24/7 News Coverage
March 19, 2022
EXO WORLDS
Scientists unlock mystery rooted in the deepest past of evolution



Ottawa, Canada (SPX) Mar 19, 2022
For decades, scientists have been trying to unravel an enduring mystery of structural biology: Why do two otherwise identical protein forms found in everything from plants, amphibians and human beings hang onto a slight variation across the mighty span of evolution? It's a puzzle rooted in the deepest past. But now, the University of Ottawa's Faculty of Medicine and Yale University colleagues have collaborated to provide a compelling answer to this elusive question. This new knowledge about these ... read more

CARBON WORLDS
Setting carbon management in stone
Boston MA (SPX) Mar 18, 2022
Keeping global temperatures within limits deemed safe by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change means doing more than slashing carbon emissions. It means reversing them. "If we want to ... more
EARLY EARTH
Ancient ancestors evolved to be strong and snappy, study finds
Bristol UK (SPX) Mar 19, 2022
Researchers led by the University of Bristol show that the earliest jaws in the fossil record were caught in a trade-off between maximising their strength and their speed. Almost all vertebrat ... more
WATER WORLD
High seas treaty talks fail to reach a deal
Paris (AFP) March 19, 2022
The clock ran out Friday at UN talks to forge a legally binding treaty to protect open oceans beyond national jurisdictions, with no schedule set for prolonging the discussions. ... more
WOOD PILE
Lost children survive 25-day ordeal in Amazon
Manaus, Brazil (AFP) March 18, 2022
Two Brazilian Indigenous boys aged seven and nine have been found after surviving 25 days lost in the Amazon rainforest, where they ate fruit and drank rainwater to stay alive, officials said Friday. ... more
24/7 Disaster News Coverage
Previous Issues Mar 17 Mar 16 Mar 15 Mar 14 Mar 13




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


Advertise at Space Media Network
DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Ukraine fears hundreds trapped in razed theatre as US presses China
Lviv, Ukraine (AFP) March 18, 2022
Ukraine on Friday said "hundreds" of civilians were trapped in the wreckage of a theatre bombed by Russia, as the United States demanded China get tough with its "war criminal" allies in the Kremlin. ... more
EPIDEMICS
China reports two Covid-19 deaths, first in more than a year
Shanghai (AFP) March 19, 2022
China reported two Covid-19 deaths on Saturday, its first in more than a year, underlining the threat posed by an Omicron outbreak that has triggered the country's highest case count since the pandemic's onset. ... more
EPIDEMICS
Hong Kong leader defends health workers drafted in from China
Hong Kong (AFP) March 18, 2022
Hong Kong's leader on Friday warned against making "divisive comments" about health workers sent by China to help contain Covid, as tensions over their deployment complicate efforts to control a spiralling outbreak. ... more
EPIDEMICS
'Iron army' of grocery runners feeds Shanghai as Covid hits
Shanghai (AFP) March 19, 2022
As many Shanghai residents shelter from Covid at home, a common sight on the megacity's suddenly subdued streets is the racing, swerving scooters of food-delivery riders. ... more
EPIDEMICS
Unitaid to finance HIV shots in Brazil, South Africa
Geneva (AFP) March 18, 2022
International health agency Unitaid said Friday it will finance the introduction of new, long-lasting HIV prevention injections in Brazil and South Africa, providing an alternative to daily pill popping. ... more
ABOUT US
New predictive model helps in identify ancient hunter-gatherer sites
Burnaby, Canada (SPX) Mar 18, 2022
Researchers looking to identify some of the most difficult 'finds' in archaeology -including sites used by nomadic hunter-gatherer communities-are tapping technology to help in the search. Arc ... more
WATER WORLD
As oceans warm, marine cold spells are disappearing
Hobart, Australia (SPX) Mar 18, 2022
Marine cold spells are cold versions of heat waves: periods of exceptionally cold water, able to hurt or help the ecosystems they hit. As the atmosphere and oceans warm, marine cold spells are becom ... more
WATER WORLD
Great Barrier Reef suffers 'widespread' bleaching event
Sydney (AFP) March 18, 2022
The Great Barrier Reef has again been hit with "widespread" bleaching, authorities said Friday, as higher-than-average ocean temperatures off Australia's northeast threaten the already struggling World Heritage site. ... more



EXO WORLDS
New microscopic organisms found in deep sea trench baffle Chile scientists
Mejillones, Chile (AFP) March 18, 2022
When Chilean scientist Osvaldo Ulloa led an expedition 8,000 meters under the sea to an area where no human had ever been, his team discovered microscopic organisms that generated more questions than answers. ... more
SHAKE AND BLOW
The oxidation of volcanoes - a magma opus
New Haven CT (SPX) Mar 18, 2022
A new, Yale-led study unlocks the science behind a key ingredient - namely oxygen - in some of the world's most violent volcanoes. The research offers a new model for understanding the oxidati ... more
WHALES AHOY
Dozens of whales die in New Zealand mass stranding
Wellington (AFP) March 17, 2022
More than two dozen whales died in a mass stranding at a New Zealand beach renowned as a death trap for the ocean giants, wildlife rangers said Friday. ... more
DEMOCRACY
Myanmar junta approves sale of Telenor subsidiary to Lebanon's M1
Yangon (AFP) March 18, 2022
Myanmar's junta has approved the sale of Norwegian telecoms giant Telenor's Myanmar subsidiary to Lebanese conglomerate M1 Group, both companies said on Friday, in a move activist groups warn could put sensitive customer data in the hands of the military. ... more
CHIP TECH
A new brain-computer interface with a flexible backing
San Diego CA (SPX) Mar 17, 2022
Engineering researchers have invented an advanced brain-computer interface with a flexible and moldable backing and penetrating microneedles. Adding a flexible backi ... more


Dramatic warming in the Arctic

24/7 News Coverage



FROTH AND BUBBLE
Visible ocean plastics just the tip of the iceberg
Fukuoka, Japan (SPX) Mar 19, 2022
While the billions of tons of plastic products produced in the "Plastic Age" of the last half-century have drastically changed the way we live for the better, the plastic waste that has made it into ... more
CLIMATE SCIENCE
Never too late for 'transformational' climate action
Paris (AFP) March 18, 2022
The world needs to launch a "transformation" to curb global warming, a top researcher behind an upcoming UN report on climate solutions said, adding that it is never to late to act. ... more
AFRICA NEWS
Guinea rights groups demand renconciliation process
Conakry (AFP) March 18, 2022
Rights groups in Guinea on Friday demanded a reconciliation process as a condition for participating in a national conference planned by the military junta, which seized power six months ago. ... more
CARBON WORLDS
The new sustainable, CO2-capturing concrete containing carbonated water
Cordoba, Spain (SPX) Mar 17, 2022
The construction sector is a major source of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions worldwide, to the extent that, according to estimates by the International Energy Agency, 8% of all global carbon dioxide ... more
EPIDEMICS
China to 'stick with' zero-Covid strategy, President Xi says
Beijing (AFP) March 17, 2022
Chinese President Xi Jinping said on Thursday the country will "stick with" its zero-Covid strategy, state TV reported, as the world's most populous nation battles its largest outbreak since the early days of the pandemic. ... more
24/7 Nuclear News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage



Ukraine fears hundreds trapped in razed theatre as US presses China
Lviv, Ukraine (AFP) March 18, 2022
Ukraine on Friday said "hundreds" of civilians were trapped in the wreckage of a theatre bombed by Russia, as the United States demanded China get tough with its "war criminal" allies in the Kremlin. Russian missiles struck an aircraft repair site close to Lviv's airport in Ukraine's far west, extending the war to a relatively unscathed region near the border with NATO member Poland. No ... more
+ Chernobyl workers held 'hostage' amid fears for reactor safety
+ Rescuers find three bodies after Peru landslide
+ Belarus grid supplying electricity to Chernobyl: local authorities
+ Power restored at Ukraine's Chernobyl: IAEA
+ Ukraine's Chernobyl loses power again: operator
+ More than 2.6 million flee Ukraine war: UN
+ Radioactive fuel, contaminated water: the Fukushima clean-up
NASA adds giant new dish to communicate with deep space missions
Pasadena CA (JPL) Mar 17, 2022
There's a powerful new member of NASA's family of giant antennas that enable engineers and scientists on Earth to communicate with the growing number of spacecraft exploring our solar system. Called Deep Space Station 53, or DSS-53, the 111-foot (34-meter) antenna is part of NASA's Deep Space Network (DSN). It's now operational at the network's facility outside Madrid, one of three such gr ... more
+ Beyond Gravity boosts its capacity for satellite dispenser systems in Linkoping and creates 60 new jobs with new production facility
+ Scientists, undergraduates team up to protect astronauts from radiation
+ Spire Global signs deal with NorthStar Earth and Space for a dedicated constellation
+ DARPA gives new life to old concrete structures through "vascularization"
+ New toolkit aids discovery of mineral deposits crucial to 'green economy' transition
+ Unlimited 3D printing for space
+ Amid NFT boom, artists worry about climate costs




As oceans warm, marine cold spells are disappearing
Hobart, Australia (SPX) Mar 18, 2022
Marine cold spells are cold versions of heat waves: periods of exceptionally cold water, able to hurt or help the ecosystems they hit. As the atmosphere and oceans warm, marine cold spells are becoming less intense and less frequent overall, according to a new study. Today, the oceans experience just 25% of the number of cold spell days they did in the 1980s, and cold spells are about 15% ... more
+ High seas treaty talks fail to reach a deal
+ Great Barrier Reef suffers 'widespread' bleaching event
+ Sparkling pools, empty taps: Cape Town's stark water divide
+ Microscopic ocean predator with a taste for carbon capture
+ Yangon residents queue for water as power blackouts bite
+ Long look at Hawaiian corals suggests reasons for optimism amid warming seas, ocean acidification
+ Increasing frequency of El Nino events expected by 2040
Dramatic warming in the Arctic
Leipzig, Germany (SPX) Mar 19, 2022
In mid-March 2022, the large-scale international HALO-(AC)3 research campaign will begin investigating transformations of air masses in the Arctic. Three German aircraft will be deployed, scientists from the UK and France will also be involved during joint flights with two further aircraft. The team of researchers will be focusing particularly on northwards-flowing warm air reaching into the cen ... more
+ First-of-its-kind research reveals rapid changes to the Arctic seafloor as submerged permafrost thaws
+ Ice sheet retreat and forest expansion turned ancient subtropical drylands into oases
+ Icesat-2 data shows Arctic sea ice thinning in just three years
+ Ice flow is more sensitive to stress than previously thought
+ Past global photosynthesis reacted quickly to more carbon in the air
+ Researchers detail causes of glacier retreat in West Antarctica
+ Thawing permafrost could leach microbes, chemicals into environment




France to cull 'millions' more poultry as bird flu flares
Paris (AFP) March 11, 2022
France will drastically step up the culling of chickens, ducks and other poultry to contain a bird flu outbreak worse than last winter's, the agriculture ministry said Friday. It is the fourth major flu epidemic for French poultry farms since 2015, mainly in the country's southwest, home to the lucrative yet controversial foie gras liver pate. By wiping out the populations where the vir ... more
+ Relocating farmland could turn back clock twenty years on carbon emissions, say scientists
+ We should be eating more insects and using their waste to grow crops, says plant ecologist
+ NASA to share tools, resources at upcoming agriculture conference
+ Bolsonaro proposes Amazon mining over fertilizer shortages
+ These solar panels pull in water vapor to grow crops in the desert
+ Big data arrives on the farm
+ Risks of using AI to grow our food are substantial
Tsunami alert lifted after powerful Japan quake
Tokyo (AFP) March 16, 2022
Authorities lifted a tsunami advisory and electricity was restored after a powerful 7.4-magnitude quake jolted northeastern Japan on Wednesday night in waters near the site of the Fukushima nuclear disaster. At least one person died in the coastal city of Soma and dozens more were injured in the quake, local news agency Kyodo reported, as authorities said emergency departments in affected ar ... more
+ Ancient ice reveals scores of gigantic volcanic eruptions
+ Residents survey damage after powerful Japan quake
+ The oxidation of volcanoes - a magma opus
+ Strong quakes shake Indonesia, Philippines but cause no damage
+ 17 die as cyclone lashes Mozambique, Malawi
+ Prayers in Japan 11 years after tsunami and nuclear disaster
+ Hundreds flee their homes as Indonesian volcano erupts




Malian junta orders French broadcasters RFI, France 24 off air
Bamako (AFP) March 17, 2022
Mali's ruling junta has ordered French broadcasters RFI and France 24 off the air, complaining they had falsely accused the army of committing abuses, it said in a statement issued on Thursday. The government in Bamako "categorically rejects these false accusations against the courageous FAMA (Malian Armed Forces)," spokesman Colonel Abdoulaye Maiga said. The junta is "initiating proceed ... more
+ Security, command flaws allowed 2020 attack on base in Kenya: Pentagon
+ Experts in Mali to investigate Mauritanian civilian disappearances
+ Algeria's 60 years of complex relations with former occupier France
+ Tanzania Maasai torn over possible eviction from Ngorongoro reserve
+ Guinea rights groups demand renconciliation process
+ Catholic group urges Senegal to end anti-rebel operation
+ UN extends S. Sudan peacekeeping mission for one year
New predictive model helps in identify ancient hunter-gatherer sites
Burnaby, Canada (SPX) Mar 18, 2022
Researchers looking to identify some of the most difficult 'finds' in archaeology -including sites used by nomadic hunter-gatherer communities-are tapping technology to help in the search. Archaeologists at the Max Planck Institute and Simon Fraser University are gaining new insights from a computer predictive model that can assess the likelihood that landscapes contain such well-sought si ... more
+ Ancient campfires reveal a 50,000 year old grocer and pharmacy
+ Grains hints at origin of 7,000-year-old Swiss pile dwellings
+ Early humans kept old stone tools to preserve memory of their ancestors
+ Archaeologists discover innovative 40,000-year-old culture in China
+ University of Oxford researchers create largest ever human family tree
+ Shelter for traumatised apes in DR Congo's strife-torn east
+ Orangutans instinctively use hammers to strike and sharp stones to cut




Effects of ancient carbon releases suggest possible scenarios for future climate
Santa Cruz CA (SPX) Mar 17, 2022
A massive release of greenhouse gases, likely triggered by volcanic activity, caused a period of extreme global warming known as the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) about 56 million years ago. A new study now confirms that the PETM was preceded by a smaller episode of warming and ocean acidification caused by a shorter burst of carbon emissions. The new findings, published March 16 ... more
+ Ancient El Ninos reveal limits to future climate projections
+ Sky is not the limit for solar geoengineering
+ Never too late for 'transformational' climate action
+ Sahara desert dust coats swathes of Spain
+ The longest drought
+ Australian court strikes down landmark climate ruling
+ UN worried about lack of funds to tackle Somalia drought
Determining the weight of Earth from space
Berlin, Germany (SPX) Mar 18, 2022
At first glance, masses appear rigid and immobile. However, this is deceptive because they are constantly in motion. Liquid rock shifts in Earth's interior, water is redistributed in large quantities across the oceans and on the continents, and air masses are constantly in flux. This uneven distribution means that Earth's gravitational field is not constant across the globe. In locations with mo ... more
+ Shipwreck of the 'Endurance' found safe thanks to satellite data
+ Remote sensing satellite lifted successfully into orbit
+ Esri releases updated land-cover map with new sets of global data
+ CH4 responsible for more than 80% of recent atmospheric methane growth
+ Satellites and surveys help count population to fill census gaps
+ Satellogic to launch five satellites on SpaceX Transporter-4 Mission
+ Scientists develop a new model of a fundamental process of Earth's global dynamics




Meteorites that helped form Earth may have formed in the outer solar system
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Mar 17, 2022
Our Solar System is believed to have formed from a cloud of gas and dust, the so-called solar nebula, which began to condense on itself gravitationally ~ 4.6 billion years ago. As this cloud contracted, it began to spin and shaped itself into a disk revolving about the highest gravity mass at its centre, which would become our Sun. Our solar system inherited all of its chemical composition ... more
+ Ancient ancestors evolved to be strong and snappy, study finds
+ Microbes and minerals may have set off Earth's oxygenation
+ Traces of life in the Earth's deep mantle
+ Confessions of a former fireball - how Earth became habitable
+ Extinct 10-armed cephalopod named after President Joe Biden
+ Cooler waters created super-sized Megalodon, latest study shows
+ New stegosaurus dinosaur species is oldest discovered in Asia
The road to renewable energy in Japan, a top CO2 emitter
Tokyo (AFP) March 9, 2022
The Fukushima region affected by the 2011 nuclear disaster has invested heavily in renewable energy - a sector Japan was slow to embrace, but now considers key to reaching carbon neutrality. Here are some things to know about renewables in Japan, which remains one of the top emitters of planet-warming CO2: - Carbon-neutral goal - Japan aims to become carbon-neutral by 2050, the same ... more
+ Will Ukraine war help or hinder green energy transition?
+ CO2 emissions from energy sector rise by record 2 bn tonnes in 2021: IEA
+ Study reveals small-scale renewables could cause power failures
+ Australian power firm rejects green billionaire's takeover bid
+ Australia's largest power firm rejects green takeover bid
+ Maine policymakers make bold push for publicly owned power
+ Paris starts building 'Triangle' tower despite green opposition




DoE funds $50M for fusion research at tokamak and spherical tokamak facilities
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 18, 2022
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced a plan to provide up to $50 million to support U.S. scientists conducting experimental research in fusion energy science at tokamak and spherical tokamak facilities in the U.S. and around the globe. Fusion energy research seeks to harness the energy that powers the sun and stars as an abundant and clean source of power on Earth. Creating condit ... more
+ UCF and NASA researchers design charged 'power suits' for electric vehicles and spacecraft
+ Magnetism helps electrons vanish in high-temp superconductors
+ New paper offers innovative solution for thermal energy storage
+ Blowing dust to cool fusion plasmas
+ Toward batteries that pack twice as much energy per pound
+ Safer, more powerful batteries for electric cars, power grid
+ Improving the safety of lithium-ion batteries in electric vehicles
Europe raptor numbers down 55,000 due to gun-lead poison: study
London (AFP) March 16, 2022
Europe's bird of prey population is around 55,000 lower than it should be due to contamination of their food by lead from gun ammunition, a study reported on Wednesday. The University of Cambridge study collected data on lead levels in the livers of thousands of dead raptors to calculate the impact of poisoning on population size. It found that Europe was missing around 55,000 adult rap ... more
+ Once-starving lions roar back to life in Sudan sanctuary
+ UN launches biodiversity talks on deal to protect nature
+ UN holds biodiversity talks on deal to stave off mass extinction
+ Elephant kills Maasai man in Tanzania's Ngorongoro
+ Gorillas in our midst: Baby apes boost Congo wildlife haven
+ Endangered bat not seen in four decades found in Rwanda
+ Darwinian theory of gradual process explained in new research
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy



Unwed and unwanted, Chinese single mothers fight for rights
Shanghai (AFP) March 18, 2022
Li Meng is a devoted mother trying to support her two-year-old daughter, but in the eyes of Chinese society and the state, she is almost a second-class citizen. Millions of single mothers like her have it rough in a country where out-of-wedlock births are frowned upon, and where only married women can claim maternity benefits. Li, a Shanghai resident, got pregnant with her boyfriend, but ... more
+ Hong Kong leader defends mainland medics; Shenzhen eases lockdown
+ Shanghai tailors keep qipao dress tradition alive
+ Vietnam bans new Tom Holland film over South China Sea map
+ 'Graft probes and power games': Xi's corruption drive turns to cash trail
+ CIA boss: China 'unsettled' by Russia's war in Ukraine
+ Virus chaos pushes more expats to join Hong Kong exodus
+ China's annual parliament opens in key year for Xi
Lost children survive 25-day ordeal in Amazon
Manaus, Brazil (AFP) March 18, 2022
Two Brazilian Indigenous boys aged seven and nine have been found after surviving 25 days lost in the Amazon rainforest, where they ate fruit and drank rainwater to stay alive, officials said Friday. Brothers Glauco, 7, and Gleison, 9, were found Tuesday 35 kilometers (22 miles) from the spot where they went missing, famished and dehydrated but otherwise fine. "They are suffering from ma ... more
+ How Indigenous burning shaped the Klamath's forests for a millennia
+ EU urged to ban all imports linked to deforestation
+ Insects could kill 1.4 million trees in U.S. cities by 2050, study says
+ Record deforestation in Brazilian Amazon in February
+ Brazil stars protest Bolsonaro environmental policy
+ Amazon rainforest is losing resilience: New evidence from satellite data analysis
+ Stora Enso suspends Russia forestry operations






Buy Advertising About Us Editorial & Other Enquiries Privacy statement
The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2020 - 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