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Dinosaur DNA clues unpicked by researchers at Kent University
The birds that follow planes to get home
The Lord Howe screw pine is a self-watering island giant
Trapped in one of the world's deepest caves
Into the Mallee
CP Daily: Friday August 24, 2018
Carry the cost: plastic ban levy 'to rise to 10p – with no shop spared'
Ministers consider doubling existing 5p levy and imposing it on even the smallest stores
Ministers have been considering rolling out the plastic bag levy to all shops and doubling it to 10p.
The prime minister was reportedly planning to announce the proposals next week as part of a series of measures designed to encourage the reuse of carrier bags and reduce the UK’s reliance on plastics, which are harmful to the environment.
Continue reading...Can a turtle live without its shell?
Weatherwatch: the relentless summer of 1976
Few records were broken in 1976, but that famous summer is still remembered as the longest and driest heatwave
It went down in meteorological, social and cultural history as the long, hot summer of 1976. For those of us who lived through it, the three-month drought and associated heatwave conjure up memories of endless summer days, with blue skies and glorious heat.
Oddly, perhaps, few temperature records were broken that year – August 1990 and 2003 recorded higher peak readings. One difference, though, was that some of the hottest days were in June and July: 35.6C in Southampton, on 28 June, was the highest ever recorded in the UK for the month of June, while the highest overall temperature in summer 1976 was 35.9C in Cheltenham, on 3 July.
Continue reading...Rural News
Mexican ETS simulation wraps up as market “shocks” lower compliance in final round
Yes, Antarctica has a fire department
EU Market: EUAs climb further above €20 for massive 14% weekly gain
Senior Energy & Climate Change Consultant, ERM – Sydney
Climate and Clean Energy Policy Manager, Washington Environmental Council – Seattle
The week in wildlife – in pictures
Red avadavat birds, pink dolphins and a bamboo rat are among this week’s pick of images from the natural world
Continue reading...Kelp dredging proposal criticised by Scottish conservationists
Use of mechanical device to pull kelp plants from beds would destroy local ecosystem, say campaigners
A proposal to mechanically dredge kelp forests off the coast of Scotland has led to an outcry from conservationists, who say it would destroy local ecosystems.
Ayr-based company Marine Biopolymers has approached Marine Scotland to apply for a licence to use a comb-like device that pulls entire kelp plants from the bed. In order to inform the environmental appraisal required by Marine Scotland, Marine Biopolymers has published a report describing the potential environmental impacts to be researched further for a full assessment.
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