Breaking Waves: Ocean News

08/02/2024 - 05:00
Environmentalists want DoJ to hold fossil fuel firms accountable and for presumptive nominee to lead charge If elected president, Kamala Harris should take on the fossil fuel industry for its history of spreading climate disinformation, environmentalists say. Forty US states and municipalities have sued big oil for allegedly spreading climate disinformation. For years, climate advocates and some lawmakers have said the Department of Justice should file a similar case. Continue reading...
08/02/2024 - 02:00
The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world Continue reading...
08/02/2024 - 01:01
So far this year officials warnings have been issued for 25 floods, and China is only halfway through its peak flood season Halfway through the peak flood season, China has already experienced the highest number of significant floods since record keeping began in 1998, and the hottest July since 1961, authorities said on Friday. This year so far it has recorded 25 “numbered” events, which the Chinese Ministry of Water Resources defined as having water levels that prompt an official warning or are measured at a magnitude of a “once in two to five years” event. Continue reading...
08/02/2024 - 01:00
Ten stores will raise freezer temperatures by 3C to -15C amid pressure for move away from long-held industry standard Morrisons is testing out raising the temperature of its freezers by 3C in the first move by a UK supermarket to depart from a long-held industry standard, in order to save energy and money. The Bradford-based chain said it would increase the temperature on appliances in 10 of its stores to -15C from -18C, the industry standard set almost 100 years ago and left unchanged. Continue reading...
08/02/2024 - 01:00
Paul Powlesland, the co-founder of Lawyers for Nature, says he considers the River Roding to be sacred When jurors are called to court, they are required to swear on a holy book or make a secular promise to tell the truth. So court officials were perplexed when the environmental activist and barrister Paul Powlesland was called for jury service and produced a vial of river water and asked to swear on the River Roding. Continue reading...
08/01/2024 - 16:38
At least 23 sea lions with suspected domoic acid poisoning rescued from Santa Barbara and Ventura beaches Sea lions are stranding themselves on a long stretch of the California coast in what experts say could be a sign of widespread poisoning by a harmful algae bloom this summer. The Channel Islands Marine & Wildlife Institute (Cimwi) said that since 26 July, it had been inundated by daily reports of sick sea lions along the shoreline in Santa Barbara and Ventura counties. Continue reading...
08/01/2024 - 13:32
Reported temperatures on continent in midwinter reach 28C above expectations on some days in July Ground temperatures across great swathes of the ice sheets of Antarctica have soared an average of 10C above normal over the past month, in what has been described as a near record heatwave. While temperatures remain below zero on the polar land mass, which is shrouded in darkness at this time of year, the depths of southern hemisphere winter, temperatures have reportedly reached 28C above expectations on some days. Continue reading...
08/01/2024 - 13:22
Activists had admitted causing public nuisance for their part in four days of disruption on motorway in 2022 Five supporters of the climate activist group Just Stop Oil have been jailed for climbing gantries over the M25 in an attempt to cause gridlock on the motorway. George Simonson and Theresa Higginson were sentenced to two years each, Paul Bell was sentenced to 22 months, and Gaie Delap and Paul Sousek were sentenced to 20 months for their part in the protests in November 2022. Continue reading...
08/01/2024 - 13:00
Rare specimens found in China from 514m years ago thought to be remains of proto-mollusc From colourful, enigmatic octopuses, to oysters with their iridescent pearls, molluscs today are as beautiful as they are diverse. But it seems their ancient relatives may have resembled the love child of a slug and a hedgehog. Soft-bodied creatures are a rarity in the fossil record as their tissues decay rapidly after death. However, researchers say they have found a rare exception in the eastern Yunnan province, in south-western China, in fossils dating to about 514m years ago. Continue reading...
08/01/2024 - 09:00
To survive a deadly cancer, author Ida Harris had to give up her sweet tooth. It’s been an identity-shaking adjustment A type 2 diabetic at a dessert show: I know it sounds like a terrible joke, the most exquisite torture or, at the very least, a bad idea. But there I was at Sweet Fest in Atlanta, rumored to be the sweetest day the city had ever seen. I strolled slowly by dessert display after display: decadent banana puddings; strawberry-stuffed muffins; brownies in shades of blonde, velvet and the darkest chocolate. I lusted after every sugar cookie, ice cream scoop and candied apple. But nothing quite piqued my interest like the bread puddings made by small, home-based bakeries. Continue reading...