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European Environment and Climate

The evolutionary twist that could have helped dinosaurs rule Earth [Video]

Dinosaur means “terrible lizard.” The idea that the prehistoric creatures were scaly, sluggish reptiles with sprawling postures that dragged their tails through tropical swamps is deeply imprinted in the collective imagination.Video above: OSU student names dinosaur he discovered after pet lizardHowever, science now has a more nuanced understanding of the diversity of dinosaur physiology. Many dinosaurs sported brightly colored feathers like birds. Dinos lived in many different ecosystems, including the Arctic, where they would have encountered snow (if not the ice caps of today) and winters devoid of light.New research this week is adding fresh detail to one of paleontology’s biggest questions: Did dinosaur blood run hot or cold?Dino-miteIt’s hard to find evidence that unquestionably shows what dinosaur metabolisms were like. Clues from fossilized eggshells and bones have now suggested that some dinosaurs were warm-blooded and others were not.Gleaning the answer matters because it sheds light on dinosaur behavior. Warm-blooded animals, such as mammals and birds, are more active than their cold-blooded counterparts.A new study, based on fossils from 1,000 dinosaur species and paleoclimate information, found that the three main dinosaur groups adapted differently, with two of the groups evolving the ability to regulate body temperature in the early Jurassic Period about 180 million years ago.The research suggested that meat-eating theropods, which included T. rex, and plant-eating ornithischians, such as Triceratops and Stegosaurus, spread to live in colder climates during the early Jurassic Period, indicating that they may have evolved the ability to generate body heat internally.A long time agoResearchers have mapped a 40-mile-long extinct section of the Nile River through satellite radar imaging and analysis of sediment.Ancient Egyptians erected some 31 pyramids, including Giza’s Great Pyramid, along the banks of the now-defunct arm of the river, which the builders likely used to transport stone and other construction materials.The discovery, buried deep beneath farmland and not visible in aerial photographs, may help archaeologists locate other Egyptian temples and monuments concealed by fields and desert sands that now cover the riverbed.TrailblazersIn another feat of mapping, a 3D model of a cubic millimeter of brain tissue smaller than a grain of rice is now available in staggering detail and beauty, thanks to a collaboration between Harvard University and Google researchers.A team led by Dr. Jeff Lichtman, a professor of molecular and cellular biology at Harvard, cut the sample into thin sections one-thousandth the thickness of a human hair. Despite the fragment’s tiny size, it contained 57,000 cells, 230 millimeters of blood vessels and 150 million synapses.The colorized images make the individual components more visible, but they are otherwise a truthful representation of the tissue.Eventually, the team hopes that observing the brain in this way could help scientists make sense of unresolved medical conditions such as autism.Climate changedThe patterns of rings in tree trunks affected by sunlight, rainfall and temperature provide a climate history for each year of their lives, going back hundreds or even thousands of years.Tree-ring data from nine regions of the Northern Hemisphere, including North America and Scandinavia, have allowed scientists to reconstruct annual temperatures for Northern Hemisphere summers between the years 1 and 1849 and compare them with last summer’s temperatures.The summer of 2023 was warmer than any other summer during this 2,000-year period, according to the study.The temperature then was at least 0.5 degree Celsius (0.9 degree Fahrenheit) warmer than the warmest summer during the period studied, the year 246 when the Roman Empire still ruled over Europe and the Maya civilization dominated Central America.Fantastic creaturesMarine scientists have used artificial intelligence to decode previously unknown complexity in the calls of sperm whales.The whales produced a catalog of clicking sounds, which the researchers described as akin to a “phonetic alphabet” for sperm whales.Sperm whales produce clicks by forcing air through an organ in their heads called the spermaceti, and these sounds can be as loud as 230 decibels louder than a rocket launch and capable of rupturing human eardrums.What sperm whales are saying with their clicks remains a mystery to human ears, but understanding the scope of their vocal exchanges is an important step toward linking their calls with specific behavior.

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European Environment and Climate

Danger behind the beauty: more solar storms could be heading our way [Video]

Tourists normally have to pay big money and brave cold climates for a chance to see an aurora, but last weekend many people around the world simply had to look up to see these colourful displays dance across the sky. Usually banished to the poles of Earth, the auroras strayed as far as Mexico, southern

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European Environment and Climate

Switzerland’s climate inaction violates human rights, top European court rules [Video]

Global temperatures around the world hit an all-time high for a tenth consecutive month, according to the European Union’s climate agency. At the same time, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) has ruled the Switzerland government’s climate policy failures violate human rights. Global’s Redmond Shannon looks at how the landmark case came to be and its potential implications for combatting climate change worldwide.For more info, please go to https://globalnews.ca/news/10411630/europe-climate-lawsuit-switzerland-ruling/Subscribe to Global News Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/20fcXDcLike Global News on Facebook HERE: http://bit.ly/255GMJQFollow Global News on Twitter HERE: http://bit.ly/1Toz8mtFollow Global News on Instagram HERE: https://bit.ly/2QZaZIB#GlobalNews #Swiss #climate #Swissruling

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European Environment and Climate

2023 Summer in Europe: Hottest on record | Climate Crisis | WION Dispatch [Video]

2023 has been a year of extreme weather conditions. Climate change & El Nino led to soaring temperatures in 2024. Earth’s temperature crossed critical threshold in 2023. With wildfires in Canada, Horn of Africa & Middle East to summer heatwaves in US, China & Europe. Watch to know more!#climatechange #elnino #europe About Channel: WION The World is One News examines global issues with in-depth analysis. We provide much more than the news of the day. Our aim is to empower people to explore their world. With our Global headquarters in New Delhi, we bring you news on the hour, by the hour. We deliver information that is not biased. We are journalists who are neutral to the core and non-partisan when it comes to world politics. People are tired of biased reportage and we stand for a globalized united world. So for us, the World is truly One. Please keep discussions on this channel clean and respectful and refrain from using racist or sexist slurs and personal insults.Subscribe to our channel at https://goo.gl/JfY3NICheck out our website: http://www.wionews.comJoin our WhatsApp Channel: https://bit.ly/455YOQ0Connect with us on our social media handles:Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WIONewsTwitter: https://twitter.com/WIONewsFollow us on Google News for the latest updatesZee News:- https://bit.ly/2Ac5G60Zee Business:- https://bit.ly/36vI2xaDNA India:- https://bit.ly/2ZDuLRYWION: https://bit.ly/3gnDb5JZee News Apps: https://bit.ly/ZeeNewsApps

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Six Floyd County students advance to state semifinals in the Governors Honors Program [Video]

Six sophomores and juniors from Floyd County high schools have advanced to the semifinals in the Governors Honors Program

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European Environment and Climate

Swiss women win climate case at top European court | REUTERS [Video]

The European Court of Human Rights ruled in favor of a group of elderly Swiss women who argued that their government’s inadequate efforts to combat climate change put them at risk of dying during heatwaves.#News #eu #swiss #women #Reuters #Newsfeed Read the story here: https://reut.rs/3UbPLKj👉 Subscribe: http://smarturl.it/reuterssubscribeKeep up with the latest news from around the world: https://www.reuters.com/Follow Reuters on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ReutersFollow Reuters on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ReutersFollow Reuters on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/reuters/?hl=en

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Germany News

Ancient trees unlock an alarming new insight into our warming world [Video]

Last summer, marked by deadly extreme heat and devastating wildfires, was the warmest in at least 2,000 years, according to new research, which analyzed weather data and tree rings to reconstruct a detailed picture of the past.The findings offer a stark insight into the “unparalleled” warming the world is experiencing today thanks to humans burning vast amounts of planet-heating fossil fuels, according to the authors of the study published Tuesday in the Journal Nature. And it’s an alarming signal as some scientists warn 2024 is on track to be be even hotter still.Related video above: Extreme heat and wildfires in 2023 threatened natural wonders in the U.S.Global warming is currently tracked by comparing temperatures to the “pre-industrial era,” before humans started burning large amounts of fossil fuels, widely defined as the period between 1850 to 1900. Under the Paris Agreement in 2015, countries agreed to restrict global warming to 2 degrees above pre-industrial levels.Last summer, the world temporarily breached this threshold, according to the report. Using data taken from temperature instruments during this period, the scientists found the Northern Hemisphere summer in 2023 was 2.07 degrees Celsius warmer than the pre-industrial period.But observational data from this period is sparse, uncertain and skews warmer. So, for a fuller picture of how the climate varied naturally before the start of the pre-industrial era, the study authors looked much further into the past.To do this, they used detailed sets of tree ring records from thousands of trees across nine regions of the Northern Hemisphere, including North America and Scandinavia, but excluding the Tropics which lack good tree data.Related video below: Another study shows being mindful of where trees are being restored is key to helping global warmingTrees act as time capsules. The patterns of their rings affected by sunlight, rainfall and temperature provide a climate history for each year of their lives, going back centuries or even thousands of years.This complex tree ring data allowed the scientists to reconstruct annual temperatures for Northern Hemisphere summers between the years 1 and 1849 and compare them to last summer’s temperatures.They found the summer of 2023 was warmer than any other summer during this period.It was at least 0.5 degrees Celsius warmer than the warmest summer during this period, the year 246 when the Roman Empire still ruled over Europe and the Mayan Civilization dominated Central America.At the other end of the scale, last summer was nearly 4 degrees Celsius warmer than the coldest summer the study identified, the year 536 when a volcanic eruption pumped out vast amounts of planet-cooling gases.Using this 2,000-year data set, they calculated that the summer of 2023 was 2.2 degrees Celsius hotter than the long-term pre-industrial average, before robust networks of instruments could measure the weather.The study follows a report published in November, which found humanity lived through the hottest 12-month period in at least 125,000 years. The study, and others like it, rely on data extracted from other proxies, such as ice cores and coral reefs, which don’t give the same detailed yearly evidence as tree rings.This makes it hard to compare individual days or even years with those in the past, said Jan Esper, lead author of the study and professor of climate geography at Johannes Gutenberg University in Germany.It is possible even likely last year was the hottest in at least 125,000 years, he added, but “we don’t have the data” to say for certain.The deep dive into the year-by-year temperatures of Northern Hemisphere summers is a “worthwhile endeavor,” said Kim Cobb, a climate scientist at Brown University who was not involved in the study.What’s impressive, she told CNN, is “we have enough temperature reconstructions from enough places around the world to document the exceptional nature of a single year of large-scale temperature extremes.”This “treasure chest of data” can be used to “sharpen our projections of future climate extremes,” she added.While the study can place the extraordinary Northern Hemisphere heat into historical context, it cannot be applied on a global scale, Esper said. There simply isn’t enough tree ring data from the Southern Hemisphere and the Tropics, he said.The study’s findings are deeply worrying, Esper said. “There are potential irreversible processes in the system, and I am afraid not of myself. I’m old,” he added. “I’m concerned for the kids.”CNN’s Laura Paddison contributed to this report.

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European Environment and Climate

LIVE NOW! Power-to-heat How can it decarbonise district heating? Euractiv [Video]

Decarbonising the heating and cooling sector is central to achieving the energy transition. This is recognised in the European Green Deal and the Fit for 55 package, as without increasing the share of renewables in this sector, our energy and climate targets cannot be achieved cost-effectively.

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European Environment and Climate

Powerful solar storm sparks stunning display of northern lights across the globe [Video]

The largest geomagnetic storm in more than 20 years reached Earth Friday, and put on a northern lights show, with breathtaking images from Europe to Canada, and across much of the U.S., even as far south as Florida. Michael George reports.