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Showing posts from April, 2024

How a giant eagle came to dominate ancient New Zealand

     From - Knowable Magazine    By  -  Boyce  Upholt   Edited by  - Amal Udawatta  N ew Zealand has long been known as a place for the birds — quite literally. Before people arrived 700 years ago, the archipelago hosted an idiosyncratic ecosystem, nearly free of mammals. More than 200 bird species filled a food web all their own. Rather than cows or antelopes, there was a family of flightless birds known as moa. And in place of apex predators like tigers, New Zealand had Haast’s eagle. Ever since a group of farm workers drained a swamp in the late 1860s and uncovered its buried bones, this eagle has captivated researchers. Julius Haast, the explorer and geologist who published the first notes on the species, described it as “a raptorial bird of enormous dimensions.” Today, biologists estimate that the eagles weighed up to 33 pounds — roughly 50 percent more than any raptor known today. But with a wingspan of only two to three meters — just beyond the range of a bald eagle — this was a

The nuclear reactors that could power bases on the Moon

  From BBC World News By Sue Nelson, Features correspondent Edited by - Amal  Udawatta Share Getty Images Astronauts living on the Moon will need lots of power – but they can't take fuel supplies with them. A new generation of miniature nuclear reactors could be the answer. The 1970s TV series  Space: 1999  began – like many a sci-fi drama – with a bang. A nuclear explosion tears the Moon out of Earth's orbit and sends Moonbase Alpha and its inhabitants on an exciting adventure through deep space. It obviously left an impression on a young Elon Musk. In 2017, when envisioning  SpaceX's plans for a future Moon base , he named it Alpha. Today, SpaceX is working with Nasa to return humankind to the Moon's surface as part of the US space agency's  Artemis programme . The planned lunar outpost, however, has a more pragmatic working title:  Artemis Base Camp . Nasa and the US Department of State have issued combined guidelines for peaceful lunar exploration in the form of