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VANCOUVER, BC, Jan. 14, 2021 /PRNewswire/ - Capella Minerals Ltd. (TSXV: CMIL) (FRA: N7D2) (the Company or Capella ) is pleased to provide the following update on drill target generation activities being undertaken on its high-grade Kjøli copper project in central Norway. The Kjøli property lies in the northern part of the Røros mining district, which saw copper production from a number of high-grade massive sulfide ( VMS ) deposits from the mid-1600 s until the mid-1980 s. Kjøli represents a district-scale brownfields/greenfields exploration project covering the former Kjøli and Killingdal copper mining operations, together with approximately 15 km strike of underexplored but highly-prospective stratigraphy for the discovery of new copper-rich VMS deposits (Figure 1).
Researchers from China studied records of ocean temperatures and salinities
They looked at measurements taken to a depth of 1.24 miles below sea level
Oceans act as a buffer against global warming, taking in 90 per cent of the heat
The oceans upper layers absorbed an extra 20 Zettajoules of energy this year
However, this will see more natural catastrophes like the wildfires seen in 2020
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IMAGE: Royal Flying Doctor Service personnel undertook 17,000 retrievals in remote areas of Australia in the first half of 2020. view more
Credit: Royal Flying Doctor Service
New data released this week by Australian researchers reveals the impact of the COVID-19 lockdown period on aeromedical retrievals in rural and remote regions.
Researchers say while the social isolation measures led to a reduction in overall aeromedical activity during the lockdown in 2020, once the restrictions were lifted, evacuations increased significantly.
These findings are published in the
Internal Medicine Journal, comparing aeromedical evacuation trends in Australia during the pre-restriction, lockdown and post-restriction periods last year.
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The build-up of calcium in a major artery outside of the heart could predict future heart attack or stroke, a new Edith Cowan University led study has demonstrated.
Published today in the
Journal of the American Heart Association, the research could help doctors identify people at risk of cardiovascular disease years before symptoms arise.
Analysing 52 previous studies, the international team of researchers found that people who have abdominal aortic calcification (AAC) have a two to four times higher risk of a future cardiovascular event.
The study also found the more extensive the calcium in the blood vessel wall, the greater the risk of future cardiovascular events and people with AAC and chronic kidney disease were at even greater risk than those from the general population with AAC.