Tag Archives: century

Bruce Springsteen Movie, With Jeremy Allen White in Talks to Star, Lands at 20th Century Studios – Variety

  1. Bruce Springsteen Movie, With Jeremy Allen White in Talks to Star, Lands at 20th Century Studios Variety
  2. In Coup For New Chief David Greenbaum, 20th Century Lands ‘Deliver Me From Nowhere’; Jeremy Allen White Plays Bruce Springsteen For Scott Cooper In Drama On Making Of ‘Nebraska’ Album Deadline
  3. Jeremy Allen White Close to Playing Bruce Springsteen in ‘Nebraska’-Era Biopic Rolling Stone
  4. Jeremy Allen White ‘in talks to star’ in upcoming Bruce Springsteen film about the making of ‘Nebraska’ album ABC News
  5. Bruce Springsteen’s Best Album Is Getting A Making-Of Movie SlashFilm

Read original article here

20th Century Lands Bruce Springsteen Movie to Star Jeremy Allen White – Hollywood Reporter

  1. 20th Century Lands Bruce Springsteen Movie to Star Jeremy Allen White Hollywood Reporter
  2. In Coup For New Chief David Greenbaum, 20th Century Lands ‘Deliver Me From Nowhere’; Jeremy Allen White Plays Bruce Springsteen For Scott Cooper In Drama On Making Of ‘Nebraska’ Album Deadline
  3. Jeremy Allen White Close to Playing Bruce Springsteen in ‘Nebraska’-Era Biopic Rolling Stone
  4. Bruce Springsteen, Jon Landau support new ‘Nebraska’ movie Asbury Park Press
  5. Jeremy Allen White to Play Bruce Springsteen in Nebraska Film Consequence

Read original article here

In Coup For New Chief David Greenbaum, 20th Century Lands ‘Deliver Me From Nowhere’; Jeremy Allen White Plays Bruce Springsteen For Scott Cooper In Drama On Making Of ‘Nebraska’ Album – Deadline

  1. In Coup For New Chief David Greenbaum, 20th Century Lands ‘Deliver Me From Nowhere’; Jeremy Allen White Plays Bruce Springsteen For Scott Cooper In Drama On Making Of ‘Nebraska’ Album Deadline
  2. Jeremy Allen White Close to Playing Bruce Springsteen in ‘Nebraska’-Era Biopic Rolling Stone
  3. Jeremy Allen White ‘in talks to star’ in upcoming Bruce Springsteen film about the making of ‘Nebraska’ album ABC News
  4. Jeremy Allen White to Play Bruce Springsteen in Nebraska Film Consequence
  5. Bruce Springsteen Movie, With Jeremy Allen White in Talks to Star, Lands at 20th Century Studios Variety

Read original article here

Disney Shakeup: Sean Bailey Out as Production President, David Greenbaum to Lead Newly Combined Live-Action Division and 20th Century Studios – Variety

  1. Disney Shakeup: Sean Bailey Out as Production President, David Greenbaum to Lead Newly Combined Live-Action Division and 20th Century Studios Variety
  2. Disney Shakeup: Sean Bailey Exits As President Of Walt Disney Motion Picture Studios, Searchlight’s David Greenbaum Takes Over & Also Will Run 20th Deadline
  3. Disney’s Sean Bailey, Longtime Movie Executive, Steps Down The New York Times
  4. Disney’s Head of Live-Action Movies to Step Down The Wall Street Journal
  5. Disney Shake-Up: Sean Bailey Leaving Studio as David Greenbaum Takes Over Live-Action Film Production Hollywood Reporter

Read original article here

Asian Games: Yashasvi Jaiswal Smashes T20 Century vs Nepal in Quarter-Final | The Quint – The Quint

  1. Asian Games: Yashasvi Jaiswal Smashes T20 Century vs Nepal in Quarter-Final | The Quint The Quint
  2. India vs Nepal men’s cricket, Asian Games 2023 T20 quarter-final: Match time and watch live streaming and telecast Olympics
  3. 1st Quarter-Final, Hangzhou, October 03, 2023, Asian Games Men’s Cricket Competition (Abinash Bohara 0*, Karan KC 18*, Shivam Dube 0/37) – RESULT, IND vs NEP, 1st Quarter-Final, Zhejiang University of Technology Cricket Field, October 03, 2023, ESPNcricinfo
  4. Yashasvi Jaiswal shines as India defeat Nepal in Asian Games opener Times of India
  5. Watch: Nepal Bowler Karan KC’s Surprising Strategy Against Yashasvi Jaiswal As He Bowls From Behind The Stumps Cricket Addictor
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Jimmy Buffett, the ‘Parrot Heads’ and the ‘Escape to Margaritaville:’ A pessimistic 19th century outlook on hedonistic 20th century life – Fortune

  1. Jimmy Buffett, the ‘Parrot Heads’ and the ‘Escape to Margaritaville:’ A pessimistic 19th century outlook on hedonistic 20th century life Fortune
  2. Turns out, Jimmy Buffett, reared in New Orleans, was a ‘native son’ of Florida, after all | Opinion Miami Herald
  3. Jimmy Buffett: Palm Springs’ unsung hero Desert Sun
  4. Jimmy Buffett explained ‘Jamaica Mistaica’ to Nevada regulators in 2012 Las Vegas Review-Journal
  5. The Pascagoula Run: Jimmy Buffett tribute concert draws a packed house WLOX
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Nat Sciver-Brunt Century Leads Eng To Win! | Highlights – England v Australia | 3rd Women’s ODI 2023 – England & Wales Cricket Board

  1. Nat Sciver-Brunt Century Leads Eng To Win! | Highlights – England v Australia | 3rd Women’s ODI 2023 England & Wales Cricket Board
  2. Consolation 69-run win for England in final Women’s Ashes ODI against Australia AOL
  3. Sciver-Brunt’s swift six before drinks | Wide World of Sports Wide World of Sports
  4. 2 Wickets In 4 Balls! | Lauren Bell & Kate Cross Remove Openers | England Women v Australia Women England & Wales Cricket Board
  5. Women’s Ashes: England clinch ODI series win with 69-run victory (DLS) over Australia at Taunton Sky Sports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Gunther’s the longest reigning Intercontinental champion of the century – Cageside Seats

  1. Gunther’s the longest reigning Intercontinental champion of the century Cageside Seats
  2. WWE Intercontinental Champion Gunther Reaches Massive Milestone ComicBook.com
  3. “Future WWE World Champion!” – Twitter erupts as Gunther breaks 18-year-old record and makes history Sportskeeda
  4. WWE Releases Playlist Of Gunther’s Record Breaking Intercontinental Title Reign, Grayson Waller Takes Shots At Tyler Bate On Twitter Wrestling Headlines
  5. GUNTHER Makes WWE History As Intercontinental Champion Cultaholic
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Last Boeing 747 rolls off line after half a century of production | Boeing

After more than half a century of production, the last Boeing 747 has rolled out of a US factory in Washington state.

The final customer was the cargo carrier Atlas Air, which ordered four 747-8 freighters early this year. The final plane was rolled out of Boeing’s massive factory in Everett, Washington, on Tuesday night.

There she goes!

The last 747 has left our Everett factory ahead of delivery to Atlas Air in early 2023. #QueenOfTheSkies

Photos: Boeing/Paul Weatherman pic.twitter.com/duzgr6MzQl

— Boeing Airplanes (@BoeingAirplanes) December 7, 2022

n”,”url”:”https://twitter.com/BoeingAirplanes/status/1600371756627554319″,”id”:”1600371756627554319″,”hasMedia”:false,”role”:”inline”,”isThirdPartyTracking”:false,”source”:”Twitter”,”elementId”:”9f00dc4a-e30b-4d03-911f-1d7bf9c8f405″}}”/>

The 747 jumbo jet has taken on numerous roles in its lifetime: a cargo plane, a commercial aircraft capable of carrying nearly 500 passengers, and even the Air Force One presidential aircraft.

When it was first produced in 1969 it was the largest commercial aircraft in the world and the first with two aisles. It still towers over most other planes.

The plane’s design included a second deck extending from the cockpit back out over the front third of the plane, giving it a distinctive hump that made it instantly recognisable and inspired the nickname, the Whale.

Construction of one of the final Boeing 747’s in Washington state. Photograph: Jennifer Buchanan/AP

It took more than 50,000 Boeing employees 16 months to churn out the first 747. The company has completed 1,573 more since then.

But over the past two decades, Boeing and its European rival Airbus have turned to more fuel-efficient and profitable aircraft; widebody planes with two engines instead of the 747’s four.

Delta was the last US airline to use the 747 for passenger flights – ending in 2017 – although some international carriers continue to fly it, including the German airline Lufthansa.

Boeing announced in May that it would move its headquarters from Chicago to Arlington, Virginia.

The move to the Washington DC area puts its executives closer to key federal government officials and the Federal Aviation Administration, which certifies Boeing passenger and cargo planes.

Boeing’s relationship with the FAA has been strained since deadly crashes of its bestselling plane, the 737 Max, in 2018 and 2019. The FAA took nearly two years to approve design changes and allow the plane back in the air.



Read original article here

Fossil overturns more than a century of knowledge about the origin of modern birds

Artist’s reconstruction of the last known toothed bird, Janavis finalidens, in its original environment surrounded by the co-occurring ‘wonderchicken’, Asteriornis. 66.7 million years ago parts of Belgium were covered by a shallow sea, and conditions were similar to modern tropical beaches in places like the Bahamas. Janavis was a very large marine bird, with long wings and teeth in its jaws. It would have hunted fish and squid-like creatures in the tropical sea. Credit: Phillip Krzeminski

Fossilized fragments of a skeleton, hidden within a rock the size of a grapefruit, have helped upend one of the longest-standing assumptions about the origins of modern birds.

Researchers from the University of Cambridge and the Natuurhistorisch Museum Maastricht found that one of the key skull features that characterizes 99% of modern birds—a mobile beak—evolved before the mass extinction event that killed all large dinosaurs, 66 million years ago.

This finding also suggests that the skulls of ostriches, emus and their relatives evolved “backwards,” reverting to a more primitive condition after modern birds arose.

Using CT scanning techniques, the Cambridge team identified bones from the palate, or the roof of the mouth, of a new species of large ancient bird, which they named Janavis finalidens. It lived at the very end of the Age of Dinosaurs and was one of the last toothed birds to ever live. The arrangement of its palate bones shows that this “dino-bird” had a mobile, dexterous beak, almost indistinguishable from that of most modern birds.






Video showing the rotating pterygoid (a palate bone) of Janavis finalidens, which is very similar to that of living duck- and chicken-like birds. The bone was found as two matching fragments, which have been digitally fitted together. The bone is hollow and was likely full of air in life, as shown by the large opening on its side. Credit: Dr Juan Benito and Dr Daniel Field, University of Cambridge

For more than a century, it had been assumed that the mechanism enabling a mobile beak evolved after the extinction of the dinosaurs. However, the new discovery, reported in the journal Nature, suggests that our understanding of how the modern bird skull came to be needs to be re-evaluated.

Each of the roughly 11,000 species of birds on Earth today is classified into one of two over-arching groups, based on the arrangement of their palate bones. Ostriches, emus and their relatives are classified into the palaeognath, or “ancient jaw” group, meaning that, like humans, their palate bones are fused together into a solid mass.

All other groups of birds are classified into the neognath, or “modern jaw” group, meaning that their palate bones are connected by a mobile joint. This makes their beaks much more dexterous, helpful for nest-building, grooming, food-gathering, and defense.

The two groups were originally classified by Thomas Huxley, the British biologist known as “Darwin’s Bulldog” for his vocal support of Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution. In 1867, he divided all living birds into either the “ancient” or “modern” jaw groups. Huxley’s assumption was that the “ancient” jaw configuration was the original condition for modern birds, with the “modern” jaw arising later.

“This assumption has been taken as a given ever since,” said Dr. Daniel Field from Cambridge’s Department of Earth Sciences, the paper’s senior author. “The main reason this assumption has lasted is that we haven’t had any well-preserved fossil bird palates from the period when modern birds originated.”

The fossil, Janavis, was found in a limestone quarry near the Belgian-Dutch border in the 1990s and was first studied in 2002. It dates from 66.7 million years ago, during the last days of the dinosaurs. Since the fossil is encased in rock, scientists at the time could only base their descriptions on what they could see from the outside. They described the bits of bone sticking out from the rock as fragments of skull and shoulder bones, and put the unremarkable-looking fossil back in storage.

Nearly 20 years later, the fossil was loaned to Field’s group in Cambridge, and Dr. Juan Benito, then a Ph.D. student, started giving it another look.

“Since this fossil was first described, we’ve started using CT scanning on fossils, which enables us to see through the rock and view the entire fossil,” said Benito, now a postdoctoral researcher at Cambridge, and the paper’s lead author. “We had high hopes for this fossil—it was originally said to have skull material, which isn’t often preserved, but we couldn’t see anything that looked like it came from a skull in our CT scans, so we gave up and put the fossil aside.”

Palate of Janavis finalidens in comparison with that of a pheasant and an ostrich. The palate anatomy of Janavis likely approximates that of the most recent common ancestor of all living birds, and is more similar to that of chicken- and duck-like birds, such as pheasants, than to birds like ostriches and emus, which were previously thought to exhibit the ancestral bird condition. Credit: Juan Benito and Daniel Field, University of Cambridge

During the early days of COVID-19 lockdown, Benito took the fossil out again. “The earlier descriptions of the fossil just didn’t make sense—there was a bone I was really puzzled by. I couldn’t see how what was first described as a shoulder bone could actually be a shoulder bone,” he said.

“It was my first in-person interaction in months: Juan and I had a socially distanced outdoor meeting, and he passed the mystery fossil bone to me,” said Field, who is also the Curator of Ornithology at Cambridge’s Museum of Zoology. “I could see it wasn’t a shoulder bone, but there was something familiar about it.”

“Then we realized we’d seen a similar bone before, in a turkey skull,” said Benito. “And because of the research we do at Cambridge, we happen to have things like turkey skulls in our lab, so we brought one out and the two bones were almost identical.”

The realization that the bone was a skull bone, and not a shoulder bone, led the researchers to conclude that the unfused “modern jaw” condition, which turkeys share, evolved before the “ancient jaw” condition of ostriches and their relatives. For an unknown reason, the fused palates of ostriches and kin must have evolved at some point after modern birds were already established.

Two of the key characteristics we use to differentiate modern birds from their dinosaur ancestors are a toothless beak and a mobile upper jaw. While Janavis finalidens still had teeth, making it a pre-modern bird, its jaw structure is that of the modern, mobile kind.

“Using geometric analyses, we were able to show that the shape of the fossil palate bone was extremely similar to those of living chickens and ducks,” said Pei-Chen Kuo, a co-author of the study. Added co-author Klara Widrig: “Surprisingly, the bird palate bones that are the least similar to that of Janavis are from ostriches and their kin.” Both Kuo and Widrig are Ph.D. students in Field’s lab at Cambridge.

Artist’s reconstruction of the world’s last known toothed bird, Janavis finalidens. This reconstruction is based on the original fossil bones of Janavis and comparisons with its close relative Ichthyornis, as well as inspiration from modern marine birds such as gulls and petrels. Janavis was a large marine bird with long wings and teeth in its jaws, and would have hunted for fish and squid in warm Late Cretaceous seas. Credit: Phillip Krzeminski

“Evolution doesn’t happen in a straight line,” said Field. “This fossil shows that the mobile beak—a condition we had always thought post-dated the origin of modern birds, actually evolved before modern birds existed. We’ve been completely backwards in our assumptions of how the modern bird skull evolved for well over a century.”

The researchers say that while this discovery does not mean that the entire bird family tree needs to be redrawn, it does rewrite our understanding of a key evolutionary feature of modern birds.

And what happened to Janavis? It, like the large dinosaurs and other toothed birds, did not survive the mass extinction event at the end of the Cretaceous period. The researchers say that this may be because of its large size: Janavis weighed around 1.5 kilograms and was the size of a modern vulture.

It’s likely that smaller animals—like the “wonderchicken,” identified by Field, Benito, and colleagues in 2020, which comes from the same area and lived alongside Janavis—had an advantage at this point in Earth’s history since they had to eat less to survive. This would have been beneficial after the asteroid struck the Earth and disrupted global food chains.

More information:
Daniel Field, Cretaceous ornithurine supports a neognathous crown bird ancestor, Nature (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05445-y. www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-05445-y

Provided by
University of Cambridge

Citation:
Fossil overturns more than a century of knowledge about the origin of modern birds (2022, November 30)
retrieved 1 December 2022
from https://phys.org/news/2022-11-fossil-overturns-century-knowledge-modern.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.



Read original article here