Tag Archives: sixth

Sixth measles case confirmed at Broward elementary school. Here’s how to protect yourself from the highly contagious virus – South Florida Sun Sentinel

  1. Sixth measles case confirmed at Broward elementary school. Here’s how to protect yourself from the highly contagious virus South Florida Sun Sentinel
  2. What is measles and why is it back in South Florida? Here’s what to know NBC 6 South Florida
  3. Rise in measles cases at Broward elementary school could just be the beginning, doctor says CBS Miami
  4. Students return to Manatee Bay Elementary following 6 confirmed cases of measles WSVN 7News | Miami News, Weather, Sports | Fort Lauderdale
  5. Health officials probe measles outbreak at South Florida school Miami Herald

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The Sixth Anniversary of Genocide Against Rohingya – United States Department of State – Department of State

  1. The Sixth Anniversary of Genocide Against Rohingya – United States Department of State Department of State
  2. UN pledges continued support for voluntary, dignified return of Rohingya refugees Anadolu Agency | English
  3. ‘We want to go home’, plead Rohingya in Bangladesh 6 years after exodus South China Morning Post
  4. Facebook should pay for what it did to my people, Rohingya Al Jazeera English
  5. IOM Calls for Increased Support, Sustainable Solutions for Rohingya Refugees International Organization for Migration (IOM)
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Mia Brahe-Pedersen qualifies for semifinals, finishes sixth in 1st round of the 100-meter dash at USATF Outdo – OregonLive

  1. Mia Brahe-Pedersen qualifies for semifinals, finishes sixth in 1st round of the 100-meter dash at USATF Outdo OregonLive
  2. USATF Outdoor Championships 2023: Five sprinters to watch including Fred Kerley, Sha’Carri Richardson, Erriyon Knighton, Noah Lyles and Aleia Hobbs Olympics
  3. Schedule & Results for 2023 USATF Outdoor Championships LetsRun.com
  4. Mia Brahe-Pedersen runs with the sharks, former Olympian Jenna Prandini and world-leader Sha’Carri Richardson OregonLive
  5. Ole Miss well represented at U.S. Nationals, Team USA and international competitions this weekend 247Sports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Idaho student killings: Moscow police say a sixth person on the lease isn’t involved in the murders



CNN
 — 

The Moscow Police Department said on Friday that they don’t believe a sixth person listed on the lease at the residence, where four University of Idaho students were killed last month, was involved in their deaths.

“They have spoken to this individual and confirmed they moved out prior to the start of the school year and was not present at the time of the incident. Detectives do not believe this person has any involvement in the murders,” police said in a statement.

The victims Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Madison Mogen, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; and Kernolde’s boyfriend, Ethan Chapin, 20 were found stabbed to death on November 13 in an off-campus house in the college town.

Police initially said Chapin lived at the house, but have since said he was only visiting.

Detectives have said three of the victims – Goncalves, Kernodle and Mogen – lived at the house with their two surviving roommates, who police have not named. Investigators announced a sixth person was listed on the lease as a resident in a Thursday update.

On Friday, police also addressed concerns about an incident that took place at Taylor Avenue and Band Field on November 13, at 3:01 a.m. Police said the incident was an alcohol offense which was addressed by an on-scene officer.

“This call is not related to the murder investigations,” police said.

Nearly three weeks since the college students were found stabbed to death, dozens of local, state and federal investigators have yet to identify a suspect or find the murder weapon.

Meanwhile, police and prosecutors have made irregular statements about the nature of the killings. On November 15, Moscow police said in a news release they “believe this was an isolated, targeted attack” that presented “no imminent threat to the community at large.” Police Chief James Fry backtracked on the threat statement at a news conference the next day, saying police could not be sure there was no risk to the public.

Then, on Wednesday, the Moscow police said that the prosecutor in Idaho’s Latah County erroneously had said this week that “the suspect(s) specifically looked at this residence,” and “that one or more of the occupants were undoubtedly targeted.”

The police statement said the prosecutor’s comments were a “miscommunication,” adding, “Detectives do not currently know if the residence or any occupants were specifically targeted.”

That was a different tone from earlier remarks by police indicating investigators believed the attack was targeted.

On Thursday, Moscow police tried to clear up the issue:

“We remain consistent in our belief that this was a targeted attack, but investigators have not concluded if the target was the residence or if it was the occupants,” police said in a news release.

Despite the uncertainty blanketing the campus over the lack of a suspect, students gathered Wednesday night for a vigil in honor of the slain victims.

Blaine Eckles, the university’s dean of students, encouraged the crowd to “tell the fun stories, remember them in the good times and do not let their lives be defined by how they died, but instead remember them for the joy they spread and the fun times they shared while they lived.”

As detectives scour the city for information, here’s where the investigation stands.

On the night of the killings, Goncalves and Mogen were at a bar in downtown Moscow, and Chapin and Kernodle were seen at a fraternity party. Two surviving roommates had also gone out in Moscow that night, but returned to the house by 1 a.m., police said, noting they did not wake up until later that morning. Investigators do not believe they were involved in the deaths.

By 2 a.m., all four victims had returned to the home, according to police. Detectives earlier said Goncalves and Mogen returned to the home by 1:45 a.m., but they updated the timeline last week, saying digital evidence showed the pair returned at 1:56 a.m. after visiting a food truck and being driven home by a “private party.”

The next morning, the two surviving roommates in the home “summoned friends to the residence because they believed one of the second-floor victims had passed out and was not waking up,” police said in a release. Somebody called 911 from the house at 11:58 a.m. using one of the surviving roommates’ phones.

“The call reported an unconscious person,” Moscow Police Capt. Roger Lanier said last week. “During that call, the dispatcher spoke to multiple people who were on scene.”

When police arrived, they found two victims on the second floor and two victims on the third floor. There was no sign of forced entry or damage, police said.

The victims were likely asleep when the attacks began, according to the Latah County coroner. Each victim was stabbed multiple times, the coroner said, and some had defensive wounds.

Extensive evidence has been collected over the course of the investigation, including 113 pieces of physical evidence, about 4,000 photos of the crime scene and several 3-D scans of the home, Moscow police said on Thursday.

Detectives have received testing and analysis of the crime scene evidence from Idaho State Police Forensic Services, and they will continue to receive the results of additional tests, according to police.

“To protect the investigation’s integrity, specific results will not be released,” police said.

Detectives also collected the contents of three dumpsters on the street where the house is located and seized five nearby vehicles to be processed for evidence, according to police.

In an effort to locate the weapon – believed to be a fixed-blade knife – detectives contacted local businesses to see if a similar knife had been purchased recently.

Investigators are also relying on a trove of public tips, photos and videos of the night the students died, including more than 260 digital media submissions that people have submitted through an FBI form, police said. Authorities have processed more than 1,000 tips and conducted at least 150 interviews in an effort to advance the case.

But even with the piles of evidence at their fingertips, authorities are asking for the public to submit any surveillance video or tips about unusual behavior in the relevant areas, even if it appears there is no movement or content in them.

In the absence of significant advances in the case, rumors have spun around the case regarding the victims, potential suspects and unusual happenings in the area. Police have attempted to tamp down on misinformation by addressing a few of the issues directly.

Investigators say they believe the following people were not involved in the killings:

• Two surviving roommates.

• Other people in the house when 911 was called.

• The person who drove Goncalves and Mogen home.

• A man seen in surveillance video from a food truck visited by Goncalves and Mogen.

• A man Goncalves and Mogen called “numerous times” in the hours before their death.

Police also dismissed online reports that the victims were tied and gagged as inaccurate.

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The sixth asteroid impact we saw coming

Space Safety

24/11/2022
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In brief

On 19 November, asteroid 2022 WJ1 became one of the many small asteroids to strike Earth, but only the sixth we ever saw coming. For the second time this year, humankind predicted an asteroid impact. The ~1-m rock caused no harm and burnt up in the sky above Toronto as a striking fireball. The detection, warning and advance observations of this asteroid illustrate our rapidly increasing ability to warn of asteroid impacts, however small.

In-depth

Sixth sense

Time-lapse photograph of 2022 WJ1 taken by astronomer Robert Weryk in Ontario, Canada

The initial discovery of asteroid 2022 WJ1 came from the Catalina Sky Survey – one of the major projects dedicated to the discovery and follow-up of near-Earth objects (NEOs) – at 04:53 UTC (05:53 CET) on 19 November 2022, just under four hours before impact.

The new asteroid was first imaged by Catalina’s 1.5-m Mt. Lemmon telescope, and once four observations were made it was reported to the Minor Planet Centre (MPC), 38 minutes after initial detection, at 05:31 UTC.

These four observations were enough to map out the asteroid’s path in the sky, and within a few minutes of this ‘astrometry’ being published, ESA’s own internal monitoring software reported that the object had a ~20% chance of Earth impact, possibly hitting somewhere in North America in the next two to three hours. A few minutes later, other impact monitoring programs also sent alerts outlining a similar scenario.

The first impact corridor computed by ESA’s Meerkat tool at 05:36 UTC, from early observations of asteroid 2022 WJ1

Following the potential impact notifications, observers at Catalina and elsewhere across the US got follow-up observations of the new asteroid. Less than 30 minutes from the initial trigger, the impact was confirmed with excellent precision: the small asteroid, likely less than a meter in diameter, was going to impact somewhere between Lake Erie and Lake Ontario, near the US-Canada border, around 08:27 UTC (09:27 CET).

At exactly the predicted time, a ~1-m asteroid struck the atmosphere becoming a brilliant fireball above the expected location. Find out more about this event at ESA’s Near-Earth Object Coordination Centre (NEOCC) web portal.

Asteroid impact: what’s the risk?

Because of how the Solar System formed, small objects are in the majority in terms of their total population. It is estimated there are 40-50 million little asteroids and ‘just’ 1 000 of the biggest, giant ‘planet-killers’. The rest fall somewhere in between.

Infographic: asteroid danger explained

We currently know of more than 1.1 million asteroids, although many more are out there. Of those discovered, about 30 600 travel in an orbit that brings them near Earth’s own. These are the ‘near-Earth asteroids’ (NEAs).

The reassuring news is that almost all the giant asteroids have been found – more than 95% – and none are of concern for the next hundred years. Astronomers are tirelessly searching for every last one.

Chelyabinsk asteroid trail

Small, metre-sized asteroids strike Earth every couple of weeks. They add to our understanding of asteroid populations, of fireballs and their makeup, but they aren’t a big priority when it comes to Planetary Defence because they pose no real danger.

The objects we are most concerned about are those ‘goldilocks asteroids’ that are large enough to do harm if they impact, and there are enough of them out there that we know, at some point, they will. The infamous Chelyabinsk impact in February 2013 and the Tunguska impact in June 1908 fall into this category, and when it comes to discovering these asteroids, there’s still a lot of work to be done.

Hera at Didymos

That’s why ESA’s Planetary Defence Office is planning new telescopes on the ground and missions in space to improve our asteroid detection abilities, sending the Hera mission to the Dimorphos asteroid struck by NASA’s DART mission to test asteroid deflection, as well as working with the international community to prepare for the scenario in which a bigger asteroid is discovered on a collision course.

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Khloe Kardashian shares photos from niece Dream’s butterfly-themed sixth birthday party

Khloe Kardashian shares photos from niece Dream’s butterfly-themed sixth birthday party ‘extravaganza’

Khloe Kardashian was a proud aunt on Saturday as she shared moments from niece Dream Kardashian’s birthday party online.

The 38-year-old TV star-turned-entrepreneur appeared on Instagram to post multiple Stories as the little girl celebrated turning six.

Dream – the daughter of Rob Kardashian and Blac Chyna, 35 and 34 – looked adorable with her hair styled in long braids with pink color intertwined. 

Sweet bond: Khloe Kardashian was a proud aunt on Saturday as she shared moments from niece Dream Kardashian’s sixth birthday party online; pictured earlier this year

Cutie pie: Dream – the daughter of Rob Kardashian and Blac Chyna, 35 and 34 – looked adorable with her hair styled in long braids with pink color intertwined

As is typical of the family’s many affairs, Dream’s soiree was hosted at one of the Kardashian’s sprawling mansions. 

‘Welcome to Dreamy’s butterfly sixth birthday extravaganza!’ Khloe said at the start of one video clip.

‘Here we are,’ she cooed as she gave her 279 million fans a look through her perspective.

The expansive decorations started at the foyer of the home, which North West also documented in a short TikTok clip. 

Fun time: The birthday girl engaged in an arts and crafts activity as her aunt recorded her 

At the entrance there was an arch of pink balloons as well as butterfly streamers hanging over the doorway.

There was also a bright red Raising Cane’s Chicken Fingers truck parked in the driveway for guests to enjoy.

The birthday girl engaged in an arts and crafts activity as her aunt recorded her handling a bowl of blue goo.

The younger Kardashian wore a beige smock over a pink dress with butterflies printed all over it.

Family affair: Dream’s grandmother Kris Jenner, 67, was in attendance for the fun-filled day, sporting a blue and white striped button-up shirt

Sweet: Dream’s grandmother Kris Jenner, 67, was in attendance for the fun-filled day, sporting a blue and white striped button-up shirt

Dream’s grandmother Kris Jenner, 67, was in attendance for the fun-filled day, sporting a blue and white striped button-up shirt.

In one snippet Khloe asked the youngster who gifted her the sparkling diamond butterfly earrings she was wearing, prompting her to gesture toward Jenner, who she calls Lovie. 

And her cousin True Thompson, four, was by her side in many of the video clips.

True displayed her stylish fashion sense in a Fendi shirt and skirt teamed with hot pink booties.

Peas in a pod: Dream’s cousin True Thompson, four, was by her side in many of the video clips 

In addition to crafting slime, the partygoers were treated to a painting activity, dancing, and sweet treats.

Missing from the posts were Dream’s parents, who split up after welcoming her in 2016.

After a stint sharing a Keeping Up with the Kardashians spin-off, their E! reality TV show called Rob & Chyna, the two called off their engagement in 2017.

Dream is the Arthur George designer’s only child. 

Blac Chyna shares son King Stevenson, ten, with ex Tyga, who later dated Rob’s younger sister Kylie Jenner. 

Pretty: Dream was treated to a towering, three-tier white cake with butterfly add-ons

Party time: In addition to crafting slime, the partygoers were treated to a painting activity, dancing, and sweet treats

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Arizona Diamondbacks’ Zac Gallen ties major league record with sixth consecutive scoreless start

PHOENIX — Zac Gallen tied the major league record with his sixth consecutive scoreless start on Sunday, leading the Arizona Diamondbacks to a 5-1 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers.

Gallen (11-2) extended his scoreless streak to 41 1/3 innings. He allowed only two singles and a walk in seven innings. He struck out seven and retired the last 11 batters he faced.

Gallen tied Don Drysdale (1968), Orel Hershiser (1988) and Zack Greinke (2015), all with the Los Angeles Dodgers, by not allowing a run in his sixth straight start. Hershiser set the MLB record with 59 consecutive scoreless innings.

In those six games, Gallen is 5-0 with a 0.58 WHIP. He has allowed 16 hits, walked eight and struck out 46 in his scoreless streak. He is two outs away from matching the Diamondbacks’ franchise record of 42 innings, set by Brandon Webb in 2007.

Daulton Varsho hit his 20th homer and helped preserve Gallen’s scoreless streak with a running catch on Tyrone Taylor’s drive to right center in the second. The catch came with two outs and a runner at first.

Gallen didn’t allow more than one baserunner in any inning and struck out the side in the fifth.

The Diamondbacks scored in the second inning against Jason Alexander (2-2) when Corbin Carroll walked and advanced to third on Carson Kelly’s single off shortstop Willy Adames’ glove. Carroll scored on Alek Thomas’ sacrifice fly. Varsho’s home run, to right field, came in the third.

In the fifth, Jake McCarthy greeted reliever Hoby Milner with a broken-bat single to right, scoring Josh Rojas with Arizona’s third run. McCarthy hit a two-run homer in the eighth off Brent Suter, his seventh home run of the season.

Alexander, a 29-year-old who debuted earlier this season, pitched 4 2/3 innings for Milwaukee. He gave up five hits, three runs, walked four and struck out three.

Hunter Renfroe spoiled the combined shutout bid when he hit his 24th homer off Mark Melancon in the ninth. Kyle Nelson pitched a scoreless eighth.

The Brewers, who managed just three hits in the game, began the day 2 1/2 games behind Philadelphia for the final National League wild card. They trail St. Louis by 8 1/2 in the Central Division race. Milwaukee is trying for its fifth consecutive postseason appearance.

Brewers manager Craig Counsell was denied his 600th career victory. The winningest manager in franchise history, Counsell is 599-542 (.524).

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MLB Wild Card: J.T. Realmuto, Kyle Gibson lead Phillies to sixth straight win

The Phillies continue to pounce on cellar dwellers and suffocate them early, leaving the weakest teams in the National League with little chance of coming back.

It bodes well with another 13 games in a row against sub-.500 clubs.

Just as they did Friday night and all week, the Phillies rode early offense to a relatively comfortable win. They scored three runs in the first inning on J.T. Realmuto’s bases-clearing double and cruised from there in a 6-0 win, their sixth in a row.

The Phils have outscored their opponents 22-1 in the first three innings of those six games.

“You know, last year, that was our downfall, honestly,” pitcher Kyle Gibson said of the Phillies’ ability to beat teams buried in the standings.

“This year, our mindset coming in has been a little bit crisper and with a little bit more of an edge than we’ve had in the past. It’s easy to get lackadaisical or complacent when you’re playing these teams. Especially lately, we’ve done a great job of coming out against these teams and getting the lead early and really setting the tone to the game.

“I’ve been on those teams where you’re losing 100 games and any time you give up runs early, it feels like, ‘Here we go again.’ I would assume some of the teams we’ve played have had that feeling. That’s what you want as the team that’s playing for the playoffs. You want them getting in that mood and for them it’s going to be hard to come back. That’s been the biggest difference.”

 

Realmuto has been one of baseball’s best sluggers for the last five weeks. He’s driven in 26 runs in his last 27 games, fourth in the majors over that span behind only Paul Goldschmidt, Aaron Judge and Pete Alonso.

Realmuto has an extra-base hit and/or an RBI in eight straight games and the opportunities should persist with Bryce Harper back hitting in front of him. Harper, in his second game since returning from a broken left thumb, singled in the first inning just as he did Friday. It loaded the bases for Realmuto. Harper was later intentionally walked twice.

“Since I’ve been here, we’ve almost played down to our competition sometimes,” Realmuto said. “For me, that’s a big difference in our season. The teams we should handle, we’ve played well against all season.”

The Phillies have opened up a nice cushion in the wild-card race. They’re in the second of three wild-card spots with a 2½-game lead over the Padres and a five-game lead on the Brewers.

There are a lot of really bad teams across baseball this season, and since being swept out of the All-Star break by the Cubs, the Phillies are 18-2 against clubs with losing records.

Since June 1, the Phillies have had five different winning streaks of at least five games. At 72-55, they are as far above .500 as they’ve been since the final day of the 2011 season, and it’s been that long since they had this many hitters hot at the same time.

The Phillies are 23-9 in their last 32 games. Nick Castellanos, Alec Bohm and Realmuto have each hit between .323 and .333 during that stretch. Bryson Stott has hit .295 with pop. Jean Segura hasn’t been back for all of that time but he’s hit .344 with a .427 on-base percentage in his last 19 games. And he’s now the 8-hole hitter.

Remember when Kyle Schwarber was carrying the Phillies’ offense from June 1 through mid-July? Schwarber has one home run over the last three weeks and the Phils have gone 14-7. They’re facing inferior pitching and shoddy defenses but they’re finding ways to score even when their home run hitters aren’t going deep.

Gibson earned the win in his 25th start, improving to 9-5 with a 4.08 ERA. He struck out nine across seven scoreless innings in one of his best starts of the year.

The Phils look to sweep the seven-game season series against the Pirates Sunday afternoon behind Noah Syndergaard, whose four starts as a Phillie have all resulted in wins.

“September 1 might be a little early to start thinking about it, but when you’re sitting in a playoff spot, it’s easier to think about,” Gibson said. “You try to fight those thoughts until you can clinch and until you can get to that moment, but absolutely, it’s something you think about.”

Thirty-five games to go.

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Manhattan rents hit record high for the sixth month in a row

Median rent for an apartment in Manhattan climbed to $4,150 a month in July, surging 29% from a year ago, according to a monthly report from brokerage firm Douglas Elliman and Miller Samuel Real Estate Appraisers and Consultants. It is up 2.5% from June.

The average rent, which crossed over the $5,000 a month threshold last month, also hit a record high of $5,113 a month.

And it is expected that rents will climb even further in August, which marks the final month of the annual peak rental season, said Jonathan Miller, president and CEO of Miller Samuel.

“It will continue, at a bare minimum through next month, because more demand is anticipated putting upward pressure on prices,” he said.

Will rents continue to climb?

But what happens after August? While the rental market in Manhattan may cool, apartments aren’t expected to become much more affordable.

“The opposite of ‘rising rents’ isn’t necessarily ‘falling rents’,” said Miller, adding it could be that prices continue to rise, just not as fast as they have or that rents stabilize and stay flat.

“Many people are hoping that after rental activity peaks in August, there will be some improvement in affordability,” said Miller. “But the only way I see that happening is if the Fed’s baseball bat to the economy inflicts more damage in the form of job losses. That isn’t a desirable scenario.”

In an effort to curb inflation, the Federal Reserve has been aggressively raising interest rates. But the central bank has to strike a delicate balance: If it raises rates too much it could plunge the economy into a recession, potentially spurring layoffs and head count reductions.

Should job losses become significant, demand for apartments in Manhattan may drop as people double up or leave the city, resulting in less pressure on prices.

However, a more likely scenario, Miller said, is that renters can expect to continue to see higher rents through the end of the year, but prices won’t rise as quickly.

Would-be home buyers are flooding the rental market

Rising mortgage rates are also having an impact on the rental market.

The Federal Reserve does not set the interest rates borrowers pay on mortgages directly. Instead, mortgage rates tend to track 10-year US Treasury bonds. But they are indirectly impacted by the Fed’s efforts to tame inflation.

Mortgage rates climbed quickly since the start of this year, with average rates on a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage moving from 3.22% in January to as high as 5.81% in June, before sitting between 5% and 5.5% in July, according to Freddie Mac. Last week, the average rate dropped just shy of 5% to 4.99%.

The rise in mortgage rates has put purchasing a home out of reach for many would-be buyers, resulting in added pressure on the rental market as more people put their purchase plans on hold and decide to rent instead, said Miller.

“The frenzy of the purchase market has been transferred through Fed policy to rental market frenzy,” said Miller. “I think it is going to come down to external factors like unemployment and hard landing to see what happens next.”

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New Study Offers a Surprising Timeline For Earth’s Sixth Mass Extinction

A climate scientist at Tohoku University in Japan has run the numbers and does not think today’s mass extinction event will equal that of the previous five. At least not for many more centuries to come.

 

On more than one occasion over the past 540 million years, Earth has lost most of its species in a relatively short geologic time span.

These are known as mass extinction events, and they often follow closely on the heels of climate change, whether it be from extreme warming or extreme cooling, triggered by asteroids or volcanic activity.

When Kunio Kaiho tried to quantify the stability of Earth’s average surface temperature and the planet’s biodiversity, he found a largely linear effect. The greater the temperature change, the greater the extent of extinction.

For global cooling events, the greatest mass extinctions occurred when temperatures fell by about 7°C. But for global warming events, Kaiho found the greatest mass extinctions occurred at roughly 9°C warming.

That’s much higher than previous estimates, which suggest a temperature of 5.2°C would result in a major marine mass extinction, on par with the previous ‘big five’.

To put that in perspective, by the end of the century, modern global warming is on track to increase surface temperatures by as much as 4.4°C. 

 

“The 9°C global warming will not appear in the Anthropocene at least till 2500 under the worst scenario,” Kaiho predicts.

Kaiho is not denying that many extinctions on land and in the sea are already occurring because of climate change; he just does not expect the same proportion of losses as before.

Still, it’s not just the degree of climate change that puts species at risk. The speed at which it occurs is vitally important.

The largest mass extinction event on Earth killed off 95 percent of known species at the time and occurred over 60,000 years about 250 million years ago. But today’s warming is occurring on a much shorter timescale thanks to human emissions of fossil fuels.

Perhaps more species will die off in Earth’s sixth extinction event not because the magnitude of warming is so great, but because the changes happened so quickly that many species could not adapt.

“Prediction of the future anthropogenic extinction magnitude using only surface temperature is difficult because the causes of the anthropogenic extinction differ from causes of mass extinctions in geologic time,” Kaihu admits. 

Whichever way scientists slice up the data, it’s clear that many species are doomed unless we can halt climate change.

The exact percentage of losses and the timing of those losses remains up for debate.

The study was published in Biogeosciences.

 

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