Monthly Archives: February 2021

Million-Year-Old DNA Rewrites Mammoths’ Evolutionary Tree – WIRED

Posted: February 22, 2021 at 2:35 pm

Ancient DNA has revolutionized how we understand human evolution, revealing how populations moved and interacted and introducing us to relatives like the Denisovans, a "ghost lineage" that we wouldn't realize existed if it weren't for discovering their DNA. But humans aren't the only ones who have left DNA behind in their bones, and the same analyses that worked for humans can work for any other group of species.

Today, the mammoths take their turn in the spotlight, helped by what appears to be the oldest DNA ever sequenced. DNA from three ancient molars, one likely to be over a million years old, has revealed that there is a ghost lineage of mammoths that interbred with distant relatives to produce the North American mammoth population.

Mammoths share something with humans: Like us, they started as an African population but spread across much of the planet. Having spread out much earlier, mammoth populations spent enough time separated from each other to form different species. After branching off from elephants, the mammoths first split into what are called southern and steppe species. Later still, adaptations to ice age climates produced the woolly mammoth and its close relative, the North American mammoth, called the Columbian mammoth. All of those species, however, are extinct, and the only living relatives are the elephants.

We have obtained DNA from two of these species, the woolly and Columbian mammoths. These revealed both a number of adaptations to cold climates and a small degree of interbreeding, as woolly mammoths made their way into North America and contributed a small amount (about 10 percent) to the genome of the Columbia population.

The new work focused on mammoth teeth found in Siberia, where conditions have favored both the preservation of remains and the preservation of the DNA they contain. The teeth come from layers of material that appear to have been deposited at the start of the most recent glacial period, which is when the ancestors of the woolly mammoth population should have been present in the area.

We don't have precise dates for any of the teeth, as they appear to be too old for carbon dating. Instead, dates have been inferred using a combination of the species present in the deposits and the known timing of flips in the orientation of Earth's magnetic field. In addition, the shape of the teeth provides some hints about what species they group with and some further indication of when they were deposited. In all, one tooth is likely to be at least 500,000 years old, another about a million years old, and a third somewhat older still.

Previously, the oldest DNA obtained from animal remains is roughly the age of the youngest of these samples. But the researchers were able to recover some elephant-like DNA from each of the molars, although it was badly fragmented, and many individual bases were damaged. Researchers were able to isolate the full mitochondrial genome for each of the three teeth, as each cell contains many copies of this genome in each of its mitochondria. Only fragments of the nuclear genome could be obtained, howeverat most, about 10 percent of one genome, and at worst under 2 percent. (Less than 2 percent is still tens of millions of individual bases.)

Using the differences between the mammoth and elephant DNA and assuming a constant rate of mutation, the research team was able to derive independent dates for when each of the animals that left a tooth must have lived. Based on the mitochondria genome, the dates were 1.6 million, 1.3 million, and 900,000 years ago. For the two that had enough nuclear genome to analyze, the dates were 1.3 million and 600,000 years ago. The DNA-based dates for these two lined up nicely with each other and the date of the material they were found in. The oldest sample might be older than the deposit it's in, and thus it might have been moved after death.

While these dates are fairly uncertain, they pretty clearly place two of the samples as the oldest DNA ever obtained from animals. And it would mean that these mammoths were living in Siberia shortly after ice-age conditions prevailed, although before there was a clear woolly mammoth lineage. They'd also predate the known appearance of mammoths in North America.

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Biden administration to invest $1.6 billion to expand testing in schools, genomic sequencing – WGN TV Chicago

Posted: at 2:35 pm

WASHINGTON (NewsNation Now) The White House COVID-19 response team announced Wednesday that the Biden administration will invest $1.6 billion to support testing in schools, increase genomic sequencing and manufacture testing supplies.

We need to test broadly and rapidly to turn the tide of this pandemic, said Carole Johnson, White House COVID-19 testing coordinator. But we still dont have enough testing and we dont have enough testing in all the places it needs to be.

$815 million will be used to increase domestic manufacturing of testing supplies, particularly those that are facing a shortage including molded plastics and filter pipette tips, the Biden administration said.

Nearly $200 million will be invested by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to increase virus genome sequencing to identify and track emerging variant virus strains throughout the country. This comes as CDC Director Rochelle Walensky confirmed that the variant strain first found in Bristol, England was reported in the United States.

$650 million will be used to expand testing in schools and underserved populations. The Department of Health and Human Services in partnership with the Department of Defense will use the money to expand testing opportunities for K-8 schools and underserved congregate settings, such as homeless shelters, according to the Biden administration.

Even though we dont feel that every teacher needs to be vaccinated before you can open a school, that doesnt take away from the fact that we strongly support the vaccination of teachers, said Dr. Anthony Fauci.

The CDC Friday provided a long-awaited road map for reopening schools emphasizing mask-wearing and social distancing and saying vaccination of teachers is important but not a prerequisite for reopening.

Agency officials were careful to say they are not calling for a mandate that all U.S. schools be reopened. But they said there is strong evidence now that in-person schooling can be done safely, especially at lower grade levels, and the guidance is targeted at schools that teach kindergarten up to 12th grade.

The guidance was issued as President Biden faces increasing pressure to deliver on his promise to get the majority of schools back to in-person learning by the end of his first 100 days in office. The White House said last week that a national strategy would be guided by science. Biden reiterated his stance at a Wisconsin town hall Tuesday night.

Asked when the nation would see kindergarten through eighth grades back to in-person learning five days a week, Biden said, Well be close to that at the end of the first 100 days. He said he expected many schools would push to stay open through the summer, but suggested reopening would take longer for high schools due to a higher risk of contagion among older students.

Biden alsoannounced a vaccination goal of 100 million coronavirus shots in his first 100 days in office.

New figures from the White House show the steady increase in the pace of vaccinations over President Joe Bidens first month in office.

Much of the increase, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, comes from people receiving their second dose of the approved vaccines from Moderna and Pfizer.

Biden is on track to beat his goal of 100 million injections in his first 100 days in office though the pace must pick up even further to meet his plans to vaccinate nearly all adults by the end of the summer.

More than 71 million vaccine doses have been distributed across the United States, with more than 55.2 million doses administered, according to the CDC.

As the average daily new virus cases dipped below 100,000 for the first time in months as the United States seeks to picture a return to life as it was pre-pandemic. There have been more than 27.7 million confirmed cases in the United States and nearly 490,000 Americans have died from the virus, according to data complied by Johns Hopkins University.

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Ocean colonization – Wikipedia

Posted: at 2:35 pm

A type of ocean claim

Ocean colonization is the theory of extending society territorially to the ocean by permanent settlements floating on the ocean surface and submerged below, employing offshore construction.[1]

Ocean Colonisation

The theory of developing permanent dwellings in the ocean, both floating and sunken, to allow permanent human settlement. This idea was first suggested by Friedman and Gramlich, and has been researched since the early 1990s.

The process of extending space available for humans to inhabit involves developing seasteads such as artificial islands, floating rigid structures, extreme-sized cruise ships or even submerged structures, to provide permanent living quarters for sections of the world's population.[1] Specifically catering for the growing issue of overpopulation, and need for extra housing as a result, the urban theorists that have pursued this idea also suggesting it as a sustainable form of living to help assist climate change [2] Colonies may form their own sovereign state of independence,[3] with these structures also being generally less impacted by natural disasters.[4]

However this theory for future urban planning has been critiqued by other scientists, suggesting that developing artificial structures in an aquatic environment will disrupt the natural marine ecosystem.[5] and may instead be impacted to aquatic natural disasters such as tsunamis. The debate against this theory further notes the threat of security of these colonies and the potential lack of protection without an overseeing government or body.[3]

The utopic theory of ocean colonisation has been explored and visually explained in many forms of entertainment such as in gaming, virtual realities and science-fiction movies, to show the potentially positive and negative changes on societies daily living.

Lessons learned from ocean colonization may prove applicable to space colonization. The ocean may prove simpler to colonize than space and thus occur first, providing a proving ground for the latter. In particular, the issue of sovereignty may bear many similarities between ocean and space colonization; adjustments to social life under harsher circumstances would apply similarly to the ocean and to space; and many technologies may have uses in both environments [6]

Underwater habitats are examples of underwater structures.

Submerged structures are sunken, air-tight vessels that either sit at an intermediate position or attached to the ocean floor that create an underwater metropolis for residences and businesses.[7]

H2ome is a project for building sea floor homes, along with high-end resorts and hotels.[8]

Ocean Spiral City is a $26 billion Japanese project,[6] with research and designing being underway to potentially house 5000 people and may be a reality by 2030.[9]

Offshore construction is one of the main forms of ocean colonization.

Land reclamation, or artificial islands, are the man-made process of relocating rock or placing cement in a sea, ocean or river bed, to extend or create a new area of liveable land in the ocean.[10] This process involves creating a solid base on the sea floor and further building upon it with materials such as clay, sand and soil to form a new island-like structure above the water surface.[5] It therefore expands the area for potential development space, supporting the erection of buildings or other necessary urban developments in response to support human activities, by utilising this otherwise untouched space for more productive uses.[5] This ocean colonisation technique is the most developed in terms of planning and implementation in the present day.

The Palm Jumeriah is the main of the three artificial islands in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, to be developed. The name Palm resembles its palm-tree like design when viewed aerially, and is both culturally and symbolically relevant to the coastal city.[5] This land reclamation project began in 2001 and involved the movement of 94 million cubic metres of sand and 5.5 million cubic metres of rock off-shore in the Persian Gulf, to allow the development of luxury beachfront villas for both residential and commercial purposes.[5]

Kansai International Airport located in Osaka Bay, Japan was created in 1987, due to overcrowding at the nearby Osaka Airport.[11] Developers suggested Japan's mountain terrain [11] is not conducive to the development of necessary flat space required for an airport and thus developed an artificial island in the bay, with a connecting bridge to support both travel and freight arrivals and departures.

Portier Cove is a new eco-district extended off the coast of Monaco designed to reduce greenhouse emissions in the area.[12] The 125m long extension project re-began in 2011 and plans to provide a hectare of space for retail, parks, offices, apartments and private villas, to support their national issue of a growing population.[12]

Very Large Floating Structures (VLFS) [13] or Seasteads [4] are artificially man-made pontoons, designed to float on the surface of the ocean or sea to house permanent residents. They have a large surface area and are designed to not be bound to a certain government but instead form their own community through clusters of floating structures.[3] This type of technology has only be theorised and is yet to be developed, however a variety of companies have investment project plans underway.

Seasteading refers to building buoyant, permanent structures to float on the surface of the ocean to support human settlements and colonies.[2]

The idea constructed by Friedman and Gramlich, who founded the Seasteading Institute, and is now a recognised in the Oxford dictionary. The pair received $500k funding from PayPal Peter Thiel, to begin designing and constructing their idea in 2008 [14]

Architectural company BIG proposed their design of the Oceanix City, involving a series of inhabitable floating villages, clustered together to form an archipelago that could house 10,000 residents.[15] The proposed design was developed in response to the effects of climate change such as rising sea levels and an increase in hurricanes in the Polynesian region, that threaten many tropical island nations from being eradicated. The design also outlines its intentions to incorporate predominantly renewable energy sources such as wind and water.[15]

The idea of cruise ships as part of the theory of ocean colonisation, surpass the typical modern-day commercial cruise ships. This technology imagines a large scale vessel, supporting permanent residence on board that can freely move about the world's oceans and seas.[1] These ships include residential, retail, sport, commercial and entertainment quarters on board.[16]

The ideal size and style is outlined in the concept of the Freedom Ship design by US engineer Norman Nixon, proposing a 4000ft length vessel that has the capability to house 60,000 residents and 15,000 personnel [17] - with an estimated cost of $10 billion (USD).[14]

The World ship debuted in 2015, sitting at 644ft long and is the largest, residential cruise ship presently in the world.[16] This vessel is the closest, existent ship to the idealised Freedom Ship design that hopes to support permanent life on board a ship. Permanent residency on the ship costs between $3million (USD) to $15million (USD) per room.[16]

THE MEG: 2018 science-fiction movie, based in living in an underwater research facility [18]

It is predicted by 2100, sea levels will have risen by 13 meters as a result of global warming, to which by 2050 are estimated to impact 90% of the world's coastal cities.[15] Theorists who support ocean colonization theories hope to face the issue and provide a solution for groups and nations worldwide that are most at risk.[15]

For example, Polynesian island nations such as Tuvalu with a population of 10,000 are expected to be fully submerged by water in approximately 3050 years [19]

Entrepreneurs who have devised these technologies to support the colonization of the seas suggest their design will have an overall minimal carbon footprint.[2]

Recycled and environmentally-friendly materials such as recycled plastics and locally sourced coconut fibres will constitute a large proportion of building materials required for construction.[20][2]

To minimise the use of pollutant energy output in the environment contributing to this rapid global warming, designers suggest using predominantly renewable energy from sources such as water, wind [14] and solar power.[20]

Designers also intend to utilise bicycles, electric and hydrogen vehicles as the primary transport system on board to prevent extra CO2 emissions.[20]

Ultimately, project designers, entrepreneurs and scientists are aiming to collaborate to create a structure allowing the formation of an eco-sustainable production and consumption cycle in the future human habitat.[20]

The primary group impacted by the effects of climate change, the Pacific Island Nations, are the target demographic identified for the ocean colony projects to which they are still able to remain in their familiar and culturally significant island environment. In 2017, French Polynesia signed an agreement with the Seasteading Institute to utilise their land for testing of the world's first floating town [21]

Green Float is another example of a project hoping to develop a carbon negative city within the Equatorial Pacific Ocean, with it set to house 100,000 locals by joining multiple floating modules.[22] They hypothesise a 40% reduction in CO2 emissions through more environmentally friendly and energy efficient modes of transport and power [22]

The number of natural disasters occurring in the world has grown by 357 from 1919 to 2019, according to Our World in Data,[23] with 90,000 people killed annually as a result of this extreme weather.[6] According to this data, the main economic impacts have primarily come from extreme weather events, wildfires and flooding.[6] Due to these economic effects, cities such as Boston, Miami and San Francisco are exploring this idea of ocean colonization as they try to protect their coastlines from an increase in flooding, rising sea levels and earthquakes respectively.[15] Ocean colony technologies are said to be less impacted by common territorial natural disasters and even extreme aquatic weather such as damaging waves as they occupy more shallow waters.[21] For example, the world's first floating hotel, the Barrier Reef Floating Resort,[24] sat 70km off the coast of Townsville, Australia and in 1988 withheld against a cyclone.[21]

According to theorists and scientists at the Seasteading Institute who have begun conducting research into aquatic environments as liveable spaces, many of the technologies supporting ocean colonization are set to mainly impacted by rogue waves [4] and storms. However, other aquatic natural disasters such as Tsunamis, Friedman says would have little impact on the structures yet only raise water levels.[4]

Research in the 1990s emerged regarding the hydro-elasticity of rigid structures at the face of relentless and on-going wave movement [13] to which lead to modern scientists such as Suzuki (2006), voicing their concern of the potentially poor integrity of aquatic structures impacting by constant motion and vibration.[13]

Further modern research and design has also been situated around testing the computation fluid dynamics of resistance against vortex formations of water,[13] such as cyclones that form and therefore threaten ocean environments.

Spar platforms, artificial and natural breakwaters and active repositioning, if applicable, of ocean structures to avoid storms are some suggestions and technologies suggested by ocean colonization supporters and scientists to combat extreme aquatic weather events.[4] Entrepreneurs such as Friedman, have acknowledged and are aware of the care that must be taken in the engineering process of these designs.[4]

Biologists have identified the individualised negative impacts of the technologies that support the implementation of colonization, by their effect on the disruption to the local marine ecosystem.

According to scientists, the process of land reclamation can lead to the erosion of natural soil and land,[5] through this human-made and unnatural movement of sediment that consequently disrupts the natural geological cycle.

Scientists at Marine Insight, have conducted studies of the environmental impacts of commercial cruise ships,[25] with these impacts predicted to be similar to the technologies allowing ocean colonization. Currently, these vessels cause air pollution through the emission of toxic gases that increase in the acidification of the ocean.[25]

Their research also showed the noise pollution from these ships can disturb the hearing of marine animals and mammals.[25]

Furthermore, the leaking of chemicals, grey water and blackwater into the ocean can lead to the accumulation of harmful chemicals, increasing the water concentration,[25] that local flora and fauna are accustomed to. These studies of cruise ships and their impact of the marine environment have been incorporated by ocean colonization scientists and designers, as they are the closest, existent technology to their proposed projects.

Ocean colonization is said by theorist to be a potential solution to the world's growing population, with 7.78 billion people currently inhabiting earth as of May 2020.[26] The BBC claim that 11 billion people is our Earth's capacity even after adjusting our consumption behaviours,[6] with the UN predicting this number to be reached by 2100.[6] With the world's oceans covering 70% of the planet surface,[27] this space has been therefore seen as a viable, long-term solution to allow an expansion and extension of in-habitable space by 50%.[6] Pioneers of this colonization theory suggest the new spaces to also cater for new and more jobs, and may be a particular solution to the moral and political dilemma of housing as well as the consequential increased number of climate refugees.[28]

Central entrepreneurs to this theory have suggested that it hosts the potential for a degree of autonomy of residences, currently operating in more strict political systems.[3] As a result, ocean colonisation has been posed as a potential solution to poor governance,[29] in which sovereign states may begin formation of greater personal freedoms, little state regulation and clearly defined state intentions.[3] Despite critical theorists at the Seasteading Institute suggesting their design to allow people to experiment with new forms of government,[21] however socialists critique this idea, seeing it as a possibility bypass tax laws [13] in international waters. Projects such as the Freedom Ship and those by the Seasteading Institute,[13] have proposed the idea for the installation of their designs in Polynesian water however are exempt by unique governing framework permitting significant autonomy from Polynesian laws.[3]

Under Article 60 of the United Nations Convention on Law of the Seas (UNCLOS), artificial islands, installations and structures have the right to build in exclusive economic zones to coastal nations, however these coastal nations still hold sovereignty of the 12 nautical miles adjacent to that coast.[29]

Little has been vocalised on the development of essential services i.e. schools, hospitals etc., within these ocean colony structures yet theorists say it is likely host or closest nations will be relied upon until the initial population grows.[3] With intentions to build beyond territorial seas in exclusive economic zones,[29] the likelihood of the idea for pure sovereignty has been questioned by critics.

According entrepreneurs at the Seasteading Institute, their particular technology of floating modules is said to be high, with a predicted cost of $10,000 - $100,000 per 1 acre of a seastead, comprised purely by volunteers.[4] Similarly, Friedman, co-founder of the Seasteading Institute, has estimated the entire project to cost a few hundred million.[14] As mentioned earlier, other projects such as the Ocean Spiral City, are set to cost $26 billion [6]

Critics have responded to these future plans; labelling them as elitist, impractical and delusional,[21] with the number of people accommodated limited.[3]

These projects will therefore rely on investors, which is acknowledged by ocean colonization theorists who state the first people to benefit will be the privileged who can afford to invest in the project.[4] However skeptics criticize the idea suggesting it is ultimately designed for capitalist gain, rather than a potential solution for the future society.[3]

Without an overseeing government and lack of taxes, critics of ocean colonisation suggest there would be little security provided in the open waters,[14] in terms of economically and regarding human rights laws. Theorists are considered by threat of being prey to pirates,[21] with colonies on board therefore having minimal personal protection.

There has been resistance to this seemingly capital-intensive project, as critics of the idea suggest private law cannot be embraced if it challenges that of the public laws.[3] Ocean colonization theorists have acknowledged the necessary assignment of responsibility of land and resources into private hands,[3] to ensure at a party is liable. This assigned responsibility is suggested to rely upon existing legal frameworks regarding property, contract and commercial laws to protect colonies.[3] Ocean colonisation theorists are currently working to balance the idea of freedom with security [4]

Developing these technologies and strategies will ultimately require changes to daily living.

Many current day activities will remain relatively unchanged and un-impacted, such as many of the modern necessities i.e. heating, lighting, kitchen appliances, hot water systems.[4] They would require specially consideration and design, however most technologies would still be available says Friedman.[4]

With such proximity to water resources, there would be a reliance on hydroponics to account for the limited space on the surface,[4] that would generate energy and support the growth of crops.[20] Similarly, to conserve space, vertical gardens have been suggested by designers for growing and composting.[4]

Humans are more likely to accustom to this environment, as psychologically they are more comfortable with water,[6] with humanity gradually moving to reside to coast and have historically always operated close to water ways.[21]

On the other hand, humans are less likely to adapt to this possible solution as the ocean is an unfamiliar territory and they are familiar with their ways on land.[4] Life on the water would also be incredibly different, with limited personal living space and many more shared spaced instead.[4] There is also the threat of possible overfishing of nearby and local species to the colony,[20] and also the raised question of waste disposal.[20] With limited ability of fresh water availability, due to the inability to drill or stream it,[4] critics and theorists of the idea themselves suggest and acknowledge that ocean colonies are unable to ever be purely self-sufficient.[4]

Land reclamation, followed by Seasteading, are the two technologies leading the way in terms of development plans.

In 2017, the Seasteading Institute proposed to begin building the first project village by 2020 in a lagoon in Tahiti.[2] Investor in the project, John Quirk, stated in 2018, that we could conceivably see our first modest seastead for 300 people by 2022.[21]

In terms of law, in 2019, plans were passed allowing a nation to host the first seastead, to which it must adhere to the regulations of that host country but is also liable for its own tailored Special Economic Zone.[30] Economic freedom is likely to be sought after and granted, but more gradually through a staged approach called strategic incrementalism.[30]

As of May 2020, both the Seastead Institute and Blue Frontiers have completed their impact assessments and are waiting for updates on their proposal.[21]

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Ocean colonization - Wikipedia

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9 Breathtaking City Concepts That Could Be Your Future …

Posted: at 2:35 pm

Its fun to imagine what the cities of the future will look like. Underwater bubble-homes? Sure. Cities that float? Why not? Houses that look like leafy trees? Were on board!

Weve got to give credit, then, to the artists, architects, and other creative voices whove dreamed up these futuristic urban visions. These city concepts span from garden bridges to self-contained biospheres andwhile they probably wont all make it past the drawing boardwere hoping that future urban planners take note. (Seriously, we definitely want to live in a floating city.)

Picture it: a self-contained community that floats on waterand exists entirely off-the-grid, thanks to its sustainability and reliance on clean energy sources. Meet Seasteading Institutes Floating City Project, which isnt just a hallucinatory oasis. Negotiations for this project are currently underway, and the very first floating city could be unveiled as early as 2020.

Water isnt just a one-time solution to urban over-crowding. Its an idea thats also driven innovator Phil Pauleys Sub-Biosphere 2, which is envisioned as a fully self-contained community that floats on the waters surface during good weatherand goes submarine when the waves get rough.

Envisioning what the worlds best-known cities will look like in 2050 is always a fun game, and this projection of Paris is, wellpretty impressive. Belgian architect Vincent Callebaut is behind the concept, which imagines antismog towers with de-polluting properties, photosynthesis towers covered in algae, and vertical farming oriented farmscrapers. Mmm, green.

Next up is Beijing, which gets the 2050 treatment courtesy of MAD Architects. Though the city is frequently in the news for its smog problems, the architects have reimagined the Chinese capital as a decidedly greener place. Were particularly obsessed with these gleaming, elevated gardens. Can we get some of those near us?

Its great to see how many of these futuristic city concepts are focused on bringing more greenery into the urban setting, and Londons Garden Bridge is no exception. A Thames-spanning walkwayfilled with pretty foliage, the proposed project has received planning permissions and is slated to open up as early as 2018. Fingers crossed for new, leafier commutes.

Ever wanted to live in a tree house? What about a house thats also a tree? From stage left, OAS1S: one of the coolest city concepts out there. The plan envisions abodes that are inspired by and effectively function as trees. Theyre oxygen-producing, sustainable, off-gridand pretty, too.

Created by illustrator Paul Chadeisson, this stunning vision of a futuristic Paris is awesome and spooky all at once. A cheery bistro is one of the only indications of the Paris we know; otherwise, industrial, high-tech design seems to have taken over. As this image was created for Dontnod Entertainments Remember Me video game, it probably wont be a reality soon. (Thats okay. We really like all those bistros as-is.)

Not to be confused with Seasteading Institutes Floating City, this one is the work of Chinese firm AT Design Office. And theyve really thought it out. From submarine transit to underwater entertainment centers, this is one city wed move to in a heartbeat. Too bad its not real (yet).

All right, youve caught us; this isnt an artist rendering but a grade-A photo. The Vertical Forest, proposed and created by Milanese architectural studio Stefano Boeri Architetti, is an example of a futuristic, super-green project that has actually made it into the real world. Let this be an inspiration, then. With any luck, the rest of these super-cool city concepts will soon become reality.

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TD blasts David Drumms early release from prison saying Ireland is soft touch for white collar crime – The Irish Sun

Posted: at 2:34 pm

A TD has blasted freed banker fraudster David Drumms early release from prison and declared: Ireland is a soft touch for white collar crime.

The disgraced former Anglo Irish Bank chief walked out of jail this week after serving just two years and eight months of his six-year sentence for a conspiracy to commit a 7.2billion banking fraud.

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The 54-year-old only spent seven months in Dublins Mountjoy before being moved to Loughan House, an open prison in Blacklion, Co Cavan.

Shamed scammer Drumm got close to the maximum time possible slashed off his stint in jail after availing of an early release scheme.

The sentence worked out at less than four-and-a-half months behind bars here for every 1billion that Drumm conspired to defraud from Anglo under his watch.

Despite his role in Irelands most spectacular corporate collapse, Drumm who was granted free legal aid for his fraud trial retains the financial firepower to start afresh.

He will be able to keep his 4.4million pension he still has from Anglo as it is protected under Irish law even though he owes at least 13million to creditors.

And as Irish taxpayers are saddled with the 30billion-plus bill to bail out toxic Anglo, the former lag will be able to enjoy life at his familys swish home worth over 400,000 in Skerries, north Co Dublin.

Deputy Peadar Toibin last night took a swipe at how white-collar criminals like Drumm are treated in Ireland.

And the Aontu leader highlighted how hundreds of thousands of people have suffered over the ex-chief execs disastrous tenure at the helm of Anglo.

Toibin told us: People will be stunned around the country at the leniency afforded to David Drumm.

The 7billion-plus conspiracy to defraud and false account are not victimless crimes. There is an enormous cost to the actions and decisions taken and made by David Drumm.

It is no exaggeration to say that hundreds of thousands of people have suffered significantly from the economic devastation that was caused by David Drumms decisions.

"We cannot be soft on white collar crime as a nation if we are to have any chance of rooting it out.

Two years and eight months in prison in Ireland, most of which was spent in a low security open prison will be seen, as not much to pay for the enormity of this crime. Drumm walked from Loughan House on Monday morning getting a whopping 50 per cent off his sentence.

He was granted early temporary release in return for doing unpaid community service work.

But the Irish Sun revealed how Drumm has avoided doing the graft as the unpaid work part of the Community Return Scheme is suspended under Level 5 Covid restrictions.

Reacting to our revelations, Toibin said: It is unbelievable.

Now we hear that the unpaid work each week on a community service site, the reason in part for the short sentence, does not have to be done due to Covid. This is outrageous.

Why not postpone it until it becomes doable? This will confirm the suspicions of many that Ireland is a soft touch for white collar crime.Under the Community Return Scheme, prisoners who meet certain criteria are given early temporary release in return for doing unpaid community service work.

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But Drumm has swerved that obligation due to the pandemic. Instead he only has to answer the phone on his designated work days, confirming his availability and ongoing commitment to participate in the scheme.

Drumm was sentenced to six years in prison in June 2018 for conspiracy to defraud and for false accounting.

He was also handed a suspended term of 15 months for his role in an illegal 2008 loans-for-shares plan.

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The solution to the farm impasse lies in federalism – Hindustan Times

Posted: at 2:33 pm

The current imbroglio over the farm laws highlights the Centres growing intrusion into what are constitutionally state subjects. But they also highlight another uncomfortable reality. Many of the most serious economic afflictions facing the country agriculture, water, power, land, health and education are state subjects. And the failures of the states to do justice on subjects that are well within their constitutional obligations have created space for an activist Centre to weigh in.

Take power. The bleeding of the distribution companies (discoms) has had enormous opportunity costs for state finances. The attempts to stem the bleeding are a veritable alphabet soup the Accelerated Power Development and Reform Programme (APDRP), the restructured-APDRP, Integrated Power Development Scheme, Financial Restructuring Plan and Ujjwal Discom Assurance Yojana (UDAY). But, despite the enormous resources poured into them, their impact is, at best, modest and, at worst, an abject failure. The Fifteenth Finance Commission (FFC) has once again attempted to clean the Augean stables of state power finances by recommending extra annual borrowing space based on certain performance criteria in the power sector. Hope springs eternal.

Take another example. Public Order and Police fall under the State List of the Seventh Schedule, putting the onus on state governments for the maintenance of the law and order in their respective states. In 1999, the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Home Affairs (chaired by late President Pranab Mukherjee) observed that of late the dependence of State Governments, all over, on the Central Para Military Forces in dealing with difficult situations arising on the law and order front has increased significantly This changing trend over the years has given rise to a situation of dichotomy wherein while on the one hand the State Governments tend to demand more and more power and autonomy, on the other hand they appear to be prepared very inadequately to perform..one of the most primary duties of maintaining law and order and peace and normalcy in their respective State. On every incident of minor or major proportion they tend to seek help of the central police forces, which only throw poor light on the preparedness of their police forces in dealing with adverse situations.

Little has changed. Over the past two decades, even as the states continued to underinvest in their police, the size of the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPFs) doubled, thereby ensuring the creeping federalisation of a state subject.

The story is similar in agriculture. For the vast majority of Indias farmers, the tiny size of their farms means that there is simply no way they can make a decent income on farming alone unless their incomes are artificially boosted by a plethora of input subsidies, price or income supports or if they are part of the privileged few who have large farms. All the policy options being debated and passed as saviours are for the vast majority of farmers post-dated check on a crashing bank, as Gandhi once said of a British proposal.

The only viable long-term answer for the majority of Indias farmers, as BR Ambedkar observed a century ago, is to get out of farming. At that time, Indias population was a fifth of what it is today and land fragmentation correspondingly less. Public policies of input subsidies (especially on fertilisers and water) that underpinned the Green Revolution certainly benefited the country broadly, in terms of both aggregate output as well as farmer incomes. But their sell-by date is well-past. Once farm incomes rose, the rural surplus should have provided the springboard for structural transformation, especially in industry. Instead, it has become a trap slowly asphyxiating the sector.

The basic thrust of the farm laws was in the right direction. But their specific details and the manner in which it was done without broad deliberation and building consensus let alone the manner in which the government has lashed out at critics has been completely self-defeating. Public policies need to have broad legitimacy among those that it affects and the reality is that these farm laws simply dont.

A way out of this turmoil might lie in respecting Indias federalism more fully. The Centre should not pass farm laws that affect agriculture markets within states, but this should also mean no central government Minimum Support Price (MSP) and no central government procurement. The states say that agriculture is a state subject. It is. And they should have complete say in what subsidies they want to give their farmers, for which crop, and how. The states that strongly believe in MSP and procurement should have complete ownership of both.

The Centres involvement in procurement today is inextricably linked to its obligations under the Right to Food Act. That Act had the right intentions but its cereal obsessiveness is having deeply damaging consequences for agriculture and agro-ecology. As FFC notes, within agriculture, the more the government intervention, the lower the growth. Crops, especially cereals, are lavished with subsidies while fisheries, livestock and horticulture have grown much faster and are more nutritious.

The Centre should move to replace the Act with a Right to Nutrition Act that eschews specifying the exact cereal and instead offers broad nutritional guarantees from a basket specific to different regional contexts. That change will take time. Until then, the Centre should buy, in the open market, the rice and wheat needed for the public distribution system after the kharif and rabi harvests and maintain buffer stocks for price stabilisation. If states think that the private sector will be exploitative, they can and should do their own procurement. It is only then that they will think hard about crops and costs.

The Centres involvement in agriculture markets should be to smoothen pan-India commerce no state should be able to block inter-state movement of a commodity. For its part, the Centre should not be able to ban agriculture exports if prices rise. Why should farmers not get the upside of prices when they have to suffer the downside when prices go down? If the government is worried about consumer reaction, it should either compensate farmers commensurately or subside the consumer directly, but not force the farmer to do so. And if agriculture is truly to be a state subject, either the Agriculture Infrastructure and Development Cess (AIDC) in the new budget should be discontinued or whatever money is raised should be handed over to the states.

But all this cannot be done overnight. There needs to be an exit ramp for farmers and states to adjust. Here, the Centre should provide a clear road map along with performance-based incentive financing to ease the transition over three to four years.

The farm laws are illustrative of an uncomfortable reality. There are many important issues that states are fully empowered to handle. But they dont. Problems arise. Then there is a clamour that the government should do more. But, inevitably, that means the central government. Of course, the Centre loves this, because it then exercises more power. And that has slowly, but surely, tilted the already imbalanced Union-state relationship even more in favour of the former.

The best bulwark against a hegemonic Centre is stronger federalism. But, for that to occur, states will have to up their game. Fundamentally, unless they bite the bullet and move to develop their non-farm sectors, most farmers will have increasingly precarious livelihoods. And the Centre can best help farmers by assisting states make that transition.

Devesh Kapur is the Starr Foundation South Asia Studies Professor and Asia Programs Director at the Paul H Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) at Johns Hopkins University, Washington, DC.

The views expressed are personal

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Federalism is the answer, after all – Part 17 – Guardian

Posted: at 2:33 pm

The clamour to right the anomaly in the Nigerias state system seems not to rankle the governing elite yet. They continue to procrastinate on the urgency of restructuring.Two recent state actions underscore the point being made.The first is the recent extension of the tenure of the Inspector General of Police by three months. The IGP, Mr. Mohammed Adamu has spent the mandatory 35 years in service and by rule ought to pave way to order in the Nigerian police to succeed him, but rather than allow for a routinised transition among the top hierarchy of the force, the president whose right it is constitutionally to nominate the IGP preferred to elongate the tenure of the incumbent IG to the dismay of a confounded public.

And as always a justification is supplied by his subalterns. The extension the country is told is based on some succession niceties, which in any case is a breach of the Police (Amendment) Act 2020 the same president signed into law barely four months ago. According to the Minister of Police Affairs, Mohammad Dingyadi, the extension is to allow for an appropriate and painstaking process of appointing a new IGP. In his words, This is not unconnected to the desire of Mr. President to, not only have a smooth handover but to also ensure the right officer is appointed into that position. Mr. President is extending by three months to allow him to get into the process of appointing a new one.

Second, in the appointment of a new head for the anti-corruption agency, the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC), the president in his wisdom nominated to the sensitive position a cousin of the Attorney General of the Federation, aMuslim andFulani from Kebbi,Abdulrasheed Bawa as the agencys substantive Chairman. The supervising minister of the EFCC is the same Attorney General, Abubakar Malami. It would be recalled that Mr. Ibrahim Magu who was never confirmed by the legislature as substantive chairman of the EFCC had served in acting capacity since November 2015 and was suspended in July last year over allegations of ethical misconduct verging on the sale of seized assets unaccounted for. For a president who prioritised anti-corruption as a main goal of his seeking office, circumspection is expected in the choice of a head of such an important ethical agency of the state ought to based on principles of nation-building and sensitivity to the federal character principle as enshrined in the countrys constitution.

Already, most of the anti-graft agencies including the Code of Conduct Bureau, Code of Conduct Tribunal, the EFCC and even the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU) are already in the hands of the presidents tribe and religion.Again, the president ostensibly acted in accordance with Paragraph 2(3) of Part 1, CAP E1 of EFCC Act 2004 but the act lendscredence to the uninspiring epithet of his administration as endogamic.However, it is to be noted that the top anti-graft body has never been immune from politicization since its establishment in 2003 at the promptings of agencies of global governance. It has taken swipe from the public as political tool for hounding political enemies. The fearful question now is:how else will this presidents insensitivity strengthen this federation without true federalism?

The above actions raise some questions.Why is there no reflection of federal character to balance the federation and enhance federalism? Are we to conclude that all the presidents men who are in power with him now do not provoke questions about federalism and the restoration of its content in theory and practice? Also, is the president inured to ignore the simmering agitation for the rightfulness of the federating units of the Nigerian state? Why does the Nigerias president approving appointments of mostly candidates of northern extraction who are also mostly Muslims in a complex federation of distinct six geopolitical zones not dominated by Muslims? Why does the president set up structures that will continue to cause disaffection in this convoluted federation? Why would the president be insensitive to the damage control measures some governors of northern extraction have been going round to organise in the southwest region where some Fulani herdsmen have been stoking fire that can impair unity? Why cant the president use federal appointments to strengthen federalism at this perilous time?

As we have repeatedly argued in this serial, responsivity principle that panders to diversity particularly in a multinational formation like Nigeria is the federal genius. This is precisely what the incumbent administration in the country is undermining and recalcitrant to appreciate. Given the tension in the country underlined by separatist impulses, one would have expected that the president should have instrumentalised appointments as brinkmanship by adhering to the federal character principle in the 1999 Constitution as amended to allay fear of components nationalitiesthat the unity of the country is priced over nepotistic inclinations of the president.

The continuation of the skewed policies of the present administration will deepen the fault lines in the country and nudge it towards disintegration. Even countries that are theoretically unitary have devolved powers for governability. For example, the United Kingdom has devolved powers to its component units, namely, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Island in ways that invest in them a great deal of autonomy in many affairs of the state. The quest for genuine federalism is to grant autonomy to the components units of this country to grow by unleashing their productive capacity without the encumbrances of a unitary behemoth pretending to be federal. Therefore, when states can take care of their policing and other institutions of governance including anti-corruption agencies, there will be no concern when such appointments are made at the federal level. That is why the only commitment that will make the international community to believe that Nigeria is ready to take up leadership of the black race and indeed Africa is restructuring that will dismantle the evil unitary system of government Nigerias soldiers of fortune foisted on the nation in 1966.

The time to dismantle that retrogressive unitary system and embrace federalism is now!

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Why Baroness Cavendish’s ‘new Act of Union’ would do anything but save the UK – The National

Posted: at 2:33 pm

DEAR Ms Cavendish. Forgive me addressing you in this slightly unorthodox and public manner. I read with great interest your article in the Financial Times on Saturday, headed A new constitutional deal would avert a break-up of the Union.

I note that you speak with some authority as the former head of the Downing Street policy unit under David Cameron and arenow a senior fellow in government at Harvard University. Perhaps even more interesting, BBC Radio 4s Womans Hour has ranked you the fifth-most influential woman in Britain.

I read your piece avidly because I, as a long-time advocate of Scottish independence, am anxious to see a resolution of the present constitutional crisis. A resolution that is both peaceful and equitable to all the constituent nations of the United Kingdom, including England.

My concern is that the UK Parliament is now acting like an English nationalist administration as you yourself admit. As a result, the political and economic future of these islands in their totality has become increasingly problematic. It is a time for wise heads and cool reflection all round.

Sadly, on reading your article, I find that you as an influential member of the British governing elite (nothing pejorative intended) are desperately ignorant of the drivers of independence in Scotland. Also, your analysis of the solutions to the present constitutional imbroglio are I do not mean to be polemical extraordinarily facile, given the gravity of the situation. Please let me explain.

I start with your opening statement that as a half-Scot, I have sympathy with the desire to assert distinct identities. I know you are trying to define common ground in this discussion but in fact you have utterly failed to understand that the demand for Scottish self-government is not and never has been centred on the issue of personal identity. Rather, the issue is about better governance, democracy, and the right of Scotland to decide its own path.

At heart, this is a debate about the over-centralisation and increasingly English-oriented nature of the UK political system. With a majority of Scots now supporting forming their own state, it is the undemocratic refusal of the Johnson administration to accept another referendum that has brought matters to a head not the psychological preferences of individuals living north of Hadrians Wall.

READ MORE:Efforts to create an idea of British Unionism shows the Union is 'under threat'

This is only compounded by the inability of influential people in the Unionist camp such as yourself to accept that the problem originates in the dysfunctional nature of the UK constitution and its obsolete parliamentary structures. This includes the House of Lords in which you sit (unelected) as Baroness Cavendish of Little Venice.

I might add, if you will forgive me, that your own understanding of how the UK constitution present operates is somewhat lacking, especially for a Harvard fellow in governance. You claim: Devolution is lopsided with Scottish and Welsh MPs voting on English matters. Surely you cannot have forgotten that in October 2015 the Conservatives used their majority to change the House of Commons standing orders to exclude MPs from Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish constituencies from voting on English-only matters (as defined by the Speaker). English votes for English matters is now standard.

This change has had serious constitutional consequences. Rather than create a devolved English legislative chamber, the Westminster Parliament now doubles as the English Parliament. Inevitably, Commons business is dominated by the health, education, transport and community ministers of England pretending to speak for the nation.

Hours of parliamentary time are taken up with English-only matters. Representatives of the other three nations are reduced to frustrated bystanders.

One obvious solution from the Unionist perspective is a move to an explicitly federal system, with a distinct English Parliament. You could even site such a parliament beyond the Red Wall.

Yet I note that you, Baroness Cavendish, are utterly opposed to federalism. You reason that federation would be unworkable as England possesses eight out of 10 UK citizens and an even higher proportion of GDP.

Again, forgive me, but your grasp of the mechanics of federation seems weak, given your Boston location. In a federation, the individual states have internal jurisdiction over agreed matters. The fact that California has a population 10 times that of Connecticut is irrelevant as they both do their own thing.

In matters reserved to the federal level, we can discount any economic or population bias by giving each constituent state the same representation. California elects two members of the Senate, as does Connecticut and every other one of the 50 US states.

Here we come to the nub of the long-standing Unionist opposition to federalism in the UK. Introducing genuine federalism would put England and English interests (chiefly economic) on an equal footing with those of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland and that will never do.

READ MORE:England is finally waking up to the fact that the Union is in peril

Subconsciously or otherwise, the English establishment views itself as the dominant power. At least, Baroness Cavendish, you have the honesty to admit that.

Which brings us to your own suggestion for a solution to The Scottish Question. You propose a new Act of Union which will define the UK as a unitary state with suitable powers devolved and with due respect for each nations identity. You say this would limit Downing Streets ability to make ad hoc changes to suit itself.

That is, of course, utter nonsense because a simple one-line bill commanding a simple majority will always override any previous legislation, as we have seen with the Fixed-term Parliaments Act. Besides, I note you want any new Act of Union to set a higher bar for referendums. Effectively, you are proposing a new prison of the nations.

Your proposal is cosmetic at best. SNP MPs would vote against it, meaning that it was imposed against the wishes of the majority of Scottish elected representatives. How, Baroness Cavendish, does that strengthen your precious Union? From day one the legislation would lack democratic legitimacy north of the Border. But there is an even more troublesome implication.

READ MORE:A different class: Darren McGarvey's BBC show breaks TV's unstated barriers

Imposing a new Act of Union on Northern Ireland is very probably in breach of the Good Friday Agreement which defines Northern Irelands status as partly in the UK and partly (constitutionally and economically) a constituent component of the whole island of Ireland. Forcing through a new Act of Union would likely trigger a fresh border poll, which Sinn Fein might win.

Worse, such meddling with the status quo in Northern Ireland could produce a dangerous backlash. And dont think that excluding Northern Ireland from the legislation would help. That would send the DUP into orbit and negate the logic of the whole project.

You finish by saying the SNPs attacks show the emptiness of their case. But how can you ever pretend to negotiate a serious modernisation of the Union when you start by dismissing your opponents case as empty. So empty, in fact, that a majority of the Scottish electorate have been won to it.

Baroness Cavendish: why not embrace the independence of the nations of the British Archipelago and let England stand on its own two feet. That and that alone is how we will create a new era of friendship and co-operation in these islands.

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Mars rover could answer questions here on Earth – The Union Leader

Posted: at 2:33 pm

Did life ever exist on Mars? Are we alone? Are we special?

Those are the questions a Dartmouth College researcher has been thinking about as she eagerly awaits new data and images from NASAs Perseverance rover, which landed on the red planet last Thursday.

Marisa Palucis, an assistant professor in the department of earth sciences, is a geomorphologist. I look at landscapes and think about how they evolved over time as a function of climate or tectonics, she explained.

For her, what makes Mars fascinating is its similarity to early Earth. Before Earth was teeming with life, before Earth had trees and dinosaurs were roaming around, it would have looked a lot like Mars, she said.

Mars today is very cold and dry, she said, but scientists believe that billions of years ago, the planet had rivers, lakes, volcanoes, perhaps even an ocean. But whereas Earth developed life and is what we know it as today, Mars didnt go that route, she said. So I think thats really fun to study the planet that was potentially very much like our own, at least early on.

In 2012, when she was a graduate student, Palucis was among the scientists gathered at NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California to watch the Curiosity rover land safely on Mars. I just remember watching grown men around me crying, she said.

Last Thursday, Palucis felt a similar rush of pride and excitement watching alone in her Dartmouth office as Perseverance stuck the landing on Mars.

She was part of a worldwide scientific community that weighed in on 60 potential locations for the rover to land. NASA selected the Jezero Crater, which scientists believe was once home to an ancient river delta.

That was Palucis first choice for Perseverance to explore.

Crater lakes are her specialty. Thats why Im so excited about this particular landing site, she said. It was clearly an ancient lake.

Her field research has taken her to such extreme environments as the Arctic and Death Valley. We go to really cold places or really dry places, basically places that have some aspects of Mars associated with them, she said.

Palucis investigates features such as water flow and sedimentary deposits. By studying them in the field, I use that to try to understand how they evolve over time, and that understanding helps me understand how they would have worked on Mars.

Until now, Mars rover missions have focused on the presence of water. We know that water is so important to life on Earth so we wanted to see: was there liquid water on the surface of Mars, she said.

The Curiosity rover, which continues to explore Mars, proved there were indeed large lakes that lasted for potentially millions of years, she said. Now Perseverance will be looking for evidence of life.

The Jezero crater that Perseverance will explore is an ancient lake with preserved deposits similar to the Mississippi Delta, she said. If youre looking for evidence of life, Palucis said, A great place to look would be a delta, where you have basically water meeting land, so you have the fresh inputs of nutrients.

Scientists hope to find evidence of fossilized microbes. But even if life didnt evolve on Mars, scientists want to learn whether there were precursors to life, Palucis said.

These are not just theoretical questions for scientists such as Palucis. Understanding the past is the key to the future, she said. Being able to really understand what it takes for life to emerge, or how does a planet deal with climate as its changing?

Mars is a whole other laboratory, a whole other set of parameters we have at our disposal, she said. The more we understand about that, the more we understand about our planet and how it works.

The Perseverance mission has four objectives: identifying past environments that would have been capable of supporting microbial life; seeking signs of that life; collecting core rock and soil samples that will eventually be returned to Earth; and testing oxygen production from the Martian atmosphere.

Perseverance carries an instrument called MOXIE (Mars Oxygen In-Situ Resource Utilization Experiment), which is tasked with producing oxygen from the carbon dioxide-rich Martian atmosphere. According to NASA.gov, MOXIE makes oxygen like a tree does. It inhales carbon dioxide and exhales oxygen.

If liquid oxygen propellant could be manufactured on Mars, that fuel could be used to return Martian samples to Earth, and even to generate fuel to maintain a colony there someday.

Palucis doesnt have to wait for the samples to be returned to Earth. For her, the images that Perseverance is already sending home reveal important data about sediments and water transport on the planet that will advance her research.

But those Martian rock cores will help other scientists understand how long the planet remained wet and why it dried up, she said. We care about climate change on Earth, and Mars had this epic climate change, she said.

I do think its a worthwhile thing to study so we can make hard decisions about our own planet and how we treat it.

Its easy for a lay person to anthropomorphize these rovers that have been exploring Mars on their own for decades now. Palucis admits she does the same.

I definitely think of them as little robotic geologists, she said.

So when two previous Mars rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, stopped transmitting, Palucis felt the sadness of loss. They died on Mars, she said. It does feel like they went there to learn and do all of these things for us. And I know theyre just robots but at the same time, its hard not to think of them as more.

After the past year of pandemic and economic hardship, Perseverances successful landing on Mars is something to celebrate, Palucis said. It gives us something as a society and as Americans to be really proud of, she said. And to remind ourselves that were explorers, and were curious.

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Nasa to reveal stunning first footage of Mars Perseverance rover touching down on the Red Planet – The Sun

Posted: at 2:33 pm

NASA will today reveal footage of its Perseverance Mars rover touching down on the Red Planet.

The $2.4billion robot landed last week after enduring "seven minutes of terror" as it plunged through the Martian atmosphere.

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The six-wheeled rover is Nasa's most complex mission to the planet's dusty surface yet, sporting 19 cameras and seven scientific instruments.

Over the next two years, it will scan Martian rock for signs of alien life and carry out tests that are key to future manned missions to the planet.

At 7pm GMT (2pm ET) on Monday, Nasa will reveal what is the first rover landing footage ever captured on another world.

The video was recorded from the rover itself as it was lowered to the surface of Mars by a spacecraft that assisted with the landing.

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You can watch the unveiling for free on Nasa's YouTube channel.

"Now that @NASAPersevere landed, we'll release first-of-its-kind footage from the rover's descent and landing after entering Mars' atmosphere," Nasa officials wrote in a Twitter update on Saturday.

The footage will show the robot dangling on nylon cables as it was delicately lowered into the Jezero crater last week.

Nasa shared a sneak peak of the clip last week when they released a photo Perseverance suspended above Mars from its rocket-powered skycrane.

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It was filmed at the end of Perseverance's seven-minute landing, during which it hit speeds of 12,000mph.

"The moment that my team dreamed of for years, now a reality. Dare mighty things," Nasa wrote in a post to the Perseverance Twitter account.

"This shot from a camera on my 'jetpack' captures me in midair, just before my wheels touched down."

Perseverance is now sending data back to Earth via the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft.

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It takes photos, videos and other information roughly 11 minutes to travel through space to Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.

The nuclear battery-powered rover has landed at the edge of an ancient, long-vanished river delta and lake bed called the Jezero crater.

Its thought that the basin was once filled with water and may have been home to alien microbes billions of years ago.

If thats the case, traces of those microbes should still be present deep within the soil at Jezero a bit like how dinosaur bones remain in Earths soil today.

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The primary objective of Perseverances two-year mission - dubbed Mars 2020 - is to dig up soil samples that could contain all the proof we need that life grows on other planets.

In an interview ahead of the landing last week, Nasa Chief Scientist James Green laid out his hopes for the project.

"We want to search the past from the rock record to see if Mars could have supported life," he said on Neil DeGrasse Tyson's podcast, StarTalk.

"My secret wish is that we find it. We dont anticipate getting fossils, but there are potential cells or microbial indications that life could have survived on Mars in its early history."

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Perseverance - What's on board?

Perseverance boasts a total of 19 cameras and two microphones, and carries seven scientific instruments.

An X-ray ray gun that will help scientists investigate the composition of Martian rock.

2. Radar Imager for Mars' subsurface experiment (RIMFAX)

A ground-penetrating radar that will image buried rocks, meteorites, and even possible underground water sources up to a depth of 10 metres (33ft).

3. Mars Environmental Dynamics Analyzer (MEDA)

A bunch of sensors that will take readings of temperature, wind speed and direction, pressure, and other atmospheric conditions.

4. Mars Oxygen ISRU Experiment (MOXIE)

An experiment that will convert Martian carbon dioxide into oxygen. A scaled-up version could be used in future to provide Martian colonists with breathable air.

5. SuperCam

A suite of instruments for measuring the makeup of rocks and regolith at a distance

6. Mastcam-Z

A camera system capable of taking 3D images by combining two or more photos into one.

7. Scanning Habitable Environments with Raman and Luminescence for Organics and Chemicals (SHERLOC)

From Baker Street to Mars: Sherloc contains an ultraviolet laser that will investigate Martian rock for organic compounds.

Advanced power tools will drill samples from Martian rock and seal them into dozens of cigar-sized tubes for eventual return to Earth for further analysis.

Provided all goes to plan, they will be the first such specimens ever collected by humankind from the surface of another planet.

Two future missions to retrieve those samples and fly them back to Earth are in the planning stages by Nasa, in collaboration with the European Space Agency.

Another of the Mars missions headline experiments involves a small, drone helicopter named Ingenuity.

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Strapped to the bottom of Perseverance, the lightweight craft will attempt the first ever powered flight on Mars in the coming months.

If successful, the four-pound (1.8-kg) whirlybird could pave the way for low-altitude aerial surveillance of Mars during later missions.

Other key equipment on board the $2.2billion rover include two microphones that will capture the first audio recordings from the Martian surface, as well as a potentially groundbreaking experiment called Moxie.

Moxie (Mars Oxygen ISRU Experiment) is a small contraption housed in the belly of the rover that will convert a small amount of atmospheric carbon dioxide into oxygen.

Its a 1/200 scale test model of a design that may be used on Mars to provide future colonists with breathable air.

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In other news, you can catch up with all the latest on the Mars 2020 mission on ourPerseverance liveblog.

Space geekshave revealedstunning 4K footage of Mars captured by Nasas Curiosity rover.

And, Elon Musk has warned that humanitymay "self-extinguish"before we can colonise Mars.

What do you make of Nasa's Mars mission? Let us know in the comments!

We pay for your stories! Do you have a story for The Sun Online Tech & Science team? Email us at tech@the-sun.co.uk

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