Categories
Technology

The way forward for mobility: 5 site visitors traits to be careful for

The way we move is changing – and not just because we can actually move again as the coronavirus pandemic subsides. Transportation is changing around the world thanks to new breakthrough technologies that promise to revolutionize the way we travel.

Whether planes, trains or automobiles – here are some of the key trends shaping the present – and future – of transport as we know it.

Autonomous vehicles

When talking about the future of mobility, no technology sums up expectations better than autonomous vehicles. Dismissed as impossible by experts less than two decades ago, today self-driving cars have covered tens of millions of kilometers, most of them on public roads. Big players in this space are split between tech companies like Alphabet (through its Waymo division) and China’s Baidu and traditional auto companies like General Motors and BMW. Some companies, like Tesla, are a mix of both.

Fully autonomous self-driving cars are still not for sale, but don’t be fooled by the fact that interest or research has waned. Self-driving vehicles are a challenge for several reasons: Technologically, in terms of social acceptance and from a regulatory perspective. While some evangelists who thought these problems had now been resolved need to revise their optimism, things are clearly going in the right direction – although there have certainly been some setbacks along the way.

Everything revolves around electrification

Rising customer demand and increased government emphasis and regulation have meant that electrification has gained significant momentum in recent years. Don’t expect this to slow down either. According to the World Economic Forum, electric car registrations rose 41% in 2020, although global auto sales fell 16%. The ramp-up of electric vehicles can be seen in the United States, Europe and China, the three largest auto markets in the world – with China remaining the leading electric vehicle market.

An electric vehicle plugged into a garage socket.

In a world increasingly focused on sustainability, the mass adoption of electric vehicles could cut emissions by more than a third globally by 2030, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA). In total, there are more than 11 million electric vehicles registered on the streets, which is roughly the size of New York and Los Angeles combined.

As countries like Sweden and Israel test custom roads that charge vehicles’ batteries as they drive over them, EV charging should also become easier. This would solve a major bottleneck.

Technologies in the car

AI is making the way cars move smarter, but the in-car experience is also changing. And not just because the dashboard now has more and more beautiful Tesla-style tablets. Affective Computing Company Affectiva is one of several companies working on interior sensing to analyze what is happening inside the vehicle. That could mean using cameras and sensors to detect when a driver is tired or distracted, warn when a child has been left behind, or just analyze who is in the car and offer personalized entertainment.

Model of what augmented reality could look like in a car.Envisics

Meanwhile, companies like Envisics are building headset-free in-car holography systems that can provide the driver with augmented reality HUD technology on the windshield that is comparable to the technology typically used in jet fighters or airliners. Innovations like these can provide contextual information about the road while driving.

A recent crowdsourced, lidar-based research project adds another twist to that by promising to give every car on the road an X-ray. Until fully autonomous cars become widespread (and even then for entertainment reasons), this technology will help determine the future of road vehicles. Of course, not every vehicle can be found on the road.

Flying cars

Flying cars have been promised for decades – to the point that their mythical status was the subject of a hilarious (and linguistically NSFW) short by Clerks director Kevin Smith. But here in 2021 they are certainly not quite as science fiction as they used to be.

A drone-based flying taxi in the air.Ehang

The New York Times has compared the rise (no pun intended) of flying car startups to the journey of autonomous vehicles, “from huge ambitions to multi-billion dollar investments to breakneck corporate competition, including a high profile lawsuit for alleged intellectual property theft. It also restores the tremendous hype. ”That hype and some impressive technological advances see to it that they are now raking in a lack of capital from avid investors.

Bloomberg recently reported on how “Airlines plan to put billions in flying taxis”. To get a glimpse of some of the big names and most exciting projects in the field, check out our roundup here.

Other futuristic modes of transport

Not only private means of transport are currently experiencing a revolution. Common forms of mass transit are also experiencing upheaval – be it the next generation of supersonic jets, giant 40-seater drone buses, or even Elon Musk’s bold claim that Space X’s Starship could carry passengers back and forth in less than two cities around the world – one Hour.

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Categories
Health

Indonesia’s health-care employees battling a ‘double burden’: NGO

A medical staff member checks on Covid-19 coronavirus patients at a hospital’s intensive care unit ward in Bogor on June 18, 2021, as Indonesia’s Covid-19 coronavirus infection rate soars.

Aditya Aji | AFP | Getty Images

Medical workers in Indonesia are grappling with the pressure of caring for Covid-19 patients while quickly vaccinating the country’s residents as infections increase, according to a global health and humanitarian relief organization.

“Health care workers in Indonesia are struggling with a double burden,” said Edhie Rahmat, executive director for Indonesia at Project HOPE, short for Health Opportunities for People Everywhere.

First, they have to take care of both Covid patients and patients with other diseases. Second, they are “under pressure to rapidly cover a high number of populations that need to be vaccinated,” he told CNBC in an email.

Total infections crossed the 2 million threshold on Monday, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. More than 55,594 people have died of Covid-19 in Indonesia. Meanwhile, around 8.9% of Indonesia’s population has received at least one dose of a Covid vaccine, and 4.6% of the country is fully vaccinated, according to Our World in Data.

The longer the pandemic lasts and the higher the caseload builds, (it) will impact their workload and make them vulnerable to transmission and infection.

Edhie Rahmat

Executive director for Indonesia at Project HOPE

“The longer the pandemic lasts and the higher the caseload builds, will impact their workload and make them vulnerable to transmission and infection,” he said, noting that there are limited beds in intensive care units and a lack of good quality personal protective equipment in the country.

Nearly 980 health-care staff have died from Covid-19, according to data from LaporCovid-19.

Medical workers are also at risk of developing mental health problems such as anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, Rahmat said.

“Most health care workers in Indonesia do not have the experience to deal with long-term crisis situations like this,” Project HOPE’s emergency response specialist for Southeast Asia, Yogi Mahendra, said in a statement.

Increase in cases

Indonesia’s coronavirus cases have spiked in recent weeks following the Eid holiday in May.

“Most Indonesians, regardless of their religion, enjoy this gathering and celebrate with lots of food, handshaking and talking,” said Rahmat.

Authorities announced tighter restrictions in 29 infection hot spots this week, in a bid to contain the spread of the virus, Reuters reported.

In these so-called “red zones,” religious activities at places of worship have been suspended, while restaurants, cafes and malls can only operate at 25% capacity, Reuters said.

The country’s most populous island, Java, has been hit hardest by the second wave, Rahmat said.

He also noted that some vaccinated health-care workers have come down with Covid-19, pointing to a report from an official in the district of Kudus, who said 350 such cases have been detected.

“We also received a report of a midwife dying in the district next to Kudus and two doctors died in the same period in different districts,” he said.

Even if medical workers have mild symptoms, they need to be isolated for 10 days and cannot work in the hospitals at a time when cases are “rocketing,” he added.

“This is a serious issue and may ruin the health system,” said Rahmat.

Categories
Science

Replace on the predictions of warmth waves within the northwestern USA – watts with that?

Reposted from the Cliff Mass Weather Blog

June 24, 2021

Incredible temperatures are predicted and now there is high confidence that they will occur

There are two possibilities:

  • The northwest is about to experience one of the most incredible weather situations in many decades
  • There is a major flaw in virtually all of our weather forecasting systems

In all fairness, I am a bit shocked when I look at the raw predictions of the model or the statistically calibrated versions of its results. The predicted event is so extreme and beyond expectations that my natural inclination is to reject it.

But I can not. Multiple modeling systems do essentially the same thing. Large ensembles of many predictions show similar solutions from most runs.

Let me show you the latest.

Proximity to the water will be a major issue, and to get that right, high-resolution forecasting is important. So let me start by presenting the latest in high resolution UW simulations. The situation is so extreme that I had the colors changed to better define high temperatures.

Saturday is transition day. Temperatures at 5:00 p.m., near the time of the maxima, will exceed 100 ° C in large parts of the Columbia Basin and in the northern Willamette Valley (e.g. Portland). The 1990s will invade the interior of southwest Washington and southern Puget Sound. Warm but typical of the hottest days of a typical year.

Sunday is different. Temperatures in the Willamette Valley rise above 108F, as do the lower elevations of the Columbia Valley. Incredibly, some areas south of the Olympic Mountains reach over 104. Can you imagine the temperature gradients near the coast?… from the 60s to over 100F in a few kilometers? In central Puget Sound, temperatures near the water rise from the 80s to the upper 90s a few miles inland.

And now Monday at 2 p.m. The model resolution is a little lower, but the solution is absolutely amazing. Temperatures in excess of 108F are found in and near the western foothills of the Cascade, thanks to the warming easterly current that descends the barrier. 104F and above from the water around Puget Sound. It’s getting incredibly warm in the Fraser River Valley too.

If that prediction confirms that virtually every major observation site in western WA and inland Oregon will hit its all-time temperature record. And in several of these places there are observations that go back 70-120 years.
Later on Monday, the ocean air will move in along the coast, resulting in Tuesday being a little cooler west of the Cascade Ridge (see 5:00 p.m. Tuesday temperatures below). But it’ll be showtime for the Columbia Basin, where the model is aiming for temperatures above 112 F. It is not unthinkable that some places in east Washington will hit or exceed the all-time temperature record for the state (118 F).

The highly skilled model of the European Center – completely different in every respect (different data assimilation, different model, different developers) – follows the same story.
For Sunday 111F in Portland and 103 in Seattle.

And for Monday at 2 p.m. a world-shattering 108F in Seattle. You can see the cooling down (orange colors) on Monday afternoon.

Let me say it again: the ensembles of many forecasts show that there is a high probability that this solution is the preferred one. The National Weather Service’s most advanced statistical post-processing system (the National Blend of Models), which combines many forecasts in an optimal way, is now up for 101F on Sunday and 104F on Monday at SeaTac Airport:

And in Portland: 101F on Friday, 105F on Saturday, 112 on Sunday, and 108F on Monday.

Finally, some people have asked about the role of global warming in this event. Is global warming contributing to this heatwave? The answer is definitely yes. If it weren’t for global warming, we would have had a record heatwave. The answer is also yes.
Our region has warmed up to 1-2F in the past fifty years and that will add to the heat wave. The rise in CO2 is probably the largest contributor to warming
Keep in mind, however, that the temperature anomalies (differences from normal) will reach 30-35 ° F during this event. The immediate cause of this event is a huge / sustained high pressure ridge that is part of a highly anomalous amplification of the upper level wave pattern.
There is no evidence that such a wave pattern is anything other than natural variability (I have researched and published in the peer-reviewed literature on the exact same subject).
So without global warming, a place with 104F would have been 102F. Still a violent heat wave, just a little less intense.

Let me conclude with the golden rule of temperature extremes: the greater the temperature extreme, the SMALLER the contribution from global warming. Think about it.
PLEASE do not send me any emails or comments accusing me of helping “deniers” or calling me names of all kinds. I had enough of that from 350 Seattle activists and Charles Mudede from Seattle Stranger. I’ve spent my life working on weather forecasting and studying northwest weather, trying to get the best science across, whether or not it fits some people’s political agendas.

_________________________________________________

The new edition of My Book: The Weather of the Pacific Northwest will be released in August

The book contains new chapters on Northwest Forest Fire Meteorology and British Columbia Weather, and the rest of the book has been greatly expanded. It can be pre-ordered from Amazon.

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Sport

Eight retro helmets to sit up for following the most recent NFL rule change

The NFL may not be synonymous with “No Fun League” much longer.

The league has relaxed some of its stricter rules in recent years, and in the 2022 season teams will no longer have to adhere to the one-helmet rule. Teams can have an alternate helmet that players can wear in games.

The second helmets can be combined with Alternate, Throwback and Color Rush jerseys. This gives each team the flexibility to combine their uniform combinations throughout the season.

This appears to be a win for the NFL as fans will see some of their favorite throwback helmets in game promotions. SN is most excited to see these eight once the 2022 season is over.

PHOTOS: SN ranks the throwback uniforms

Buccaneers

We have to start with the obvious. The Buccaneers’ orange Creamsicle jersey might be the best throwback jersey in the NFL, and the helmet is definitely the best of them all.

The red and orange buccaneer on a white helmet is a great logo that is affectionately called “Bucco Bruce”. It’ll be a lot of fun to see the Tom Brady on the side of his head – assuming the veteran quarterback is still playing in 2022.

Tampa Bay owner Joel Glazer had long spearheaded the push to change the rules of recidivism.

“When it comes to setbacks, we’re always on the league’s doorstep trying to get them to move so we can carry our setbacks,” Glazer told Pewter Report. “We’re not there yet. But there are discussions and hopefully that will happen at some point in the future. I know how popular they are with our fans.”

So it’s safe to say that the Buccaneers will be one of the teams that suffer early and often setbacks once the new helmet rules are in place.

Patriots

Like the Bucs, the Patriots have a solid throwback helmet with a white base and a mascot that doubles as a logo. “Pat the Patriot” may not be as iconic as Bucco Bruce, but of course it’s more interesting than the “Flying Elvis” that currently graces the side of New England helmets.

The Patriots had more success with the Flying Elvis than Pat the Patriot, but fans would likely welcome a return to the red alternatives and classic helmets. You will surely wonder if Mac Jones will be wearing one in ’22 as he wants to step forward as Brady’s successor.

MORE: Madden 22’s early rendering of Mac Jones doesn’t look anything like him

Eagle

There isn’t much difference between the Eagles helmets of new and old. Both have a wing on each side and a green background.

But the shades of green are very different. The newer helmets are midnight green and the older helmets are kelly green. The kelly green stands out and makes for a uniquely bright, uniform combination that fans would love to see again.

Randall Cunningham wore Kelly Green to his Eagles days. Maybe Jalen Hurts would look like a mini Cunningham in these jerseys – if he can develop as a passer.

(Getty Images)

Hawks

The Falcons changed their uniforms ahead of the 2020 season. They largely butchered what was one of the NFL’s smoother jersey designs, ending up as the fourth worst team in the NFL.

Coincidence? Probably, but it wouldn’t hurt to give the 2022 throwback helmet a chance if the team’s losers continue in 2021.

The Falcons have a sharp looking red helmet with a black Falcons logo on the side. It would offer more pop than their current helmets, which have a black base with a red, black, and white Falcons logo.

Denver Broncos

The Broncos have increasingly switched to orange jerseys in recent years to honor the Orange Crush defense, but they still wear dark blue helmets. Orange and blue are complementary colors, but the dark blue makes the uniforms a little less prominent.

Few would complain if the team switched to their old-fashioned baby blue helmets for a handful of games. The logo on them is pretty cool.

These are @Bronco’s coldest helmets … but what’s that color called? Baby blue NC blue? Light Blue? Powder blue? I’m trying to find gear in this color. But when I type “baby blue” it only shows pacifiers and bibs pic.twitter.com/VyOh2r6oo4

– Black Prez (@BlackPrez) June 28, 2019

Sea hawks

The Seahawks completely redesigned their jerseys and helmets in 2012. The move came after Nike took over the NFL’s jersey manufacturing contract from Reebok.

While the modern Seahawks jerseys are sharper and better than the old ones, the silver helmet the team wore before the move has a certain charm.

The green-eyed Seahawk would look great on Russell Wilson’s head and the unique blue face mask would help differentiate the helmet from other setbacks.

(Getty Images)

Dolphins

Miami’s kit colors are elite and represent the South Florida region well. The dolphin with a helmet that jumped out of the sea into the sun always had something charming about it.

With all due respect to the newer dolphin on Miami’s helmet, we’d love to see our old friend return for a few games each season, if only to give us visions of Dan Marino gracing the field.

Bengal

The Bengals don’t really have a good throwback helmet. They have been using the striped helmet since the 1980s. Why did you make the list? They have the option to make their own alternative helmet instead of using a traditional kickback.

Some have suggested a white and black look. The zebra look with a white Color Rush jersey could be a nice alternative pairing.

That would be pretty cool. Either way, it’s interesting to imagine what the creative team behind one of the best helmets in the NFL can come up with.

Newer expansion teams like the Panthers, Jaguars, and Texans will also endure watching, as they have no traditional setbacks and are free to make their own.

Categories
Science

Subsequently, Mars colonists will want to have an environment above them

For future colonists on Mars, there will be all sorts of risks, such as extreme weather and temperature conditions, radiation, and the human physiological problems associated with life under reduced gravity. But another problem means that colonists on Mars have to keep a constant lookout over their heads.

While Mars and Earth are regularly hit by space debris – dust, small rocks, and larger meteorites – meteors on our planet usually evaporate in the atmosphere.

“On Mars, on the other hand, the impactors usually make it to the surface with a surface pressure of 1/100 that of Earth,” says the team of the HiRISE camera of the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO).

A small impact crater on Mars that has formed over the past 5 years as seen by the HiRISE camera of the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. Photo credit: NASA / JPL / UArizona.

HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment) aboard MRO captured this image of a small impact crater that has formed sometime in the past 5 years. Although the crater is small, the ejection jets ejected by the impact are easy to spot and extend for nearly a kilometer.

How often does this happen on Mars? A 2013 study estimated that the Red Planet is washed by more than 200 small asteroids or comet pieces each year, forming craters at least 3.9 meters (12.8 feet) in diameter. As on Earth, even a small impact would devastate any Martian settlement. But impacts of this size on Mars are more common.

Related: What does it take to feed a million people on Mars?

Mars is roughly half the size of Earth in diameter, and the thinner air surrounding the planet has an atmospheric volume less than 1% of the Earth’s volume. The atmospheric composition also differs significantly: mainly based on carbon dioxide, while the earth is rich in nitrogen and oxygen.

MRO has been in orbit around Mars since 2006, and one of the benefits of having a spacecraft orbiting another planet for several years is the ability to make long-term observations and interpretations. HiRISE images have discovered numerous “fresh” craters that have formed over the years, and since multiple regions on Mars have been repeatedly imaged, scientists can examine the before-and-after images to calculate the rate of impact based on new craters .

A 2010 image of ice excavated on Mars following a recent meteorite impact. Image from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter’s High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera. Photo credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / Univ. from Arizona

The 2013 study showed that the frequency with which new craters at least 3.9 meters in diameter form on any area of ​​the Martian surface per year is roughly the same as that of the US state of Texas.

Just one more thing that will be a challenge for anyone who dares to live on Mars.

See the original image and more details of MRO on the HiRISE website.

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Entertainment

Judi Dench’s grandson was saved from a fan mob by Ed Sheeran Save

When it comes to resemblance Ed Sheeran, Judi Dench‘s 23 year old grandson looks perfect.

Indeed, Samuel Williams is such a close double of Sheeran that fans of the four-time Grammy winner mistook him for the “Shape of You” singer and urged him for photos, according to a new report in The Sun.

“I was in the crowd at one of his shows and a lot of people wanted their photo with me and it got really close,” Williams said of the strange encounter. “People jumped around and jumped over to take a picture.”

The redhead tried to reassure them that he wasn’t who they thought he was.

Fortunately, Sheeran saved the day (working with his team) and helped Williams get out of the crowd. When Williams met Sheeran afterward, he stated that he was responsible for dispatching the cavalry in the form of his security guard: “He said, ‘Oh yeah, I sent him out. You needed the help.”

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Sport

School World Sequence 2021 – A pitch away from going dwelling, Vanderbilt miraculously saved its season

OMAHA, Neb. — They were one pitch away from going home. Bottom of the batting order. Vanderbilt coach Tim Corbin scanned the dugout Wednesday night and decided to pinch hit Spencer Jones, who had just 87 at-bats all season, who, less than a year ago, was undergoing Tommy John surgery.

“The one thing about Spencer,” Corbin said, “[Is] you’re going to get a good heartbeat because he contains himself very well. He’s very present in what’s going on.”

Despite the fact that Stanford ace Brendan Beck was cruising, retiring eight straight batters, six of them on strikeouts, Jones was confident. The 6-foot-7, 225-pound utility player turned to teammate Enrique Bradfield Jr., who was batting behind him, and promised that he’d get on base and give Bradfield one more chance to save the Commodores’ season.

A few minutes later, Jones was crossing the plate and eventually shirtless, wildly celebrating Vanderbilt’s 6-5 walkoff victory over Stanford.

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It was one of the more memorable finishes in recent College World Series history, and it gave new life to the Commodores, who came to Omaha with the glitz of two high first-round draft pick pitchers, but stayed alive with five lesser-known hurlers and bats that came alive after a fiery speech in the dugout from Corbin. After the Commodores fell behind 4-0, the veteran coach laid into his players in the fourth inning following three errors and another misplayed ball.

“We know we played pretty much the worst baseball in four innings, both sides of the ball,” Bradfield said. “It was just about regrouping, getting back to what we know we could do.

“Going into the ninth, we all knew we could do it. We’ve done some crazy things this year, down in the last inning, two outs.”

Down to their last strike and trailing 5-4, eight-hole hitter Javier Vaz walked, then Jones ran out an infield single, and shortstop Adam Crampton’s errant throw allowed Vaz to reach third. Bradfield singled to right to tie the game and Beck, the Cardinal ace who was pitching on three days’ rest, showed signs of fatigue. A pitch squirted out of his hand and sailed over catcher Kody Huff’s head, and Jones scored to put the 47-16 Commodores into Friday’s Bracket 1 final against North Carolina State.

Stanford, which turned to Beck in the seventh inning, gathered along the right-field line long after the game was over, hugging and not wanting to leave. Beck, the Pac-12 pitcher of the year, was so dominant for 2 2/3 innings. Vaz worked a 3-2 count before his walk.

Brendan Beck was dominant for 2 2/3 innings before Vanderbilt stormed back. AP Photo/Rebecca S. Gratz

“That’s what happens here at Omaha sometimes,” Stanford coach David Esquer said. “You get in those late innings and sometimes you have those magical endings for one team or another. And, hey, zero regrets on our side.

“Hats off to Vanderbilt for staying with it and creating that inning out of nothing against an unbelievable pitcher. So when you’re able to do that against a pitcher like Brendan Beck, you’ve earned that win. And so I congratulate them. But I feel for Brendan.”

The Commodores did not turn to their one-two pitching punch of Jack Leiter and Kumar Rocker. They knew they’d have to get to Friday to see Rocker, the fireball-throwing righty. In somewhat of a surprise, Corbin started Christian Little, a 17-year-old freshman who reclassified in 2020 and arrived on campus in January.

Little lasted three innings but his defense did him no favors, committing two errors in the first inning. Little was visibly frustrated by the developments, and Vanderbilt coach Scott Brown tried to allay his frustrations, telling him to let it go.

In the fourth inning, Nick Maldonado came in and quieted Stanford’s bats, allowing one run in three innings. Around that time, Corbin delivered his dugout speech.

“It was just a moment,” he said. “I don’t typically talk to them during the course of the game. But I thought that there were some moments. I went out to the mound to change pitchers, and I didn’t think the eyes looked good. And when I came back in, Browny said the same thing. So just didn’t want to go down — if we were going to lose, we’re going to lose playing aggressively and I just didn’t think we were.

“It was more of a challenge than anything else. First of all, I don’t like doing that. And, second of all, it’s their game. It’s theirs to win or lose, and you don’t ever want to interfere. But at the same time I didn’t feel like they were playing like themselves and we needed to snap out of it. And I’m not saying that discussion had anything to do with what happened. But at that point we just needed to snap out of whatever fog we were in because we were not playing like ourselves.”

Spencer Jones led Vanderbilt to one of the more memorable finishes in recent College World Series history. Bruce Thorson-USA TODAY Sports

Shortly after that, Dominic Keegan crushed a two-run home run to left field. Vanderbilt pulled within a run in the bottom of the sixth inning on Parker Noland’s RBI single but the next inning, Beck arrived and the Commodores’ bats were quiet. Until they were down to the last out.

The Commodores can reset now, with Rocker and Leiter available and the nerves of elimination possibly behind them. Rocker will face an NC State team that beat Vanderbilt 1-0 Monday, despite Leiter’s 15 strikeouts.

“We might not be the most talented team,” Corbin said, “but the thing that you can’t deny the kids is they are tough. They’re tough. And every time you challenge them, they come back. And I appreciate that. I appreciate they’re fighters.”

Categories
Health

You could know that

June 2021, people are standing in front of a vaccination center in Sydney as residents have largely been banned from leaving the city in order to stop a growing outbreak of the highly contagious Delta-Covid-19 variant in other regions.

SAEED KHAN | AFP | Getty Images

The “Delta variant” dominated the headlines after it was discovered in India, where it sparked an extreme spike in Covid-19 cases before spreading around the world.

But now a mutation of this variant has emerged, known as “Delta plus”, which worries global experts.

India has named Delta Plus a “worrying variant” and there are fears that it could potentially be more transferable. In the UK, Public Health England noted in its most recent round-up that routine scanning of Covid cases in the country (where the Delta variant is now responsible for the bulk of new infections) found nearly 40 cases of the newer variant causing the spike- Protein mutation K417N, ie Delta plus.

It found that by June 16 there were also cases of the Delta Plus variant in the United States (83 cases at the time the report was published last Friday), as well as in Canada, India, Japan, Nepal, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Switzerland and Turkey.

India third wave?

As is common with all viruses, the coronavirus has mutated repeatedly since its appearance in China at the end of 2019. As the pandemic progressed, a handful of variants have emerged that have altered the communicability, risk profile, and even symptoms of the virus.

Read more: The rapidly spreading Delta Covid variant could have different symptoms, experts say

Several of these varieties, such as the “Alpha” variety (formerly known as the “Kent” or “British” variety) and then the Delta variety, have become dominant varieties worldwide, hence the attention to Delta Plus.

The Indian Ministry of Health reportedly said on Wednesday that it had found around 40 cases of the Delta Plus variant with the K417N mutation. The ministry released a statement Tuesday saying that INSACOG, a consortium of 28 laboratories that are sequencing the virus in India during the pandemic, had told it that the Delta Plus variant had three properties of concern.

These are: increased transmissibility, stronger binding to receptors on lung cells, and the potential reduction in monoclonal antibody response (which could reduce the effectiveness of life-saving monoclonal antibody therapy in some hospitalized Covid patients).

The Indian Ministry of Health said it had alerted three states (Maharashtra, Kerala and Madhya Pradesh) after the Delta Plus variant was discovered in genome-sequenced samples from these areas.

The discovery of a variation on the Delta variant, largely blamed for India’s catastrophic second wave of cases, has raised fears that India is ill-prepared for a possible third wave. But some experts call for calm.

DR. Chandrakant Lahariya, A doctor, epidemiologist and vaccine and health systems expert based in New Delhi told CNBC on Thursday that while the government should remain vigilant on the progress of the variant, there is “no need to panic”.

“Epidemiologically, I have no reason to believe that ‘Delta plus’ is changing the current situation to accelerate or trigger the third wave,” he told CNBC via email.

“If we stick to the evidence currently available, Delta plus is not very different from the Delta variant. It’s the same Delta variant with an additional mutation. The only clinical difference we know of so far is that Delta plus some resistance to monoclonal antibody combination therapy. And that’s not much of a difference since the therapy itself is under investigation and few are suitable for this treatment. “

He advised the public to follow the Covid restrictions and get vaccinated as soon as possible. An analysis published last week by Public Health England showed that two doses of the Pfizer BioNTech or Oxford AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccines are highly effective against hospitalizations from the Delta variant.

The WHO has announced that it will be following the latest reports on a “Delta Plus” variant. “An additional mutation … has been identified,” said Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO technical director for Covid-19, at a briefing last week.

“In some of the Delta variants, we saw one less mutation or one deletion instead of an additional one, so let’s look at everything.”

Categories
Science

Methods to evaluate right now to the previous – Watts Up With That?

By Andy May

In the last post, I discussed the problems comparing modern instrumental global or hemispheric average temperatures to the past. Ocean temperature coverage was sparse and of poor quality prior to 2005. Prior to 1950, land (29% of the surface) measurements were also sparse and of poor quality. Only proxy temperatures are available before thermometers were invented, but, again, these are sparse and poorly calibrated prior to 1600. So how can we compare modern temperatures to the distant past? We can’t do it globally or hemispherically, the past data are too poor or too sparse or both. Why not pick the best proxies and compute comparable modern temperatures to compare to the proxies at the specific proxy locations? It is easier to lessen resolution than to increase it.

Rosenthal, et al.’s temperature reconstruction, plotted in Figure 1, shows ~500-meter temperatures from the “Indonesian Throughflow” (Rosenthal, Linsley, & Oppo, 2013). Their data are from sediment cores taken in the Makassar Strait east of Borneo Island. This strait is a portion of the main connection between the Indian, Southern and Pacific Oceans. Its temperature is reflective of the temperature of significant portions of these three large water masses at 500 meters.

Rosenthal, et al. used an Mg/Ca (Magnesium/Calcium ratio) proxy from benthic foraminifers to estimate the 500-meter temperatures and they claim a temperature accuracy of ±0.7°C. Dating was done using radiocarbon (14C) and is probably no better than ±50 years. The radiocarbon dating was checked using distinctive volcanic ash layers and lead isotope dates (210Pb).

The fossils and shells studied by Rosenthal and his colleagues are from a bottom-dwelling foraminifer that lives at about 500 meters depth in the strait. Sea level varied over his study period, but he has corrected for this. Five hundred meters is deep enough to be insulated from short-term weather fluctuations on the chaotic surface, but shallow enough to reflect longer-term surface climatic fluctuations. In addition, from the University of Hamburg we have an accurate modern temperature for the period from about 2006-2016, at 500 meters, of about 7.7°C, this modern temperature is identified on the plot with a red box. Rosenthal’s reconstruction only goes back to 7100 BC and has a resolution of 20 years to 30 BC, and 50 years before then.

Figure 1. Rosenthal, et al.’s Indonesian throughway temperature reconstruction at 500 meters. Click on the image or here for a full-size image. Data source: (Rosenthal, Linsley, & Oppo, 2013).

Figure 1 represents ocean mixed layer and upper deep ocean temperatures in three major oceans. These oceans contain more heat capacity than the entire atmosphere. The reconstruction in Figure 1 illustrates the steady drop in surface temperatures since the Holocene Climatic Optimum, which ended about 6,000 years ago. The period of cooling after the Holocene Climatic Optimum is called the Neoglacial. Figure 1 suggests that the average temperature from 2006-2016 is quite normal, even cool, relative to the past 2,000 or 1,000 years, and before then. This temperature is only applicable to the Makassar Strait, but it is connected to three large oceans.

Several historical events are noted on the plot to show how civilization has been affected, at least in part, by the increasingly cooler temperatures. Historical events are important climatic indicators since they are accurately dated, and often indicate climate changes over large areas. The “Little Ice Age” or LIA, was a very cold and miserable time for humanity. It contributed to the Black Death Plague, the end of the Viking settlements in Greenland, and to the burning and persecution of witches and Jews in Europe, as they were often blamed for the cold weather (Behringer, 2010, pp. 98, 128). This is the “pre-industrial” weather the alarmists want us to return to, and without the benefits of fossil fuels. Welcome to Hell!

The Medieval Warm Period (MWP), The Roman Warm Period (RWP), and the Holocene Climatic Optimum are all warmer in the Makassar Strait than today. The Neoglacial cooling period, after the Climatic Optimum is well defined at this site.

Bo Christiansen and Fredrick Ljungqvist’s reconstruction of the past 2,000 years (Christiansen & Ljungqvist, 2012) is also important. As discussed in the previous post, they avoid spatial regression in their reconstruction to preserve as much climatic variability as possible. Their reconstruction is shown in Figure 2. It is only for the extra-tropical Northern Hemisphere. The red box, plotted at the year 2000, is the average extra-tropical Northern Hemisphere HadCRUT5 average temperature from 1970-2020. In this case it is meant to be compared to Christiansen and Ljungqvist’s 50-year smoothed reconstruction. The HadCRUT5 anomaly has been moved from the HadCRUT5 zero (1961-1990) to the 1880-1960 zero point used by Christiansen and Ljungqvist. “Extra-tropical” includes all HadCRUT5 5°x5° cells from 27.5°N to 87.5°N, ignoring null cells. The average HadCRUT5 cell temperature is area-weighted by latitude.

Figure 2. Christiansen and Ljungqvist extra-tropical Northern Hemisphere temperature reconstruction. Click on the image or here for a full-sized jpeg.

Just like in Figure 1, we did not try and expand the proxy record to more than it is meant to cover, we reduced HadCRUT5 to the area the proxy record covers. In this case the HadCRUT5 50-year average fits the proxy reconstruction well and is also roughly the same temperature as the MWP. The faint lines in Figure 2 are yearly proxy temperatures, they show much more variability than the 50-year smoothed curve but are not as meaningful as the 50-year average in terms of climate change.

In Figure 2 we show some of the warming and cooling events documented in Soon, et al.’s 2003 papers for the past two millennia (Soon & Baliunas, 2003) and (Soon, Baliunas, & Legates, 2003c). Soon and colleague’s make the important point that climate is a local thing, it does not vary uniformly across the globe. Large scale indicators of climate, such as global glacial advances and retreats, suggest that globally the Medieval Warm Period (MWP) was warmer, and a time of global glacial retreat. The Little Ice Age (LIA) was a period of glacial advance and colder weather. But, looking at detailed records suggests that both warming and cooling existed during both periods, depending upon the location. Most of the world warmed during the MWP, but it cooled significantly around Taylor Dome in Antarctica. The world generally cooled in the LIA, but Switzerland and Antarctica warmed significantly in the decades around 1540AD and 1800AD, respectively. The peaks of these global climate anomalies were reached at different times in different places.

Comparing these reconstructions to Vinther’s 2009 Greenland reconstruction (see the first post, Figure 2, where it is compared to Antarctic temperatures), as we do in Figure 3, illustrates how climate varies by region and by hemisphere. These local variations confound the “global warming” narrative.

Vinther’s reconstruction is built using the average of the Agassiz and Renland ice cores in Greenland, after correcting them for elevation changes. The Agassiz core is not actually from Greenland, but on a neighboring island. Vinther’s paper has a map of the two sites. The central graph in Figure 3 is the Vinther reconstruction in actual degrees C. The red box is the Greenland temperature average from the populated HadCRUT5 5×5 degree cells closest to the Agassiz and Renland sites for 2000-2020. As you can see, it is not very anomalous, relative to the Vinther record. It is lower than the peaks in the MWP, RWP and one to two degrees lower than the Holocene Climatic Optimum.

Figure 3. The full climate and history of civilization timeline. Click on the image or here to download a full scale jpeg.

There are a large number of historical references in the timeline shown in Figure 5 and we will not explain all of them here, they are well documented in earlier posts here and here. We will just make the point that significant local climate changes, the only climate changes that matter to people, are historical events that are often described in detail by the historians of the time and dated precisely. These historical descriptions can be more valuable than biological or ice core proxies. There are three significant Northern Hemisphere or global climate changes that deserve special mention.

Roman Warm Period


The Roman Warm Period (RWP) was a period from roughly 100 BC to 200 AD, depending upon where you are. This was the time when robust civilizations developed in the Americas, around the Mediterranean, China, and India. Ch’in unified China by 200BC and Alexander invaded India just 136 years earlier. The Mayan civilization rose to prominence before 250 AD in present-day Mexico, Guatemala, and Belize. The Roman Warm Period truly marks the beginning of modern civilization, written records document all major events over most of the world since this time. These writings and most recent reconstructions suggest that temperatures, at least in the Northern Hemisphere, were warmer than today.

Medieval Warm Period


The Medieval Warm Period (MWP) is normally given as 800 AD to 1250 AD, but it began and ended at different times in different places. In the beginning of this period, temperatures in Central Greenland rose by about 1.5°C in about 200 years, but they are erratic. It has been well documented as a worldwide event, but is not synchronous. It is uncertain what the global average temperature was during the period and whether the world was warmer then, than now. But, certainly in many areas where we have records, such as Greenland, the UK, and China, temperatures were comparable to today and in many cases warmer. During this period, the Vikings were a dominant force in Europe and in the Middle East.

Little Ice Age


The Little Ice Age (LIA) was not a true ice age, but a cooler period that followed the Medieval Warm Period. It is generally considered to have started by 1350 AD and it ended between 1850 and 1900 AD. The LIA was the coldest period in the Holocene. Northern Hemisphere temperatures dropped from 1°C to 1.5°C on average, but, like the MWP, it was not synchronous around the world. Many areas in the Southern Hemisphere were warmer than normal, especially in Antarctica. It was not cold over the entire period, but the Little Ice Age saw many periods that were very cold, from the famous year without a summer (1816), to the great famine of 1315. New York Harbor completely froze over in 1780, the Norse colonies in Greenland starved and had to be abandoned. A recent study notes several droughts in Europe during the Little Ice Age. These occurred in AD 1540, 1590, 1626 and 1719, plus an especially intense drought from 1437-1473 AD.

Modern Warm Period

The Modern Warm Period starts between 1850 and 1905, which is also the time when people began systematically recording and collecting objectively calibrated instrumental surface air temperature data from around the world. These temperatures were spotty in the beginning, but by the middle of the 20th Century a good, land-based worldwide temperature database was developing. In 1979, satellites were launched that could give us a reasonably accurate and complete lower troposphere temperature record over nearly the entire globe. A discussion of the accuracy of the satellite temperature measurements can be found in an interesting paper by John Christy, Roy Spencer, and William Braswell (Christy, Spencer, & Braswell, 2000) here. Satellite data suggests the lower troposphere is warming at an unimpressive rate of 0.14°C/decade.

Conclusions


Modern global instrumental temperatures have only been available for a short time. Even if the entire 170-year record is used, it is too short to be representative of documented temperature extremes seen over the past 2,000 years. New York Harbor has not frozen over recently, and many areas now covered in glacial ice were ice-free in the MWP.

Going further back, to the beginning of the Holocene, temperature proxies are very sparse and constructing a hemispheric or global temperature reconstruction is futile. The proxies are not accurate that far back, and there is no way to establish that the proxy to temperature functions used will work that far back in time with only a 170-year calibration period.

As we show in this report and as recommended by Soon, et al. (Soon, Baliunas, Idso, Idso, & Legates, 2003b), it is far better to deal with proxies one at a time. Combining them statistically is misleading. When the exact location of the proxy record is known, modern temperature data is accurate and dense enough to extract a reasonable modern instrumental temperature record for the location at a matching temporal resolution. In the examples shown in this post, modern temperatures appear to be well within the range of natural variability for the past 2,000 years and the past 15,000 years.

It is well known that insolation varies by latitude and the records discussed in this post support that. Carbon dioxide is a well-mixed gas and one would expect it to affect global average temperature change approximately evenly over some sufficient time period. We see no evidence that this is the case now, but the record is short.

In the words of Professor Steven Mithen (Mithen, 2003, p. 507):

“The next century of human-made global warming is predicted to be far less extreme than that which occurred at [9600 BC]. At the end of the Younger Dryas, mean global temperature had risen by 7°C in fifty years, whereas the predicted rise for the next hundred years is less than 3°C. The end of the last ice age led to a 120 meter increase in sea level, whereas that predicted for the next fifty years is a paltry 32 centimeters at most…”

Perspective is important, we must recognize that the climate and temperature change we have observed over the past century are very tiny relative to past natural changes. To gain that perspective we must do valid comparisons of historical climate changes to today. That means local comparisons, not global. That means recognizing the poor temporal resolution of proxies and their questionable accuracy, which degrades with time. It is also important to recognize that while the Northern Hemisphere network of land-based weather stations has been good for some time, a good network in the Southern Hemisphere is very new. Finally, decent temperature records of the oceans are a very recent addition. Since oceans cover 70% of Earth’s surface, they are a reliable global temperature record, a record that has been underutilized to date. To put modern temperatures into historical perspective, we should go local, not global.

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Keri Hilson sparked on-line debate by saying she “hopes my soulmate is a black man”

As a roommate, Keri Hilson often uses social media to share her opinions and preferences on a range of topics – and her latest posts on her stance on her soulmate keep everyone talking. While talking about relationships, Keri asked Hilson if she was wrong in hoping God would send her soulmate that he was a black man.

On her Twitter account, Keri Hilson posted the following tweets about who she would like to be in a relationship with:

“I want who God wants for me, but am I wrong in hoping my soulmate is a black man? He doesn’t even have to be American, I dated 3 non-American black men. But I want to love a black guy. Or a man of color …

And if he’s neither, then he would need to have a deep understanding and genuine support for my pro-blackness. Does anyone feel me? “

As with most things on social media with celebrities, it wasn’t long before Keri was a top trending topic based on their opinion. While there were some who disagreed with her and said that she should be open to love from anyone, regardless of race, there were more who understood where she was from and gave her tons of virtual love and support offered.

If you kept up, you will remember that Keri Hilson was very open about her hope of one day being married and having kids, but she doesn’t want to settle for just anyone.

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