Tag Archives: rivers

Indigenous groups scour forests and rivers for Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira | Brazil

Warm rain lashed the speedboat as it barrelled south towards the spot where Binin Matis’s mentor vanished without a trace.

“He was like a father to me,” said the 31-year-old Indigenous leader as his vessel advanced to the U-shaped bend where Bruno Pereira was last seen. “Now he’s gone, I’m not sure what I’ll do.”

Pereira, a celebrated Brazilian Indigenous expert, disappeared early last Sunday while returning from a reporting trip deep into the Amazon with the British journalist and longtime Guardian collaborator Dom Phillips.

Dom Phillips in Brazil on 14 November 2019. Photograph: João Laet/AFP/Getty Images

Four days later, young Indigenous men like Matis – who Pereira was training to use technology to protect his people’s ancestral lands from environmental criminals – were spearheading the search.

“I wish we could find them or at least some sign that might give us hope,” Matis said on Thursday afternoon as he journeyed downriver to a jungle-flanked stretch of the River Itaquaí where that operation is focused.

As he scanned the brown waters, Matis said he was on the lookout for even the tiniest suggestion that Pereira and Phillips might have been there: a backpack or T-shirt, a can of oil, a lifejacket or perhaps the seat of a boat.

Yet there was nothing but the occasional submerged tree trunk to be seen in the river that meanders towards the Javari Indigenous Reserve, whose inhabitants Phillips was in the region to interview.

Twenty-four hours earlier, the search team’s pulse quickened when they saw vultures circling over the rainforest canopy. But when they followed the trail into the jungle their hopes were dashed. “It was just a dead monkey and the vultures were eating it,” Matis said, vowing to push on with the manhunt despite the lack of progress.

Further along the murky river, a cluster of boats had been moored on its western shore. Onboard the largest, sat the man helping coordinate the search and rescue mission – a 37-year-old Indigenous specialist called Orlando Possuelo.

With support from heavily armed members of the military police, two dozen Indigenous men have spent this week scouring the region’s forests and rivers for the missing pair, under Possuelo’s command.

Orlando Possuelo in the Javari Valley on 9 June 2022. Photograph: João Laet/AFP/Getty Images

“We’ve been here since Monday,” said the indigenista, son of the legendary explorer and Indigenous defender Sydney Possuelo. “This is the region where he was last seen.”

Possuelo, a close friend of Pereira, recalled how exactly a week earlier he had helped the two missing men load their bags on to a boat as they began their three-day trip along the River Itaquaí.

When they failed to return to their starting point – the isolated rivertown of Atalaia do Norte – by the agreed time on Sunday morning, Possuelo set off downriver to find them, fearing they had suffered an accident.

“My first thought was that their engine had broken … I was looking for a broken-down boat, or one that had run out of petrol – something like that.”

map of the search area

As the hours and days went by, darker thoughts began to swirl. When Possuelo made it home, after three fruitless hours trawling the river, he started “to fear something really bad had happened”.

Carol Santana, a legal adviser to the Javari Indigenous association, said activists were now firmly focused on the theory that the pair had been the victims of “forced disappearances”.

“We are not necessarily saying they’re no longer alive,” emphasised Santana, a lawyer who is also representing Pereira’s wife, Beatriz de Almeida Matos.

But few involved in the rescue mission now believe the disappearances were the result of an innocent accident. Many suspect the men were targeted by the illegal hunting and fishing gangs that are laying siege to the region’s Indigenous lands in search of gold and animals such as pirarucu fish and tracajá river turtles.

On Friday afternoon a judge ordered that a suspect arrested on Tuesday should be held for another 30 days while police investigate whether he is involved. Amarildo da Costa, a fisherman known locally as “Pelado”, was charged with illegal possession of restricted ammunition.

Jair Bolsonaro’s far-right administration, under which Amazon deforestation has soared, appears to be gradually responding to a cacophony of criticism, in Brazil and around the world, for its sluggish response.

In a letter to Bolsonaro this week, editors from some of the world’s leading media organizations, including the Guardian, the Washington Post, NPR and the New York Times, denounced the “minimally resourced” and slow-to-start government search operation.

On Thursday, as Indigenous searchers from four ethnic groups – the Matis, the Marubo, the Kanamari and the Mayoruna – continued their search, grey navy vessels could be seen patrolling the river. A military helicopter soared overhead as white storks lurked on the riverbanks below.

“I’ve got 300 men in the area, two aircraft, 20 vessels. We’ve already spent more than R$0.5M (about £83,000). Just to show that Brazil is taking action, not fooling about,” the justice minister, Anderson Torres, told reporters.

But critics see such efforts as too little, far too late. And Indigenous activists, who have been searching for Phillips and Pereira since just a few hours after they vanished, voiced disgust at Bolsonaro’s suggestion that the pair had themselves to blame for embarking on such an ill-advised “adventure”.

“They went off on an adventure – we’re sorry if the worst has happened,” Bolsonaro said on Thursday before meeting the US president, Joe Biden, at the Summit of the Americas.

“The one who’s out having an adventure is the president who squanders public money riding around on jet skis and motorbikes, when that money could be spent on healthcare,” said Indigenous lawyer Eliesio Marubo, remembering how nearly 670,000 Brazilians have died from Covid, a disease Bolsonaro has downplayed.

As the coronavirus catastrophe swept Brazil, Phillips was also reporting on another calamity that has accelerated since Bolsonaro’s shock 2018 election: the decimation of the world’s largest tropical rainforest. Phillips’s journey to the Javari region was one of the final pieces of reporting he had planned for a book he was writing on the environmental crisis – and potential solutions.

Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira filmed on Amazon expedition in 2018 – video

“I was crazy for him to finish the book so we could start working on other things together,” said João Laet, a Brazilian photographer with whom Phillips has reported extensively on the environmental emergency unfolding in the Amazon.

As he retraced his friend’s final footsteps to the spot where the missing men were last seen, Laet spoke of the “enchantment” they shared for the original inhabitants of Brazil’s rainforests and Phillips’s belief that Indigenous communities needed empowering by people such as Pereira so they could repel the growing assault on their lands. “Dom was absolutely convinced of this.”

Laet insisted he had not given up hope that Phillips would return to finish his book. “I have great faith,” the photographer said.

But as the sun set over the jungle there was no sign of a breakthrough. “We’re doing our best,” said one rain-soaked Matis searcher as he clambered back into Possuelo’s floating search base near the village of Cachoeira, accompanied by five rifle-toting police guards. “But we’ve not found a single trace.”

Read original article here

Doc Rivers to return as coach of the Philadelphia 76ers, president Daryl Morey says

CAMDEN, N.J. — Philadelphia 76ers president of basketball operations Daryl Morey said coach Doc Rivers will return next season for a third year with the franchise.

“I just think he’s a great coach,” Morey said during Friday’s exit interviews after the Sixers were eliminated the previous night on their home court by the Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference semifinals. “I love working with him. I feel like I’m learning from him. I think [general manager] Elton [Brand] and I and him make a great team, and we’re gonna see where this journey takes us.

“But we feel very good about where it’s gonna take us, and it’s gonna be where we have a very good chance to win the title.”

That has been the goal each of the past two seasons in Philadelphia, since Morey arrived from the Houston Rockets and Rivers from the LA Clippers: to take this team to level it hasn’t reached in a generation. The 76ers haven’t made it past the second round of the playoffs — where they’ve now lost four times in five years — since reaching the NBA Finals in 2001.

The 76ers haven’t won an NBA championship since 1983.

Morey reiterated that goal when he traded Ben Simmons, Seth Curry, Andre Drummond and two first-round draft picks for James Harden in this season’s blockbuster deal at the trade deadline.

On Friday, Morey repeatedly said the 76ers are looking forward to spending the offseason finding ways to “unlock” Harden, who was underwhelming in the playoffs (18.6 points, 8.6 assists), and to clean up the fit alongside superstar center Joel Embiid.

When asked several times directly if that meant Harden has more levels to reach or if fans should come to lower their expectations for the former NBA MVP moving forward, Morey artfully danced around the question without answering it.

Instead, Morey said he is looking forward to Rivers and his staff finding ways to use Harden.

“Look. He’s an incredibly talented player,” Morey said. “Just like Joel, just like Tobias [Harris]. And I’m excited for Doc and his staff to have a whole offseason to work with the players and come up with the best plan for the roster we’ll have. … Having it all come together in February makes it very difficult to try and figure out how to … ‘unlock’ all the different skills of the players and how they can work together.

“We all know he’s a very skilled player, and we’ll figure out how to use him.”

Morey also followed up on Harden’s declaration that, as he weighs what to do with his player option this summer, he will be back in Philadelphia next season.

“That’s the plan, is to have him back,” Morey said. “That’s been the plan since the trade. Obviously, we have to work with his representation and that’ll be between us to figure out how that works.”

Overall, though, it was a melancholy mood — as one would expect for a team that bounced out of the playoffs in the manner that it did, with two straight ugly losses to the Heat.

“Well, we’re sick,” Morey said. “We’re here because we have big aspirations. I know our fans do as well. … That’s why we’re here. That’s why we do this. So it’s tough to be here right now. Still emotional.

“[But] look, we’re excited about what we can build from here. We think a lot of things that we can improve on and that’s myself, that’s on [Brand], that’s on Coach Rivers. We’re going to figure this out. But we feel like there’s a lot to build on.”

While Philadelphia has a strong foundation to build upon, simply thanks to Embiid’s presence, there still is plenty of work to be done. Miami star Jimmy Butler was able to get what he wanted against the 76ers defensively in this series, and perimeter defense was a constant problem all season. Depth also was an issue.

Morey said defense was going to be a focus, while Rivers echoed Embiid’s statements that the team needs more toughness moving forward.

“Well, I think it’s something that our players can grow,” Morey said about a lack of mental toughness being a common theme in exit interviews with players. “I mean, going through losses and how you respond to that and how you take it as your own look in the mirror. I think we all need to look in the mirror and say, ‘How can we each be better?’ … And that goes for myself as well.”

Ultimately, though, what the 76ers have done the past two seasons is no better than what they did the prior three in terms of how far they’ve managed to advance in the postseason. But advancing in the playoffs is no easy feat, Rivers said, and requires a learning curve from up and down an organization to do so.

“Because winning is hard,” Rivers said. “You just don’t show up and you just say, ‘OK, guys. We’re moving on.’ It’s hard. We’re not the only organization. It’s hard to move on. We had an opportunity last year, didn’t get it done. This year was tough. I mean, obviously, with all the injuries and stuff, so the answers are easy. It’s hard. We’re right there. We put ourselves in the argument. And that’s all you can do. And then you come back and keep working at it until you get over the mountain.

“Milwaukee, you look at them, it took two or three years to get over the mountain. That’s just the way it works. It’s not guaranteed to anybody.”

Read original article here

Sources — Philadelphia 76ers coach Doc Rivers enters COVID-19 protocols

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Facebook Messenger
  • Pinterest
  • Email
  • print

Philadelphia 76ers coach Doc Rivers tested positive for COVID-19 and has entered the NBA’s health and safety protocols, sources told ESPN.

Assistant coach Dan Burke will serve as the acting coach, beginning with the Sixers-Brooklyn Nets game Thursday in New York, sources said.

Two more Sixers players entered into the protocols Thursday: guards Myles Powell and Tyler Johnson.

Rivers joins NBA coaches Michael Malone (Denver Nuggets), Frank Vogel (Los Angeles Lakers), Monty Williams (Phoenix Suns), Billy Donovan (Chicago Bulls), Chauncey Billups (Portland Trail Blazers) and Mark Daigneault (Oklahoma City Thunder) in the COVID-19 protocols.



Read original article here

Philip Rivers Would ‘Listen’ If Saints Contacted Him After Jameis Winston Injury | Bleacher Report

AP Photo/Jeffrey T. Barnes

Retired NFL quarterback Philip Rivers said he would listen if the New Orleans Saints called about adding him to their roster, according to Sam Farmer of the Los Angeles Times.

The Saints suddenly have an opening under center after starter Jameis Winston suffered a torn ACL during Sunday’s game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, although the team has not contacted Rivers.

“We’re satisfied with the quarterback room,” Saints coach Sean Payton told reporters Monday. 

New Orleans also has Taysom Hill, Trevor Siemian and rookie fourth-round pick Ian Book on the roster.

Hill was the team’s starter last season when Drew Brees suffered a rib injury, leading the team to a 3-1 record in four starts. He totaled 834 passing yards and four touchdowns along with 209 rushing yards and four more scores during his four full games as a quarterback.

Rivers could be an upgrade if he joins the team.

The 39-year-old was effective last year in his lone season with the Indianapolis Colts, finishing with 4,169 passing yards, 24 touchdowns and 11 interceptions. His 97.0 quarterback rating was the sixth-highest of his 15 seasons as a starter in the NFL.

He retired after the season, but told Bob Kravitz of The Athletic in August that he thought he could have remained the Colts’ starter if he wanted.

Rivers’ recent success showed he can still be productive, especially in a Payton-led offense that allowed Brees to thrive. New Orleans should explore all options as it tries to remain a contender after a 5-2 start to the season. 



Read original article here

Rivers on Saturn’s moon Titan could help NASA determine whether moon is ripe to host life 

The rivers and tributaries on Saturn’s moon Titan could help NASA’s upcoming mission to the celestial satellite learn more about its geology and whether it’s capable of supporting life, a new study suggests.

Astronomers, led by those at Cornell University, looked at Titan’s map of rivers and tributaries and determined that the shapes of the rivers can give additional information on how deep they are or what occurred in the region.

They also found that the images they used to study Titan likely underestimated the drainage density, which could show how they operate on the distant moon.

The rivers and tributaries on Saturn’s moon Titan could be helpful for NASA’s upcoming mission to the celestial satellite to learn more about its geology and if it’s capable of supporting life

Astronomers determined the shapes of the rivers on Titan (pictured) can give information on how deep they are or what occurred in the region

‘The channel systems are the heart of Titan’s sediment transport pathways,’ said study co-author Alex Hayes in a statement. 

‘They tell you how organic material is routed around Titan’s surface, and identifies locations where the material might be concentrated near tectonic or perhaps even cryovolcanic features.’

In 2018, scientists found evidence of a 4,000-mile-wide ‘ice corridor’ on Titan could be evidence of ancient volcanic activity.     

Given that Titan is the only place in the solar system known to have liquids (aside from Earth) on the surface, understand how the rivers work is important to understand its sediment transport system and the moon’s geology. 

‘Further, those materials either can be sent down into Titan’s liquid water interior ocean, or alternatively, mixed with liquid water that gets transported up to the surface,’ Hayes added. 

The researchers studied Titan’s rivers by looking at Earth-based radar images of rivers in places like Alaska, Quebec and other parts of the planet and comparing them to radar images that NASA’s Cassini spacecraft took of the moon

The researchers studied Titan’s rivers by looking at Earth-based radar images of rivers in places like Alaska, Quebec and Pilbara, Western Australia

The researchers studied Titan’s rivers by looking at Earth-based radar images of rivers in places like Alaska, Quebec and Pilbara, Western Australia. 

They compared them to radar images that NASA’s Cassini spacecraft took of the moon, before it intentionally plunged itself into Saturn in September 2017.

In doing so, they were able to understand the limits of Cassini’s dataset and what will likely need more studying ahead of the Dragonfly expedition.

‘Although the quality and quantity of Cassini [Synthetic Aperture Radar] images put significant limits on their utility for investigating river networks,’ study lead author Julia Miller said.

‘They can still be used to understand Titan’s landscape at a fundamental level.’

Titan (pictured) is well known to have a Martian-like landscape, as scientists mapped the icy moon in 2019, revealing a landscape full of mountains, lakes, plains, craters, valleys and ‘labyrinth terrains’

Titan is well known to have a Martian-like landscape, as scientists mapped the icy moon in 2019 (using data from the Cassini spacecraft), revealing a landscape full of mountains, lakes, plains, craters, valleys and ‘labyrinth terrains.’  

Unlike Earth, Titan’s liquids are in methane and ethane form and not water. 

The methane lakes can reach more than 300 feet deep on some parts of Titan, particularly in the northern polar region. 

However, Titan, the second largest moon in the solar system behind Ganymede, is well-known to have a thick crust made of water ice.

Getting a further understanding of Titan’s hydrologic system can give astronomers insight into how it differs from Earth’s.

‘Examining Titan’s hydrologic system represents an extreme example comparable to Earth’s hydrologic system—and it’s the only instance where we can actively see how a planetary landscape evolves in the absence of vegetation,’ Hayes added.

Dragonfly (pictured) was originally set to launch in 2026, but the COVID-19 pandemic pushed back the launch date to 2027

Dragonfly was originally set to launch in 2026, but the COVID-19 pandemic pushed back the launch date to 2027. 

The study was published in the Planetary Science Journal. 

Last year, researchers discovered that Titan is moving away from the planet at four inchers per year, compared to the 1.5 inches that the moon is moving away from Earth.  

WHAT DID CASSINI DISCOVER DURING ITS 20-YEAR MISSION TO SATURN?

Cassini launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida in 1997, then spent seven years in transit followed by 13 years orbiting Saturn.

An artist’s impression of the Cassini spacecraft studying Saturn 

In 2000 it spent six months studying Jupiter before reaching Saturn in 2004.

In that time, it discovered six more moons around Saturn, three-dimensional structures towering above Saturn’s rings, and a giant storm that raged across the planet for nearly a year.

On 13 December 2004 it made its first flyby of Saturn’s moons Titan and Dione.

On 24 December it released the European Space Agency-built Huygens probe on Saturn’s moon Titan to study its atmosphere and surface composition.

There it discovered eerie hydrocarbon lakes made from ethane and methane.

In 2008, Cassini completed its primary mission to explore the Saturn system and began its mission extension (the Cassini Equinox Mission).

In 2010 it began its second mission (Cassini Solstice Mission) which lasted until it exploded in Saturn’s atmosphere.

In December 2011, Cassini obtained the highest resolution images of Saturn’s moon Enceladus.

In December of the following year it tracked the transit of Venus to test the feasibility of observing planets outside our solar system.

In March 2013 Cassini made the last flyby of Saturn’s moon Rhea and measured its internal structure and gravitational pull.

Cassini didn’t just study Saturn – it also captured incredible views of its many moons. In the image above, Saturn’s moon Enceladus can be seen drifting before the rings and the tiny moon Pandora. It was captured on Nov. 1, 2009, with the entire scene is backlit by the Sun

In July of that year Cassini captured a black-lit Saturn to examine the rings in fine detail and also captured an image of Earth.

In April of this year it completed its closest flyby of Titan and started its Grande Finale orbit which finished on September 15.

‘The mission has changed the way we think of where life may have developed beyond our Earth,’ said Andrew Coates, head of the Planetary Science Group at Mullard Space Science Laboratory at University College London.

‘As well as Mars, outer planet moons like Enceladus, Europa and even Titan are now top contenders for life elsewhere,’ he added. ‘We’ve completely rewritten the textbooks about Saturn.’

Read original article here

Mars was always too small to hold onto its oceans, rivers and lakes

Mars was doomed to desiccation by its small size, a new study suggests.

Thanks to observations by robotic explorers such as NASA’s Curiosity and Perseverance rovers, scientists know that in the ancient past, liquid water coursed across the Martian surface: The Red Planet once hosted lakes, rivers and streams, and possibly even a huge ocean that covered much of its northern hemisphere.

But that surface water was pretty much all gone by about 3.5 billion years ago, lost to space along with much of the Martian atmosphere. This dramatic climate shift occurred after the Red Planet lost its global magnetic field, which had protected Mars’ air from being stripped away by charged particles streaming from the sun, scientists believe.

Related: The search for water on Mars (photos)

But this proximate cause was underlain by a more fundamental driver, according to the new study: Mars is just too small to hold onto surface water over the long haul.

“Mars’ fate was decided from the beginning,” study co-author Kun Wang, an assistant professor of Earth and planetary sciences at Washington University in St. Louis, said in a statement. “There is likely a threshold on the size requirements of rocky planets to retain enough water to enable habitability and plate tectonics.” That threshold is larger than Mars, the scientists believe.

The study team — led by Zhen Tian, a grad student in Wang’s lab — examined 20 Mars meteorites, which they selected to be representative of the Red Planet’s bulk composition. The researchers measured the abundance of various isotopes of potassium in these extraterrestrial rocks, which ranged in age from 200 million years to four billion years. (Isotopes are versions of an element that contain different numbers of neutrons in their atomic nuclei.)

Tian and her colleagues used potassium, known by the chemical symbol K, as a tracer for more “volatile” elements and compounds — stuff like water, which transitions to the gas phase at relatively low temperatures. They found that Mars lost significantly more volatiles during its formation than Earth, which is about nine times more massive than the Red Planet. But Mars held onto its volatiles better than did Earth’s moon and the 329-mile-wide (530 kilometers) asteroid Vesta, both of which are much smaller and drier than the Red Planet.

“The reason for far lower abundances of volatile elements and their compounds in differentiated planets than in primitive undifferentiated meteorites has been a longstanding question,” co-author Katharina Lodders, a research professor of Earth and planetary sciences at Washington University, said in the same statement. (“Differentiated” refers to a cosmic body whose interior has separated into different layers, such as crust, mantle and core.)

“The finding of the correlation of K isotopic compositions with planet gravity is a novel discovery with important quantitative implications for when and how the differentiated planets received and lost their volatiles,” Lodders said.

The new study, which was published online today (Sept. 20) in the journal Proceedings of the National Academies of Sciences, and previous work together suggest that small size is a double whammy for habitability. Bantam planets lose lots of water during formation, and their global magnetic fields also shut down relatively early, resulting in atmospheric thinning. (In contrast, Earth’s global magnetic field is still going strong, powered by a dynamo deep within our planet.)

The new work also could have applications beyond our own cosmic backyard, team members said.

“This study emphasizes that there is a very limited size range for planets to have just enough but not too much water to develop a habitable surface environment,” co-author Klaus Mezger, of the Center for Space and Habitability at the University of Bern in Switzerland, said in the same statement. “These results will guide astronomers in their search for habitable exoplanets in other solar systems.”

That “surface environment” disclaimer is an important one in any discussion of habitability. Scientists think that modern Mars still supports potentially life-supporting underground aquifers, for example. And moons such as Jupiter’s Europa and Saturn’s Enceladus host huge, possibly life-supporting oceans beneath their ice-covered surfaces.

Mike Wall is the author of “Out There” (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), a book about the search for alien life. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or Facebook. 



Read original article here

Ida’s aftermath: Swollen rivers threaten new flooding in parts of Northeast as storms kill dozens

As the remnants of Hurricane Ida walloped the Northeast, killing more than 50 people, other areas are bracing for the storm’s impact as swollen rivers are threatening additional flooding. 

In Trenton, New Jersey, police officers were going door-to-door Wednesday night and Thursday morning encouraging residents to leave their homes in anticipation of the rising Delaware River. Flooding was anticipated at many Delaware River Basin locations and not expected to subside by Friday morning. 

A car flooded on a local street as a result of the remnants of Hurricane Ida is seen in Somerville, N.J. Thursday, Sept. 2, 2021.
(AP)

Further north, in Fairfield, the Passaic River is forecast to crest more than 23 feet by Friday evening, police said. 

Police there have closed at least 16 roads and warned that additional roads could be closed by the morning as the river continues to rise overnight. 

Fairfield Mayor Jim Gasparini urged residents to take the warning seriously, advising that “even though the weather appears nice, river levels continue to rise and the township is expected to have widespread flooding that will affect many homes and businesses.” 

MULTIPLE NATIONAL GUARD SOLDIERS INVOLVED IN MISSISSIPPI WRECK ON WAY TO ASSIST WITH IDA RELIEF EFFORTS

The National Weather Service anticipates area rivers will crest and overflow through Friday. 

“For the northeast north New Jersey rivers, we’re still seeing minor to moderate with locally, major flooding along those rivers,” James Tomasini from the Brookhaven National Weather Service told The Record. 

North Jersey officials are keeping a close watch on the Passaic, Hackensack, Pequannock, and Rockaway rivers. 

The National Hurricane Center had warned since Tuesday of the potential for “significant and life-threatening flash flooding” and major river flooding in the mid-Atlantic region and New England.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Hurricane Ida struck Louisiana as the fifth-strongest storm to ever hit the U.S. mainland, leaving 1 million people without power – potentially for weeks. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report

Read original article here

Daryl Morey, Doc Rivers explain Sixers acquisition of George Hill

The Philadelphia 76ers made a move on Thursday that they believe will help position themselves to go on a deep playoff run that they believe they are set up for. They acquired veteran George Hill from the Oklahoma City Thunder in a 3-team deal that gives them a solid backup point guard.

Hill has played in 127 playoff games in his career and he has been to the NBA Finals as well as a couple of runs to the Eastern Conference Finals in his career. On top of that, he is a career 38.4% shooter from deep and he is a solid defender.

He is the type of two-way player that president Daryl Morey and coach Doc Rivers are looking for.

“I think Doc had some good comments recently about looking for a two-way guard and that being one of the, what he thought, was one of the very few needs for us,” said Morey. “That’s what we got with George. A veteran two-way guard who can shoot at a very high level and defend at a high level.”

When Hill is put in the right role, he can be a really solid player for any team. He shot 46% from deep in the 2019-20 season with the Milwaukee Bucks and he is a solid veteran who can help a pretty young team. That is something that people do forget as Philadelphia relies on younger players off the bench.

“He’s just such a solid veteran,” said Rivers. “Just one of those guys who just like on your team. He shots the heck out of the ball, defends well, good veteran, and we’re really a young team. Adding a veteran like him will be great for us.”

On top of that, Morey has put a big emphasis on acquiring all of the shooting he possibly can to make sure the floor is properly spaced at all times for Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons to operate. That is what Hill brings to the table and his ability to defend is what made him attractive to the Sixers.

“Obviously, shooting being a premium for us, and I think he (Hill) maybe led the NBA in shooting recently,” Morey added. “I think that’s been a big theme for us to get the shooting in a two-way player like sort of Danny. I sort of see him as an acquisition like we did with Danny Green. A guy who’s been through a lot of playoff wars.”

A red flag for some could be the fact that Hill has not played a game since Jan. 24 due to thumb surgery. However, Morey is not too worried about that.

Our medical staff hasn’t had a chance to evaluate him yet, but our understanding is that his time back is measured and I don’t want to give a timeline, but it’s not long.

“He had an issue where he chose to have surgery on it so that will never be an issue again,” he explained. “I think that pushed out his recovery, but once he’s back, apparently it will be something that never bothers him again. So we’re very optimistic about him going forward medically.”

A big important sticking point in all of this is that the Sixers now can roll out a unit of guys who can provide good play on both ends of the floor. Philadelphia will be a bit deeper now rolling into the playoffs in May with a proven, veteran team.

“I think one thing that coach Rivers and coach (Dan) Burke can do right now is put five strong playoff tested guys who can play both ends on the floor at one time if they want to do that in crunch time,” Morey finished. “We’re pretty excited about that.”

This post originally appeared on Sixers Wire! Follow us on Facebook!

Read original article here

Facing uncertain future, Knicks’ Austin Rivers not seen on bench

Austin Rivers, who has labeled his future with the Knicks as uncertain, was not seen on the bench during any part of their 110-107 victory over the Pacers on Saturday night at the Garden.

Rivers was taken out of the rotation when the Knicks acquired Derrick Rose in a trade earlier this month. Then, in another bad twist, Rivers was bypassed for Frank Ntilikina in Thursday’s win over the Kings after Elfrid Payton went down with a hamstring injury.

A Knicks official said Rivers was at the Garden, but in the back getting treatment for a sore ankle. Rivers was not listed on the pregame injury report submitted to the NBA. On the box score, Rivers was listed with a DNP-Coach’s Decision.

Earlier this week, Rivers said of his situation: “I can’t control if I’m traded today, tomorrow or the next day. What I can control is how I am as a player.’’

Austin Rivers
NBAE via Getty Images

Rivers has made two cameo appearances in garbage time for a total of five minutes over the past nine games. Against Sacramento, he was the lone Knick not to get into the game.

Interestingly, after Taj Gibson sprained an ankle during Saturday’s game, Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau said president Leon Rose “will look into players that are available.’’ The Knicks could be in position to have to waive a player to sign a center.

Rivers was signed in November to a three-year deal, but only the first is guaranteed. He has played in 21 games.

Read original article here

NASA photo shows ‘gold’ Peruvian Amazon rivers

What appear to be rivers of gold running through the Amazon rainforest in Madre de Dios state in eastern Peru are in fact prospecting pits, likely left by independent miners, according to NASA’s Earth Observatory, which published the photo taken by one of its astronauts.

The pits are normally hidden from view to those on the ISS but stand out in this shot due to reflected sunlight.

The image shows the Inambari River and a number of pits surrounded by deforested areas of muddy spoil.

Independent gold mining supports tens of thousands of people in the Madre de Dios region, making it one of the largest unregistered mining industries in the world, according to NASA.

Mining is also the biggest driver of deforestation in the region, and mercury used to extract gold pollutes waterways, the agency added.

Gold prospecting in the region has expanded since the inauguration of the Southern Interoceanic Highway in 2011 made the area more accessible.

The only road connection between Brazil and Peru was meant to boost trade and tourism, but “deforestation may be the larger result of the highway,” said NASA.

The photo, released publicly earlier this month, was taken on December 24.

Madre de Dios is a pristine chunk of the Amazon about the size of South Carolina, where macaws and monkeys, jaguars and butterflies thrive. But while some parts of Madre de Dios, such as the Tambopata National Reserve, are protected from mining, hundreds of square miles of rainforest in the area have been turned into a treeless, toxic wasteland.

Increases in the price of gold in recent years have created jungle boomtowns, complete with pop-up brothels and gun fights, as tens of thousands of people from across Peru joined a modern gold rush.

In January 2019, a scientific study found that gold mining deforestation destroyed an estimated 22,930 acres of Peru’s Amazon in 2018, according to the group Monitoring of the Andean Amazon Project, known as MAAP. That’s the highest annual total on record dating back to 1985, based on research conducted by Wake Forest University’s Center for Amazonian Scientific Innovation.

Deforestation in 2018 eclipsed the previous record high from 2017, when an estimated 22,635 acres of forest were felled by gold miners, according to MAAP.

This means that over two years, gold mining decimated the equivalent of more than 34,000 American football fields of the Peruvian Amazon rainforest, according to MAAP’s analysis.

Read original article here