Feed aggregator

Watch: Rocket blasts off for India's first space-docking mission

BBC - Tue, 2024-12-31 09:01
The rocket, which took off from a site north of Chennai, places two satellites in orbit.
Categories: Around The Web

In 2025, let’s make it game on – not game over – for our precious natural world

The Conversation - Tue, 2024-12-31 05:02
Amidst habitat destruction and ecological grief, let’s make a New Year’s resolution for nature — to care for beetles and butterflies, rainforests and reefs, ourselves, and future generations. Darcy Watchorn, Threatened Species Biologist, Wildlife Conservation & Science Department, Zoos Victoria, and Visiting Scholar, School of Life & Environmental Science, Deakin University Marissa Parrott, Senior Conservation Biologist, Wildlife Conservation & Science, Zoos Victoria, and Honorary Research Associate, BioSciences, The University of Melbourne Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

Essex county council sends 95% of non-recycled waste to landfill, data reveals

The Guardian - Tue, 2024-12-31 04:04

Seven local authorities in England have waste figures highlighted as government launches circular economy measures

New government data published on Monday showed that 95% of non-recycled waste in Essex is sent to landfill, as ministers launched their plans for a circular economy.

The data revealed that seven local authorities in England reported sending more than 40% of their residual waste to landfill in 2022 to 2023, with Essex county council at the top of the list.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

A cicada: ‘What cicadas leave behind is a kind of crystallised memory’ | Helen Sullivan

The Guardian - Tue, 2024-12-31 00:00

Part of their body is hollow, this amplifies the sound. The longer you listen to their sound, the more they seem to sync up

Of all the languages’ words for cicada, Croatian’s might be the best: cvrčak, pronounced: tvr-chak. The sound it makes is tvr-chi tvr-chi. I have a Croatian friend who taught me part of a poem – Cicada – when we were in high school. It is by Vladimir Nazor, who was Croatia’s first head of state. The first stanza includes the satisfyingly low on vowels and onomatopoeic phrase: “cvrči, cvrči cvrčak” (pronounced “tvrchi, tvrchi tvrchak”) – which translates as “chirp, chirp cicada”.

And the cricket chirps, chirps on the knot of the black spruce
Its deafening trochee, its sonorous, heavy iambic …
It is noon. – Like water, it spills out in silence.
A solar dithyramb.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Weather tracker: Giant waves bring rare surfing event to Hawaii

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-12-30 23:41

Competition named after champion surfer Eddie Aikau is held only when waves in Waimea Bay top 30ft

A rare surfing event, the Eddie, took place in Hawaii last week, thanks to some giant waves.

Formed about a week ago in the north Pacific Ocean, the waves emerged as a low-pressure system produced an exceptionally large swell. They went on to hit Hawaii, enabling the Eddie to take place for just the 11th time in its 40-year history.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

World endures 'decade of deadly heat' as 2024 caps hottest years on record

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-12-30 19:35

UN secretary general, António Guterres, says ‘we must exit this road to ruin’ in annual new year message

The world has endured a “decade of deadly heat”, with 2024 capping 10 years of unprecedented temperatures, the UN has said.

Delivering his annual new year message, the UN secretary general, António Guterres, said the 10 hottest years on record had happened in the past decade, including 2024.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

As the Grampians fires approached, 20 kangaroo joeys took shelter in a living room. Experts say others aren’t so lucky

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-12-30 16:22

Wildlife Victoria expects ‘catastrophic and long-term impacts’ for wildlife, including substantial loss of life, burns, blindness and starvation

As fires headed toward her Grampians property in the Australian state of Victoria on Boxing Day, wildlife carer Pam Turner sheltered 20 joeys in her living room.

The animals gathered inside – standing alert from the noise of the sprinklers – are all hand-reared by her after being orphaned through car accidents, fence hangings and shootings.

Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Astronomers ready for dazzling but brief celestial show after 80-year wait

BBC - Mon, 2024-12-30 15:08
Astronomers are poised to see a star system about 3,000 light years away explode into brightness.
Categories: Around The Web

Police seize 6,000 illegal wild birds’ eggs as raids net largest haul in UK history

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-12-30 15:00

Part of an international initiative to combat organised wildlife crime, similar seizures in Australia and Norway have recovered more than 50,000 eggs

More than 6,000 eggs have been seized in the biggest haul of its kind in UK history, after police carried out raids in Scotland, South Yorkshire, Essex, Wales and Gloucester. Thousands of eggs were found secreted in attics, offices and drawers.

The UK raids took place in November as part of Operation Pulka, an international effort to tackle organised wildlife crime – specifically the taking, possessing and trading of wild birds’ eggs. The raids began in June 2023 in Norway, and resulted in 16 arrests and the seizure of 50,000 eggs. In Australia, an estimated 3,500 eggs have been seized, worth up to A$500,000 (£250,000).

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

2024’s most costly climate disasters killed 2,000 people and caused $229bn in damages, data shows

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-12-30 10:01

Analysis of insurance payouts by Christian Aid reveals three-quarters of financial destruction occurred in US

The world’s 10 most costly climate disasters of 2024 caused $229bn in damages and killed 2,000 people, the latest annual analysis of insurance payouts has revealed.

Three-quarters of the financial destruction occurred in the world’s biggest economy, the US, where climate denier Donald Trump will become president next month.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Don’t go chasing waterfalls: slippery rocks, currents and daredevil jumpers make Australia’s waterways surprisingly deadly

The Conversation - Mon, 2024-12-30 05:05
Slightly more Australians drown in rivers and creeks than at the beach. As more of us flock to waterfalls, hidden dangers at these idyllic spots are claiming lives Richard Franklin, Professor of Public Health, James Cook University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

Disparities in EV charging provision risk drop-off in UK transition, study warns

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-12-30 00:00

Exclusive: Report finds poorer areas particularly affected by varying availability and cost of charging electric cars

The UK is at risk of a drastic slowdown in its transition to electric cars because of big disparities in the availability and cost of charging points, especially in poorer areas, a report says.

The study, by the consultancy Stonehaven, argues that given rapid advances in batteries and car range, persuading more people to move to electric vehicles is now less an issue of technology than one of “urban management and social equity”.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

A year of extreme weather that challenged billions

BBC - Sun, 2024-12-29 12:03
Climate change caused 41 additional days of dangerous heat and extreme weather, say scientists.
Categories: Around The Web

A year of extreme weather that challenged billions

BBC - Sun, 2024-12-29 12:03
Climate change caused 41 additional days of dangerous heat and extreme weather, say scientists.
Categories: Around The Web

Lost city found by accident and rhino IVF breakthrough: 2024's scientific wins

BBC - Sun, 2024-12-29 11:47
Moments to celebrate included a solar eclipse seen by millions and a lost city discovered by accident.
Categories: Around The Web

Australia’s best agency photography for 2024 – in pictures

The Guardian - Sun, 2024-12-29 09:00

Protests, Taylor Swift and chubby penguins are all part of the best images from the wire agencies in 2024

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

More than 1,300 tiny snails reintroduced to remote Atlantic island

The Guardian - Sat, 2024-12-28 22:15

The Desertas Island land snails have been set free to roam on the uninhabited island of Bugio, near Madeira

More than 1,300 tiny, critically endangered snails have been set free to roam on an island off the coast of Morocco after a breeding programme rescued two obscure species from the brink of extinction.

The Desertas Island land snails had not been recorded for more than 100 years and were believed to have disappeared from their natural habitat on the windswept, mountainous island of Deserta Grande, close to Portugal-owned Madeira.

Experts at the Instituto das Florestas e Conservação da Natureza (IFCN) rediscovered minute populations of two species of the snail, each consisting of fewer than 200 survivors, in conservation expeditions between 2012 and 2017 amid fears that invasive predators might have eaten the pea-sized molluscs into oblivion.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

‘When I show people this, they think it’s Mordor’: the architect viewing the West Midlands as a national park

The Guardian - Sat, 2024-12-28 22:00

Birmingham City University thinktank imagines new approach to urban areas and land use across the region

“When I show people this, they think it’s Mordor,” says landscape architecture professor Kathryn Moore with a smile.

She is pointing at a map of the West Midlands. But instead of buildings, roads and a sprawling canal network, this map shows the natural hills and undulations that lie below the human-made architecture.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

‘We have to change our attitude’: wildlife expert says rhino horn trade must be legalised

The Guardian - Sat, 2024-12-28 21:59

Call for illicit market to be taken out of hands of criminals as numbers continue to fall drastically due to poaching

International trade in rhino horns should be legalised, a leading wildlife expert has urged.

Writing in the research journal Science, Martin Wikelski argues only carefully monitored, legitimate transactions in horns can save the world’s remaining species of rhinoceros.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Pages

Subscribe to Sustainable Engineering Society aggregator