TuesdayNewsdayVol. 6 - Issue 41 - July 28, 2020 | |
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UC Santa Cruz graduate student Graham Edwards and Slawek Tulaczyk, professor of Earth and planetary sciences, at the Taylor Glacier in Antarctica. |
UC Santa Cruz researchers have found evidence of glacial retreat in the Wilkes Basin in Antarctica 400,000 years ago that suggests ice loss in this region, if it continues, could add 10 to 13 feet to future global sea-level rise.
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| Take a moment to enjoy the flora, fauna, and art at the Arboretum and Botanical Garden. |
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| The first end-to-end (‘telomere-to-telomere’) DNA sequence of a human chromosome, without gaps, is a major milestone for genomics research. |
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| The Humanities Institute has teamed up with the Cabrillo Festival and Bookshop Santa Cruz to present a live Zoom panel discussion on the fight for women's suffrage. |
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| A new study reveals widespread illegal fishing by 'dark fleets' that operate in the poorly monitored waters between the Koreas, Japan, and Russia. |
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| This year, the annual weeklong Dickens Universe will go virtual and feature panels with scholars from Victorian and early African American studies. |
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| National Geographic - July 22, 2020 Biggest ice sheet on Earth more vulnerable to melting than thought | | Artforum - July 14, 2020 New Movements: Wandering Seminar, Campus Protest, and the Institute of the Arts and Sciences at UCSC | | Science Alert - July 14, 2020 For The First Time, Scientists Have Completely Sequenced a Human Chromosome | | Asia Times - July 23, 2020 China’s dark fishing fleets plunder North Korea | | New York Times - July 22, 2020 Four Artists on the Future of Video Art | | CNN - July 24, 2020 First chicken to ever cross the road was likely in Southeast Asia, scientists say |
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