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Showing posts with label beaches. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beaches. Show all posts

Thursday, January 16, 2025

Bits and Bites from Around the World > Sydney beaches closed by mysterious little balls; Woolly Mammoth, Woolly Mammoth

 

Mystery balls of debris prompt closure 

of 9 beaches in Sydney, Australia


Once again, small ball-shaped debris have washed up along the shores of Sydney, Australia, forcing the closure of nine area beaches while experts try to figure out what they are and where they’re coming from.


The grey and white balls, most about the size of a marble, come months after mysterious black balls washed up, prompting the closure of eight beaches in October. When authorities tested those balls, they determined they were likely the result of a sewage spill.

Now, Northern Beaches Mayor Sue Heins says the latest balls “could be anything.”

“We don’t know at the moment what it is and that makes it even more concerning,” she told The Guardian.

Most of the debris balls are about the size of a marble. Handout / Northern Beaches Council

“There’s something that’s obviously leaking or dropping… floating out there and being tossed around.”

In a statement, the Northern Beaches council said it was working with the New South Wales Environment Protection Authority (EPA) to clean up the mystery balls and have them sent for testing.

Meanwhile, they advised beachgoers to avoid Manly, Dee Why, Long Reef, Queenscliff, Freshwater, North and South Curl Curl, North Steyne and North Narrabeen beaches until further notice.

According to the BBC, the debris that washed up in October was widely reported as “tar balls,” but testing found they contained everything from pesticides and hair, to cooking oils, soap scum, veterinary drugs, methamphetamine and more.

Last October, several beaches, including the iconic Bondi east of downtown Sydney, were shut after thousands of black balls appeared on the shores. Handout / Northern Beaches Council

Scientists said they resembled fat, oil, and grease blobs — often called fatbergs — which are commonly formed in sewage systems from human-generated waste and can form when substances pile up and stick together.

The EPA has advised the public not to handle the balls of debris and to report them when they are found.




US company wants to ‘resurrect’ mammoths

Colossal Biosciences is editing genes and working on artificial wombs, its CEO has said
US company wants to ‘resurrect’ mammoths











Texas-based Colossal Biosciences aims to bring back from extinction the woolly mammoth, the Tasmanian tiger and the dodo bird, and has just raised another $200 million for the projects.

What? $200 million! That could have extended the Ukraine war for 3 or 4 more days!

The startup is headed by AI entrepreneur Ben Lamm, who told Bloomberg that Colossal is on track to have a mammoth calf by 2028.

“We’re not going to do anything until we get the genomes right,” Lamm said in an interview with Bloomberg Technology on Wednesday.

The company is currently in the “editing phase” of the project, with the Tasmanian tiger, or thylacine, “actually ahead of schedule,” Lamm said.

A team of 17 is working on artificial wombs, the first of which ought to be ready within two years, he added.

Colossal has a market valuation of over $10 billion and has raised a total of $435 million in cash, including the most recent injection, $200 million from investor TWG Global.

TWG was impressed by Colossal’s “significant technology innovations and impact in advancing conservation,” the investor’s CEO Mark Walter said in a statement.

Lamm told Bloomberg that his project was inspired by forecasts that the earth would lose 15% of its biodiversity by 2050, which have since been updated to a 50% loss.

“It would be better to have a de-extinction toolkit and not need it than to need a de-extinction toolkit and not have it,” he said.

Critics have pointed out the project’s similarities to Michael Crichton’s cautionary tale ‘Jurassic Park,’ which involved re-creating dinosaurs.

In December 2023, Russian billionaire Andrei Melnichenko said he was partnering with Colossal to develop a ‘Pleistocene Park.’ At the COP28 climate summit in Dubai, Melnichenko described it as a way to reduce methane emissions from Siberian permafrost by re-creating Ice Age fauna, as a “cost-effective method to mitigate climate change.” US sanctions against Russia over the Ukraine conflict put the project on ice, however.

Lamm co-founded Colossal in 2021, with Harvard University geneticist George Church. Among the company’s backers is the CIA affiliate In-Q-Tel.

Scientists believe that the woolly mammoths suffered a population collapse around 10,000 years ago, at the end of the last major Ice Age, with the last members of the species dying out around 4,000 years ago.

Which would be about the time of the Biblical global flood. 

Colossal’s other two projects deal with more recent extinctions. The dodo, a flightless bird, disappeared in the late 1600s, after European explorers introduced invasive species to its native Mauritius, while the last known thylacine died in 1936 at the Hobart Zoo in Tasmania.

European explorers were the invasive species that eliminated the Dodo, I suspect!

Why not the saber-tooth tiger?

Thylacine

Saturday, December 17, 2022

Bits and Bites from around the World > Creepy Aliens in South African waters; World's Cutest, or, at least, Roundest Dog

..

‘Aliens’ crawling on coast spark panic online:

‘Is it safe to go into the water?’

By Ben Cost
December 14, 2022 1:45pm  Updated

There’s something in the water!

A South African man sparked hysteria among the online masses after they mistook his creepy pictures of dead plants for aliens emerging from the sea. His photos were shared to a South African Facebook group, where they’re currently scaring up hilarious responses, Kennedy News has reported.

“I was surprised [by the reaction],” Jan Vorster told Kennedy News of the extraterrestrial-seeming pics, which were snapped in his hometown of Still Bay, Western Cape. “I thought that people would have fun with it, but then it was very serious, some of it was extremely serious.”

He added, “A lot of people were scared of these alien-looking sea monsters. It was like ‘Jaws’ — is it safe to go into the water?”


An “aloe vera alien” on Still Bay Beach in South Africa.
Kennedy News and Media


The 62-year-old farm worker had taken pics of dead aloe vera plants — an evergreen succulent prized for its healing properties — that he’d lined up on the beach at sunrise, so that they evoked tentacled monsters invading the shore. He then posted the otherworldly pics to Facebook in an effort to raise awareness about environmental degradation.

“I thought I could use this as a metaphor for how people see these plants as aliens, but we are actually the two-legged aliens messing up their world,” Vorster described. “That was the idea.”

Unfortunately, Vorster’s eco-conscious photo op was taken literally after users thought that the expired desert flora were actually aliens making an intergalactic beachhead — reminiscent of Orson Welles’ hysteria-stirring “War of the Worlds” radio broadcast in 1938.

“Just wanted to cancel my vacation,” exclaimed one aghast viewer of the unorthodox eco-PSA. “Because of things like this, I don’t swim. I’m already scared of a shark.”


“It’s [just] a picture, I didn’t expect this to happen and for the reaction to be so big,” said photographer Jan Vorster.
Kennedy News and Media


“Please go back into the ocean,” pleaded another, while one petrified commenter wrote, “Are you serious? Holy moly… scary.”

“Never seen those before in all the years living on the coast,” declared another. “Maybe they’re only in Cape waters.”

“They look like some alien thing from War of the Worlds with Tom Cruise,” exclaimed one commenter, referencing the lanky invaders in Steven Spielberg’s 2005 sci-fi remake.

“People kept asking me when they [the creatures] were coming out, and if they were only coming out at night,” explained Vorster, who also re-created the eerie performance piece at a nearby river.

The aloe vera looked like aliens emerging from the sea like an interstellar Normandy Invasion.
Kennedy News and Media


In an attempt to dispel panic, the bewildered eco-warrior tried to explain that this was no SeaT.

However, his aloe vera-fication only made things worse as critics claimed he’d “misled them” and “should be crucified,” Vorster claimed.

“People Googled the aloe ferox [scientific name] and couldn’t put two and two together,” he lamented. “They kept saying, ‘Please help us, because this is not a plant. This can’t be a plant.’ “

Some online worrywarts even sent Vorster’s photos to an environmental scientist, who confirmed that the figures weren’t dangerous to humans.

"A lot of people were scared of these alien-looking sea monsters," said Vorster.
"It was like Jaws - is it safe to go into the water?"
Kennedy News and Media

Despite the backlash, the undaunted farmer hopes to create similar environmental PSAs in the future. “I’ve learned a lot, and I’m very motivated to continue with Aloe feroxes and keep focusing on nature-related issues,” Vorster declared.

This isn’t the first time a beached object has been mistaken for a monster.

Earlier this month, a baffled British beachcomber experienced vex on the beach after sharing pics of a bizarre beast they found washed ashore — with many viewers comparing it to the legendary Loch Ness monster.




‘World’s cutest dog’ is completely round:

‘When I have a bad day, I look at this dog’

By Emily Lefroy, NYPost
December 16, 2022 8:13pm  Updated

Toy poodle Mohu is extremely popular due to her round, fluffy shape


A toy poodle from Japan is having a ball with the unofficial title of “world’s cutest dog.”

Tens of thousands of adoring fans are lapping up the spherical, fluffy shape of Mohu, a 6-year-old pooch from Osaka.

Mohu is mature and moves at a slow pace — and she doesn’t quite understand people’s obsession, according to her owner, Nanae.

”I don’t know why she’s so popular,” Nanae told SWNS. “She always gets looked at on the street, and I get asked all the time what breed she is.”

Mohu is paws-itively prized on Instagram and TikTok, where she has rounded up about 120,000 followers between the two pages.

Mohu is adored by hundreds of thousands of people all around the world.

Nanae often posts photos and videos of Mohu posing in her home and playing with her toys. Her followers are always begging for more.

“This is Mohu. She just got a fresh haircut and is really feeling herself. Nothing makes her more confident than being completely round. 13/10,” the Twitter account WeRateDogs declared Wednesday.

“Dogrates, I feel we need to alert all scientists, Mohu might be the roundest thing on Earth,” one fan barked.

“I love her so much. I saw a video of her going into a tight li’l space where all her fluff disappeared, and it was like magic,” another howled.

“When I have a bad day, I look at this dog and feel much better,” one devotee confessed. “So cute!”

“I feel like all my life’s problems would go away if I had a dog like that,” agreed another, with a third professing, “I would forfeit all my assets to her.”