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WATER WORLD
Five surfers die in Dutch beach tragedy
by Staff Writers
The Hague (AFP) May 12, 2020

Five surfers died after getting into difficulty in "avalanche-like" sea foam caused by stormy conditions off a popular Dutch beach, police and witnesses said Tuesday.

Rescue workers retrieved the bodies after a major search following the incident on Monday at Scheveningen, a suburb of The Hague that borders the North Sea.

Two victims were pulled from the sea late Monday but died despite efforts to resuscitate them. Three more bodies were discovered on Tuesday.

Two of the surfers were internationally-trained life guards and had worked in Australia, The Hague's "alternative mayor" Pat Smith said.

"They were busy training. They then disappeared under the foam like it was some sort of avalanche," he told Den Haag FM radio station.

Pictures from the scene showed rescue helicopters using their rotor blades to blow away a thick layer of sea foam near Scheveningen harbour entrance.

Several boats also combed the surf.

Drownings are rare along the Dutch coastline, but conditions can deteriorate rapidly during storms.

"The whole Dutch surfing community is in mourning today," one local surfer, who asked not to be named, told AFP.


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Cannibalism helps comb jellies survive harsh conditions, invade new environs
Washington (UPI) May 8, 2019
The warty comb jelly, or sea walnut, is native to the coastal waters of the western Atlantic, but in recent decades, the gelatinous invertebrate has invaded the waters of Eurasia. New research - published this week in the journal Communications Biology - suggests cannibalism is key to the species' ability to move into new environs. "We had this species arrive in the Black Sea in the 80s, and it arrived in the Caspian Sea in the 90s," Jamileh Javidpour, lead author of the new study and ... read more

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