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Page 41 - ஆஸ்திரேலிய கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் அறிவியல் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

World s largest coral restoration program is bringing the 47-acre Hope Reef back to life

Scientists are recovering 45 acres of coral in Indonesia’s Spermonde Archipelago that has decayed They are using Reef Stars to help with what is called the world s largest coral recovery program The stars are metal frames made of locally sourced material and sand that covers the exterior   The structure acts as a base for young coral to latch on, allowing them to settle in the bed The team has grown up to 55% of the coral in three years and have placed the word HOPE across  HOPE is so large that it can be seen via Google Earth and is the inspiration behind the project 

A conversation with Danny Kennedy & Saul Griffith PhD

About this Event The complexity and scale of what s needed to mobilise the the right resources to supply the world with 100% clean energy can be overwhelming. With major disruption and innovation happening in equal measure, how do we ensure discoveries move from the lab to the impact? Saul Griffith has the answer! In his book Electrify - launching in October 2021, Saul outlines his blueprint to electrify everything. In so doing, we create jobs and a healthier planet. Danny Kennedy joins from Silicon Valley with insights from his entrepreneurial journey. Now at New Energy Nexus, where he runs programs across China, India, US and Africa help clean tech entrepreneurs with funding, support and networks, Danny will share learnings from founder journeys around the world.

Ancient potsherd inscription may be the missing link in the alphabet s history, researchers suggest

Antiquity. Discovered in 2018 at a dig site in Tel Lachish, Israel, the fragment dates back to around 3,450 years ago and contains letters used by people in the Levant, an ancient region along the eastern shores of the Mediterranean Sea, which includes modern-day Israel. Researchers from the Austrian Academy of Sciences and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem call the inscription “a missing link” because it connects the earliest known alphabetic writing to the Levantines’ alphabetic script. “Dating to the fifteenth century B.C., this inscription is currently the oldest securely dated alphabetic inscription from the Southern Levant,” the researchers wrote. The gap in the alphabet’s history

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