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India COVID-19 crisis: Oxygen scarce, bodies burning through the night

India COVID-19 crisis: Oxygen scarce, bodies burning through the night
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Quality or speed? Scientists face Covid-19 dilemma - Expat Guide to Switzerland


Quality or speed? Scientists face Covid-19 dilemma
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The Covid-19 pandemic has pushed science and research to the fore. But the unprecedented influence it currently wields over politics and public life has a downside: the crisis demands quick answers that risk scientists’ credibility.
“Since the start of the pandemic there has been a veritable tsunami of scientific publications about Sars-CoV-2,” says Subhra Priyadarshini, editor-in-chief of
Nature India. She recently took part in an online discussion about science communications organised by the Swiss Academies of Arts and Sciences.
Worldwide, as much as 4% of all scientific publications in 2020 had to do with Covid-19,

Zurich , Züsz , Switzerland , India , Swiss , Luca-tratschin , Reto-knutti , Marcel-tanner , Daniel-kahneman , Subhra-priyadarshini , National-covid , Swiss-science-journalism-club

Quality or speed? Scientists face Covid-19 dilemma


Quality or speed? Scientists face Covid-19 dilemma
There was a heated debate in parliament about whether only Martin Ackermann, president of the National Covid-19 Science Taskforce, should be allowed to speak publicly about Covid-19. In the end parliament decided against this. Keystone / Peter Schneider
The Covid-19 pandemic has pushed science and research to the fore. But the unprecedented influence it currently wields over politics and public life has a downside: the crisis demands quick answers that risk scientists’ credibility.
This content was published on April 29, 2021 - 09:00
April 29, 2021 - 09:00
Christian Raaflaub
“Since the start of the pandemic there has been a veritable tsunami of scientific publications about Sars-CoV-2,” says Subhra Priyadarshini, editor-in-chief of

Zurich , Züsz , Switzerland , India , Swiss , Luca-tratschin , Reto-knutti , Marcel-tanner , Daniel-kahneman , Subhra-priyadarshini , National-covid , Swiss-science-journalism-club

Scorpions tell a fascinating story of India's repeated brush-ups with Southeast Asia


Scorpions tell a fascinating story of India’s repeated brush-ups with Southeast Asia
Subhra Priyadarshini
Representative species of forest scorpions from India: (left) 
Deccanometrus phipsoni, Achanakmar Tiger Reserve, Chhattisgarh; (right)
Chersonesometrus tristis, Kaigal Falls, Andhra Pradesh. 
© Zeeshan A. Mirza (left); © Karthik, S. (right)
Tracking the evolutionary
history of Asian forest scorpions, zoologists suggest that the arthropods moved
out of India three times to colonise Southeast Asia
1. This new
evidence supports the theory that India brushed past Southeast Asia multiple
times before finally fusing into it and becoming one landmass – Eurasia –
several million years ago.
Geologists believe that an ancient southern

India , Chhattisgarh , Achanakmar , Zeeshana-mirza , Subhra-priyadarshini , Achanakmar-tiger-reserve , Kaigal-falls , Southeast-asia , இந்தியா , சத்தீஸ்கர் , சுப்ரா-பிரியதர்ஷினி