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Massive ancient undersea landslide discovered off Great Barrier Reef
Scientists were amazed to find remains of 300,000-year-old sediment slip while conducting 3D mapping of deep sea floor
Evidence of a massive undersea landslide that took place more than 300,000 years ago has been discovered off the Great Barrier Reef.
Scientists discovered remains of the slip off Innisfail on Australia’s north Queensland coast.
Elephants in crisis: MPs accuse government and Europe of dragging their feet over ivory ban
‘This is the last chance saloon,’ say politicians and campaigners pushing for urgent action
The UK and EU, the world’s largest exporters of legal ivory, have been accused of not doing enough to save Africa’s fast disappearing elephant populations.
“This is the last chance saloon to save elephants,” said UK Labour MP Justin Madders at a meeting at Westminster Hall on Monday where more than 30 MPs on both sides of the chamber debated a public petition of 107,000 signatories calling for government to close its domestic ivory markets.
Continue reading...Data linking death with air pollution inconclusive, says Indian minister
Environment minister Anil Madhav Dave overlooks Greenpeace research stating 1.2m Indians die each year from airborne pollutants
India’s environment minister has been accused of playing down the health risks of the country’s extremely polluted air by claiming, contrary to research, that there is no conclusive data available linking “death exclusively with air pollution”.
The environmental group Greenpeace released a report in January citing Global Burden of Disease (GBD) research that estimated nearly 1.2 million Indians die each year due to high concentrations of airborne pollutants such as dust, mould spores, arsenic, lead, nickel and the carcinogen chromium.
Continue reading...Cod in a cold climate – in pictures
Fish is Norway’s most valuable export, more so than its vast oil fields. Two-thirds of UK cod comes from the Barents Sea. As the climate changes and the sea grows warmer the fish move north, and so, too, do the fishermen
Continue reading...Face of Orkney's St Magnus reconstructed
Microbead ban should include all products washed down the drain, say campaigners
A proposed government ban on the tiny plastic beads that pollute the ocean should be extended to include items such as make-up, sunscreen and cleaning products
Plans to ban tiny pieces of plastic that pollute the ocean should be extended to more products that people commonly wash down the drain, campaigners urged.
The government has proposed banning the sale and manufacture of products containing plastics known as microbeads that they classify as “rinse-off” items, such as shower gel, face scrubs and toothpaste.
Continue reading...Ancient undersea landslide discovered in Australia
Carmichael mine jobs need '212 times the subsidies' of renewables, says lobby group
Federal funding for Adani project amounts to $683,060 a job, compared with $3,219 a worker in Queensland’s clean energy sector, 350.org says
Clean energy projects in Queensland are already on track to create more employment than Australia’s largest proposed coalmine, which if funded federally would cost taxpayers 212 times more per job, according to new study.
Federal government agencies are investing $71.4m in seven solar farms and a wind farm in Queensland, which are set to deliver a total of 2,218 jobs, according to analysis by climate advocacy group 350.org.
Continue reading...There's nothing dull about dunnocks
Wenlock Edge With its riotous sex life and quick, edgy, movements, the hedge sparrow is like a little ticking bomb
Tseep! The hedge sparrow will not break loose from the gravity of the hedge. Hedge is home: a four-dimensional forest that travels through a landscape beset by dangerous space, and provides for a kind of dwelling that supports a very particular society. This tiny passerine is also called a dunnock – literally, little brown bird – an anonymous, blended-in, could-be-anything.
This one is prospecting for beetles, spiders and ants, as damp, mild, weather brings out early creatures. Its pencil-sharp beak shows that it is not adapted to seeds but it will take them when there’s nothing else. Drab and grey-headed is the usual description (as is mine), but there is a subtle vibrancy to its oak-polish brown flecked with darker encryptions, and its head, the colour of lichen on branches.
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