Tag Archives: China

China approves Genuine Biotech’s HIV drug for COVID patients

BEIJING, July 25 (Reuters) – China on Monday gave conditional approval to domestic firm Genuine Biotech’s Azvudine pill to treat certain adult patients with COVID-19, adding another oral treatment option against the coronavirus.

The availability of effective COVID vaccines and treatments is crucial in laying the groundwork for China’s potential pivoting from its “dynamic COVID zero” policy, which aims to eliminate every outbreak – however small – and relies on mass testing and strict quarantining.

The Azvudine tablet, which China approved in July last year to treat certain HIV-1 virus infections, has been given a conditional green light to treat adult patients with “normal type” COVID, the National Medical Products Administration said in a statement.

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“Normal type” COVID is a term China uses to refer to coronavirus infections where there are signs of pneumonia, but the patients haven’t reached a severe stage.

China in February allowed the use of Pfizer’s oral treatment Paxlovid in adults with mild-to-moderate COVID and high risk of progressing to a severe condition. In 2020, it approved the use of Lianhuaqingwen capsules, a traditional Chinese medicine-style formula, to alleviate symptoms of COVID such as fever and cough.

In a late-stage clinical trial, 40.4% of patients taking Azvudine showed improvement in symptoms seven days after first taking the drug, compared with 10.9% in the control group, Henan province-based Genuine Biotech said in a statement earlier this month, without providing detailed readings.

Other Chinese companies developing potential oral COVID treatments include Shanghai Junshi Biosciences (688180.SS) and Kintor Pharmaceutical (9939.HK).

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Reporting by Roxanne Liu and Ryan Woo
Editing by Louise Heavens and Mark Potter

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Rocket debris from China space station mission to crash land

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China’s latest launch of a huge rocket is, once again, raising alarm that the debris will crash into the Earth’s surface in an uncertain location and at great speed.

On Sunday afternoon local time, the Long March 5B blasted off from the Wenchang launch site on the southern island province of Hainan, carrying a solar-powered new lab, the Wentian experiment module, to be added to China’s Tiangong Space Station.

But size of the heavy-lift rocket — it stands 53.6 meters (176 feet) tall and weighs 837,500 kilograms (more than 1.8 million pounds) — and the risky design of its launch process have led experts to fear that some debris from its core stage could fail to burn up as it reenters Earth’s atmosphere.

China says out-of-control space rocket booster probably won’t cause any harm

As with two previous launches, the rocket shed its empty 23-ton first stage in orbit, meaning that it will continue to loop the Earth over coming days as it gradually comes closer to landing. This flight path is difficult to predict because of fluctuations in the atmosphere caused by changes in solar activity.

Although experts consider the chances of debris hitting an inhabited area very low, many also believe China is taking an unnecessary risk. After the core stage of the last launch fell into the Indian Ocean, NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said China was “failing to meet responsible standards regarding their space debris,” including minimizing risks during reentry and being transparent about operations.

China rejects accusations of irresponsibility. In response to concerns about last year’s launch, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said the likelihood of damage was “extremely low.”

Before the launch, Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer at the Center for Astrophysics who closely tracks space launches, wrote on Twitter that he had hoped China would have adopted a new design to allow the core stage to be actively deorbited.

Late on Sunday, McDowell added that U.S. Space Command orbital data about two objects from the launch had confirmed that the core stage “remains in orbit and was not actively deorbited.”

Many scientists agree with China that the odds of debris causing serious damage are tiny. An article published in the journal Nature Astronomy this month put the chance that, under current launch practices, someone would die or be injured from parts of a rocket making an uncontrolled reentry at 1 in 10 over the next decade.

But many believe launch designs like the Long March 5B’s are an unnecessary risk. “Launch providers have access to technologies and mission designs today that could eliminate the need for most uncontrolled re-entries,” the authors wrote. They proposed global safety standards mandating controlled reentry.

China sends three astronauts to new space station

Although it lags the United States in many respects, China’s spaceflight program has achieved many symbolic victories over the past decade under Chinese President Xi Jinping’s plan to build the nation into a space power, including placing the Tiangong Space Station in orbit last year.

The successful docking of the Wentian experiment module on Monday means its orbital outpost is only one more addition away from completion, with the final module expected to be launched later this year. There are three Chinese astronauts on the station.

The rapid increase in space activity has raised concerns of an emerging space race — and the risk of a damaging and geopolitically destabilizing accident caused by poor communication between nations. Cooperation between China and the United States in space has been minimal since the 2011 Wolf Amendment that banned NASA from using government funding to work with the Chinese government.

The prospect of international collaboration has been further undermined by China’s growing partnership with Russia, which Beijing says remains strong despite President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine. The two last year announced plans to jointly build a research outpost on the moon.

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China Launches Wentian Space Station Module With Giant Rocket

Another big Chinese rocket launched to space on Sunday at 2:22 p.m. Beijing time, and once again, no one knows where or when it will come down.

It will be a replay of two earlier launches of the same rocket, the Long March 5B, which is one of the largest currently in use. For about a week after launch, the world’s watchers of space debris will be tracking the 10-story, 23-ton rocket booster as wisps of air friction slowly pull back it back down.

The chance that it will strike anyone on Earth is low but significantly higher than what many space experts consider acceptable.

The powerful rocket was designed specifically to launch pieces of China’s Tiangong space station. The latest mission lifted Wentian, a laboratory module that will expand the station’s scientific research capabilities. It will also add three more spaces for astronauts to sleep and another airlock for them to conduct spacewalks.

Completing and operating the space station is described in state media broadcasts as important to China’s national prestige. But the country has taken some damage to its reputation during earlier flights of the rocket.

After the first Long March 5B launch in 2020, the booster re-entered over West Africa, with debris causing damage but no injuries to villages in the nation of Ivory Coast.

The booster from the second launch, in 2021, splashed harmlessly in the Indian Ocean near the Maldives. Still, Bill Nelson, the NASA administrator, issued a statement criticizing the Chinese. “It is clear that China is failing to meet responsible standards regarding their space debris,” he said.

China rejected that criticism with considerable fanfare. Hua Chunying, a senior spokeswoman at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, accused the United States of “hype.”

“The U.S. and a few other countries have been hyping up the landing of the Chinese rocket debris over the past few days,” Ms. Hua said. “To date, no damage by the landing debris has been reported. I’ve seen reports that since the launch of the first man-made satellite over 60 years ago, not a single incident has occurred where a piece of debris hit someone. U.S. experts put the chances of that at less than one in a billion.”

China’s space agencies did not respond to a request for an interview about the upcoming launch.

Space has immense prestige for the Chinese government, which sees each major launch as adding to its accumulation of space power, said Namrata Goswani, an author of “Scramble for the Skies: The Great Power Competition to Control the Resources of Outer Space.”

China has surpassed Russia in the sophistication of its space program, Dr. Goswani said. “China is ahead when compared to the Russian space program in terms of its lunar and Mars program as well as military space organization,” she said.

On a sunny and warm morning, crowds of China’s space fans spread across the beach near the rocket launch area on Hainan Island in the country’s south. Others crammed onto rooftops at hotels along the beach front.

Zhang Jingyi, 26, set up her camera on a hotel roof along with about 30 others on Sunday morning.

It was her 19th trip to “chase rockets,” she said. She made her hotel reservation four months ago.

“There are more people than ever,” she said.

Ms. Zhang referred to the rocket by the nickname used by aficionados: “Fat Five.” “There will be a small earthquake when it is launched,” she said.

China has landed a rover on the far side of the moon, gathered lunar material and brought it back to Earth for scientific study and landed and operated a rover on Mars. The United States is the only other country to accomplish that last feat.

“China is not and has not done anything the U.S. has not already done in space,” said Joan Johnson-Freese, professor at the U.S. Naval War College and former chair of the National Security Affairs department. “But it is reaching technical parity, which is of great concern to the U.S.”

She likened the Chinese space program as a tortoise compared to the American hare, “though the tortoise has sped up considerably in recent years.”

As of this April, China had completed a total of six missions for the construction of the space station. Three crews of astronauts have lived aboard the station, including the trio that will receive the Wentian module this week.

About 15 minutes after the launch, the rocket booster successfully placed the Wentian spacecraft on its intended orbital path. It is to rendezvous with the Tianhe space station module about 13 hours after liftoff. The Chinese space agency has not given any indication that it has made any changes to the booster.

“It’s going to be the same story,” said Jonathan McDowell, an astrophysicist at the Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass., who tracks the comings and goings of objects in space. “It’s possible that the rocket designers could have made some minor change to the rocket that would let them then propulsively deorbit the stage. But I don’t expect so.”

If the rocket design has not changed, no thrusters will be guiding its descent, and the booster’s engines cannot be restarted. The final rain of debris, with a few tons of metal expected to survive all the way to the surface, could occur anywhere along the booster’s path, which travels as far north as 41.5 degrees north latitude and as far south as 41.5 degrees south latitude.

That means there will be no danger to Chicago or Rome, which both lie a bit north of the orbital trajectories, but Los Angeles, New York, Cairo and Sydney, Australia are among the cities that the booster will travel over.

The science of predicting where a tumbling rocket stage is going to fall is tricky. The Earth’s atmosphere puffs up and deflates depending on how strongly the sun is shining on a particular day, and that phenomenon speeds or slows the rate of falling. If a calculation is off by half an hour, the falling debris has already traveled one-third of the way around the world.

By design, the center booster stage of the Long March 5B will push the Wentian module, which is more than 50 feet long, all the way to orbit. That means the booster will also reach orbit.

This differs from most rockets, where the lower stages typically drop back to Earth immediately after launch. Upper stages that reach orbit usually fire the engine again after releasing their payloads, guiding them toward re-entry over an unoccupied area, like the middle of an ocean.

Malfunctions occasionally cause unintended uncontrolled re-entries, like the second stage of a SpaceX rocket that came down over Washington State in 2021. But the Falcon 9 stage was smaller, about four tons, and less likely to cause damage or injuries.

The United States and NASA were not always been as careful as they are now when bringing large objects back into the atmosphere.

Skylab, the first American space station, plummeted to Earth in 1979, with large pieces hitting Western Australia. (NASA never paid a $400 fine for littering.)

NASA also did not plan the disposal of its Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite, or UARS, after the end of that mission in 2005. Six years later, as the dead satellite, which was the size of the city bus, was headed toward an uncontrolled re-entry, NASA calculated a 1-in-3,200 chance that someone could be injured. It ended up falling in the Pacific Ocean.

Typically 20 percent to 40 percent of a rocket or satellite will survive re-entry, said Ted Muelhaupt, a debris expert at Aerospace Corporation, a nonprofit largely financed by the federal government that performs research and analysis.

That would suggest 10,000 pounds to 20,000 pounds of the Long March 5B booster could hit the Earth’s surface.

Mr. Muelhaupt said the United States and some other countries avoid uncontrolled re-entries of space debris if the chances of an injury to someone on the ground are higher than 1 in 10,000.

To date, there have been no known cases where someone was hurt by falling human-made space debris.

“That 1-in-10,000 number is somewhat arbitrary,” Mr. Muelhaupt said. “It has been widely accepted, and recently there’s been concern about when a lot of objects re-enter, they add up to the point where somebody is going to get hurt.”

If the risk is higher, “it’s fairly common practice to dump them in the ocean,” said Marlon Sorge, executive director of Aerospace Corporation’s Center for Orbital and Re-entry Debris Studies. “That way, you know you’re not going to hit anybody.”

Mr. Muelhaupt said that without details of the design of the Chinese rocket, it would not be possible to calculate an estimate of the risk. But “I’m very confident this is above the threshold” of 1-in-10,000 risk, he added. “Well above the threshold.”

The Long March 5B booster is about three times as massive as the UARS. A rough guess would be that it poses three times as much of the 1-in-3,200 risk that NASA had estimated for UARS, perhaps higher.

“This is three UARSs in some sense,” Dr. McDowell said. The possibility of this booster injuring someone, he said, “could be as high as one in a few hundred.”

During a prelaunch broadcast on CGTN, a Chinese state media outlet, Xu Yansong, a former official at the China National Space Administration, referred to the 2020 incident in Ivory Coast. Since then, he said, “we improved our technologies” to bring the rocket stage down in an uninhabited region, but he gave no specifics.

The same series of events could soon play out yet again.

In October, China will launch a second laboratory module named Mengtian to orbit to complete the assembly of Tiangong. It, too, will fly on another Long March 5B rocket.

Li You contributed research.

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China heightens warning to U.S. over possible House Speaker Pelosi visit to Taiwan -FT

U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) holds her weekly news conference with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., July 14, 2022. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz

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July 23 (Reuters) – China has issued stark private warnings to the Biden administration about a possible trip to Taiwan in August by U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the Financial Times reported on Saturday.

The report cited six people familiar with the Chinese warnings as saying they were significantly stronger than the threats that Beijing has made in the past when it was unhappy with U.S. actions or policy on Taiwan, which is claimed by China.

The private rhetoric suggested a possible military response, the Financial Times cited several people familiar with the situation as saying.

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The White House National Security Council and the State Department declined to comment on the report. China’s foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on Sunday.

China has been stepping up military activity around Taiwan seeking to pressure the democratically elected government there to accept Chinese sovereignty. Taiwan’s government says only the island’s 23 million people can decide their future, and while it wants peace will defend itself if attacked.

The Financial Times reported on Monday that Pelosi plans to visit Taiwan in August.

China’s foreign ministry said the next day a visit to Taiwan by her would seriously undermine China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and the United States would bear the consequences of its response.

On Wednesday, U.S. President Joe Biden said he plans to speak with Chinese President Xi Jinping by the end of the month. Biden appeared to cast doubt on the reported Pelosi trip to Taiwan.

“I think that the military thinks it’s not a good idea right now, but I don’t know what the status of it is,” Biden told reporters. read more

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Reporting by Rachna Dhanrajani in Bengaluru; Editing by Grant McCool

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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China says Xi Jinping given local Covid jab as it seeks to ease vaccine safety fears | Coronavirus

China’s Covid-19 vaccines are safe and have been given to leaders of the state and ruling Communist party, officials said, as Beijing steps up efforts to allay public concerns about safety that risk hampering its vaccination drive.

“China’s state and party leaders have all been vaccinated against Covid-19 with domestically made shots,” said Zeng Yixin, deputy head of the National Health Commission, on Saturday.

In China, “state and party leaders” is a specific category of top officials at the national and deputy national level that would include the president, Xi Jinping, and premier, Li Keqiang.

Zeng’s comment, which did not specify when officials received the jab and how many doses they have received, came about two years after the country launched its Covid vaccination drive. China lags behind many other countries in informing its public about the vaccination status of their leaders.

Experts and officials have warned that lower vaccination rates for elderly people would probably squeeze health resources if the virus spreads widely, and render China less ready to emerge from its strict “dynamic Covid zero” policy that demands strict quarantine requirement for international travellers and various curbs on people’s movement and local businesses in domestic areas with clusters.

China reported 982 new coronavirus cases for 23 July, up from 817 new cases a day earlier, the National Health Commission said on Sunday. The bulk of the cases were in the northwestern province of Gansu and the southern region of Guangxi.

The country has achieved a 89.7% vaccination rate and given about 56% of its 1.41 billion people a booster dose, but only 61% of those aged above 80 have finished their primary vaccination.

However, more aggressive pushes by frontline officials, including limiting access of the unvaccinated to public venues, triggered online backlash and were quickly reversed.

A major concern among the unvaccinated is the safety of shots being used in China, with anecdotes of post-vaccination severe disease stirring fear online and criticism over the lack of transparency of the government and Chinese vaccine makers.

“Covid vaccines do not cause leukemia or diabetes, nor do they affect genetic development, cause tumor metastasis or antibody-dependent enhancement, and those are irresponsible, false information on the internet,” said Wang Fusheng, an infectious disease expert at a hospital affiliated with the Chinese military.

The rate of hospitalisation for diabetes and leukemia were similar during 2018-22, Wang told a news conference.

For those aged over 60, the complete primary vaccination using Chinese shots cut the risk of progressing to severe disease by 89%, while a booster dose further lowered the risk to 95%, compared with the unvaccinated, said Feng Zijian, an official at the Chinese Preventive Medicine Association.

The most used Chinese shots were made by Sinovac and Sinopharm. The country has yet to approve foreign-made Covid products.

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China wants to defend the Earth from asteroids using the moon

China’s “Planetary Defense System” has been catching momentum recently, with Beijing researchers now planning to utilize the moon to protect Earth from asteroid strikes that could potentially wipe out a city or human civilization, according to scientists involved in the project.

Two optical telescopes would be built on the moon’s south and north poles to survey the space around them for any threats that may have slipped through the ground-based early warning network, especially those approaching from the blind side facing the sun.

The new project entails putting three guardian satellites carrying loads of fuel and kinetic weapons into the moon’s orbit around the Earth, Wu Weiren, chief designer of the Chinese Lunar Exploration Program, said in a paper published in the Chinese peer-reviewed journal Scientia Sinica Informationis.

According to the planned project, when the system detects a celestial body with the potential to cause severe damage, it sends one or all of the guardian satellites to intercept the asteroid within a short timeframe, as short as a week, faster than what any large rocket launched from Earth could achieve, according to the team.

“It will have the ability to intercept incoming asteroids from all directions, and can form a defense circle about twice the distance between the moon and Earth – about 800,000km in diameter,” Wu and his colleagues said.

“It will have the ability to intercept incoming asteroids from all directions, and can form a defense circle about twice the distance between the moon and Earth – about 800,000km in diameter.”

Wu and his research team

China’s currently developing Earth Defense System consists of giant radars and telescopes in an attempt to manage an extinction event such as the one that wiped out the dinosaurs about 65 million years ago.

Planetary surveillance

But before breaking ground on the moon, China would first launch satellites into the moon’s orbit to test their latest surveillance, tracking and interception technologies.

These satellites could, potentially, be used to defend China’s national security by having the telescopes and sensors pointed toward the Earth, the researchers suggested.

They “have the ability to monitor the geosynchronous orbit,” a high-altitude belt hosting many communications and military satellites, they said in the paper.

The Earth-defending satellites could help China keep a close eye on other countries’ satellites “and improve the ability to protect high-value space assets”.

A growing space power

China has become a growing space power, putting ever-increasing effort in recent years to improve its capabilities in space. So far, China has launched new satellites, landed probes on the moon and explored its dark side, and even constructed its own space station.

Nasa administrator Bill Nelson said earlier this month he was concerned about the possibility China would take over the moon, though Beijing has denied this and dismissed these claims.



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White House national security adviser: Taiwan policy ‘unchanged,’ US wary of ‘new cold war’ with China

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White House National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan told the Aspen Security Forum that U.S. policy regarding Taiwan remains “unchanged,” and Washington is closely monitoring developments on the contested island nation.

“So, the president said in Japan that our policy has not changed, that we maintain a policy of strategic ambiguity, and we do. … As the president himself has said, our policy has not changed,” Sullivan said. 

National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan speaks during a press briefing at the White House March 22, 2022, in Washington. 
(AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Sullivan noted that the U.S. remains wary of elevating any conflict with China to a point where it could possibly “drift” into a new Cold War. 

“That is how we have tried to approach things,” he said. “I believe that we have hit our marks in terms of what we set out, and two days ago is an 18-month point of this administration. 

CHINA ‘IN DISTRESS’: ECONOMY SUFFERING ‘RAPID’ SLOWDOWN AS ‘SYSTEMIC’ PROBLEMS SURFACE

“I think in the Pacific, in Europe, in the Middle East, as we look at the global competition with China, I think we are well positioned to be able to effectively deal with it.” 

On Ukraine, Sulivan noted that when it comes to U.S. support, “Our job is to put the Ukrainians on the strongest possible footing on the battlefield so that they are in the strongest possible position at the negotiating table. Beyond that, we have to further objectives; one, to ensure that Putin is stymied in his goal to weaken and divide the West.

‘We believe that it is our strategic objective to ensure that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is not a strategic success for Putin, that it is a strategic failure for Putin. And that means both that he be denied his objectives in Ukraine and that Russia pay a longer-term price in terms of the elements of its national power.”

U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper speaks after he was sworn in as President Trump looks on in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., July 23, 2019. 
(Nicholas Kamm/AFP via Getty Images)

On last year’s botched U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, the national security adviser noted that nearly “one year later, I think the president feels that the decision that he made was the right decision for the American people and the right decision for how we can position ourselves to be the best and most effective contributor to the global public good across a range of issues involving a range of geographies.”

Asked about the president’s meeting with the Saudis and the controversy surrounding Jamal Khashoggi, Sullivan said it was raised immediately with the Saudis. 

“Right at the top of the meeting with the crown prince, he raised the issue, both the direct issue of Jamal Khashoggi and his brutal and grisly murder and the broader issue of human rights as well and let the crown prince know exactly where America is,” Sullivan said.

At an earlier session at the Aspen Security Forum, former Defense Secretary Mark Esper acknowledged that China’s language that set out the One China policy talked about “Chinese on both sides of the strait,” but he added that he believed “the One China policy has run its course.” 

DEMOCRATIC FOREIGN POLICY EXPERTS DIVIDED ON PELOSI’S TRIP TO TAIWAN: ‘GOOD FOR HER,’ ‘NOT A GOOD IDEA’

“Look, those two tenets are no longer true,” Esper argued. “First of all, a majority of people on Taiwan identify as Taiwanese, not Chinese; and secondly, they long ago renounced any ambition to returning to the mainland and claiming it.”

Chinese ambassador to the United States Qin Gang makes a statement at an online symposium jointly held by the Chinese Embassy and Consulates General in the U.S. to commemorate the 110th anniversary of the Revolution of 1911 on Oct. 13, 2021, in Washington, D.C.
(Chen Mengtong/China News Service via Getty Images)

“I think, on top of that, the other piece of this is clearly China has been violating the unwritten, maybe some would say unwritten rule — that is, of course, it’s embodied in the Taiwan Relations Act — but they would not use coercion to determine the final status, if you will, of Taiwan,” Esper added, saying China has “upped its game” against Taiwan to “coerce” negotiations in its favor. 

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Chinese Ambassador to the United States Qin Gang earlier this week spoke at the same forum and insisted that U.S. support for the One China policy included an acknowledgement of China’s ownership over Taiwan. 

President Biden has repeatedly stressed that the U.S. can support One China while maintaining that Taiwan is not part of China. Sullivan reiterated that when Biden has said the U.S. will support Taiwan that the president does not “speak off the cuff” but is indeed stating policy. 

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Customer Finds 100 Million-Year-Old Footprints Belonging to World’s Largest Dinosaur Species At a Restaurant in China!

Picture of a dinosaur track found at the restaurant.

(Lida Xing (facebook.com/xinglida))

Imagine walking into a restaurant in search of something delicious, only to find dinosaur footprints dating back to the Cretaceous! Believe it or not, that’s precisely what happened with a palaeontology-enthusiast in China earlier this month.

On July 10, Ou Hongtao visited a restaurant in Leshan (based in China’s Sichuan province) as per usual, when his eyes caught something quite unusual. In the yard of the restaurant, he spotted “special dents” on the ground that looked very much like dinosaur footprints to him.

His assumptions were soon confirmed by a team headed by Dr Lida Xing, a palaeontologist and associate professor at the China University of Geosciences.

Using a 3D scanner, the team was able to deduce that the prints were left behind by two brontosauruses, a genus of gigantic quadruped sauropod dinosaurs. They roamed the Earth during the Cretaceous period that lasted from about 145 to 66 million years ago, at a time when dinosaurs flourished around the globe.

These dinos, which had four thick legs and an extremely long neck, are believed to be among the largest land animals to have ever existed! They were 122 feet long and an estimated 70 tons heavy, extending the length of three buses and weighing as much as 10 African elephants.

This discovery was made just 5 kilometres from the Giant Buddha of Leshan — the world’s largest stone Buddha statue that’s carved out of a cliff of red sandstone. In fact, the 8-metre-long footprints were found preserved in sediment similar to what was used to create the statue.

What makes this find even more incredible is its rarity — in China, the field of palaeontology is being hampered by the country’s rapid development, with construction projects increasingly destroying countless fossils.

It was sheer luck that kept these footprints intact. Prior to the restaurant, the site was home to a chicken farm where sand and dirt possibly helped protect the prints.

And once the restaurant owner took over, his preference for a natural stone look was the sole reason why he decided not to cover the ground with cement and unknowingly bury the prints with it. Quite fascinating, isn’t it?

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China fines Didi more than $1 billion for breaking data security laws

The app of Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi is seen on a mobile phone in front of the company logo displayed in this illustration picture taken July 1, 2021.

Florence Lo | Reuters

BEIJING — China’s cybersecurity authority fined ride-hailing giant Didi Global on Thursday in apparent closure of a yearlong probe that prevented the company from adding new users.

The Cyberspace Administration of China said it fined Didi 8.026 billion yuan ($1.19 billion) after deciding the company violated China’s network security law, data security law and personal information protection law.

The administration also fined two Didi executives 1 million yuan each.

Didi said in an online statement it accepted the cybersecurity regulators decision.

Didi did not immediately respond to a CNBC request for comment.

The cybersecurity authority’s announcement did not say whether the fine meant that Didi would soon be able to add new users or restore its presence on app stores in China.

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100-million-year-old dinosaur footprints discovered at restaurant in China

A restaurant in southwestern China has become a site of natural history after a diner spotted dinosaur footprints in the establishment’s courtyard last week.

Located in Leshan, Sichuan province, the restaurant officially houses footprints of two sauropods that lived during the Early Cretaceous period more than 100 million years ago, a team from the China University of Geosciences confirmed.

Sauropods first evolved in the Early Jurassic epoch, roughly 201 million to 174 million years ago, and continued into the Cretaceous period, which lasted from 145 million to 66 million years ago.

These herbivorous dinosaurs had small heads, long necks and long tails and were most likely the largest terrestrial animals of all time.

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Paleontologist Lida Xing, whose team confirmed the discovery, said the two sauropods — specifically brontosauruses — were most likely around 8 meters (approximately 26.25 feet) in length. His team used a 3D scanner to make the analysis.

Ou Hongtao, the diner who spotted the “special dents” on July 10, has an interest in paleontology himself and contacted Xing immediately.

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Xing told CNN that the Cretaceous period was when “dinosaurs really flourished.” He said that the fossils that have been found in Sichuan are usually from the Jurassic period, not the Cretaceous period.

The restaurant’s location previously served as a chicken farm. The dirt that covered the footprints was only removed a year ago due to the restaurant’s opening. For this reason, the footprints are considered well-preserved.

“When we went there, we found that the footprints were very deep and quite obvious, but nobody had thought about [the possibility],” Xing told CNN.

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The site has since been surrounded by fences, and the restaurant’s owner might construct a shed for further protection.

 

Featured Image via China News Service

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