Read More:
The Perks of Bickering in a Second Language
http://nymag.com/scienceofus/2014/12/perks-of-bickering-in-a-second-language.html “On the most recent episode of ‘On the Media,’ there was a really interesting segment in which Brooke Gladstone spoke with Boaz Keysar and Albert Costa, two researchers working on the question of how bilingual people might make certain decisions differently depending on which language the decision is described in.”
Learning Another Language Boosts Your Ability to Make Rational Decisions
http://www.medicaldaily.com/learning-another-language-boosts-your-ability-make-rational-decisions-243285 “Time to brush off that German textbook - and not just because you'll be able to communicate with German speakers. Researchers from the University of Chicago found that learning a foreign language may boost people's ability to make rational decisions.”
DNews is dedicated to satisfying your curiosity and to bringing you mind-bending stories & perspectives you won't find anywhere else! New videos twice daily.
Why You Make Better Decisions In Another LanguageSeeker2015-01-05 | Do you want to know the secret to being more reasonable? Try learning another language!
Read More:
The Perks of Bickering in a Second Language
http://nymag.com/scienceofus/2014/12/perks-of-bickering-in-a-second-language.html “On the most recent episode of ‘On the Media,’ there was a really interesting segment in which Brooke Gladstone spoke with Boaz Keysar and Albert Costa, two researchers working on the question of how bilingual people might make certain decisions differently depending on which language the decision is described in.”
Learning Another Language Boosts Your Ability to Make Rational Decisions
http://www.medicaldaily.com/learning-another-language-boosts-your-ability-make-rational-decisions-243285 “Time to brush off that German textbook - and not just because you'll be able to communicate with German speakers. Researchers from the University of Chicago found that learning a foreign language may boost people's ability to make rational decisions.”
DNews is dedicated to satisfying your curiosity and to bringing you mind-bending stories & perspectives you won't find anywhere else! New videos twice daily.
Download the TestTube App: http://testu.be/1ndmmMqHow researchers mapped the magnetic field of our Local Bubble for the first time #shortsSeeker2023-01-20 | Our solar system exists in a giant bubble of dust and gas in space, and researchers at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics have just mapped its magnetic field for the first time. This new research is part of a larger effort to better understand the nature of superbubbles and our cosmic neighborhood.Check out the magnetic field of our Local Bubble #shortsSeeker2023-01-19 | Our solar system exists in a giant bubble of dust and gas in space, and researchers at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics have just mapped its magnetic field for the first time. The bubble is called the Local Bubble, and it's home to many star-forming regions.NASA just greenlit the latest batch of futuristic research #shortsSeeker2023-01-17 | NIAC just greenlit a bunch of futuristic research that could one day be on future missions. Check out some of the wild ideas.NASA’s Curiosity rover found a surprising evidence on Mars #shortsSeeker2023-01-13 | NASA's Curiosity rover discovered opal on Mars, which could be a potential water resource for future human exploration on the Red Planet.Is gravity science’s biggest mystery? #shortsSeeker2023-01-12 | Here's what we know (and don't know) about gravity in 60 seconds.Watch a mock space station go BOOM! #shortsSeeker2022-12-26 | Sierra Space just exploded their mock module for a future space station design. Here's how it went down.NASA’s InSight lander has lost power. RIP #shortsSeeker2022-12-21 | After four years, NASA's InSight lander has lost power. Here's a look back at everything it was able to accomplish on Mars.What caused the coolant leak in Russia’s Soyuz MS-22 spacecraft? #shortsSeeker2022-12-15 | Russia’s Soyuz MS-22 spacecraft had a coolant leak the other night, causing mission control to cancel an upcoming spacewalk for two cosmonauts. The leak lasted a few hours and did not pose a threat to any of the crew at the ISS.This is what a Martian dust devil sounds like #shortsSeeker2022-12-15 | NASA's Perseverance Rover recorded a colossal dust devil inside the Jezero Crater. Scientists then used the acoustic signals to figure out how many particles there were in the dust clouds.Researchers just reached fusion ignition for the first time #shortsSeeker2022-12-13 | The Department of Energy just announced a big step in reaching fusion energy. Here's what it means.NASA’s Orion spacecraft just returned to Earth #shortsSeeker2022-12-11 | NASA’s Orion spacecraft splashed down in the Pacific Ocean on Sunday, December 11th. The successful return marks the end of NASA’s Artemis I, the first in a series of missions to create a long-term human presence on the moon.Meet the dearMoon crew #shortsSeeker2022-12-09 | SpaceX’s dearMoon crew has been announced and here’s who got a free trip to the moon.We bought moon dirt off the internet (and blew it up) #shortsSeeker2022-12-02 | We "launched" a rocket to try and understand why moon dirt could be a problem for future space missions. And this is how it went. Watch our full video here. youtu.be/rRoz-2rbxeUWhat Elon Musks latest Neuralink update is all about #shortsSeeker2022-12-01 | Elon Musk said Neuralink is six months away from inserting an implant into a human brain. Here’s what else Musk had to say.This is why moon dust is such a problem for NASASeeker2022-11-28 | With the launch of Artemis 1, the new Moon race has kicked into a higher gear. Government agencies like NASA are joining private companies to return to our trusty satellite and potentially usher in a new lunar economy. And to prep for all these missions, they’re relying on an unsung hero of the Moon biz: lunar regolith simulant, or fake Moon dirt. We acquired some real samples of fake lunar regolith from the Exolith lab at the University of Central Florida, and put it to the test to demonstrate a phenomenon that could jeopardize our grandest ambitions for the Moon.
0:00 Intro 0:27 What is lunar regolith simulant? 0:57 What the Apollo missions taught us about lunar regolith 2:18 The new race to the Moon 2:56 How to make fake Moon dirt 4:18 Experiments with lunar regolith simulant 4:51 Landing a rocket on the Moon 7:00 The potential geopolitics of Moon dust 8:04 Looking to the Moon & beyond 9:05 Outro & Credits
Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribeseeker Like Seeker by The Verge on Facebook: facebook.com/SeekerMedia Follow on Twitter: http://twitter.com/seeker Follow on Instagram: instagram.com/seekerThis lunar mission could make history, here’s how #shortsSeeker2022-11-23 | This next mission could be the first commercial company to land onto the moon's surface.We just found the closest ever black hole to Earth #shortsSeeker2022-11-21 | Astronomers just discovered the closest stellar-mass black hole to Earth.NASA’s JWST just made another exciting discovery #shortsSeeker2022-11-17 | NASA's JWST just found the earliest galaxy we've ever seen. 🔭NASA’s Artemis mission has finally launched! #shortsSeeker2022-11-16 | NASA's Artemis mission has finally launched and will begin the 26-day journey to the moon and back to Earth.NASA’s Artemis mission faces more challenges as Tropical Cyclone Nicole moves in #shortsSeeker2022-11-11 | NASA's Artemis mission is having some bad luck getting off the ground. The most recent delay is thanks to Nicole, now a tropical cyclone. It hit Florida's coast early Thursday as a hurricane, but winds have since slowed. NASA's SLS rocket and Orion capsule were left on the launchpad to brave the weather. SLS was designed to withstand high winds, but public data from the NWS suggests that gusts exceeded the rocket's threshold. Time will tell if the mission will be ready for a launch attempt on November 16, 2022.SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy has lifted off! #shortsSeeker2022-11-01 | SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy successfully launched for the first time in over three years. Here’s how it went down.Is the future of solid-state batteries 3D-printed?Seeker2022-10-28 | The race to create a solid-state battery that could compete with today’s lithium-ion cells is heating up. In the past few years, there’s been a lot of R&D around solid electrolytes that promise to be safer and more powerful. In this video, we visit Sakuú, a company that doesn’t just want to make solid-state batteries, they also want to 3D-print them.
0:00 Intro 0:29 Battery basics feat. a potato 1:29 Lithium-ion batteries 101 2:18 What is a solid-state battery? 3:28 Intro to Sakuú 4:00 Why 3D-printing? 5:35 3D-printing prototype 6:25 Customized battery shapes 7:34 Challenges of total reinvention 8:09 Looking forward
Correction: 0:40 The positive end (cathode) is the copper penny and the negative end (anode) is the zinc coated nail.
Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribeseeker Like Seeker by The Verge on Facebook: facebook.com/SeekerMedia Follow on Twitter: http://twitter.com/seeker Follow on Instagram: instagram.com/seekerThese drones can 3D-print towers #shortsSeeker2022-10-27 | Researchers have created a new technique for a group of drones to 3D print towers. Check out the research paper here: nature.com/articles/s41586-022-04988-4Falcon Heavy is back on the launchpad, here’s what you need to know #shortsSeeker2022-10-25 | The world's most powerful operational rocket is finally back on the launchpad. It's expected to launch from NASA's Kennedy Space Center on October 31, 2022.There’s an Adderall shortage, here’s what you need to know #shortsSeeker2022-10-19 | The FDA has officially said there’s a shortage of Adderall. Here’s why.Answering your solar gravitational lens questions #shortsSeeker2022-10-14 | Thanks for the questions on our solar gravitational lens video - we've got some answers for you!NASA’s DART mission was a success, here’s what you need to know #shortsSeeker2022-10-12 | Early results from NASA's Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission reveal it was a smash hit. It's also the first time humans have purposely changed the movement of an object in space.What composting a human body could look like #shortsSeeker2022-10-07 | Ever wonder how human composting works?NASA’s wild plan to turn the sun into a telescopeSeeker2022-10-04 | We can find exoplanets with the James Webb Space Telescope, but it can't take a high resolution image of one. Luckily, NASA is studying a mission that plans to use gravitational lensing to get us that elusive picture. All we need to do is point a telescope directly at the Sun.
0:00 - Intro 0:50 - The NASA mission 1:34 - The necessary tech 2:18 - Solar Gravitational lens 101 3:55 - Einstein ring 5:13 - How to create a detailed image of exoplanet 5:57 - Telescope location 7:12 - Telescope size 7:39 - Answering big questions
Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribeseeker Like Seeker by The Verge on Facebook: facebook.com/SeekerMedia Follow on Twitter: http://twitter.com/seeker Follow on Instagram: instagram.com/seekerWhy SpaceX built Starship #shortsSeeker2022-09-29 | Our team spent a week in Boca Chica, Texas watching Starbase. Check out our bio to learn more about our trip in a new documentary, Rocketland: The SpaceX superfans uprooting their lives for Elon's Starship.This accidental computer model shows a rare X-shaped galaxy #shortsSeeker2022-09-27 | Researchers were using a computer model to study supermassive black holes when it accidentally created a rare X-shaped galaxy. This simulation suggests that galaxies take on an X-shape for a period of time, potentially making them much less rare than we thought.
Credit: Aretaios Lalakos/Northwestern UniversityNASA’s DART is headed for impact #shortsSeeker2022-09-23 | NASA will crash a spacecraft into an asteroid in the name of planetary defense on September 26, 2022. To learn more about this mission, check out our video here: youtu.be/o9fxIxH8LqMWhy SpaceX chose Boca Chica for Starbase #shortsSeeker2022-09-21 | Our team spent a week in Boca Chica, Texas watching Starbase. Learn more about our trip in a new documentary, Rocketland: The SpaceX superfans uprooting their lives for Elon's Starship. Watch on The Verge's YouTube channel.Someone’s ashes were smuggled into space! #shortsSeeker2022-09-16 | Would you send your ashes to space?NASA’s MOXIE produced oxygen on Mars #shortsSeeker2022-09-09 | MOXIE could transform future missions to Mars. Learn more about MOXIE here. youtu.be/UkQHCSZQvv0Do spiders dream? #shortsSeeker2022-09-07 | Recent research found some surprising results about jumping spiders.NASA revealed what a black hole sounds like… and it’s pretty metal #shortsSeeker2022-08-31 | NASA recently released audio of what a black hole sounds like and it sounds pretty... metal? At least The Verge's Matt Morales thinks so.How researchers hack bacteria to dye blue jeansSeeker2022-08-23 | To give jeans their signature blue hue and fading abilities, it’s estimated that over 70,000 tons of synthetic indigo dye are made each year. One team of scientists is reverse engineering indigo molecules using microbes and sugar to clean up the process.
00:00 Intro 00:40 Why indigo? 01:12 Natural vs. synthetic indigo dye 01:56 Dying demo 03:06 Environmental impact of dyes 04:01 How Huue makes biosynthetic indigo dye from microbes 07:22 Regulation and voluntary efforts 07:45 Jeans can be slow fashion
Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribeseeker Like Seeker by The Verge on Facebook: facebook.com/SeekerMedia Follow on Twitter: http://twitter.com/seeker Follow on Instagram: instagram.com/seekerUnboxing uranium ore #shortsSeeker2022-08-16 | This isn't your typical unboxing video...it's a radioactive one. 😳 Learn more about why the US needs Russian uranium here: youtu.be/cWs9tNZqNpEWhy the US needs Russian uraniumSeeker2022-08-09 | The Russia-Ukraine war is exposing a problem that doesn’t get that much coverage: the nuclear fuel supply chain. Back in March 2022, President Biden announced sanctions on Russia’s energy exports, oil and gas. But uranium was left off the list.
00:00 Introduction 00:36 Russia-Ukraine War 01:19 Why uranium? 01:41 How uranium becomes nuclear fuel 04:12 The future of nuclear power 06:34 The debate behind nuclear power
Russia is a huge player on the global stage when it comes to nuclear energy and particularly when it comes to the uranium supply chain.
The US can pretty easily turn its back on Russian oil and gas and has and has not been able to pull the trigger on uranium because we rely on Russia for a significant chunk of our uranium.
It supplies about 16% of the US’s uranium supply and upwards of that when it comes to the global uranium supply.
Nuclear power is a highly contested energy source, but it still makes up about half of our carbon pollution free electricity in the U.S. Right now, the Biden administration is investing a lot of money and resources into its expansion, from extending the life span of old plants to building new ones.
Read more: The US Can’t Seem to Quit Russian Uranium theverge.com/2022/3/31/23003494/war-ukraine-nuclear-energy-uranium-russia-supply-chain The US’s exclusion of uranium from energy sanctions “was very frustrating because we understand that this is part of the Russian war machine,” says Kostiantyn Krynytskyi, head of the energy department at Ukrainian environmental organization Ekodia.
That uranium ore found at a Grand Canyon museum isn’t as scary as it sounds theverge.com/2019/2/19/18232027/uranium-ore-grand-canyon-museum-radiation-safety-health-risks We know that prolonged exposure to one of the decay products of uranium or radon gas in high concentrations increases your chance of getting cancer. But three buckets of ore sitting in a basement or in a closet is a lot different than somebody going down into a mine and working for 30 years mining uranium ore. It’s not just the dose rate, but it’s the total dosage you get is what determines your risk.Where will animals fit into the future of lab-grown meat? #shortsSeeker2022-08-02 | We wanted to look into what the future of lab-grown meat could look like and specific thought experiment which led us to a front yard pig named Bosco. To learn more about this thought experiment, check out our video: youtu.be/IiSBsFxTsa8Rethinking the future of lab-grown meatSeeker2022-07-27 | In 2021, cultured meat companies raised $1.8 billion dollars in investment. But with so many roadblocks ahead and lots of different visions for the future, it’s hard to know exactly what shape the industry will take. Perhaps more importantly, what role will that future play into our lives and tastes as consumers? Watch our new video to learn more — and meet a friendly neighborhood pig.
00:00 Intro 00:44 What is lab-grown meat? 01:30 Pros and cons of lab-grown meat 02:11 How to grow lab-grown meat 03:58 Challenges of lab-grown meat 04:41 The future of lab-grown meat 05:54 The pig in the backyard
Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribeseeker Like Seeker by The Verge on Facebook: facebook.com/SeekerMedia Follow on Twitter: http://twitter.com/seeker Follow on Instagram: instagram.com/seekerScientists react to NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope images #shortsSeeker2022-07-19 | NASA released the first full-color images from the James Webb Space Telescope and we wanted to hear directly from the scientists whose lives would be altered by the release and hear what they had to say.
Learn more here: youtube.com/watch?v=9VXHPvI6kv8&t=3s&ab_channel=SeekerNASA’s JWST first images: everything you need to knowSeeker2022-07-13 | NASA just released the first full-color images from the James Webb Space Telescope. These images, including the deepest infrared image of our universe ever, are a preview to how JWST will change our understanding of the cosmos. So what else does this first batch of photos reveal?
NASA showed off the first full-color images captured by the James Webb Space Telescope. And these images are just a glimpse into what JWST can really do. It took two and a half decades to build and launch JWST, the largest and most advanced space telescope ever built. Unlike its predecessor Hubble, Webb can observe way farther into the infrared part of the spectrum, giving it an even better look at the first galaxies formed after the Big Bang. The telescope will help us understand how the cosmos began, and whether we’re alone out there.
First, we have the deepest and sharpest infrared image ever taken of our universe. It’s a region full of thousands of galaxies. And because the light from these distant objects takes so long to reach us, we’re seeing them as they were when the universe was less than a billion years old.
Then there’s the Carina Nebula, a stellar nursery. This image provides a glimpse into how stars form. It was imaged by Hubble…but this new view reveals new stars…and some new mysteries.
On the other end of the stellar life cycle, there’s the Southern Ring. It’s a region of cosmic dust and gas that surrounds a dying star. The telescope captured two views in different chunks of the infrared spectrum, revealing a clearer view of the binary star at the nebula’s center.
Then there’s Stephan’s Quintet, a compact group of five galaxies. Highlights here are two galaxies in the process of merging, and a region of extremely bright gas being pulled into a black hole.
And finally, this is the telescope’s first spectrum of an exoplanet’s atmosphere. This graph reveals the atmospheric composition of a large, hot planet far from our own solar system. Data like this can reveal whether a world may sustain life as we know it....in this case, we can see the tell-tale signs of water vapor.
Read more: Marvel At The First Batch Of Full-Color Images From NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope theverge.com/2022/7/12/23203307/jwst-first-full-color-images-nasa-reveal Today’s images each showcase an exciting ability of the observatory — and they’re only a jumping-off point of what’s to come. It’s got approximately 20 years left in its lifespan to serve up more delicious astronomical treats. How Engineers Got The World’s Most Powerful Space Telescope Ready to Do Science theverge.com/2022/7/7/23188300/nasa-jwst-space-telescope-mirror-alignment-commissioning-engineers But, before JWST can start collecting all these baby pictures of the cosmos, NASA and STScI, which oversees the telescope’s operations and science, needed to know that all of JWST’s state-of-the-art instruments and hardware could actually work in tandem to get the job done.
What to Expect From NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope Launch theverge.com/22826899/james-webb-space-telescope-jwst-launch-mission-what-to-expect “I really do think that this telescope will be transformational for astrophysics,” says Straughn. “I think that we will learn things about the Universe that completely surprise us, and that’s one of the most exciting prospects about any time we put a big, bold telescope like this into space. We learn things that we never expected.”Short Film: The Hidden Reason Bees Are Being Wiped OutSeeker2022-06-03 | What if bees are not the herbivores we thought they were? Scientists have unveiled the secret microbial world that is vital to bees’ population, and our food supply.
While they may not be our favorite part of eating outside, bees are really important to our ecosystem. They’re prolific natural pollinators and are a huge part of our modern agriculture. A lot of the food we eat relies on pollination from bees! Unfortunately though, they’re also in serious danger. 4,000 species across the U.S are in decline. And there isn’t one specific reason as to why this is happening.
The scientists in our next film, SymBeeOsis, might have discovered one cause. And it could change everything we know about bees and their ecosystem, starting with a microscopic world that we never knew existed, until now.
Seeker empowers the curious to understand the science shaping our world. We tell award-winning stories about the natural forces and groundbreaking innovations that impact our lives, our planet, and our universe.
Seeker http://www.seeker.comShort Film: Plastic Pollution Is Too Big to Ignore in This Beach ParadiseSeeker2022-05-31 | Tourism is huge for the economy of Mexico, but at what cost to the natural landscape of the region? One diver shows the impact of plastic pollution off the coast of the most popular beaches.
The Caribbean coastline of the Yucatán Peninsula is famous for its beautiful beaches, clear blue water, and diversity of wildlife. But under the surface of the water lies a different story.
As the world continues to churn out millions of tonnes of plastic each year, more and more of it ends up in the ocean and on our shores. If we don’t reduce our plastic use, experts say that by 2050 there will be more plastic in the ocean than there are fish.
This film follows diver Tamara Adame as she battles the growing plastic waste that plagues Yucatán’s fragile reefs, marine life, and even her own livelihood.
This is Mermaids Against Plastic: Tamara, a Free Roaming Studios production.
Seeker empowers the curious to understand the science shaping our world. We tell award-winning stories about the natural forces and groundbreaking innovations that impact our lives, our planet, and our universe.
Seeker http://www.seeker.comScience Can’t Figure Out Why Some Liquids FlowSeeker2022-05-30 | Scientists are still trying to understand why not all liquids flow in the same way. One recent study dove into the complexities of pusher fluids used for extracting oil and solved a decades-old mystery.
Fluids are a necessary part of day to day life. After all, without water you couldn’t live, and without chocolate syrup, well, what would be the point? But have you ever noticed that not all liquids behave the same? In fact, some of them do some totally bewildering stuff under the right circumstances, and even after decades of research scientists are no closer to understanding why.
One question about strange fluids may have finally been answered thanks to some glass beads and laser beams. All liquids that we encounter in the real world can be boiled down to one of two kinds. They’re either Newtonian, or non-Newtonian.
Newtonian fluids are pretty easy to grasp. Well, not literally in some cases—a Newtonian fluid like water would squirt right out of your hand. A Newtonian fluid obeys Newton's Law of Viscosity which means its viscosity is constant. It doesn’t change when a force is applied to it. Non-Newtonian fluids, on the other, less sticky hand, do change their viscosity…which can lead to some pretty zany shenanigans.
Still there are many more weird non-Newtonian behaviors scientists don’t have answers for. They may have just solved one riddle that’s stood for over 50 years.
Your Next Surgeon Could Be a Slime Robot cnet.com/science/your-next-surgeon-could-be-a-magnetic-slime-robot Created by a team of researchers at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, the Slime Robot is a non-Newtonian fluid, meaning it can behave both as a solid and a liquid. This slime is made from a mixture of PVA and borax, but you can also make your own non-Newtonian fluid at home using cornstarch and water.
SCIENTISTS FINALLY KNOW WHY OREO FILLING ALWAYS STICKS TO ONE SIDE inverse.com/science/oreology-milks-favorite-scientific-field Owens was measuring the solution’s viscosity, or thickness. She loaded the solution between two parallel plates in her rheometer and rotated them. Rotating and shearing, or separating, the solution between two plates allows Owens to measure its resistance to separating, which is its viscosity.
____________________
Elements is more than just a science show. It’s your science-loving best friend, tasked with keeping you updated and interested in the compelling, innovative, and groundbreaking science that's happening all around us. Join our passionate hosts as they help break down and present fascinating science, from quarks to quantum theory and beyond.
Seeker empowers the curious to understand the science shaping our world. We tell award-winning stories about the natural forces and groundbreaking innovations that impact our lives, our planet, and our universe.
Seeker http://www.seeker.comThe Sahara Desert Used to Look Like This…And May AgainSeeker2022-05-18 | Thousands of years ago, the Sahel region of Africa was a green, lush, tropical paradise. The Great Green Wall initiative is on a mission to restore that greenery in that region across the entire continent.
The Great Green Wall is an epic project that aims to grow an 8,000 kilometer belt of vegetation across the entire width of the African continent. If completed, it would be three times larger than the Great Barrier Reef, and be the largest living “structure” on the planet. But can this massive geo-engineering project transform the landscape into the fertile, tropical place it once was?
So here’s the thing: this part of Africa is heating up. Particularly in the Sahel, which sits between the southern edge of the world’s largest hot desert, the Sahara, and humid savannas to the south. Vegetation is scarce in this semi-arid belt of land, and the U.N. has identified it as a hotspot for climate change.
Temperatures in the Sahel region are increasing 1.5 times faster than the rest of the world, and the Sahara desert is now 10% larger than it was in 1920. Periodic drought, deforestation, and unsustainable agricultural practices have reduced the productivity of the Sahel, causing desertification. This has led to massive food insecurity and displacement of people in the region.
And with temperatures expected to be 3-5°C warmer by 2050, these problems are projected to get worse.
But not all is lost! Remember when we said the Sahara used to be green? Well, that was about 11,500 years ago. Back then there was grass, lakes, and animals like hippos and antelopes! Dubbed the African Humid Period, also known as the “Green Sahara,” this era was the result of intense West African monsoons, which were stronger and brought more summer rainfall than today.
Read More: Africa’s ‘Great Green Wall’ shifts focus to hold off desert politico.com/news/2021/11/13/africa-great-green-wall-521292 The project called the Great Green Wall began in 2007 with a vision for the trees to extend like a belt across the vast Sahel region, from Senegal in the west to Djibouti in the east, by 2030. But as temperatures rose and rainfall diminished, millions of the planted trees died.
Could the Sahara ever be green again? livescience.com/will-sahara-desert-turn-green.html Sometime between 11,000 and 5,000 years ago, after the last ice age ended, the Sahara Desert transformed. Green vegetation grew atop the sandy dunes and increased rainfall turned arid caverns into lakes. About 3.5 million square miles (9 million square kilometers) of Northern Africa turned green, drawing in animals such as hippos, antelopes, elephants and aurochs (wild ancestors of domesticated cattle), who feasted on its thriving grasses and shrubs.
Africa’s ‘Great Green Wall’ could have far-reaching climate effects sciencenews.org/article/africa-great-green-wall-trees-sahel-climate-change To investigate those possible impacts, Pausata created high-resolution computer simulations of future global warming, both with and without a simulated wall of plants along the Sahel. Against the backdrop of global warming, the Great Green Wall would decrease average summertime temperatures in most of the Sahel by as much as 1.5 degrees Celsius. ____________________ Elements is more than just a science show. It’s your science-loving best friend, tasked with keeping you updated and interested in the compelling, innovative, and groundbreaking science that's happening all around us. Join our passionate hosts as they help break down and present fascinating science, from quarks to quantum theory and beyond.
Seeker empowers the curious to understand the science shaping our world. We tell award-winning stories about the natural forces and groundbreaking innovations that impact our lives, our planet, and our universe.
Seeker http://www.seeker.comShort Film: How Clear Cutting Could Lead to Massive FloodsSeeker2022-05-17 | In the last few years, the city of Grand Forks in British Columbia has been hit with unprecedented floods; wiping out homes in the region. We follow one resident and her journey to document this issue before it’s too late.
British Columbia is well-known for its stunning natural beauty, especially their lush forests of old growth trees. But did you know that over the last few years, much of the landscape has undergone “clear-cutting”? This is where forests are logged and left with large swaths of empty land. This is a huge problem for the future climate.
Residents in cities, like Grand Forks, B.C., are facing the consequences of clear-cutting head on. Join us in this next film to see how this community is at risk of flooding and much more.
Seeker empowers the curious to understand the science shaping our world. We tell award-winning stories about the natural forces and groundbreaking innovations that impact our lives, our planet, and our universe.
Seeker http://www.seeker.comShort Film: How a 90-year-old Balinese Fisherman Fights Plastic PollutionSeeker2022-05-10 | Each year, just about 30,000 metric tonnes of plastic pollution enter Indonesia’s waters. How does one man plan to clean it up?
In Indonesia, the ocean plays a critical role in people’s livelihood; from their food to their careers. But that important life source is under threat from overwhelming amounts of plastic.
Unfortunately, this pollution is fueled from one of Indonesia’s most popular tourist destinations, Bali. This, combined with plastic from the rest of the world, washes up on beaches, gets hooked by local fishermen, and damages marine ecosystems.
This film follows Wayan, a 90-year-old Balinese fisherman using all his resources and knowledge to tackle this growing problem, one net of trash at a time.
This is Voice Above Water, a production from Turning Tides Films.
Seeker empowers the curious to understand the science shaping our world. We tell award-winning stories about the natural forces and groundbreaking innovations that impact our lives, our planet, and our universe.