Centre for Arts and Technology Reveals Inaugural Create Your Future Scholarship Recipients: Four Exceptional Winners
KELOWNA, British Columbia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sep 27, 2023--
1970-01-01 08:00
Square Introduces Software That Turns Android Devices Into Powerful Payment Technology in Canada
TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sep 27, 2023--
1970-01-01 08:00
Roundup: Shakira Charged With Tax Fraud; Phillies Clinch Top NL Wild Card Spot; Lou Holtz Fires Back at Ryan Day
Shakira charged with tax fraud in Spain, the Phillies clinched the top NL wild card spot, Lou Holtz fired back at Ryan Day and more in the Roundup.
1970-01-01 08:00
Millions of families scramble for child care as pandemic support program ends
Nationwide, more than 70,000 child care programs are projected to close, and about 3.2 million children could lose their spots due to the end of the child care stabilization grant program on September 30, according to an analysis by The Century Foundation.
1970-01-01 08:00
NewJeans to release League of Legends World Championship soundtrack
NewJeans have announced the release of 'Gods' for the esports tournament.
1970-01-01 08:00
IATA head says price of sustainable fuel likely to remain high
LISBON Sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) is likely to stay more expensive than kerosene even when large-scale production kicks
1970-01-01 08:00
Scientists discover human groups that were long thought to be extinct are still alive
A recent finding in South Africa has rediscovered a human population that was thought to have been lost. When some languages from the Namibia Desert died out, anthropologists feared that the populations that spoke them had gone with it. However, researchers have discovered that the genetic identity of these once-thought lost populations may have been maintained, even without their native tongue. Southern Africa holds some of the greatest human genetic diversity on Earth, and it is a common pattern that this diversity suggests it is where a species or family originated. Even without fossil records, anthropologists would know humans evolved in Africa, simply by looking at how much greater the biological diversity is there. It is among the inhabitants of the Kalahari and Namibia Deserts of south-eastern Africa where this diversity can be seen most dramatically. "We were able to locate groups which were once thought to have disappeared more than 50 years ago," Dr Jorge Rocha of the University of Porto said in a statement. One of these groups is the Kwepe, who used to speak Kwadi. The disappearance of the language was thought to mark the end of their serration from neighbouring populations. Dr Ann-Maria Fehn of the Centro de Investigação em Biodiversidade e Recursos Genéticos said: "Kwadi was a click language that shared a common ancestor with the Khoe languages spoken by foragers and herders across Southern Africa." The team managed to find the descendants of those who spoke Kwadi, and discovered that they had retained their genetic distinctiveness that traces back to a time before Bantu-speaking farmers moved into the area. “A lot of our efforts were placed in understanding how much of this local variation and global eccentricity was caused by genetic drift – a random process that disproportionately affects small populations and by admixtures from vanished populations,” said Dr Sandra Oliverira of the University of Bern. "Previous studies revealed that foragers from the Kalahari desert descend from an ancestral population who was the first to split from all other extant humans,” added Professor Mark Stoneking of the Max Plank Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. “Our results consistently place the newly identified ancestry within the same ancestral lineage but suggest that the Namib-related ancestry diverged from all other southern African ancestries, followed by a split of northern and southern Kalahari ancestries." The research allowed the team to reconstruct the migrations of the region's populations. With the Khoe-Kwadi speakers dispersed across the area around 2,000 years ago, possibly from what is now Tanzania. The populations that once spoke Kwadi, before adopting Bantu languages in recent decades, are the missing piece in the history of humanity as anthropologists identified in this study. The study can be read in Science Advances. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
1970-01-01 08:00
Largest ever Irish drug seizure after ship raided
Irish authorities say that more than €150m of suspected cocaine has been seized from a cargo ship.
1970-01-01 08:00
Northisle Intersects 130m Grading 1.65g/t Au and 0.33% Cu including 72m grading 2.22g/t Au and 0.41% Cu and 15m grading 3.42g/t and 1.15% Cu at Northwest Expo
VANCOUVER, British Columbia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sep 27, 2023--
1970-01-01 08:00
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg to kick off developer conference with focus on AI, virtual reality
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg will kick off the tech giant's Connect developer conference with a focus on virtual and augmented reality and artificial intelligence
1970-01-01 08:00
Australian man who faked own kidnapping ordered to compensate police
The Australian came up with the plot to spend New Year's Eve with another woman instead of his partner.
1970-01-01 08:00
New Found Intercepts 3.29 g/t Au Over 42.4m, Further Defines 30m+ Thick Gold Zone at Keats West
VANCOUVER, British Columbia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sep 27, 2023--
1970-01-01 08:00
