Discoveries shed new light on the day the dinosaurs died
The Thescelosaurus moved stealthily along the seashore. Stretching about 12 feet long and weighing about 500 pounds, the thickly muscled dinosaur was probably looking for food - or trying to avoid becoming a meal. Featuring prominent bony eyebrows and a pointy beak, Thescelosaurus plodded along on two feet with the bulk of its body leaning forward while a long tail stretched backward for balance. Suddenly, the dinosaur lifted its head and looked around, alarmed as the calm was broken by a series
news.yahoo.comPrince William unveils finalists for environmental prize
Prince William has announced 15 inaugural finalists for the Earthshot Prize, his ambitious global environmental award that aims to find new ideas and technologies to tackle climate change, air pollution and the Earthโs most pressing challenges.
Prince William writes introduction to โauthoritative guideโ on his Earthshot Prize
The Duke of Cambridge has penned the introduction to a new book described as an โauthoritative guideโ to his Earthshot Prize. The book, Earthshot: How To Save Our Planet, highlights the urgency of the environmental challenge facing the world, while also showcasing some of the solutions underway. It features contributions from Sir David Attenborough, the naturalist and broadcaster, Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, an environmental activist, singer Shakira, and Naoko Yamazaki, a former astronaut - all memb
news.yahoo.comThe Latest: Attenborough: G-7 must speed up climate action
Group of Seven leaders are talking about climate change on the final day of their summit in England, with naturalist David Attenborough warning they must take urgent action to avoid human-based environmental catastrophe. Attenborough, who is due to address the leaders on Sunday by video, said global warning and loss of biodiversity are โbeyond doubt,โ as is the fact that โour societies and nations are unequal.โ โIf that is so, then the decisions we make this decade โ in particular the decisions made by the most economically advanced nations โ are the most important in human history,โ Attenborough said in comments released by summit organizers.
news.yahoo.comDavid Attenborough to address leaders at UN climate summit
Veteran British broadcaster David Attenborough has been appointed the โpeopleโs advocateโ at the U.N. global climate summit this year, where he is expected to address political leaders about the need for urgent action to tackle the โcripplingโ threat of climate change.
Sir David Attenborough's "The Year Earth Changed" explores nature's rebound amid COVID lockdowns
A new Apple TV+ documentary narrated by the legendary broadcaster Sir David Attenborough is exploring how nature rebounded during COVID-19 lockdowns. Attenborough and "The Year Earth Changed" Executive Producer Mike Gunton join "CBS This Morning" to discuss how species from penguins to humpback whales thrived when humans stayed indoors.
cbsnews.comUN Security Council to discuss the 'gravest threat' to global peace and stability
Climate change represents the "gravest threats" to global peace and security, the UN Security Council will hear on Tuesday. The U.K. currently has a one-month presidency of the Council, which is charged with ensuring international peace and security. He said the upcoming UN climate change meeting, known as COP26, that will take place in Glasgow in November, could be the "last opportunity to make the necessary step-change." "If we objectively view climate change and the loss of nature as world-wide security threats โ as indeed, they are โ then we may yet act proportionately and in time," he said. UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres and Sudanese climate activist Nisreen Elsaim will also brief the Security Council live on Tuesday.
cnbc.comUK report urges need for nature to be at heart of economics
The review of the economics of biodiversity by Professor Partha Dasgupta concludes that nature needs to become as valued as traditional gauges of economic wealth such as profits in the future. Responding to the report, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the coming year is โcriticalโ in efforts to stop and reverse declining biodiversity. He said that the U.K., which is this year president of the Group of Seven leading economies and hosting the 26th global U.N. โWe are destroying biodiversity, the very characteristic that until recently enabled the natural world to flourish so abundantly,โ he said. He said the report โshows us how, by bringing economics and ecology together, we can help save the natural world at what may be the last minute โ and in doing so, save ourselves.โ
The Latest: S Korea extends distancing rules for 2 weeks
According to the Texas Department of State Health Services, intensive care units in several parts of Texas were full or nearly full. India and Brazil trail behind the U.S. in coronavirus cases at over 10 million and 7 million, respectively. ___MILAN, Italy โ Italy added another 462 virus deaths on Friday for a known pandemic death toll of 74,621, the highest in Europe. ___BANGKOK โ The Thai capital is shutting down venues including schools and entertainment parks as coronavirus cases continue to spread. China on Friday reported a total of 19 new virus cases, including 10 that were brought from outside the country.
'60 Minutes' keeps on the news and is rewarded by viewers
FILE - "60 Minutes" correspondent Lesley Stahl poses for a photo in her office at the "60 Minutes" offices, in New York on Sept. 12, 2017. It's not the first time that's been said about โ60 Minutesโ since its 1968 debut. After executive producer Bill Owens turned the show primarily over to COVID-19 coverage last spring, โ60 Minutesโ has returned to its traditional format while being focused on being timely. โ60 Minutesโ this fall has featured interviews with fired government cybersecurity chief Chris Krebs, former President Barack Obama and poisoned Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny. Original executive producer Don Hewitt often ran โ60 Minutesโ as an island unto itself.
Prince William, David Attenborough launch 'Earthshot' award
In this undated handout photo issued by WWF on Saturday, Sept. 26, 2020, British Naturalist Sir David Attenborough, sits with Prince William for a private outdoor screening of his upcoming film, David Attenborough: A Life On Our Planet, at Kensington Palace, London. William, who has been immersed in environmental issues all his life, said the same resources used to tackle the coronavirus pandemic should be devoted to saving the natural world. โAccording to the experts, it really is the point of no return," he told Sky News. โItโs a matter of great urgency now.โWilliam also spoke about how his seven-year-old son, Prince George, is getting concerned about what's going on in the world. He said his son was left so saddened by an Attenborough documentary about extinction that he told his father โI donโt want to watch this anymore."
60 Seconds with Sir David Attenborough on literature, optimism and death
60 Seconds with Sir David Attenborough on literature, optimism and death Sir David Attenborough tells Anderson Cooper about the last book he read, whoโs influenced him the most, and whether or not heโs afraid of death.
cbsnews.comMalta seeks shark tooth fossil presented to Prince George
(Kensington Palace via AP)VALLETTA โ Malta says it will seek to retrieve a shark tooth that was presented to Britainโs Prince George by veteran broadcaster and naturalist David Attenborough, who found the fossil during a holiday on the Mediterranean island in the 1960s. Culture Minister Jose Herrera said he will โget the ball rollingโ to bring back the tooth to be exhibited in a Maltese museum. Attenborough, 94, presented the fossil to Prince George during a private viewing of his new documentary at Kensington Palace. Photos released by the palace over the weekend showed the 7-year-old prince looking intrigued as he looked at the tooth. Kensington Palace declined to comment.
Sir David Attenborough explains what he thinks needs to happen to save the planet
Sir David AttenboroughSir David Attenborough: And so it isn't that I enjoy saying, "Doom, doom, doom." Sir David Attenborough: I know it sounds like a publicist slogan, but it is the greatest story ever told. Sir David Attenborough: Repopulation of the oceans can happen like that, in a decade. Sir David Attenborough: That's what's gonna sink us in the end. We've allowed this to happen, Sir David Attenborough says, despite being the smartest creatures that have ever lived.
cbsnews.comSir David Attenborough to 60 Minutes on climate change: "A crime has been committed"
"I want [people] to knowโฆnot the human story particularly, but the story of life on this earth, how it how it developed," Attenborough told 60 Minutes. Attenborough with Orangutans Getty ImagesNow 94, Attenborough has witnessed the evolution of the natural world more closely than most. In 2002, the naturalist told 60 Minutes correspondent Ed Bradley in an interview that his role was to show an "objective depiction of the natural world." He calls this latest project his "witness statement," and on 60 Minutes told correspondent Anderson Cooper "a crime has been committed" against the planet. Attenborough during the shoot for this week's 60 Minutes storyAttenborough no longer minces words nor leaves his viewers wondering where he stands on the issue of climate change.
cbsnews.comSir David Attenborough on why his new film is a "witness statement" to climate change
The world's foremost wildlife filmmaker tells Anderson Cooper humanity has committed a crime against his beloved natural world. BBC legend Sir David Attenborough, who at one time had been skeptical about climate change, now says scientists are right about the harm to the planet humans are causing and considers it a crime. Attenborough calls his latest film and book "A Life on Our Planet," a "witness statement." He's convinced what's happening now to the natural world because of climate change is far worse than what humans have done over the ages. "People who have never listened to a birdsong are suddenly thrilled, excited, supported, inspired by the natural world.
cbsnews.comSir David Attenborough on why his new film is a "witness statement" to climate change
The world's foremost wildlife filmmaker tells Anderson Cooper humanity has committed a crime against his beloved natural world. BBC legend Sir David Attenborough, who at one time had been skeptical about climate change, now says scientists are right about the harm to the planet humans are causing and considers it a crime. Attenborough calls his latest film and book "A Life on Our Planet," a "witness statement." He's convinced what's happening now to the natural world because of climate change is far worse than what humans have done over the ages. "People who have never listened to a birdsong are suddenly thrilled, excited, supported, inspired by the natural world.
cbsnews.comNew this week: Katy Perry's 'Smile' and 'Love Island' return
This image released by BBC America shows Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins in a scene from "Planet Earth: A Celebration." The special debuts at 8 p.m. EDT Monday, Aug. 31, on BBC America, AMC, SundanceTV and IFC. (BBC Studios/BBC America via AP)
New this week: Katy Perry's 'Smile' and 'Love Island' return
Heres a collection curated by The Associated Press entertainment journalists of whats arriving on TV, streaming services and music platforms this week. Infused with a hip-hop energy and a solidly anarchic spirit, Get Duked! is the directorial debut of music video director Ninian Doff. Katy Perry says shes been on a real emotional, psychological and spiritual journey... to find my smile in the last three years since releasing her Witness album. AP Music Editor Mesfin FekaduTELEVISIONWhether the new season of CBS Love Island includes any version of love remains to be seen, but its definitely not on an island. Love Island, with host Arielle Vandenberg and narrator Matthew Hoffman, debuts 8 p.m. EDT Monday with a two-hour episode, followed by nightly episodes at 9 p.m. EDT.
Butterfly and Pollinator Festival Includes Bat Man, Classes for Teachers
The Bat Man of Mexico will be descending on this years Monarch Butterfly and Pollinator Festival. His work earned him the Bat Man nickname from famed naturalist David Attenborough, who narrated a BBC documentary on Medelln and his work. The panel is part of the 2019 Monarch Butterfly and Pollinator Festival, which runs from Oct. 12 to Oct. 20. Next time you raise your glass of tequila or mezcal, celebrating whatever you want to celebrate, please first and foremost toast the bats, Medelln said. This article has been updated to correct that the free screening of The Bat Man of Mexico will take place at UNAM San Antonios auditorium.
therivardreport.comBat Man of Mexico to Appear at Monarch Butterfly and Pollinator Festival
The renowned Mexican mammalogist, credited with saving the tequila bat from extinction, has slogged through caves shin-deep in bat poop more times than he can count. Medelln, a senior professor of ecology at the Universidad Nacional Autnoma de Mxico (UNAM), will be in San Antonio Oct. 18-20 for the 2019 Monarch Butterfly and Pollinator Festival. The Bat Man of Mexico, a 2015 BBC documentary, narrated by Sir David Attenborough, chronicles Medellns mission to prevent the extinction of the lesser long-nosed bat, commonly known as the tequila bat. Its the Bat Man of Mexico. Its the Bat Man of MexicoMedelln will present on bats in the ecosystem, specifically the role they play in making some of our favorite food and drink possible.
therivardreport.com