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#newcastle newborn
kyliejamesphotography · 11 months
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totallyhussein-blog · 2 years
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AMAR builds new women's hospital in Basra
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With the help of generous donors, the AMAR International Charitable Foundation has constructed and partly equipped a brand new charitable Paediatric, Maternity, Womens Hospital in Basra.
The hospital will serve over 100,000 living in Shatt Al-Arab, an area near Basra under-served by existing medical services. There are more than 22,000 women in the reproductive age group and over 4000 pregnancies are expected each year. There are more than 20,000 children under the age of 5 years old.
This state-of-the-art hospital will bring a new level of healthcare to women and children in these communities. The hospital is now close to opening and delivering an outpatient's clinic for women and children to the needy.
Donations are now being sought to enable AMAR to equip the hospital fully and start providing a more extensive range of medical services to the many disadvantaged women and children in the area.
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aimeedaisies · 10 months
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✨ 15 days of Princess Anne ✨
August is Princess Anne’s birth month and her 73rd birthday is on the 15th so until then we will look at her fascinating life, one photo for every year!
The sixties
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1960 Queen Elizabeth, The Queen Mother with her three grandchildren, Princess Anne, Prince Charles and newborn Prince Andrew, August 1960.
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1961 Princess Anne at the Royal Windsor Horse Show in Berkshire on 13th May 1961.
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1962 Prince Philip at the helm (in yellow sou'wester) with his daughter Princess Anne on board the Royal Yawl "Bloodhound" during a sailing holiday on Loch Oich, Invernesshire on 23rd August 1962.
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1963 A portrait of Princess Anne wearing a girl guides uniform taken for her 13th birthday on 9th August 1963
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1964 Princess Anne (bottom left) as a bridesmaid at King Constantine & Queen Anne-Marie’s wedding on 18th September 1964.
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1965 One year old Prince Edward in his pram with his elder sister Princess Anne and their father Prince Philip which was taken at Frogmore on 13th April 1965.
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1966 Princess Anne with Prince Charles and Prince Philip, behind the wheel arriving at a polo match in Kingston, Jamaica on 10th August 1966.
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1967 Princess Anne’s first tiara appearance (the Cartier Halo tiara), at the 1967 state opening. She is travelling in a state coach with her mother, Queen Elizabeth II, her father, The Duke of Edinburgh and her brother, Prince Charles to the Houses of Parliament.
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1968 Princess Anne (front, second from left) with members of the Danish and British royal families in the royal box at the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden, London, UK, 29th April 1968. From left to right, Prince George of Denmark, Princess Margaret, Queen Ingrid of Denmark, Queen Elizabeth II, King Frederick IX, Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother and Princess Anne of Denmark.
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1969 Princess Anne at her first ever engagement where she launched Esso Northumbria in Newcastle on 02/05/1969
(50’s)
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dorcasmeadowsx · 9 months
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[ greta onieogou, she/her ] -  DORCAS MEADOWES is a [21] old [ CIS WOMAN ], and a member of the [ Gryffindor ] house. Dorcas is studying [ History of Magic ] in their [ 10th ] year at hogwarts. Dorcas reminds people of [ the bitter first taste of black coffee, the echo of laughter on a summer evening, a bag of sugar quills, partying with a pair of heels in hand, the smell of a blown out candle ], and is siding with the [ ORDER ] during the war. but hopefully, it won’t come to that. 
BASICS
name : dorcas nadine meadows nickname/s: dor, doe. age: 21 birth date: january 11th 1957. zodiac: capricorn sexuality: bisexual birthplace: newcastle, england. affiliation: order of the phoenix height: 5'4
FAMILY
parents: keith meadows (father), willa meadows (nee bell.) siblings: younger sister children: n/a pets: n/a
PERSONALITY
positive traits: warm, humorous, fun-loving, reliable. negative traits: sarcastic, stubborn , judgemental, arrogant aesthetic: the bitter first taste of black coffee, the echo of laughter on a summer evening, a bag of sugar quills, partying with a pair of heels in hand, the smell of a blown out candle 
MAGIC
blood status: halfblood wand: 11" Sturdy Apple Wood with Dragon Heart Core boggart: small spaces patronus: tabbycat house + year: tenth year gryffindor specialization: history of magic extra curricular: tba
BIOGRAPHY:
Keith and Willa Meadows were slow and steady people, content with the offering that life had given them.  Keith Meadows is a halfblooded wizard with a keen interest in Herbology whose eyes fell on Willa, a muggle school teacher, and never looked back.
First came the ring and the prospect of marriage between the young pair, and then came Dorcas. Born fast, almost two months early.  Dorcas was the complete opposite of slow and steady. The couple were besotted with their daughter,  a living example of their love for each other. Dorcas was not an easy newborn by any means. The pair had many of sleepless nights, pleading with the baby to settle. Dorcas would never listen, she would cry and scream but all of it was worth it for the few moments of the child's laughter.
Her parents always instilled the importance of being reliable in Dorcas, to always ensure that people felt appreciated, and valued. Dorcas' childhood was filled with love. Summer days were spent sitting on the countertop of her father's florist in Newcastle, a grin on the young girl's face as elderly women brought her opal fruit sweets and slipped fifty pence pieces into her hand. Dorcas' world shifted when her younger sister was born, no longer was she battling the world of adults alone. While some children may be filled with jealous of the diversion of their parent's attention, Dorcas was besotted with her younger sister. No longer did the world feel so small, with a partner in crime the possibilities were endless.
Dorcas' temper mellowed in her teenage years, but her unwillingness to listen to decisions or opinions that weren't her own remained. After being accepted to Hogwarts, Dorcas felt her entire world shift. Finding it hard to be separated from her sister for the first time, it took a while for Dorcas to push herself out there amongst her peers.
Quiet smiles and burying her nose in a book only lasted so long before Dorcas had to force herself out of her shell. And she didn't regret it. Dorcas loves to attend a party and enjoys time spent with her dearest friends. Sometimes, she even has a tendency to prioritise a good time over her education. After all, isn't that what being twenty-one is all about?
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Natural Lights Photography,  one of the leading wedding and portrait photographers in Newcastle , Hunter Valley  & Central Coast.  They offer exceptional talent for not just capturing images, but crafting profound stories through their lens. From weddings to newborn photography sessions,  they're the storytellers of love and life, capturing moments that turn into cherished memories for a lifelong journey. To capture your memories of a lifetime visit the official website today!
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repromed15062023 · 1 year
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Galway, Ireland Noticed Doctors Events
software is assessed utilizing the usual means check. The radiology division at Galway Clinic added they are putting in further mitigation measures to minimise any influence on patient safety, the assertion added. The third get together, the Clinic says, is “working around the clock with the hospital to resolve the problem urgently” to guarantee that all pictures can be found on the system. The Cervical Cancer debacle was caused by a similar downside when such work was out-sourced to a third party by Irish clinics.
Doctor 365 moved from its earlier location on the Tuam Road, Galway, in December 2019 and the clinic is now located at three University Halls, Newcastle Road, Galway, directly reverse University Hospital Galway. We provide comprehensive journey vaccinations and medicines recommendation for all worldwide journey. We offer a full vary of care from newborn checks, vaccinations, asthma management and many more. This web site makes use of Google Analytics to collect nameless info such because the number of visitors to the positioning, and the most well-liked pages. We imagine you want to be capable of method your GP about any medical fear you've and anticipate to be treated with respect, whereas leaving with a great understanding of the problem and the prescribed remedy. Your GP must be like an interpreter on your physique to provide you a better understanding of what is wrong and why, in plain English.
Welcome to the UROLOGY on-line doctors and patients info useful resource. This web site was written and reviewed by Mr Syed Jaffry, Consultant Urological Surgeon, for information and training purposes solely. Established in 2005, Urology Ireland noticed a need for information on Urological Surgery.
The Lower Salthill medical centre is a neighborhood based health care facility that has been offering basic practice and occupational well being services to patients in Galway for over 20 years. They are open to personal and medical card holders, as well as these with legitimate GP visit cards. Their staff of doctors, nurses and assist employees are dedicated to providing a high normal of care to all of their sufferers.
We are a group apply with each female and male practitioners, a follow nurse, physiotherapist and help workers. We cater for all age groups and attempt to ship the greatest possible care in a pleasant and caring environment. On common 90% of your medical issues could be dealt with instantly by your GP with out the necessity for further referral. General apply is by far the most efficient component of Ireland’s health service, with fast entry to appointments and experience.
To apply, you submit the medical card application kind and embody the relevant E or S kind. The E or S kind is issued in your nation and confirms that you are part of a medical health insurance scheme in one other EU/EEA country or Switzerland. If your nation confirms that you're entitled to healthcare here
finishing an online review form. If you do not present the knowledge they ask for, your application cannot be re-assessed and your card will not be re-issued. If you could have a baby for whom you are getting Domiciliary Care Allowance, the child is eligible for a medical card, with no means
The follow was established in 1960 by Dr Michael O’Flaherty, and his son Dr Colm O’Flaherty later joined the practice. In addition to Dr Michael and Dr Colm, the follow can also be staffed by Dr John Lally and Dr Ruth Smith. The medical centre is positioned in the city centre, making it easily accessible for sufferers. The staff at Galway City Medical Centre are experienced and knowledgeable, they usually present a variety of companies to their sufferers. If you are on the lookout for a medical centre that may provide you with the care and therapy you need, then Galway City Medical Centre is a perfect selection.
Visiting have to be pre-arranged in agreement with the Clinical Nurse Manager of the ward/unit and only patients who are listed for exceptional visiting may have visitors permitted. Please contact the ward directly and converse to the Clinical Nurse Manager. The IBTS offers a variety of specialist companies to hospitals throughout the country.
The 'Student Health Matters' App and Interactive eBook, provides college students with straightforward, fast and handy entry to dependable and related health data, multi function place. Registrar Emergency Medicine, Jul TTM presently recruiting Registrar Emergency Medicine Doctor to college hospitals in Ireland beginning Jul... DoctorJobs Ireland is a medical recruitment company, recruiting doctors for contract and locum roles in public & personal hospitals...
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pastedpast · 1 year
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I made some notes about this painting from the book I mentioned earlier which I found in Newcastle city library, I shall have to find them and add them here. It's called 'Death On A Pale Horse' by William Blake. I saw a brilliant exhibition of his work when I visited Madrid and, hehehe, yeh, I filled a whole notebook with notes!
I've been watching a film today called 'Le Quattro Volte' which is about a simple* way of life (and death, and transformation) in a remote Calabrian village, in southern Italy. Lots of lovely goats in it and the gorgeous sounds of goat bells. I should compile a playlist of goat bells and church bells, and the sounds of seagulls. That would be lovely.
*Note: The film actually has profound philosophical meaning, see here for a bit more insight. I just liked the goats and the bells, the peaceful village and especially the story about the newborn. Very moving.
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recentlyheardcom · 2 years
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Nick Pope opens up on Newcastle bromance with Bruno Guimaraes and explains World Cup-themed gift the England star gave the Brazilian’s newborn son
Nick Pope opens up on Newcastle bromance with Bruno Guimaraes and explains World Cup-themed gift the England star gave the Brazilian’s newborn son
Newcastle and England goalkeeper Nick Pope says Bruno Guimaraes was “extremely welcoming to him” when he first joined the Magpies. But despite their bromance, the former Burnley glovemaker admitted he hoped not to face his Brazilian team-mate ‘too soon’ at the World Cup this winter. Getty Newcastle are flying in the Premier League this season with Pope between the sticks, currently fourth in…
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petnews2day · 2 years
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Watch what a World Cup call-up means to Brazilian footballers, their families and pet dog
New Post has been published on https://petnews2day.com/pet-industry-news/pet-travel-news/watch-what-a-world-cup-call-up-means-to-brazilian-footballers-their-families-and-pet-dog/
Watch what a World Cup call-up means to Brazilian footballers, their families and pet dog
Brazil manager Tite on Monday has confirmed his 26-man squad for the 2022 FIFA World Cup to be held in Qatar.
Several players, including Manchester United forward Antony and in-form Newcastle midfielder Bruno Guimaraes, Sevilla defender Alext Telles, Tottenham winger Richarlison, and PSG star Neymar filmed their reaction to the news and posted footage on their social media channels.
Antony can be seen sitting with his friends, while Alex Telles, who is currently on loan to the Spanish side Sevilla, was with his wife, Richarlison can be seen with his family, while Neymar was sitting with his son. The players reacted differently, Antony and Richarlison erupted in joy, and Bruno Guimaraes shared the moment with his newborn baby.
Neymar spearheaded the group of forwards, including relative youngsters Vinicius Jr., Gabriel Martinelli and Rodrygo. Liverpool’s Roberto Firmino, capped since 2014, missed out.
Dani Alves, the 39-year-old former Barcelona right back, was also on the 26-man list. Alves, who played his last club match in September for Mexico’s Pumas, said he understood why some fans were not happy about his selection.
“I am not here to please everyone. We are here not to fail those who trust us,” Alves said in a video his staffers shared with reporters. “The effort, the dedication and the sacrifice have paid off.”
Tite said “the criteria for Dani Alves is recognizing individual skill, the physical and mental aspects.”
There were also eight defenders and six midfielders, not including 2018 World Cup player Philippe Coutinho, who suffered a quadricep injury in training with Aston Villa at the weekend.
Tite narrowed down the list from 55 players he and his staff had been monitoring since 2018 to try and win a record-extending sixth World Cup crown.
In Qatar, Brazil will face Serbia, Switzerland and Cameroon in Group G. Serbia and Switzerland were also in Brazil’s group four years ago in Russia, when the Brazilians lost to Belgium in the quarterfinals.
The squad will gather in Turin on November 14. It will travel to Qatar five days later.
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watchinghallmark · 4 years
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The upcoming movie Swept up by Christmas features a Paralympian!  And it looks like he gets a romance of his own.  Love that!
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Here’s some info about him:
Joshua Cassidy was born November 15th, 1984. He came into the world fighting a non-congenital cancer which primarily effects children, Neuroblastoma. The doctors told his parents that their newborn had a narrow chance of survival. Perhaps through a combination of medicine, family prayer, and a will to live, Cassidy won miraculously. The damage done to his spinal cord left his legs partially paralyzed. Where many saw obstacles ahead, this young boy saw opportunities. This blessing gave him the blocks needed to overcome hardships and build a life of success, love, and happiness.
Cassidy grew up as the oldest of 10 kids which began in the military life, then a farm life, moving out as a young man to the city life, and now he has spent over a decade travelling and living around the globe. Cassidy’s early love of sport eventually led to athletics, and in 2008 he competed in his first Paralympic Games in Beijing, in front of 90,000 spectators. At the London Marathon in 2010, Josh recorded his first ‘big’ win, against the best in the world.
In 2012, Cassidy won the prestigious Boston Marathon with an incredible performance, recording the World's Fastest time of 1:18:25. He has been recorded hitting a top end speed of over 80 km/h down the Tyne Tunnel in Newcastle UK. In a year, Cassidy has covered over 7500kms, equivalent of the width of Canada, coast to coast. He has been a Canadian Champion 28 times and is also the Canadian Record holder in the 5000m, 10000m, and Marathon.
Now a three-time Paralympian, winning many races around the world, Cassidy is known internationally for his work ethic and fortitude. He has beaten every competitor in the world at least once.
He is currently preparing for his fourth Paralympic Games in Tokyo.
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scented-secret · 5 years
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It's a Girl👶 💖Scented Secret Baby Powder it's a girl Candle 🍼👶 The perfect gift for someone who is having or just had a baby💖White lilies, vanilla, amber and ivory musk make this a powdery fragrance! Dont for get the beautiful hidden Secret inside for the new mummy 💖 🇦🇺Shop Here👇 www.scentedsecret.com.au Afterpay available💖 #baby #newborn #newmum #mum #mother #nan #candle #candles #gift #soycandle #soy #smallbusiness #gift #bling #vegan #handmade #giftforher #gift #giftideas #australianmade #newcastle #maitland #nsw #love #wax #babygirl #babyboy (at Thornton, New South Wales, Australia) https://www.instagram.com/p/BsSSgtQgpcW/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1x6m1m4az8spg
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alnwicks · 4 years
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Prince Felix and Lady Katherine Seen Shopping at Children’s Store!
Is another royal baby on the way?
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Could baby make three? Today, HRH Prince Felix and his girlfriend, Lady Katherine Raines, were seen at Paddywhack’s Children’s Emporium in Newcastle, Windenburg. The two focused all their shopping on the baby and toddler section of the children’s store, leading many royal fans to speculate that Lady Katherine is expecting. The couple looked totally in love with one another as they browsed the cot section, and were seen getting cuddly when looking at items in the newborn and baby department. Could another royal baby be on the way? Are Prince Felix and Lady Katherine secretly engaged? Sources close to the couple have yet to confirm anything, and Alnwick Palace has not commented on the outing or on their relationship. All we know for certain is that between Lady Katherine’s move and this latest outing, Prince Felix and Lady Katherine love to keep royal fans on their toes!
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scienceetfiction · 5 years
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2018 in Science
from Wikipedia 
Some highlights:
1 January – Researchers at Harvard, writing in Nature Nanotechnology, report the first single lens that can focus all colours of the rainbow in the same spot and in high resolution, previously only achievable with multiple lenses.
2 January – Physicists at Cornell University report the creation of "muscle" for shape-changing, cell-sized robots.
3 January  – Scientists in Rome unveil the first bionic hand with a sense of touch that can be worn outside a laboratory.
9 January  – A pattern in exoplanets is discovered by a team of multinational researchers led by the Université de Montréal: Planets orbiting the same star tend to have similar sizes and regular spacings. This could imply that most planetary systems form differently from the Solar System.
10 January – Researchers at Imperial College London and King's College London publish a paper in the journal Scientific Reports about the development of a new 3D bioprinting technique, which allows the more accurate printing of soft tissue organs, such as lungs. 15 January –  University of Washington scientists publish a report in the journal Nature Chemistry of the development of a new form of biomaterial based delivery system for therapeutic drugs, which only release their cargo under certain physiological conditions, thereby potentially reducing drug side-effects in patients.
17 January – Engineers at the University of Texas at Austin, in collaboration with Peking University scientists, announce the creation of a memory storage device only one atomic layer thick; a so-called 'atomristor'.
19 January – Researchers at the Technical University of Munich report a new propulsion method for molecular machines, which enables them to move 100,000 times faster than biochemical processes used to date.
22 January –  Engineers at MIT develop a new computer chip, with "artificial synapses," which process information more like neurons in a brain.
24 January – Scientists in China report in the journal Cell the creation of two monkey clones, named Zhong Zhong and Hua Hua, using the complex DNA transfer method that produced Dolly the sheep, for the first time.
25 January –  Researchers report evidence that modern humans migrated from Africa at least as early as 194,000 years ago, somewhat consistent with recent genetic studies, and much earlier than previously thought.
Scientists working for Calico, a company owned by Alphabet, publish a paper in the journal eLife which presents possible evidence that Heterocephalus glaber (naked mole-rat) do not face increased mortality risk due to aging.
29 January – Scientists report, for the first time, that 800 million viruses, mainly of marine origin, are deposited daily from the Earth's atmosphere onto every square meter of the planet's surface, as the result of a global atmospheric stream of viruses, circulating above the weather system, but below the altitude of usual airline travel, distributing viruses around the planet.
6 February  –  The National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) reports that global sea ice extent has fallen to a new record low. 9 February – Human eggs are grown in the laboratory for the first time, by researchers at the University of Edinburgh.
14 February  – Researchers found that blocking the enzyme beta-secretase (BACE1) in mice reduces formation of plaques responsible for Alzheimer's disease.
16 February – Scientists report, for the first time, the discovery of a new form of light, which may involve polaritons, that could be useful in the development of quantum computers.
19 February – Scientists identify traces of the genes of the indigenous Taíno people in modern-day Puerto Ricans, indicating that the ethnic group was not extinct as previously believed.
28 February – Astronomers report, for the first time, a signal of the reionization epoch, an indirect detection of light from the earliest stars formed – about 180 million years after the Big Bang.
9 March – NASA medical researchers report that human spaceflight may alter gene expression in astronauts, based on twin studies where one astronaut twin, Scott Kelly, spent nearly one year in space while the other, Mark Kelly, remained on Earth.
19 March – Uber suspends all of its self-driving cars worldwide after a woman is killed by one of the vehicles in Arizona. This is the first recorded fatality using a fully automated version of the technology.
18 April  –  Nanyang Technological University demonstrates a robot that can autonomously assemble an IKEA chair without interruption.
25 April   –  Scientists publish evidence that asteroids may have been primarily responsible for bringing water to Earth.
27 April – Stephen Hawking's final paper – A smooth exit from eternal inflation? – is published in the Journal of High Energy Physics.
30 April – Researchers report identifying 6,331 groups of genes that are common to all living animals, and which may have arisen from a single common ancestor that lived 650 million years ago in the Precambrian.
10 May – NASA's Carbon Monitoring System (CMS) is cancelled by the Trump administration.
17 May – Scientists warn that banned CFC-11 gas emissions are originating from an unknown source somewhere in East Asia, with potential to damage the ozone layer.
22 May –  Scientists from Purdue University and the Chinese Academy of Sciences report the use of CRISPR/Cas9 to develop a variety of rice producing 25-31% more grain than traditional breeding methods.
24 May  –  Researchers at the University of Leeds report that climate change could increase arable land in boreal regions by 44% by the year 2100, while having a negative impact everywhere else.
30 May  –  The first 3D printed human corneas are created at Newcastle University.  The FDA approves the first artificial iris.
Physicists of the MiniBooNE experiment report a stronger neutrino oscillation signal than expected, a possible hint of sterile neutrinos, an elusive particle that may pass through matter without any interaction whatsoever.
4 June – Direct coupling of the Higgs boson with the top quark is observed for the first time by the ATLAS experiment and the CMS experiment at CERN.
6 June –  Footprints in the Yangtze Gorges area of South China, dating back 546 million years, are reported to be the earliest known record of an animal with legs.
8 June – The U.S. Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory unveils Summit as the world’s most powerful supercomputer, with a peak performance of 200,000 trillion calculations per second, or 200 petaflops.
20 June  – Gene-edited pigs are made resistant to porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome, one of the world's most costly animal diseases.
2 July  –  First confirmed image of a newborn planet, exoplanet PDS 70b, several times larger than the planet Jupiter.
11 July – Scientists report the discovery in China of the oldest stone tools outside of Africa, estimated at 2.12 million years old.
12 July – The IceCube Neutrino Observatory announces that they have traced a neutrino that hit their Antarctica-based research station in September 2017 back to its point of origin in a blazar 3.7 billion light-years away. This is the first time that a neutrino detector has been used to locate an object in space.
Using NASA's Hubble and ESA's Gaia, astronomers make the most precise measurements to date of the universe's expansion rate – a figure of 73.5 km (45.6 miles) per second per megaparsec – reducing the uncertainty to just 2.2 percent.
17 July – Scientists led by Scott S. Sheppard report the discovery of 12 new moons of Jupiter, taking its total number to 79. This includes an "oddball", Valetudo (originally known as S/2016 J 2; Roman-numeral designation Jupiter LXII), that is predicted to eventually collide with a neighbouring moon.
20 July – Scientists at the University of Alabama at Birmingham announce the reversal of aging-associated skin wrinkles and hair loss in a mouse model. 25 July –  Scientists report the discovery, based on MARSIS radar studies, of a subglacial lake on Mars, 1.5 km (0.93 mi) below the southern polar ice cap (see image), and extending sideways about 20 km (12 mi), the first known stable body of water on the planet.
27 July – The longest total lunar eclipse of the 21st century occurs.
30 July –  Using high-resolution satellite images, researchers from the Chizé Centre for Biological Studies report an 88% reduction in the world's biggest colony of king penguins, found on Île aux Cochons in the subantarctic Crozet Archipelago.
A study by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center concludes that terraforming of Mars is physically impossible with present-day technology.
1 August  –  Lab-grown lungs are successfully transplanted into pigs for the first time.
16 August  –  Scientists at Sandia National Laboratories reveal a platinum-gold alloy believed to be the most wear-resistant metal in the world, 100 times more durable than high-strength steel.
16 August  – First complete map of the wheat genome.
18 August – Research presented at the Goldschmidt conference in Boston concludes that water is likely to be a common feature of exoplanets between two and four times the size of Earth, with implications for the search of life in our Galaxy.
20 August –  Scientists report that life, based on genetic and fossil evidences, may have begun on Earth nearly 4.5 billion years ago, much earlier than thought before.
22 August   –  Scientists report evidence of a 13 year-old hominin female, nicknamed Denny, estimated to have lived 90,000 years ago, and who was determined to be half Neanderthal and half Denisovan, based on genetic analysis of a bone fragment discovered in Denisova Cave; the first time an ancient individual was discovered whose parents belonged to distinct human groups.
Researchers report evidence of rapid shifts (in geological-time terms), nearly 30 times faster than known previously, of geomagnetic reversals, where the north magnetic pole of Earth becomes the south magnetic pole and vice versa, including a chronozone that lasted only 200 years, much shorter than any other such reversal found earlier.
30 August – Researchers from the Chinese University of Hong Kong report a new way of controlling nanobots, using swarm behaviours to do complex tasks in minimally invasive surgeries.
6 September – A study by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign finds that large-scale solar panels and wind turbines in the Sahara desert would have a major impact on rainfall, vegetation and temperatures – potentially greening the region.
12 September – Scientists report the discovery of the earliest known drawing by Homo sapiens, which is estimated to be 73,000 years old, much earlier than the 43,000 years old artifacts understood to be the earliest known modern human drawings found previously.
20 September – Scientists discover molecules of fat in an ancient fossil to reveal the earliest confirmed animal in the geological record that lived on Earth 558 million years ago.
A paper in the Cryosphere journal, from the European Geosciences Union, suggests that building walls on the seafloor could halt the slide of undersea glaciers, which are melting due to warmer ocean temperatures.
Using data from the European Space Agency’s X-ray observatory XMM-Newton, astronomers report the first detection of matter falling into a black hole at 30% of the speed of light, located in the centre of the billion-light year distant galaxy PG211+143.
25 September  – Scientists determine that Vorombe titan, an extinct elephant bird from the island of Madagascar which reached weights of 800 kg (1,800 lb) and heights of 3 m (9.8 ft) tall, is the largest bird known to have existed.
26 September – Researchers provide evidence that phosphorus compounds, key components for life, are made in interstellar space and distributed throughout outer space, including the early Earth.
27 September – A study in the journal Science concludes that polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) could halve killer whale populations in the most heavily contaminated areas within 30–50 years. 1 October –  NASA-funded researchers find that lengthy journeys into outer space, including travel to the planet Mars, may substantially damage the gastrointestinal tissues of astronauts. The studies support earlier work that found such journeys could significantly damage the brains of astronauts, and age them prematurely. However, unlike the conditions in space, the study admitted the full radiation doses over short periods.
Astronomers announce the discovery of 2015 TG387 (also known as "The Goblin"), a trans-Neptunian object and sednoid in the outermost part of the Solar System, which may help explain some apparent effects of a hypothetical planet named Planet Nine (or Planet X).
11 October   –  Physicists report that quantum behavior can be explained with classical physics for a single particle, but not for multiple particles as in quantum entanglement and related nonlocality phenomena ("spooky action at a distance" ["gruselige Action in einiger Entfernung" (german)], according to Albert Einstein).
Harvard astronomers present an analytical model that suggests matter—and potentially dormant spores—can be exchanged across the vast distances between galaxies, a process termed 'galactic panspermia', and not be restricted to the limited scale of solar systems.
The world's fastest camera, able to capture 10 trillion frames per second, is announced by the Institut national de la recherche scientifique (INRS) in Quebec, Canada.
15 October – A study by the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute finds that insect populations in Puerto Rico have crashed since the 1970s, with some species witnessing a 60-fold decrease in numbers. The fall is attributed to a 2.0 °C rise in tropical forest temperatures.
16 October   –  A comprehensive analysis of demographic trends published in The Lancet predicts that all countries are likely to experience at least a slight increase in life expectancy by 2040. Spain is expected to overtake Japan as it rises from fourth to first place, with an average lifespan of 85.8 years.
Astronomers report that GRB 150101B, a gamma-ray burst event detected in 2015, may be directly related to the historic GW170817, a gravitational wave event detected in 2017, and associated with the merger of two neutron stars. The similarities between the two events, in terms of gamma ray, optical and x-ray emissions, as well as to the nature of the associated host galaxies, are "striking", suggesting the two separate events may both be the result of the merger of neutron stars, and both may be a kilonova (i.e., a luminous flash of radioactive light that produces elements like silver, gold, platinum and uranium), which may be more common in the universe than previously understood, according to the researchers.
17 October –  Researchers report possible transgenerational epigenetic inheritance (i.e., transmission of information from one generation of an organism to the next that affects the traits of offspring without alteration of the primary structure of DNA) in the form of paternal transmission of epigenetic memory via of sperm chromosomes in the roundworm Caenorhabditis elegans, a laboratory test organism.
24 October – Scientists report discovering the oldest weapons found in North America, ancient spear points, dated to 13,500 – 15,500 years ago, made of chert, predating the clovis culture (typically dated to 13,000 years ago), in the state of Texas.
1 November  – The Earth BioGenome Project is launched, a 10-year global effort to sequence the genomes of all 1.5 million known animal, plant, protozoan and fungal species on Earth. Astronomers from Harvard University suggest that the interstellar object 'Oumuamua may be an extraterrestrial solar sail from an alien civilization, in an effort to help explain the object's "peculiar acceleration".
2 November  – The world’s largest neuromorphic supercomputer, the million-core 'SpiNNaker' machine, is switched on by the University of Manchester, England.
5 November  –  Polar ozone holes are healing faster than previously thought, and are expected to completely heal by 2060.
5 November –  Astronomers report the discovery of one of the oldest stars, named 2MASS J18082002-5104378 B, in the universe, about 13.5 billion-years-old, possibly one of the very first stars, a tiny ultra metal-poor (UMP) star made almost entirely of materials released from the Big Bang. The discovery of the star in the Milky Way galaxy suggests that the galaxy may be at least 3 billion years older than thought earlier.
Scientists report the discovery of the smallest known ape, Simiolus minutus, which weighed approximately eight pounds, and lived about 12.5 million years ago in Kenya in East Africa.
7 November – Scientists report the discovery of the oldest known figurative art painting, over 40,000 (perhaps as old as 52,000) years old, of an unknown animal, in the cave of Lubang Jeriji Saléh on the Indonesian island of Borneo
12 November – China's Institute of Plasma Physics announces that plasma in the Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak (EAST) has reached 100 million degrees Celsius.
Researchers at Japan's National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) reveal a humanoid robot prototype, HRP-5P, intended to autonomously perform heavy labor or work in hazardous environments.
20 November – The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) publishes its latest Greenhouse Gas Bulletin, showing record high concentrations of heat-trapping greenhouse gases, with levels of carbon dioxide (CO2) reaching 405.5 parts per million (ppm) in 2017, up from 403.3 ppm in 2016 and 400.1 ppm in 2015. The WMO reports that "there is no sign of a reversal in this trend, which is driving long-term climate change, sea level rise, ocean acidification and more extreme weather."
22 November  – Research published in Environmental Research Letters concludes that stratospheric aerosol injection to curb global warming is "technically possible" and would be "remarkably inexpensive" at $2 to 2.5 billion per year over the first 15 years.
23 November – The Brazilian government reports that deforestation in the Amazon rainforest has reached its highest rate for a decade, with 7,900 sq km (3,050 sq miles) destroyed between August 2017 and July 2018, largely due to illegal logging.
24 November – Scientists report that nearly all extant populations of animals, including humans, may be a result of a population expansion that began between one and two hundred thousand years ago, based on genetic mitochondrial DNA studies.
25 November – Chinese scientists report the birth of twin human girls, Lulu and Nana, as the world's first genetically edited babies. The human genes were edited to resist the HIV virus.
27 November – Researchers at the University of Southern California publish details of a freeze-dried polio vaccine that does not require refrigeration.
30 November – Astronomers report that the extragalactic background light (EBL), the total amount of light that has ever been released by all the stars in the observable universe, amounts to 4 × 1084 photons.
10 December – Voyager 2, a space probe launched in 1977, is confirmed (image of onboard detections) to have left the Solar System for interstellar space on 5 November 2018, six years after its sister probe, Voyager 1.
Four glaciers in the Vincennes Bay region of Antarctica are found to be thinning at surprisingly fast rates, casting doubt on the idea that the eastern part of the icy continent is stable.
Researchers announce the discovery of considerable amounts of life forms, including 70% of bacteria and archea on Earth, comprising up to 23 billion tonnes of carbon, living up to at least 4.8 km (3.0 mi) deep underground, including 2.5 km (1.6 mi) below the seabed, according to a ten-year Deep Carbon Observatory project.
11 December – A report on the impact of climate change in the Arctic, published during the latest American Geophysical Union meeting, concludes that populations of wild reindeer, or caribou, have crashed from almost 5 million to just 2.1 million animals in the last two decades.
17 December  –  Astronomers led by Scott Sheppard announce the discovery of 2018 VG18, nicknamed "Farout", the most distant body ever observed in the Solar System at approximately 120 AU.
Scientists announce that the earliest feathers may have originated 250 million years ago, 70 million years earlier than previously thought
18 December – Scientists report that the earliest flowers began about 180 million years ago, 50 million years earlier than previously thought.
and more
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livalittleco-blog · 5 years
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newstfionline · 6 years
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‘Enemy’ or ‘mother’? Chinese party members occupy homes
By Dake Kang and Yanan Wang, AP, Nov. 30, 2018
ISTANBUL (AP)--The two women in the photograph were smiling, but Halmurat Idris knew something was terribly wrong.
One was his 39-year-old sister; standing at her side was an elderly woman Idris did not know. Their grins were tight-lipped, mirthless. Her sister had posted the picture on a social media account along with a caption punctuated by a smiley-face.
“Look, I have a Han Chinese mother now!” his sister wrote.
Idris knew instantly: The old woman was a spy, sent by the Chinese government to infiltrate his family.
There are many like her. According to the ruling Communist Party’s official newspaper, as of the end of September, 1.1 million local government workers have been deployed to ethnic minorities’ living rooms, dining areas and Muslim prayer spaces, not to mention at weddings, funerals and other occasions once considered intimate and private.
All this is taking place in China’s far west region of Xinjiang, home to the predominantly Muslim, Turkic-speaking Uighurs, who have long reported discrimination at the hands of the country’s majority Han Chinese.
While government notices about the “Pair Up and Become Family” program portray it as an affectionate cultural exchange, Uighurs living in exile in Turkey said their loved ones saw the campaign as a chilling intrusion into the only place that they once felt safe.
They believe the program is aimed at coercing Uighurs into living secular lives like the Han majority. Anything diverging from the party’s prescribed lifestyle can be viewed by authorities as a sign of potential extremism--from suddenly giving up smoking or alcohol, to having an “abnormal” beard or an overly religious name.
Under Chinese President Xi Jinping, the Uighur homeland has been blanketed with stifling surveillance, from armed checkpoints on street corners to facial-recognition-equipped CCTV cameras steadily surveying passers-by. Now, Uighurs say, they must live under the watchful eye of the ruling Communist Party even inside their own homes.
“The government is trying to destroy that last protected space in which Uighurs have been able to maintain their identity,” said Joanne Smith Finley, an ethnographer at England’s Newcastle University.
The Associated Press spoke to five Uighurs living in Istanbul who shared the experiences of their family members in Xinjiang who have had to host Han Chinese civil servants. These accounts are based on prior communications with their family members, the majority of whom have since cut off contact because Uighurs can be punished for speaking to people abroad.
The Uighurs abroad said their loved ones were constantly on edge in their own homes, knowing that any misstep--a misplaced Quran, a carelessly spoken word--could lead to detention or worse. In the presence of these faux relatives, their family members could not pray or wear religious garbs, and the cadres were privy to their every move.
The thought of it--and the sight of his sister, the old woman and their false smiles--made Idris queasy.
“I wanted to throw up,” said the 49-year-old petroleum engineer, shaking his head in disgust.
“The moment I saw the old woman, I thought, ‘Ugh, this person is our enemy.’ If your enemy became your mother, think about it--how would you feel?”
Tensions between Muslim minorities and Han Chinese have bubbled over in recent years, resulting in violent attacks pegged to Uighur separatists and a fierce government crackdown on broadly defined “extremism” that has placed as many as 1 million Muslims in internment camps, according to estimates by experts and a human rights group.
Uighurs say the omnipresent threat of being sent to one of these centers, which are described as political indoctrination camps by former detainees, looms large in their relatives’ minds when they are forced to welcome party members into their homes.
Last December, Xinjiang authorities organized a “Becoming Family Week” which placed more than 1 million cadres in minority households. Government reports on the program gushed about the warm “family reunions,” as public servants and Uighurs shared meals and even beds.
Another notice showed photos of visitors helping Uighur children with their homework and cooking meals for their “families.” The caption beneath a photo of three women lying in bed, clad in pajamas, said the cadre was “sleeping with her relatives in their cozy room.”
A different photo showed two women “studying the 19th Party Congress and walking together into the new era”--a nod to when Xi’s name was enshrined in the party constitution alongside the likes of Deng Xiaoping and Mao Zedong.
Becoming Family Week turned out to be a test run for a standardized homestay program. The Xinjiang United Front Work Department said in February that government workers should live with their assigned families every two months, for five days at a time.
The United Front, a Communist Party agency, indicates in the notice that the program is mandatory for cadres. Likewise, Idris and other interviewees said their families understood that they would be deemed extremists if they refused to take part.
Cadres, who are generally civilians working in the public sector, are directed to attend important family events such as the naming of newborns, circumcisions, weddings and funerals of close relatives. They must have a firm grasp of each family member’s ideological state, social activities, religion, income, their challenges and needs, as well as basic details on immediate relatives, the notice said.
Families were to be paid a daily rate of 20 to 50 yuan ($2.80 to $7.80) to cover the cost of meals shared with their newfound relatives. Some families might be paired with two or three cadres at a time, according to the notice, and the regularly mandated house calls could be supplanted with trips to the local party office.
A February piece on the Communist Party’s official news site said: “The vast majority of party cadres are not only living inside villagers’ homes, but also living inside the hearts of the masses.”
Overseas Uighurs said the “visits” to their relatives’ homes often lasted longer than five days, and they were closely monitored the whole time. The cadres would ask their family members where they were going and who they were meeting whenever they wanted to leave the house.
“They couldn’t pray,” said Abduzahir Yunus, a 23-year-old Uighur originally from Urumqi, Xinjiang’s capital. “Praying or even having a Quran at home could endanger the whole family.”
Yunus, who now lives in Istanbul, said his father used to lament to him about being visited three to four times a week by the administrator of his neighborhood committee, a middle-aged Han Chinese man. The surprise house calls began in 2016, and it was “impossible to say no,” Yunus said. They often coincided with times traditionally designated for prayer.
“Their aim is to assimilate us,” Yunus said. “They want us to eat like them, sleep like them and dress like them.”
After Yunus’s parents and older brother were detained, only Yunus’s sister-in-law and 5-year-old brother remained in the house. Around the beginning of 2018, the Han Chinese man started staying with them full-time.
Uighurs said they were particularly repulsed by the thought of male visitors living under the same roof as their female relatives and children--a practice contrary to their faith. Women and kids are sometimes the only ones left at home after male family members are sent to internment camps.
In recent years, the government has even encouraged Uighurs and Han Chinese to tie the knot.
Starting in 2014, Han-Uighur spouses in one county were eligible to receive 10,000 yuan ($1,442) annually for up to five years following the registration of their marriage license.
Such marriages are highly publicized. The party committee in Luopu county celebrated the marriage of a Uighur woman and a “young lad” from Henan in an official social media account in October 2017. The man, Wang Linkai, had been recruited through a program that brought university graduates to work in the southern Xinjiang city of Hotan.
“They will let ethnic unity forever bloom in their hearts,” the party committee’s post said. “Let ethnic unity become one’s own flesh and blood.”
As with many of the government’s other initiatives in Xinjiang, the “Pair Up and Become Family” program is presented as a way to rescue Muslim minorities from poverty. Public servants show up at homes bearing bags of rice and gallons of cooking oil, and their duties include helping with chores and farm work.
Xu Jing, an employee at Turpan city’s environmental bureau, recounted her shock after entering her assigned relative’s home. Xu said the only light in the residence came from a small window, and she realized that Xasiyet Hoshur wasn’t lying when she said she lived on 3,000 yuan ($433) a year.
Thousands of miles away, in Turkey, Uighur relatives in exile watch what is happening with dread.
Earlier this year, Ablikim Abliz studied a photo of his uncle’s family gathered around a table. Clad in thick winter jackets, his uncle and the smiling Han Chinese man beside him both held chubby-faced children in their laps.
His uncle had posted the photo to his WeChat page along with the caption “Han Chinese brother.”
The 58-year-old Abliz said his entire extended family in China has been sent to internment camps. When he saw his uncle’s photo, his first reaction was relief. If his uncle had been assigned a Han family member, Abliz thought, that meant he was safe.
But the consolation was short-lived. A friend who tried to visit his uncle in Turpan this summer told Abliz that his uncle’s front door was boarded up and sealed with police tape. Abliz has not been able to reach any of his family members since.
As for Idris, he fears that his sister is living under immense pressure with her Han Chinese “mother.” Shortly after her sister’s first post about her new relatives, a friend responded on WeChat: “I also have one! You guys better be careful!”
The same friend later posted photos of herself and a Han Chinese woman doing a Chinese fan dance, playing the drums and wearing traditional Han clothing.
His sister would never have volunteered for such a program, Idris said. She and his younger sister had been trying to get passports to bring their children to Turkey and reunite with Idris, but their applications were not accepted.
Last summer, both of his sisters deleted him on WeChat. A few months later, his aunt deleted him, too. For more than a year, Idris has not been able to communicate with his relatives. He wonders, with growing unease, how they’re getting along with their new “family.”
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