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Bottoms up: Morocco PM glugs water to dispel pollution fears by Staff Writers Rabat (AFP) Feb 7, 2018 Morocco's prime minister on Wednesday swigged a glass of water from a reservoir supplying some seven million people in a bid to dispel fears over pollution. Saad-Eddine El Othmani staged the publicity stunt in front of flashing cameras after environmental groups said it was being tainted by waste from two nearby prisons. "This water is drinkable," he told journalists as he sipped a glass from the Sidi Mohamed Benabdallah reservoir on the coast between capital Rabat and Casablanca. "You are in good hands," the premier said. The authorities in the North African kingdom have scrambled to defuse reports over the pollution that have caused consternation among locals. The national water authorities have insisted there is "no danger to the health of consumers". The issue has reached the country's parliament with the official in charge of the nation's water supply summoned to give an explanation last month. The official Charafat Afailal admitted there was some wastewater being discharged into the reservoir but said that it remained "clean and drinkable".
Lab experiment yields evidence of superionic ice Washington (UPI) Feb 6, 2018 Scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory have found experimental evidence of superionic ice - a first. Various models and numerical simulations have long suggested that water ice assumes unusual behavior at extremely high pressures. The numbers suggest water under extreme-pressure features liquid-like hydrogen ions confined by a solid lattice of oxygen. Until now, however, scientists have been able to identify experimental evidence of superionic ice. Scientists began ... read more
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