboscis sheds light on the insect pollination origin
Moscow, Russia (SPX) Apr 03, 2019
A long-nosed fly from the Jurassic of Central Asia, reported by Russian paleontologists, provides new evidence that insects have started serving as pollinators long before the emergence of flowering ... more
SHAKE AND BLOW
'We have lost everything': Afghans describe deadly floods
Herat, Afghanistan (AFP) March 31, 2019
Villagers in western Afghanistan began cleaning up Sunday after the worst floods in a decade swept away houses and forced many families - already displaced by drought - to abandon damaged homes. ... more
AFRICA NEWS
Rwanda's genocide killers learn new life back home
Mutobo, Rwanda (AFP) April 1, 2019
Dozens of ex-militia killers stroll around an open camp beneath mist-shrouded volcanoes in Rwanda. They are learning to reintegrate into the country whose government they have spent years trying to overthrow. ... more
ABOUT US
Can technology improve even though people don't understand what they are doing?
Tempe AZ (SPX) Apr 03, 2019
Beginning about 60,000 years ago, our species spread across the world occupying a wider range of habitats than any other species. Humans can do this because we can rapidly evolve specialized tools t ... more


Nitrogen degrading coral in Hawaii traced to wastewater treatment plant

WATER WORLD
Bleaching hits world's southernmost coral reef: scientists
Sydney (AFP) April 3, 2019
The world's southernmost coral reef has been hit by bleaching this summer, Australian scientists said Wednesday, as they warned rising sea temperatures from climate change were affecting even the most isolated ecosystems. ... more
24/7 News Coverage



WATER WORLD
Warming seas wreck Great Barrier Reef's regrowth
Paris (AFP) April 3, 2019
Rising sea temperatures have wrecked the Great Barrier Reef's ability to regrow, researchers said Wednesday, highlighting for the first time a 90 percent fall in new corals since back-to-back heatwaves bleached the World Heritage site. ... more
SHAKE AND BLOW
Flooding in Paraguay's capital due to heavy rain
Asuncion (AFP) April 4, 2019
More than 20,000 families across Paraguay have been affected by severe flooding from two weeks of heavy rain that caused the country's main river to burst its banks, a senior official said Wednesday as an emergency was declared in the capital. ... more
FIRE STORM
Chinese firefighters contain forest fire after 30 dead
Beijing (AFP) April 2, 2019
Firefighters in southwest China contained a forest blaze on Tuesday after it claimed the lives of 27 firefighters and three others, local officials said. ... more
DEMOCRACY
Twitter may tag rule-breaking Trump tweets
San Francisco (AFP) March 28, 2019
Twitter said Thursday it could start tagging tweets from newsworthy figures such as US President Donald Trump that break its rules, while stopping short of deleting them. ... more
AFRICA NEWS
Algeria army demands start of impeachment against Bouteflika
Algiers (AFP) April 2, 2019
Algeria's military on Tuesday demanded the immediate launch of impeachment proceedings against President Abdelaziz Bouteflika as it dismissed an announcement he will resign before his mandate expires. ... more
24/7 Nuclear News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage



Gun control, climate: a new US generation takes to the barricades
New York (AFP) March 31, 2019
In the United States, David Hogg is a leading campaigner for gun control, while in Europe, Greta Thunberg fights to defend the climate. They may only be teenagers, but both have drawn worldwide followings for their clear messages and fierce commitment - symbols of a generation of surprising militancy. Hogg, who is 18, is a leader of the March for Our Lives movement, launched by student ... more
+ Lebanon sees eastern EU refugee hardline as model to follow
+ Disease fears mount for Africa cyclone survivors
+ Japan to lift evacuation order in town hosting Fukushima plant
+ 40 years after meltdown, Three Mile Island plant may shut down
+ US lawmakers challenge Pentagon diversion of $1 bn for border wall
+ Anger, grief sweep Iraq's Mosul as ferry disaster toll hits 100
+ Pentagon authorizes $1 bn for Trump's border wall
Indian satellite destruction created 400 pieces of debris, endangering ISS: NASA
Washington (AFP) April 1, 2019
The head of NASA on Monday branded India's destruction of one of its satellites a "terrible thing" that had created 400 pieces of orbital debris and led to new dangers for astronauts aboard the International Space Station. Jim Bridenstine was addressing employees of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration five days after India shot down a low-orbiting satellite in a missile test to ... more
+ New virtual reality tool allows you to see the world through the eyes of a tiny primate
+ Progress MS-11 Spacecraft Launched to Reach ISS in Record Time
+ US Air Force and Raytheon collaborate to modernize space command and control system
+ Teaching computers to intelligently design 'billions' of possible materials
+ Group teams up to combat growing space debris threat, protect satellites in orbit
+ Indian satellite destruction creates debris field of 'space junk'
+ Adhesive formed from bee spit and flower oil could form basis of new glues


Sierra Leone bans industrial fishing for a month
Freetown (AFP) April 1, 2019
Sierra Leone has banned industrial fishing in its territorial waters for a month from Monday in a move to try to shore up stocks that was applauded by environmental activists. The government also decreed an April 1-30 halt to exports by major fishing companies "to protect our fish stock from depletion", said a statement from the fisheries ministry. "All industrial fishing companies shoul ... more
+ Nitrogen degrading coral in Hawaii traced to wastewater treatment plant
+ Ocean heat hits record high: UN
+ Bleaching hits world's southernmost coral reef: scientists
+ Warming seas wreck Great Barrier Reef's regrowth
+ Libya chaos leaves city residents struggling for water
+ Scientists propose a new benchmark skill for decadal prediction of terrestrial water storage
+ Satellites key to addressing water scarcity
A Decade of Exploring Alaska's Mountain Glaciers
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Apr 03, 2019
In Alaska, 5 percent of the land is covered by glaciers that are losing a lot of ice and contributing to sea level rise. To monitor these changes, a small team of NASA-funded researchers has been flying scientific instruments on a bright red, single-engine plane since spring 2009. In almost a decade of operations, the Operation IceBridge Alaska team has more than doubled the number of moun ... more
+ Alaska bakes under heat wave linked to climate change
+ NASA Begins Final Year of Airborne Polar Ice Mission
+ How climate change is reshaping the Arctic landscape
+ Tall ice-cliffs may trigger big calving events - and fast sea-level rise
+ Cold Water Currently Slowing Fastest Greenland Glacier
+ Ecuador's indigenous fear for wetlands as glacier recedes
+ NASA's Greenland mission still surprises in year four


Monsanto ordered to pay $81 mn in Roundup cancer trial
San Francisco (AFP) March 28, 2019
Monsanto was ordered on Wednesday to pay some $81 million to an American retiree who blames his cancer on the agribusiness giant's weedkiller Roundup. A San Francisco jury found the firm, which is owned by Bayer, had been "negligent by not using reasonable care" to warn of the risks of its product, ordering it to pay Edwin Hardeman $75 million in punitive damages, $5.6 million in compensatio ... more
+ 'Cow toilets' in Netherlands aim to cut e-moo-ssions
+ Glyphosate under fire from San Francisco to Sri Lanka
+ Plant seed research provides basis for sustainable alternatives to chemical fertilizers
+ Seeds share memories with their offspring
+ China expands ban on Canadian canola imports to second firm
+ China expands ban on Canadian canola imports to second firm
+ Toxicologist denies manipulating studies in Monsanto damages proceedings
Geophysics: A surprising, cascading earthquake
Munich, Germany (SPX) Mar 27, 2019
The Kaikoura earthquake in New Zealand in 2016 caused widespread damage. Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet (LMU) in Munich researchers have now dissected its mechanisms revealing surprising insights on earthquake physics with the aid of simulations carried out on the supercomputer SuperMUC. The 2016 Kaikoura earthquake (magnitude 7.8) on the South Island of New Zealand is among the most intr ... more
+ Farmers devastated as Mozambique counts cost of deadly cyclone
+ Flooding in Paraguay's capital due to heavy rain
+ California should have had a major earthquake by now, geologists warn
+ 'We have lost everything': Afghans describe deadly floods
+ Iran orders evacuation of flood-hit western cities
+ Mexico raises alert level as volcano spews ash, lava
+ 23 dead as Iran battles heavy rain and floods


Algeria army demands start of impeachment against Bouteflika
Algiers (AFP) April 2, 2019
Algeria's military on Tuesday demanded the immediate launch of impeachment proceedings against President Abdelaziz Bouteflika as it dismissed an announcement he will resign before his mandate expires. Armed forces chief Ahmed Gaid Salah called for "the immediate application of the constitutional procedure for removing the head of state from power", in a defence ministry statement after a mee ... more
+ S.Sudan holds breath as fragile peace faces crucial test
+ Rwanda's genocide killers learn new life back home
+ Comoros President Azali re-elected in a landslide
+ Cellphone apps fight Africa's taboos
+ Southern Africa leaders back Western Sahara at 'historic' talks
+ Algeria army chief demands Bouteflika be declared unfit to rule
+ In Mali, jihadists losing grip but peace will take time: French military chief
Is Earth Quarantined? Researchers Meet to Try Shed Light on Alien Riddle
Moscow (Sputnik) Mar 28, 2019
With arrays of new galaxies and their stars being discovered every day, it still remains unresolved if there is anyone, or anything, super-intelligent in control, and though the probability of the existence of extra-terrestrial civilizations is considered to be incredibly high, the evidence is a far cry from sufficient. Members of METI (Messaging Extraterrestrial Intelligence), a San Franc ... more
+ Can technology improve even though people don't understand what they are doing?
+ Researchers get humans to think like computers
+ Attractive businesswomen considered less trustworthy, surveys suggest
+ Humans can be tricked just like computers
+ From stone chips to microchips: How tiny tools may have made us human
+ Fossil teeth in Kenya help fill monkey evolution record gap
+ Chimps' cultural diversity threatened by humans, study says


Australia sees record temperatures for fourth month in a row
Sydney (AFP) April 1, 2019
Australia continued a string of "hottest ever" months in March, the government said Monday, as global warming emerges as the hot button issue in national elections just weeks away. The Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) said the country had experienced the warmest March on record, with mean maximum and minimum temperatures above average for nearly all of the vast continent nation. BOM said the ... more
+ Canada experiencing warming at twice global level: report
+ Eco-tax championed, contested and still marginal in EU
+ Is it right to invest in space exploration when there is an unsolved climate crisis on earth?
+ Droughts could hit aging power plants hard
+ UN wants to showcase ambitious countries at climate summit
+ Stalagmite to help predict droughts, floods in India
+ Measuring impact of drought on groundwater resources from space
Natural climate processes overshadow recent human-induced Walker circulation trends
Seoul, South Korea (SPX) Apr 03, 2019
A new study, published this week in the journal Nature Climate Change, shows that the recent intensification of the equatorial Pacific wind system, known as Walker Circulation, is unrelated to human influences and can be explained by natural processes. This result ends a long-standing debate on the drivers of an unprecedented atmospheric trend, which contributed to a three-fold acceleration of s ... more
+ Researchers unveil effects of dust particles on cloud properties
+ Experts reveal that clouds have moderated warming triggered by climate change
+ Free satellite data available to help tackle public sector challenges
+ Two Chinese Earth observation satellites put into service
+ Land-cover dynamics unveiled
+ Copernicus Sentinel-1 maps floods in wake of Idai
+ Tunas, sharks and ships at sea


In ancient oceans that resembled our own, oxygen loss triggered mass extinction
Tallahassee FL (SPX) Apr 03, 2019
Roughly 430 million years ago, during the Earth's Silurian Period, global oceans were experiencing changes that would seem eerily familiar today. Melting polar ice sheets meant sea levels were steadily rising, and ocean oxygen was falling fast around the world. At around the same time, a global die-off known among scientists as the Ireviken extinction event devastated scores of ancient spe ... more
+ Fossil fly with an extremely long proboscis sheds light on the insect pollination origin
+ 66-million-year-old deathbed linked to dinosaur-killing meteor
+ Oxygen depletion triggered mass extinction in oceans similar to today's
+ Half-a-billion-year-old fossil reveals the origins of comb jellies
+ A petrifying virus key to evolution
+ ANU scientists solve mystery shrouding oldest animal fossils
+ Paleontologists uncover largest-ever T. rex fossil
Lights out around the globe for Earth Hour environmental campaign
Paris (AFP) March 30, 2019
The Eiffel Tower, the Sydney Opera House and even the ancient Acropolis in Athens were plunged into darkness for an hour Saturday as part of a global campaign to raise awareness about climate change and its impact on the planet's vanishing plant and animal life. The 13th edition of Earth Hour, organised by green group WWF, saw millions of people across 180 countries turn off their lights at ... more
+ Iraq needs three years on Iran power: parliament speaker
+ 2018 spike in energy demand spells climate trouble: IEA
+ Forget about coal - broadband is the best bet for rural America
+ CO2 emissions in developed economies fall due to decreasing fossil fuel and energy use
+ S.Africa imposes severe power cuts ahead of election
+ To conserve energy, AI clears up cloudy forecasts
+ Keeping the lights on during extreme cold snaps takes investments and upgrades


New 'blue-green' solution for recycling world's batteries
Houston TX (SPX) Apr 02, 2019
Rice University researchers literally have a solution to deal with the glut of used lithium-ion batteries left behind by the ever-increasing demand for electric vehicles, cellphones and other electronic devices. The Rice lab of materials scientist Pulickel Ajayan used an environmentally friendly deep eutectic solvent to extract valuable elements from the metal oxides commonly used as catho ... more
+ Scientists discover potential sustainable energy technology for the household refrigerator
+ CMBlu and MANN+HUMMEL team up for large-scale battery storage
+ Energy monitor can find electrical failures before they happen
+ New research shows highest energy density all-solid-state batteries now possible
+ Speeding the development of fusion power to create unlimited energy on Earth
+ Advances point the way to smaller, safer batteries
+ Fusion science and astronomy collaboration enables investigation of the origin of heavy elements
Tasmanian devils prove quick adaptors in bid for survival
Cradle Mountain, Australia (AFP) March 29, 2019
A contagious cancer is threatening Tasmanian devils with extinction, but these unique carnivores - and their human helpers - are adapting at breakneck speed, giving new hope for their survival. Evolutionary change is usually measured over millennia, but in the craggy mountains of northern Tasmania, it can be seen in real time. Three decades after the first cases of a fatal transmissi ... more
+ Bacteria may travel thousands of miles through the air globally
+ US zoo to return beloved giant pandas to China
+ Bacteria can travel thousands of miles through the air
+ Macron and Xi urge 'global push' to halt biodiversity loss
+ The most aggressive spider societies don't always thrive
+ Commercial agriculture reduces butterfly diversity by two-thirds
+ Indonesia busts Russian smuggling drugged orangutan
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

China is 'threat to world' says dissident writer
Paris (AFP) April 5, 2019
A dissident writer dubbed the "Chinese Solzhenitsyn" said Friday that his homeland is a "threat for the whole world". Liao Yiwu, who was jailed for writing a poem called "Massacre" about the Tiananmen Square protests, told AFP that it would be better for mankind if the economic superpower "splits up". "My dream is that China splits up into 10 or so countries. Because China as it is today ... more
+ Don't be bewitched by Dalai Lama: Tibetan official
+ Hong Kong's China extradition plan sparks alarm
+ China offering no proof against ex-Interpol chief, wife says
+ Australia seeks to mend China ties with new foundation, envoy
+ Human rights in Hong Kong 'deteriorating severely': Amnesty
+ China's ex-internet tsar handed 14-year jail sentence
+ Restrictions on Hong Kong's freedoms denting business confidence: US
Help NASA Measure Trees with Your Smartphone
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Mar 27, 2019
Healthy forests play an crucial role in Earth's ecosystem as growing trees take up carbon from the atmosphere. NASA satellites and airborne missions study forests to see how carbon moves through ecosystems - and now citizen scientists can help investigate this key question as well by using their smartphone to measure tree height. The GLOBE Observer app provides a step-by-step guide for peo ... more
+ US-China trade war 'imperils' Amazon forest, experts warn
+ Bolsonaro says Brazil owes world nothing on environment
+ Project promises to turn palm oil plantations back into rainforest in Borneo
+ USAID and NASA harness science, technology for Amazon sustainability
+ Floodplain forests under threat
+ Billions pledged to halt Africa's forest loss
+ Largest carbon dioxide sink in renewable forests


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