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Added on the 30/06/2015 20:38:25 - Copyright : Reuters - Next Media
Scientists used to say there were millions of tons of ice in the permanently shadowed craters of the moon’s poles. Now, HuffPost reports a pair of studies in the journal Nature Astronomy says there's far, far more potential water available. Twenty percent more, to be exact. A team led by the University of Colorado's Paul Hayne says more than 15,400 square miles of lunar terrain have the capability to trap water in the form of ice. However, lead researcher Casey Honniball says the molecules are so far apart that they are in neither liquid nor solid form. To be clear, this is not puddles of water. Casey Honniball, Lead Researcher Postdoctoral fellow, NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Maryland Greater access to water could allow astronauts and robots more places to land, and support future lunar bases. Scientists believe the moon's water came from comets, asteroids, interplanetary dust, solar wind, or even lunar volcanic eruptions.
New research suggests deaths in America have been seriously undercounted. According to Gizmodo, a new study estimates that between March and July, there were 225,000 more deaths in the US than expected. Of those fatalities, a little over half were officially attributed to the novel coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic. COVID-19 can damage the heart, which may partially account for the increase in deaths attributed to heart disease seen in some weeks. States with spikes in COVID-19 deaths also saw more excess deaths generally during those spikes, further implicating the virus as the cause. COVID-19 is also thought to have caused thousands of deaths indirectly, by people being too afraid to seek medical help for chronic conditions.
A study of sexual assaults based on the testing of nearly 5,000 backlogged rape kits in Cleveland has revealed that serial rapists are far more common than imagined.
Californians are constantly warned about the "big one." But if it strikes, what kind of destruction is Tinseltown looking at? The facts are not comforting.
Vallejo California residents Denise Huskins and Aaron Quinn were accused of faking a kidnapping, but on Monday July 13, the FBI announced the arrest of 38-year-old Matthew Muller, an ex-Marine and Harvard University graduate. The FBI now suspects Muller was the culprit in the home invasion and kidnapping incident originally reported by Huskins and Quinn in late March.
U.S. President Barack Obama attends an outdoor arrival ceremony in heavy rain, as the first sitting U.S. president to visit Laos. Rough Cut (no reporter narration).