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List of All Articles with Tag 'ci'

Chiefs coach, players infuriate Jets fans by claiming bad calls were correct
Chiefs coach, players infuriate Jets fans by claiming bad calls were correct
The Chiefs refused to admit the referees made questionable calls in their win over the Jets in Week 4.
1970-01-01 08:00
Kenya panel urges shutdown of Worldcoin's crypto project within country
Kenya panel urges shutdown of Worldcoin's crypto project within country
By Duncan Miriri NAIROBI A Kenyan parliamentary panel called on the country's information technology regulator on Monday to
1970-01-01 08:00
Tesla misses estimates for quarterly deliveries; shares fall
Tesla misses estimates for quarterly deliveries; shares fall
(Drops extraneous word from headline) (Reuters) -Tesla missed market estimates for third-quarter deliveries on Monday as the automaker was forced
1970-01-01 08:00
Patrick Mahomes Slid Instead of Scoring a Touchdown and It Either Crushed Or Saved Your Bet
Patrick Mahomes Slid Instead of Scoring a Touchdown and It Either Crushed Or Saved Your Bet
The Kansas City Chiefs closed as 8-point favorites over the New York Jets and bettors were more than happy to throw their money behind them for obvious reasons.
1970-01-01 08:00
Rodney Harrison Tried Really Hard to Get Chris Jones to Say Zach Wilson Sucks in Awkward Interview
Rodney Harrison Tried Really Hard to Get Chris Jones to Say Zach Wilson Sucks in Awkward Interview
VIDEO: Chris Jones and Rodney Harrison had a couple awkward exchanges about Zach Wilson.
1970-01-01 08:00
Mauricio Pochettino reveals Marc Cucurella plans following failed Man Utd move
Mauricio Pochettino reveals Marc Cucurella plans following failed Man Utd move
Chelsea head coach Mauricio Pochettino has revealed his plans for Marc Cucurella, who came close to leaving for Manchester United on loan in the summer.
1970-01-01 08:00
Kenya to ban private children's homes over trafficking fears - Florence Bore
Kenya to ban private children's homes over trafficking fears - Florence Bore
All privately owned orphanages and children's homes will be abolished, the social protection minister says.
1970-01-01 08:00
Ryder Cup lake plunge fan says 'sun got to me'
Ryder Cup lake plunge fan says 'sun got to me'
John Burleigh became a social media sensation after leaping into a lake to celebrate Europe's win.
1970-01-01 08:00
There's a sinister reason why you never see narwhals in aquariums
There's a sinister reason why you never see narwhals in aquariums
Narwhals are among the most elusive creatures in the ocean, with their long, spiralling tusks giving them an almost mythological quality. And whilst many people would pay good money to see these unicorns of the sea in the flesh, they are notably absent from the world’s aquariums. The reason for this is both dark and mysterious, since there have only been two attempts to keep the toothed whales in captivity. Both of these ended in tragedy and the general acceptance that narwhals simply don’t belong in our sealife centres. The legendary porpoises, which are related to belugas and orcas, are found in Arctic coastal waters and rivers. They have two teeth and, in males, the more prominent of these grows into the swordlike tusk which can be up to 10 feet long, according to National Geographic. Back in 1969, Coney Island’s New York Aquarium becoming the first-ever centre to put a narwhal on display. According to IFL Science, the aquarium became home to a young calf called Umiak, whose name referred to the canoe used to hunt the species in the High Arctic. It was captured by members of the Inuit community who said that it followed their canoe back to camp after they killed its mother for meat. Umiak was put in a tank alongside a female “white whale” (most likely a beluga), who acted as its stepmother. And although staff reportedly fed vast quantities of milk mixed with chopped clams to keep it happy, they weren’t able to keep it healthy. Less than a year after Umiak arrived at the centre, the orphaned narwhal died of pneumonia, as reported by The New York Times at the time. Still, the animal’s swift and tragic demise didn’t stop Canada’s Vancouver Aquarium from attempting the same feat in 1970. The aquarium had been gearing up to host a narwhal since 1968, when its director, Murray Newman, hoped that bringing narwhals to the city could generate interest in the species and help with its conservation, IFL Science reports. After two unsuccessful attempts to capture one of the whales themselves, Newman and his team were forced to buy a young male from a community of Inuit hunters based in Grise Fiord on Canada’s Ellesmere Island. The animal was reportedly called Keela Luguk – a phonetic spelling of the word “qilalugaq”, which means “narwhal” in some Inuktitut dialects. Within a week of Keela Luguk’s arrival at Vancouver Aquarium in August 1970, the centre had caught two female narwhals and three calves, which were then added to his tank. However, in less than a month, the three calves had died. And by November, the two females were also gone. As public outrage mounted, the mayor of Vancouver himself called for Keela Luguk to be returned to the wild. But Newman would not succumb to their pressure and, eventually, on 26 December that same year, the young whale was reported to have died too. It’s not known exactly why the narwhals fared so dismally in captivity, particularly given that the species’s closest relative, the beluga, can survive a number of years, or even decades, in aquarium facilities. However, the porpoises are known to be exceptionally sensitive animals, with studies finding that they are so affected by human-made noises that even the sound of a ship sailing near their habitat is enough to radically impact their behaviour. Fortunately, aquariums seem to have got the memo, and narwhals have largely been left to continue their lives as fabled enigmas of the sea. Sign up for 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
Roundup: Taylor Swift Brings Friends to Travis Kelce's Game; Tim Wakefield Dies at 57; Adam Copeland Debuts in AEW
Roundup: Taylor Swift Brings Friends to Travis Kelce's Game; Tim Wakefield Dies at 57; Adam Copeland Debuts in AEW
Taylor Swift brought her celebrity friends to Travis Kelce's latest game, Tim Wakefield died at 57, Adam Copeland debuted in AEW and more in the Roundup.
1970-01-01 08:00
Groundbreaking footage shows how hammerhead sharks get their hammers
Groundbreaking footage shows how hammerhead sharks get their hammers
Hammerhead sharks are named that for a fairly obvious reason, but now groundbreaking footage has emerged which shows exactly how their unique head shape occurs. The strange-looking hammerhead shark has a very broad nose and spaced-out eyes that lend to its name and make it one of the most bizarre-looking sharks out there. Scientists studying the creature have until now had no idea how their hammers form, but now researchers have gotten a glimpse thanks to new footage. The species’ embryonic development is notoriously hard to study as they don’t lay eggs, so experts instead have been helped by the bonnethead sharks (Sphyrna tiburo), the smallest hammerhead species which is commonly found in estuaries and waters in the Gulf of Mexico and the Western North Atlantic Ocean. In a study published in Developmental Dynamics, researchers looked at embryos that had been preserved from bonnetheads that had been caught in previous studies to ensure that no additional sharks were affected. They studied embryos of the sharks at different stages of their development and witnessed as the shark's head started to form its unique shape. Hammerhead Transformation www.youtube.com The team found that the bonnetheads develop their head early on in their development, but the hammer doesn’t begin to form until around halfway through their gestation when the cartilage that forms the hammer begins to expand from the nasal area. The lead author, Steven Byrum, explained: “It’s the perfect qualities of the bonnethead that allowed us [to] do it with this species. “This was a unique opportunity we may not be able to get for very much longer with bonnetheads and may not be able to get in any other species of hammerhead.”
1970-01-01 08:00
Hungarian and U.S. scientists win medicine Nobel for COVID-19 vaccine work
Hungarian and U.S. scientists win medicine Nobel for COVID-19 vaccine work
By Niklas Pollard and Ludwig Burger STOCKHOLM (Reuters) -Scientists Katalin Kariko and Drew Weissman from Hungary and the United States
1970-01-01 08:00
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