Survivor from twin endangered loggerheads is separated by scientists and freed in Mediterranean Sea
Marine biologists in southern Italy have separated conjoined twin loggerhead turtles and released the surviving newborn into the Mediterranean Sea.
The release occurred this week along the beaches of Campania where the endangered loggerheads nest every year.
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Ai Nikkor 50mm f/1.4 with Panasonic DMC-GX7
January 25th, 2016
near Big Ben, London, UK
It's time for some real talk about self-driving cars: they're not coming around any time soon.
You won't find a bigger fan of the technology than me. I love robots, autonomy and artificial intelligence. I can still remember visiting Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, and standing a few feet away from the car that nearly won the DARPA Grand Challenge in 2004.
SEE ALSO: Get out of the driver's seat, human
But I'm also a realist — and despite recent promises by Uber and Ford, I know that self-driving cars are decades away from becoming a significant part of our lives.
You have to love Ford and its promise of a driverless car by 2021 — a mere five years from now. We're not just talking about an automobile that can drive itself, but one without steering wheel or floor pedals. This is what's known in the world of car autonomy as a Level 5. (Ford actually insists it's a 4, mostly because the car will sometimes follow a mapped out route. Let's agree to disagree and put it at 4.5). Read more...
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Josh Spencer is the owner and operator of The Last Bookstore in downtown Los Angeles. It's aptly named; after all, there have been widespread closures of bookstores across the country in favor of online purchases and e-readers. Chad Howitt's short film, Welcome to the Last Bookstore, is an emotional look at Spencer's journey towards opening the store and the heart behind its success. Years ago, he was in an accident that left him unable to walk and forced him to reexamine his life. “I've always been a writer and a reader, so I thought, ‘Well, I'll try books,'” he says. “It was busy from the first day we opened our doors.”
For more of Howitt's work, visit his website. He's currently working on a short film based on the poem "From 35,000 feet / Praise Aviophobia," by the American poet Geffrey Davis.
Off the coast of Bermuda, tiny vessels are diving 1,000 feet to research something we know surprisingly little about: the ocean itself. Though the ocean makes up 95 percent of the planet's habitable area, we've explored 0.0001 percent of it.
Nekton, a U.K.-based NGO, launched its first mission in mid-July to finally give us an understanding of the deep sea, using tiny research pods that are reminiscent of goldfish bowls — bowls with robot arms that grab samples from corals and sponges. The Guardian reports that the mission has uncovered new species, large black coral forests, and fossilized beaches.
There's one thing we do know about the deep sea: We're already changing it. Higher temperatures and ocean acidification are starving the deep sea of oxygen and changing how food circulates. That's worrisome, because the deep ocean performs important functions: absorbing heat, regulating carbon, and terrifying us with alien-like creatures (Exhibit A: the blobfish).
Once the Nekton mission is complete, the pods will turn their grabby little arms to the Mediterranean Sea.
Until then, the goings-on of the deep sea remains one of life's greatest mysteries — like how life originated or where your socks disappeared to after that last load of laundry.
This story was originally published by Grist with the headline We've only explored 0.0001 percent of the ocean, but that's about to change. on August 18, 2016.