Hyrra Features the Latest and Most Talked-About Topstories News and Headlines from Around the World.
⎯ 《 Hyrra • Com 》
EU agrees on framework for Niger sanctions
EU agrees on framework for Niger sanctions
BRUSSELS European Union countries on Monday adopted a framework to impose sanctions on members of a junta that
2023-10-23 17:59
Who is Trista Fullerton? Arkansas mom arrested for kidnapping her 8 children from foster homes
Who is Trista Fullerton? Arkansas mom arrested for kidnapping her 8 children from foster homes
A mother, Trista Fullerton, was arrested in Shasta County, California for allegedly kidnapping her eight children from foster homes
2023-10-23 17:59
Kim Kardashian shares pic from her birthday bash but Internet only has eyes for one of them
Kim Kardashian shares pic from her birthday bash but Internet only has eyes for one of them
The internet had eyes only for Ivanka Trump who opted for a dazzling white outfit with a thigh-high slit at Kim Kardashian's 43rd birthday bash
2023-10-23 17:57
Flat Earther left humiliated after trying to argue with a scientist
Flat Earther left humiliated after trying to argue with a scientist
Flat Earther David Weiss was left humiliated after debating a professor on the shape of our Earth. Weiss regularly interviews people on the subject on his show The Flat Earth Podcast, but threw himself into unfamiliar territory last year when he switched out being the interviewer for the interviewee. Weiss appeared on Professor Dave Explains in an episode title 'Professor Dave Humiliates Flat Earthed David Weiss'. During the hour long episode the pair debated Flat Earth believes, with Weiss claiming that the shape of the Earth came from astronomers who Professor Dave "doesn't know". "You've never met these men, you don't know anything about these men other than the stories that the controllers of this world tell you," Weiss told the academic. Like most Flat Earthers Weiss seemed to have an answer for everything, well, almost everything. Because when the discussion arrive at Earth's movement within space, Weiss struggled. "You think that we're spinning at 1000 miles an hour, and we don't feel it? And we're changing directions?" Weiss said on Earth's orbit. "How is that possible? How about when the Earth comes around towards the Sun in the winter, it's speeding up and taking its sharpest turn, and we don't feel any go those forces?" Naturally, Professor Dave made counterpoints at Weiss' argument. "Why don't you go ahead and get in a car, and do a 360 turn and make it take a year. Are you going to feel that?" Professor Dave asked Weiss, who acknowledged that it takes a year for the Earth to travel around the Sun. "Let's break it down," Professor Dave continued. "360 degrees, 365 days, that's about a degree a [day] right? Why don't you get in a car and drive for 24 hours, and over 24 hours veer by one degree. Are you going to feel that?" Professor Dave Humiliates Flat Earther David Weiss (DITRH Debunked Live) www.youtube.com Weiss was silent after this, with the participants on the Zoom call bursting out into laughter from Weiss' inability to respond. Weiss' humiliation now has over 4 million views. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-10-23 17:57
Kenyan shilling hits record low of 150 to the dollar
Kenyan shilling hits record low of 150 to the dollar
The Kenyan shilling sank to a new all-time low of 150 to the dollar on Monday, adding to the woes of people already battered by high inflation...
2023-10-23 17:55
Danish deputy prime minister leaves politics but his party stays on in the center-right government
Danish deputy prime minister leaves politics but his party stays on in the center-right government
Denmark’s deputy prime minister and economy minister is leaving politics altogether
2023-10-23 17:52
Who is Dianne Hensley? Case of Texas judge at center of same-sex storm heads to state Supreme Court
Who is Dianne Hensley? Case of Texas judge at center of same-sex storm heads to state Supreme Court
Dianne Hensley was reprimanded in 2019 for not conducting same-sex marriages, casting doubt on her capacity to act impartially as a judge
2023-10-23 17:52
Who was Jacob Todd? Colorado dad on cusp of 100th skydiving jump of the year dies after parachute mishap
Who was Jacob Todd? Colorado dad on cusp of 100th skydiving jump of the year dies after parachute mishap
Jake Todd's untimely death has left an indescribable void in the lives of his loved ones
2023-10-23 17:51
Arsenal monitoring Douglas Luiz following failed 2022 transfer
Arsenal monitoring Douglas Luiz following failed 2022 transfer
Arsenal remain interested in trying to sign Douglas Luiz from Aston Villa following his excellent start to the 2023/24 season. Mikel Arteta is a huge fan of the midfielder and tried to sign him last summer.
2023-10-23 17:51
'Not in our name': Jewish peace activists across the US call for immediate ceasefire and justice for Palestinians
'Not in our name': Jewish peace activists across the US call for immediate ceasefire and justice for Palestinians
Thousands of Jewish peace activists across the United States are calling on President Joe Biden and other elected officials to rein in Israel -- arguing more civilian deaths is not the answer to Hamas' deadly attack.
2023-10-23 17:49
Scientists baffled after discovering that the Earth's core is 'leaking'
Scientists baffled after discovering that the Earth's core is 'leaking'
The name “core” suggests something hard and fixed but, it turns out, the Earth’s core is leaking. That is, at least, according to a team of top scientists, who drew the conclusion after analysing 62-million-old Arctic rocks. Geochemists from the California Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution detected record concentrations of helium 3 (3He) and helium 4 (4He) isotopes in the rocks, which suggest a slow trickle up from the very heart of our planet. They believe there could be reserves of the elusive gas buried some 2,900km underground. Helium is a surprisingly rare element on the Earth’s surface and experts have yet to establish just how much of it remains trapped deep beneath our feet. However, the new discovery has provided them with a fresh insight into the most mysterious region of our world. Understanding the presence of these helium isotopes could illuminate key processes in the core, such as how the Earth generated its life-protecting magnetic field. Most helium in the universe dates back to the Big Bang which occurred 13.8 billion years ago. The Earth swallowed up some of this as an infant planet, but mostly burped it all away during its 4.6 billion-year-long formation, as Science Alert reports. This means that any traces of helium found in volcanic rock – such as the samples unearthed in the Arctic – are believed to come either from pockets of mantle that are yet to release their helium, or from a vast, slow-leaking reserve. Basaltic lavas on Canada's Baffin Island contain some of the world's highest ratios of 3He to 4He, which geologists believe indicates that the gas's presence is not to do with the atmosphere, but rather the sign of deeper terrestrial origins. Several years ago, geochemist Forrest Horton uncovered helium isotope ratios of up to 50 times that of atmospheric levels in samples collected from Baffin's lava fields. This unusual concentration was also detected in lavas collected from Iceland. Horton and his team wondered if the helium in both samples may have derived from an ancient reservoir deep within the crust. And, it seems, their hunch may have been right. Their latest analysis – including specimens of the mineral olivine taken from dozens of sites across Baffin and surrounding islands – has delivered the highest ratio of 3He to 4He ever recorded in volcanic rock – measuring nearly 70 times anything previously detected in the atmosphere, as Science Alert notes. The team also considered ratios of other isotopes in order to rule out factors that may have altered the helium’s composition post-volcanic eruption, and found that the ratio of isotopes in the gas neon also matched the conditions present during the Earth’s formation. Despite advances in geology, the Earth’s core remains a great mystery, given that we have no way of directly exploring its core. The deepest hole humans have ever dug – branded the "entrance to hell" – extended an impressive 12,263m (40,230ft) down, but even that doesn’t come close to breaking through the crust to the layers beneath. Still, thanks to techniques like seismic tomography – which analyses how waves of energy travel through different materials during earthquakes – we’ve been able to map out the world’s interior. And carefully crafted simulations, based on the thermodynamics and pressures of our planet’s innards, suggest reserves of noble gases (like helium and neon) trapped in the core could have been protected as the Earth grew before seeping into the surrounding mantle over time. If the core is leaking, this could teach us a thing or two about how planets like ours form and how life, eventually, emerges. Sign up for our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings
2023-10-23 17:29
'Cat Person' may be a miss, but its pivotal sex scene is an all-timer
'Cat Person' may be a miss, but its pivotal sex scene is an all-timer
From Joy Ride to Oppenheimer, every time a new film dares to display sex on
2023-10-23 17:28
«941942943944»