Tag Archives: Oceans

George Clooney reveals idea for new ‘Ocean’s’ movie: ‘It’s actually a great script’ – New York Post

  1. George Clooney reveals idea for new ‘Ocean’s’ movie: ‘It’s actually a great script’ New York Post
  2. George Clooney says it ‘makes sense’ for Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling to play his parents in ‘Oceans’ prequel CNN
  3. George Clooney on Ryan Gosling Playing His Dad in ‘Ocean’s’ Prequel: ‘It Makes Sense’ Variety
  4. George Clooney Teases “Good Script For Another Ocean’s” Sequel & Gives Thoughts On Margot Robbie, Ryan Gosling As His Parents In Prequel Deadline
  5. George Clooney on Margot Robbie, Ryan Gosling in ‘Ocean’s’ Prequel PEOPLE

Read original article here

George Clooney says there’s ‘a great script’ for a new ‘Ocean’s’ movie – Entertainment Weekly News

  1. George Clooney says there’s ‘a great script’ for a new ‘Ocean’s’ movie Entertainment Weekly News
  2. George Clooney says it ‘makes sense’ for Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling to play his parents in ‘Oceans’ prequel CNN
  3. George Clooney Says a ‘Great Script’ for New ‘Ocean’s’ Movie Exists, but He Won’t Call It ‘Ocean’s 14’: ‘We May End Up Doing Another One’ Variety
  4. George Clooney Confirms Fourth ‘Ocean’s’ Movie Script IndieWire
  5. George Clooney on Margot Robbie, Ryan Gosling in ‘Ocean’s’ Prequel PEOPLE

Read original article here

George Clooney Says a ‘Great Script’ for New ‘Ocean’s’ Movie Exists, but He Won’t Call It ‘Ocean’s 14’: ‘We May End Up Doing Another One’ – Variety

  1. George Clooney Says a ‘Great Script’ for New ‘Ocean’s’ Movie Exists, but He Won’t Call It ‘Ocean’s 14’: ‘We May End Up Doing Another One’ Variety
  2. George Clooney says it ‘makes sense’ for Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling to play his parents in ‘Oceans’ prequel CNN
  3. George Clooney Says ‘Oceans 14’ Has A “Great Script” — World of Reel Jordan Ruimy
  4. George Clooney on Margot Robbie, Ryan Gosling in ‘Ocean’s’ Prequel PEOPLE
  5. George Clooney on Ryan Gosling and Margot Robbie as His Parents in Ocean’s Prequel: ‘It Makes Sense’ IGN

Read original article here

George Clooney reacts to Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling playing his beloved character Danny Ocean’s parents in – Daily Mail

  1. George Clooney reacts to Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling playing his beloved character Danny Ocean’s parents in Daily Mail
  2. George Clooney says it ‘makes sense’ for Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling to play his parents in ‘Oceans’ prequel CNN
  3. George Clooney on Ryan Gosling and Margot Robbie as His Parents in Ocean’s Prequel: ‘It Makes Sense’ IGN
  4. George Clooney on Ryan Gosling Playing His Dad in ‘Ocean’s’ Prequel: ‘It Makes Sense’ Variety
  5. George Clooney on What He Really Thinks About Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling Playing His Parents Yahoo Life

Read original article here

Ocean’s 11 Prequel Producer Says Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling Film Will Do Right by the Franchise – IGN

  1. Ocean’s 11 Prequel Producer Says Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling Film Will Do Right by the Franchise IGN
  2. ‘Barbie’ stars Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling will ‘do right’ in ‘Ocean’s Eleven’ prequel, producer says CNN
  3. Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling’s First ‘Barbie’ Reunion Is an ‘Ocean’s 11’ Prequel, and Its Producer Is Hoping for Even ‘More Projects’ Starring Them Variety
  4. Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling tapped to star in ‘Oceans 11’ prequel New York Post
  5. Details on Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling’s Next Movie Revealed E! NEWS
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

‘Ocean’s 11’ Prequel: Producer Teases Margot Robbie & Ryan Gosling Film Will “Do Right By The Franchise” – Deadline

  1. ‘Ocean’s 11’ Prequel: Producer Teases Margot Robbie & Ryan Gosling Film Will “Do Right By The Franchise” Deadline
  2. ‘Barbie’ stars Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling will ‘do right’ in ‘Ocean’s Eleven’ prequel, producer says CNN
  3. Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling’s First ‘Barbie’ Reunion Is an ‘Ocean’s 11’ Prequel, and Its Producer Is Hoping for Even ‘More Projects’ Starring Them Variety
  4. Details on Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling’s Next Movie Revealed E! NEWS
  5. Ocean’s 11 prequel producer says the Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling film will do right by the franchise Gamesradar
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Viking 1 may have landed at site of ancient Martian megatsunami

Sign up for CNN’s Wonder Theory science newsletter. Explore the universe with news on fascinating discoveries, scientific advancements and more.



CNN
 — 

When NASA’s Viking 1 lander made history as the first spacecraft to touch down on Mars on July 20, 1976, it sent back images of a landscape no one was expecting.

Those first images taken from the ground there showed a surprisingly boulder-strewn surface in the red planet’s northern equatorial region, rather than the smooth plains and flood channels expected based on images of the area taken from space.

The mystery of the Viking landing site has long puzzled scientists, who believe an ocean once existed there.

Now, new research suggests that the lander touched down where a Martian megatsunami deposited materials 3.4 billion years ago, according to a study published Thursday in the journal Scientific Reports.

The catastrophic event likely occurred when an asteroid slammed into the shallow Martian ocean — similar to the Chicxulub asteroid impact that wiped out dinosaurs on Earth 66 million years ago, according to researchers.

Five years before the Viking I landing, NASA’s Mariner 9 spacecraft had orbited Mars, spotting the first landscapes on another planet that suggested evidence of ancient flood channels there.

The interest in the potential for life on the red planet prompted scientists to select its northern equatorial region, Chryse Planitia, as the first Martian landing site for Viking I.

“The lander was designed to seek evidence of extant life on the Martian surface, so to select a suitable landing site, the engineers and scientists at the time faced the arduous task of using some of the planet’s earliest acquired images, accompanied by Earth-based radar probing of the planet’s surface,” said lead study author Alexis Rodriguez, senior scientist at the Planetary Science Institute in Tucson, Arizona, via email.

“The landing site selection needed to fulfill a critical requirement — the presence of extensive evidence of former surface water. On Earth, life always requires the presence of water to exist.”

At first, scientists thought the rocky surface might be a thick layer of debris left behind due to space rocks crashing into Mars and creating craters, or broken pieces of lava.

But there weren’t enough craters nearby, and lava fragments proved rare on the ground at the site.

“Our investigation provides a new solution — that a megatsunami washed ashore, emplacing sediments on which, about 3.4 billion years later, the Viking 1 lander touched down,” Rodriguez said.

The researchers believe the tsunami occurred when an asteroid or comet hit the planet’s northern ocean. But finding a resulting impact crater has been difficult.

Rodriguez and his team studied maps of the Martian surface created from different missions and analyzed a newly identified crater that seemed to be the likely point of impact.

The crater is 68 miles (nearly 110 kilometers) across in part of the northern lowlands — an area once likely covered in ocean. Researchers simulated collisions in this region using modeling to determine what impact was necessary to create what’s known as the Pohl crater.

It was possible in two different scenarios, one caused by a 5.6-mile (9-kilometer) asteroid meeting strong ground resistance and releasing 13 million megatons of TNT energy, or a 1.8-mile (2.9-kilometer) asteroid plowing into softer ground and releasing 0.5 million megatons of TNT energy.

For perspective, the most powerful nuclear bomb ever tested, Tsar Bomba, created 57 megatons of TNT energy.

During simulations, both impacts created a crater with Pohl’s dimensions — as well as a megatsunami that reached 932 miles (1,500 kilometers) from the impact site.

The 1.8-mile asteroid generated a tsunami that measured 820 feet (250 meters) tall once it reached land.

The results were similar to those of the Chicxulub impact on Earth, which created a crater that was initially 62 miles (100 kilometers) across and triggered a towering tsunami that traveled around the world.

The impact likely sent water vapor up into the atmosphere, which would have affected the Martian climate and potentially created snow or rain in the fallout. Vast amounts of water from the shallow ocean, as well as sediments, would have been displaced, Rodriguez said, although most of the water returned to the ocean soon after the megatsunami reached its peak.

“The seismic shaking associated with the impact would have been so intense that it could have dislodged sea floor materials into the megatsunami,” said study coauthor Darrel Robertson at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley, in a statement.

It’s also possible that the megatsunami reached the location of the 1997 landing site for the Pathfinder, south of where Viking 1 landed, and even contributed to the formation of an inland sea.

If so, then the two landers touched down at the site of ancient marine environments.

“The ocean is thought to have been groundwater-fed from aquifers that likely formed much earlier in Martian history — over 3.7 billion years ago — when the planet was ‘Earth-like’ with rivers, lakes, seas, and a primordial ocean,” Rodriguez said.

Next, the team wants to investigate Pohl crater as a potential landing site for a future rover, since the location might contain evidence of ancient life.

“Right after its formation, the crater would have generated submarine hydrothermal systems lasting tens of thousands of years, providing energy and nutrient-rich environments,” Rodriguez said, referring to the heat generated by the asteroid impact.

Read original article here

Viking 1 may have landed at site of ancient Martian megatsunami

Sign up for CNN’s Wonder Theory science newsletter. Explore the universe with news on fascinating discoveries, scientific advancements and more.



CNN
 — 

When NASA’s Viking 1 lander made history as the first spacecraft to touch down on Mars on July 20, 1976, it sent back images of a landscape no one was expecting.

Those first images taken from the ground there showed a surprisingly boulder-strewn surface in the red planet’s northern equatorial region, rather than the smooth plains and flood channels expected based on images of the area taken from space.

The mystery of the Viking landing site has long puzzled scientists, who believe an ocean once existed there.

Now, new research suggests that the lander touched down where a Martian megatsunami deposited materials 3.4 billion years ago, according to a study published Thursday in the journal Scientific Reports.

The catastrophic event likely occurred when an asteroid slammed into the shallow Martian ocean — similar to the Chicxulub asteroid impact that wiped out dinosaurs on Earth 66 million years ago, according to researchers.

Five years before the Viking I landing, NASA’s Mariner 9 spacecraft had orbited Mars, spotting the first landscapes on another planet that suggested evidence of ancient flood channels there.

The interest in the potential for life on the red planet prompted scientists to select its northern equatorial region, Chryse Planitia, as the first Martian landing site for Viking I.

“The lander was designed to seek evidence of extant life on the Martian surface, so to select a suitable landing site, the engineers and scientists at the time faced the arduous task of using some of the planet’s earliest acquired images, accompanied by Earth-based radar probing of the planet’s surface,” said lead study author Alexis Rodriguez, senior scientist at the Planetary Science Institute in Tucson, Arizona, via email.

“The landing site selection needed to fulfill a critical requirement — the presence of extensive evidence of former surface water. On Earth, life always requires the presence of water to exist.”

At first, scientists thought the rocky surface might be a thick layer of debris left behind due to space rocks crashing into Mars and creating craters, or broken pieces of lava.

But there weren’t enough craters nearby, and lava fragments proved rare on the ground at the site.

“Our investigation provides a new solution — that a megatsunami washed ashore, emplacing sediments on which, about 3.4 billion years later, the Viking 1 lander touched down,” Rodriguez said.

The researchers believe the tsunami occurred when an asteroid or comet hit the planet’s northern ocean. But finding a resulting impact crater has been difficult.

Rodriguez and his team studied maps of the Martian surface created from different missions and analyzed a newly identified crater that seemed to be the likely point of impact.

The crater is 68 miles (nearly 110 kilometers) across in part of the northern lowlands — an area once likely covered in ocean. Researchers simulated collisions in this region using modeling to determine what impact was necessary to create what’s known as the Pohl crater.

It was possible in two different scenarios, one caused by a 5.6-mile (9-kilometer) asteroid meeting strong ground resistance and releasing 13 million megatons of TNT energy, or a 1.8-mile (2.9-kilometer) asteroid plowing into softer ground and releasing 0.5 million megatons of TNT energy.

For perspective, the most powerful nuclear bomb ever tested, Tsar Bomba, created 57 megatons of TNT energy.

During simulations, both impacts created a crater with Pohl’s dimensions — as well as a megatsunami that reached 932 miles (1,500 kilometers) from the impact site.

The 1.8-mile asteroid generated a tsunami that measured 820 feet (250 meters) tall once it reached land.

The results were similar to those of the Chicxulub impact on Earth, which created a crater that was initially 62 miles (100 kilometers) across and triggered a towering tsunami that traveled around the world.

The impact likely sent water vapor up into the atmosphere, which would have affected the Martian climate and potentially created snow or rain in the fallout. Vast amounts of water from the shallow ocean, as well as sediments, would have been displaced, Rodriguez said, although most of the water returned to the ocean soon after the megatsunami reached its peak.

“The seismic shaking associated with the impact would have been so intense that it could have dislodged sea floor materials into the megatsunami,” said study coauthor Darrel Robertson at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley, in a statement.

It’s also possible that the megatsunami reached the location of the 1997 landing site for the Pathfinder, south of where Viking 1 landed, and even contributed to the formation of an inland sea.

If so, then the two landers touched down at the site of ancient marine environments.

“The ocean is thought to have been groundwater-fed from aquifers that likely formed much earlier in Martian history — over 3.7 billion years ago — when the planet was ‘Earth-like’ with rivers, lakes, seas, and a primordial ocean,” Rodriguez said.

Next, the team wants to investigate Pohl crater as a potential landing site for a future rover, since the location might contain evidence of ancient life.

“Right after its formation, the crater would have generated submarine hydrothermal systems lasting tens of thousands of years, providing energy and nutrient-rich environments,” Rodriguez said, referring to the heat generated by the asteroid impact.

Read original article here

Nigerian stowaways found on ship’s rudder in Canary Islands

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — Three stowaways were found on a ship’s rudder in the Canary Islands after an 11-day ocean voyage from Nigeria, Spain’s maritime rescue service said.

The men found on the Alithini II oil tanker at the Las Palmas port on Monday afternoon appeared to have symptoms of dehydration and hypothermia and were transferred to hospitals on the island for medical attention, according to Spain’s Maritime Safety and Rescue Society.

The survivors were all from Nigeria, the Spanish government’s delegation in the Canary Islands told The Associated Press. One of them remained hospitalized Tuesday.

The maritime rescue agency, known in Spain as Salvamento Marítimo. shared a photo of the three men sitting on top of the rudder under the ship’s massive hull with their feet hanging only a few centimeters (inches) from the water.

According to the MarineTraffic tracking website, the Malta-flagged vessel left Lagos, Nigeria on Nov. 17 and arrived in Las Palmas on Monday. The distance between the ports is roughly 4,600 kilometers (2,800 miles).

Other people were previously discovered clinging to rudders while risking their lives to reach the Spanish islands located off northwest Africa. Salvamento Maritimo has dealt with six similar cases in the last two years, according to Sofía Hernández who heads the service’s coordination center in Las Palmas.

Migrants may seek cover inside the box-like structure around the rudder, Hernández explained, but are still vulnerable to bad weather and rough seas. “It is very dangerous,” she told the AP.

A ship’s fluctuating draft level – the vertical distance between the waterline and the bottom of the hull- is another hazard for such stowaways. The levels vary depending on the weight of the cargo onboard.

“We are talking about several meters difference. This part could have been perfectly submerged in the water,” Hernández said.

In 2020 14-year-old Nigerian boy was interviewed by Spain’s El País newspaper after surviving two weeks on a ship’s rudder. He had also departed from Lagos.

“It’s not the first time nor will it be the last,” tweeted Txema Santana, a journalist and migration advisor to the regional government of the Canary Islands.

In cases like these, the ship owner is responsible for bringing the stowaways back to their point of departure, according to the Spanish government delegation in the islands.

Thousands of migrants and refugees from North and West Africa have reached the Canary Islands irregularly in recent years. Most make the dangerous Atlantic crossing on crowded boats after departing from the coast of Morocco, the Western Sahara, Mauritania and even Senegal.

More than 11,600 people have reached the Spanish islands by boat so far this year, according to figures released by Spain’s Interior Ministry.

___

Follow AP’s coverage of global migration at https://apnews.com/hub/migration

Read original article here

The Red Planet was once BLUE: Mars was covered by 984ft-deep oceans 4.5 billion years ago

Now a desolate red desert, a new study has claimed that Mars was once actually predominantly blue.

While researchers have long agreed that our red neighbour once held water, just how much water it had was subject to debate. 

Now, a new study has revealed that 4.5 billion years ago, Mars was covered by 984ft (300 metre)-deep oceans.

Researchers from the University of Copenhagen hope the findings could bring humanity one step closer to answering a vital question: did Mars ever have life? 

A new study claims that Mars was covered by 984 feet deep oceans 4.5 billion years ago 

A meteroid impact crater created on December 24, 2021, in the Amazonis Planitia region of Mars

Proof that Mars once held water 

Spirit and Opportunity, NASA’s twin rovers, found evidence of the presence of water enclosed in rock in 2007, when one of Spirit’s wheels broke and gorged a piece of stone.

Analysis of the silica-rich layer discovered in the scratch suggested it formed in the presence of liquid water.

In 2008, the Phoenix lander was gathering geological samples, and they disappeared after a few days.

Scientists thought these were pieces of ice. This assessment was confirmed when the lander later detected water vapour in a sample. 

In 2012, Curiosity was meandering over an ancient martian seabed when it examined a number of rocks that were exposed to liquid water billions of years ago.

<!- - ad: https://mads.dailymail.co.uk/v8/de/sciencetech/none/article/other/mpu_factbox.html?id=mpu_factbox_1 - ->

Advertisement

The study estimates that the oceans covered the entire planet, and could have ranged anywhere from 984 feet (300 metres) to 3,280 feet (1,000 metres) deep.

Given that the planet is about half the size of Earth, Professor Martin Bizzarro, from the Centre for Star and Planet Formation says that in comparison, there is actually very little water on our planet. 

This water was brought to Mars by asteroids filled with ice, according to Professor Bizzarro. 

In addition to water, the icy asteroids also brought biologically relevant molecules such as amino acids to Mars.

Amino acids are used when DNA and RNA form bases that contain everything a cell needs. 

Professor Bizzarro explained: ‘This happened within Mars’s first 100 million years. 

‘After this period, something catastrophic happened for potential life on Earth. 

‘It is believed that there was a gigantic collision between the Earth and another Mars-sized planet. 

‘It was an energetic collision that formed the Earth-Moon system and, as the same time, wiped out all potential life on Earth.’

To reach these conclusions, the researchers studied a meteorite that is billions of years old. 

Speaking to MailOnline, Professor Bizzarro explained that the meteorite was formed 4.5 billion years ago and is now ‘a fragment of the original crust of Mars.’

‘Thus, it records the bombardment history of the planet,’ he explained. 

Billions of years ago, Mars was struck by asteroids filled with ice and critical organic material

Unlike Earth, Mars doesn’t have tectonic plates deep under its surface, as the searing molten rock has long cooled to form a rocky mantle. 

As a result, the researchers note that the crust remains static, keeping the surface of the planet unchanged. 

This allows them to study Mars’ past in a way that would be impossible to do on Earth.

Professor Bizzarro added: ‘Plate tectonics on Earth erased all evidence of what happened in the first 500 million years of our planet’s history. 

‘The plates constantly move and are recycled back and destroyed into the interior of our planet. 

‘In contrast, Mars does not have plate tectonics such that planet’s surface preserves a record of the earliest history of the planet.’

The new study comes shortly after experts claimed that ancient microbes could survive for hundreds of millions of years beneath the surface of Mars in ‘suspended animation’. 

Researchers say a bacterium called Deinococcus radiodurans could survive 280 million years on Mars – nearly 300 times longer than previously assumed – if it was buried 32 feet below the Red Planet’s surface.

D. radiodurans is also known as ‘Conan the Bacterium’ and a ‘superhero of the bacterial world’ due to its toughness, which has even earned it the title of ‘world’s toughest known bacterium’ in the Guinness Book of Records.  

Like a muscle-bound movie hero, it withstands attacks from acid baths, high and low temperatures, and even radiation doses.

While Conan the Bacterium likely doesn’t exist on Mars, the researchers believe an equivalent microorganism could exist on the Red Planet for a similar time period. 

THE NASA MARS CURIOSITY ROVER LAUNCHED IN 2011 AND HAS IMPROVED OUR UNDERSTANDING OF THE RED PLANET

The Mars Curiosity rover was initially launched from Cape Canaveral, an American Air Force station in Florida on November 26, 2011. 

After embarking on a 350 million mile (560 million km) journey, the £1.8 billion ($2.5 billion) research vehicle touched down only 1.5 miles (2.4 km) away from the earmarked landing spot.

After a successful landing on August 5th, 2012, the rover has travelled about 11 miles (18 km). 

It launched on the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) spacecraft and the rover constituted 23 per cent of the mass of the total mission. 

With 80 kg (180 lb) of scientific instruments on board, the rover weighs a total of 899 kg (1,982 lb) and is powered by a plutonium fuel source. 

The rover is 2.9 metres (9.5 ft) long by 2.7 metres (8.9 ft) wide by 2.2 metres (7.2 ft) in height. 

The Mars curiosity rover was initially intended to be a two-year mission to gather information to help answer if the planet could support life, has liquid water, study the climate and the geology of Mars an has since been active for more than 2,000  days

The rover was initially intended to be a two-year mission to gather information to help answer if the planet could support life, has liquid water, study the climate and the geology of Mars.  

Due to its success, the mission has been extended indefinitely and has now been active for over 3,500 days.

The rover has several scientific instruments on board, including the mastcam which consists of two cameras and can take high-resolution images and videos in real colour. 

So far on the journey of the car-sized robot it has encountered an ancient streambed where liquid water used to flow, not long after it also discovered that billions of years ago, a nearby area known as Yellowknife Bay was part of a lake that could have supported microbial life.

Read original article here