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List of All Articles with Tag 'an'

Temu, Shein far lag Amazon as online holiday shopping ramps up
Temu, Shein far lag Amazon as online holiday shopping ramps up
By Arriana McLymore NEW YORK Upstart online retailers Temu.com and Shein are drawing millions of window-shoppers to their
2023-11-23 00:20
Harry Maguire receives apology from MP who mocked him
Harry Maguire receives apology from MP who mocked him
The Ghanaian MP who mocked Manchester United defender Harry Maguire has apologised to the England international and hailed him as a 'transformational footballer'.
2023-11-23 00:17
10 Worst MLB Contracts
10 Worst MLB Contracts
The 10 worst contracts currently on the books in Major League Baseball.
2023-11-22 23:57
The Earth’s axis is shifting because of water
The Earth’s axis is shifting because of water
We’re discovering new things about the Earth all the time – just like scientists recently found water is slowly leaking down there from the surface, and people only just realising that there’s a massive ocean hidden under the Earth’s crust. Now, experts have found that the Earth’s axis appears to be shifting for a reason no-one saw coming. Essentially, the Earth’s tilt is changing over time. A few years ago, scientists put this down to global warming and the melting of the polar ice caps. However, experts have published new research which suggests that groundwater extraction is also playing a bigger factor than previously thought. The Earth’s poles can move with the melting of ice sheets. However, the depletion of groundwater caused by irrigation can also force the same thing to happen. While things are moving at a slow rate, with the North Pole moving gradually in the direction of the UK, the phenomenon does have the capacity to change the Earth’s seasons over time in theory. The most concerning thing, though, is what the new study published in Geophysical Research Letters suggests about the way we’re consuming Earth’s natural resources – especially when it comes to salty water being used on dehydrated land. Ki-Weon Seo of National University is co-lead on the study. She said in a statement: "Earth's rotational pole actually changes a lot. Our study shows that among climate-related causes, the redistribution of groundwater actually has the largest impact on the drift of the rotational pole." It comes after scientists recently discovered water is slowly leaking down there from the surface. The liquid is dripping down descending tectonic plates, before eventually reaching the core after a 2,900 kilometre journey. And while the process is slow, it has over billions of years formed a new surface between the molten metal of the outer core and the outer mantle of the Earth. Sign up for our free Indy100 weekly newsletter How to join the indy100's free WhatsApp channel 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
2023-11-22 23:49
Global stock indexes forecast to rise modestly in 2024
Global stock indexes forecast to rise modestly in 2024
By Hari Kishan and Indradip Ghosh BENGALURU Most key global stock indexes are forecast to rise modestly over
2023-11-22 23:47
Dillon Brooks says the Memphis Grizzlies are really missing Dillon Brooks
Dillon Brooks says the Memphis Grizzlies are really missing Dillon Brooks
The Memphis Grizzlies are off to a disastrous start and Dillon Brooks thinks their biggest problem is a noticable lack of Dillon Brooks.
2023-11-22 23:47
Great white sharks keep entering the twilight zone and experts are mystified
Great white sharks keep entering the twilight zone and experts are mystified
Great white sharks are displaying unprecedented behaviours, and experts can’t explain why. One of the ocean’s greatest apex predators has been entering the twilight zone way beneath the surface of the ocean, and far beneath the areas they normally feed in. The twilight zone, also referred to as the mesopelagic zone, is the area 200 to 1,000 metres down below the surface which is at least partly permeated by sunlight. The midnight zone, meanwhile, is found 1,000 to 3,000 metres down and is impenetrable to sunlight. Now, a new study published in the journal PNAS offered insight into the behaviours of 344 tagged predatory fish including great white sharks. Scientists would usually expect the creatures studied to dive to the deep scattering layer (DSL), which is full of small fish and other ocean life forms and therefore attracts more predators than other levels. However, there was also evidence that suggested predators dove down far deeper than the DSL, and scientists don’t know why. According to the research, great white sharks dive down to as deep as 1,128 metres. Camrin Braun is assistant scientist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and study lead. Braun told Live Science: "How, when, where they access the deep ocean certainly varies, but the clear anecdotal answer is that the deep ocean seems like an important habitat regardless of the predator species. It's clear there are good reasons for these animals to dive deep, otherwise why would they all do it? "There's good evidence for some species/situations in which diving deep is clearly for foraging," Braun added. "So that supported our expectation. However, we also find several cases where we can pretty definitively say the use of the deep ocean is not for feeding – or if it is it represents a totally different kind of predator-prey interaction or mysterious prey resource." The study could suggest that the twilight zone could be far more important to great white sharks and other predatory fish than previously thought. "If it turns out that there is indeed more biomass in the twilight zone than in all current marine capture fisheries combined then it's possible to imagine a kind of mesopelagic 'gold rush' to catch and use this biomass," Braun said. "There are many 'ifs' in this chain and many issues in making mesopelagic fishing feasible but it seems that biomass may be important for predators. Therefore, we really need to better quantify those links between predators and mesopelagic biomass before we can sustainably harvest/use those resources.” Sign up for our free Indy100 weekly newsletter How to join the indy100's free WhatsApp channel 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
2023-11-22 23:26
Real Hoopers Know: Kevin Durant will be remembered as better than LeBron James
Real Hoopers Know: Kevin Durant will be remembered as better than LeBron James
Real Hoopers know things about basketball that the rest of us could never grasp, like the fact that Kevin Durant is going to go down in history as better than LeBron.
2023-11-22 23:25
11 Illuminating Facts About Hanukkah
11 Illuminating Facts About Hanukkah
Every winter, Jewish people around the world spend eight nights lighting candles, eating latkes, and spinning dreidels. But what’s Hanukkah really all about?
2023-11-22 23:24
Shaka Smart Got Into It With Bill Self And Had to Be Escorted Away By Marquette Players
Shaka Smart Got Into It With Bill Self And Had to Be Escorted Away By Marquette Players
We almost had a coach fight at the Maui Invitational.
2023-11-22 23:21
Sam Altman returns to OpenAI days after being fired
Sam Altman returns to OpenAI days after being fired
Sam Altman has been reinstated as the boss of OpenAI after the company's employees threaten to resign.
2023-11-22 23:20
15 Moving Facts About ’Planes, Trains and Automobiles’
15 Moving Facts About ’Planes, Trains and Automobiles’
John Hughes’s own hellish trip from New York City to Chicago inspired ‘Planes, Trains and Automobiles,’ the 1987 Thanksgiving classic starring Steve Martin and John Candy.
2023-11-22 22:58
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