Ination Global News Portal Sat, 21 Sep 2024 12:15:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://ination.online/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/cropped-Untitled-3-32x32.png Ination 32 32 Twin tons put India in the box seat https://ination.online/twin-tons-put-india-in-the-box-seat/ https://ination.online/twin-tons-put-india-in-the-box-seat/#respond Sat, 21 Sep 2024 12:15:42 +0000 https://ination.online/?p=3078 India sat firmly in the driver’s seat at the end of the third day’s play after being set up nicely by tons from Shubman Gill and Rishabh Pant. The duo had enabled them to declare with a lead of 514 with more than two and a half day’s play left in the first Test at […]

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India sat firmly in the driver’s seat at the end of the third day’s play after being set up nicely by tons from Shubman Gill and Rishabh Pant. The duo had enabled them to declare with a lead of 514 with more than two and a half day’s play left in the first Test at Chennai. In reply, Bangladesh put in a better batting show in comparison to their first dig but still lost four wickets, with R Ashwin being the wrecker-in-chief.

Ashwin, fresh off a hundred with the bat, had not got a wicket in the first innings here but as the match wore on, he began to find some assistance which he expertly exploited. But this was not before openers Zakir Hasan and Shadman Islam put on a confident 62-run stand. The pitch had no demons on it until then and the duo began to drive well against the pacers, putting both Mohammad Siraj and Jasprit Bumrah under the sword a little. The confident strokes gave Bangladesh something to cheer about in an otherwise woeful game. However, Hasan eventually nicked Bumrah and was caught well by Yashasvi Jaiswal at gully.

Ashwin gradually began to make his presence felt with teasing lines and the occasional turn and bounce threatening the left-handers. He first had Shadman caught at midwicket, before bowling Mominul Haque with a beautiful offbreak that beat the outside edge. Mushfiqur Rahim came in with an intent to counterattack and even lofted Ashwin for a six before he mistimed the encore and was caught at mid on. In the daunting chase, Bangladesh were in the doldrums before bad light forced an early end to the day’s play. Despite the loss of overs, India had forged ahead thanks to the quick work of the batters earlier in the day.

Shubman Gill and Rishabh Pant registered tons and put on a 167-run stand that had Bangladesh chasing leather. The play got underway on time on an overcast morning despite overnight and early morning rains. Pant got India going with a pull shot off Mehidy Hasan Miraz for a four and his second four of the day was a controlled pull off Hasan Mahmud.

Gill, who began watchfully, came down the track and struck two sixes off Mehidy to bring up a fine half-century, the fifty-run stand was raised soon after, and India also extended their lead past 350. But it was a watchful start in the first hour as India managed 48 runs in 15 overs despite Pant striking another four off Mehidy.

Pant got to his fifty close to 30 minutes into the second hour, taking 88 balls to get there having started the day at 12 off 13. It was a wait and watch approach from the pair as they cashed in on the loose deliveries. Gill put away a slow, short delivery from Mahmud for a four, followed by a fine shot from Pant as he came down the track and went inside-out off Mehidy for a boundary. Gill also came down the track to Mehidy, just about clearing the long-on boundary for his third six.

Pant executed a reverse-sweep off Shakib Al Hasan for a four to raise the century stand. There was, perhaps, a message from the dressing room, as Pant shifted to a higher gear, punching a Mahmud delivery for a boundary, followed by a lap shot for a six. Gill came down the track to Shakib and converted the ball into a full-toss as he played it wide of cover for a four. To add to Bangladesh’s woes, their skipper Najmul Hossain Shanto put down a catch to give Pant a reprieve. Pant then struck two fours off Shakib despite it being the last over before Lunch as India asserted their authority.

The top gear continued post the break as Pant raced through the 80s and 90s with a flurry of boundaries to bring up his sixth Test ton, marking a memorable return to Test cricket after two years. He was dismissed caught and bowled by Mehidy soon after but Gill clipped his way to his hundred – fifth in Tests – as India piled on the misery. The declaration came with about an hour’s play left in the second session, before Ashwin and Co. took over.

Brief scores: India 376 & 287/4 decl (Shubman Gill 119*, Rishabh Pant 109) lead Bangladesh 149 & 146/4 (Najmul Hossain Shanto 51; R Ashwin 3-63) by 357 runs

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Stunning turnaround sees Root ascend to the throne https://ination.online/stunning-turnaround-sees-root-ascend-to-the-throne/ https://ination.online/stunning-turnaround-sees-root-ascend-to-the-throne/#respond Sat, 21 Sep 2024 11:51:30 +0000 https://ination.online/?p=3073 Despite the setback at the Oval, England enjoyed a successful home season winning the rubbers against both West Indies and Sri Lanka. England’s success has run parallel with the ascent of their premier batter Joe Root, who during the course of the summer scaled peaks. He displaced Alastair Cook from the top of the charts for […]

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Despite the setback at the Oval, England enjoyed a successful home season winning the rubbers against both West Indies and Sri Lanka. England’s success has run parallel with the ascent of their premier batter Joe Root, who during the course of the summer scaled peaks. He displaced Alastair Cook from the top of the charts for most Test centuries by an Englishman and is within touching distance from his tally of runs. He also became the leading run getter and century maker at the ‘home of cricket’ Lord’s during the second Test against Sri Lanka. Root’s rise in the last 3.5 years has been astounding and it would be hard to argue the fact that he is currently the best batter in the world in the longest format.

The fall and rise of Root

Root was bracketed alongside his peers Steven Smith, Virat Kohli, and Kane Williamson as the modern day ‘Fab Four’ who dominated the batting charts in the 2010s. While his peers peaked at one point, Root was left behind in comparison though he steadfastly remained the best among the rest. But since 2021, the narrative has turned on its head with Root hitting his zenith as a batter. Root’s aggregate of 4579 runs is 2000+ runs adrift of the next best batter in this period while his 17 hundreds is ten centuries more than any other player barring Kane Williamson who is a distant second in the list with nine hundreds. (The numbers are partially driven by the fact England play more Test cricket than any other nation. Among non-English batters, the most batted by anyone in this phase in Marnus Labuschagne’s 63 innings, way short of Root’s 90) It’s not just the volume of runs that puts Root at a pedestal, it’s the manner in which he got those runs. He averages 55.84 in this period which is the second highest for any batter behind Williamson’s 64.34 (1500+ runs), but the latter has batted just over a third of Root’s tally (33 innings to Root’s 90).

Most runs in Tests since 2021

Player Mat Inngs Runs Avg SR 100s 50s
Joe Root 49 90 4579 55.84 61.63 17 15
U Khawaja 29 54 2564 53.41 45.97 7 12
M Labuschagne 34 63 2526 45.10 51.36 7 12
D Karunaratne 27 50 2455 51.14 57.25 7 14
Steven Smith 34 60 2448 47.07 49.31 6 12
O Pope 36 67 2236 34.40 67.65 6 8
Z Crawley 39 74 2127 29.54 68.17 3 12
B Stokes 38 68 2080 32.00 61.73 3 12

The big change in Root’s game has been in terms of converting the starts to big scores. Up until the end of 2020, he crossed fifty 66 times across 97 Tests but only about a quarter of those were converted to three figures (17) – second worst by a batter in the period. In 49 Tests since, he has doubled the tally of tons to 34 at a rate of converting every second 50+ score to a 100 – the best in this period. In fact, his tally of 17 hundreds since 2021 is the same as the combined aggregate of his Fab Four companions Williamson (9), Smith (6), and Kohli (2).

Root pre and post 2021

Period Mat Inngs Runs Avg SR 100s 50s
2012-2020 97 177 7823 48.00 54.49 17 49
Since 2021 49 90 4579 55.84 61.63 17 15

Root’s rise has to do with two major factors: his significantly improved home record and embellished second innings stats.

Soaring at home

Between 2013 and 2020, 18 batters scored 2000+ runs at home and Root’s home average of 50.56 was only the ninth best in this group headed by Kohli (72.45), Smith (71.00), Warner (70.62), and Williamson (67.29). England was a tough place to bat, compared to most other countries, especially in the period between 2018 to 2021, and this is reflected notably in the stats. Of the nine English batters with 1000+ runs at home between 2013 and 2020, Cook was the only other batter to average 40+ (43.89), underlining Root was country miles ahead of the rest of the pack even in the not so friendly conditions.

Root turned a corner in his career as the calendar flipped to 2021, kicking off the year with big daddy hundreds in the two Tests in Galle followed by a double century in his landmark 100th Test at Chepauk. He carried on his form to the home summer where the rest of his teammates struggled, leading the run charts in the home rubber against India with 737 runs – 333 runs more than the next.

Root's average at home has increased in the last 3 years.

Root’s average at home has increased in the last 3 years. ©AFP

Things took a brighter turn after Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum were appointed at the helm of affairs in the summer of 2022 relieving Root from captaincy duties. The tracks in England turned out to be among the most conducive for batters, aligning with their game modelled on attacking batsmanship. Root marched on his golden run from 2021 to the ‘Bazall’ era and his record at home soared. In 25 Tests in England across the last four seasons, Root averages 65.14 – in the territory of his peers when they were at their peak. The impact Root has had in the last 3.5 years is also reflected in his strike – up by 28% and he is scoring 15 runs more per 100 balls, and this hasn’t come detrimental to his stay at wicket which has increased by ten balls per innings on average.

Root at home

Period Mat Inngs Runs Avg SR 100s 50s
2012-2020 53 94 4348 50.56 56.77 11 24
Since 2021 25 43 2410 65.14 65.94 10 8

Second innings stats

Root enhanced numbers at home says one half of the story of his resurgence while the other half can be rationalized by his polished second innings stats. Since the start of 2021, Root is the only batter in the world to aggregate 1000+ runs in second innings (1855) at 50.13 – a significant jump from his 43 in the period till 2020. The big shift has happened in home Tests: in 25 home Tests in this period Root’s second innings average of 75.43 dwarfs his first innings average of 58.87.

Dissecting it further, Root’s fourth innings numbers have had a meteoric rise during the ‘Bazball’ era. Up until May 2022, Root averaged 32 across 37 fourth innings knocks with a highest of 87. He set the tone for the ‘Bazball’ era of fourth innings chases hitting an unbeaten 115 to guide England home in pursuit of 277 at Lord’s. This was followed by an unbeaten 142 in the series decider against India in Edgbaston later in the summer where England made their highest successful fourth innings chase of 378. In ten outings in fourth innings during the ‘Bazball’ era, Root averages a Bradman-esque 94.16 at a strike rate of 68.

Second innings stats pre & post 2021

Period Mat Inngs Runs Avg SR 100s 50s
2012-2020 97 80 3056 43.04 52.18 4 25
Since 2021 49 41 1855 50.14 62.08 6 8

Liberation from the burden of captaincy

Whether letting go of captaincy duties and embracing the new ‘Bazball’ style has unleashed the beast in Root the batter is anyone’s guess, but the numbers do back the theory that it has. Though Root had a productive run as a batter in the last 15 months of his captaincy tenure averaging 54.37 in 20 Tests since 2021, England endured a barren run as a team. In his last 17 Tests in charge, only one ended in an England win while they tasted defeat in as many as 11. However, since giving up captaincy, Root has averaged 57.11 in 29 Tests and is scoring at 68.08 per 100 balls with nine three figure scores – the best phase of his career.

Root’s career progression

Test # Inngs Runs Avg SR 100s 50s
1-30 55 2586 55.02 51.91 7 13
31-59 54 2736 53.65 61.24 6 19
60-88 53 1960 37.69 49.82 4 13
89-117 54 2607 51.12 55.35 8 8
118-147 51 2513 57.11 68.08 9 11

Root is also one of the select few players who enjoyed a good run as a batter in his post captaincy period, in his case the best phase of his career.

Batting record after being relieved of full time captaincy

Player Mat Runs Avg 100s/50s
Andy Flower 20 1952 67.31 5/10
Joe Root 29 2513 57.11 9/11
Chris Gayle 15 1208 54.91 3/4
Sunil Gavaskar 19 1468 54.37 4/8
Sachin Tendulkar 124 9885 52.86 29/44
Steven Smith 45 3486 50.52 9/17

Minimum 20 Tests as captain & 15+ Tests after resigning from full time captaincy.

For a large part of his career, Root was chasing his peers to the throne of the best batter in the world. It took a while, but Root finally caught up with the rest of the pack and he is now firmly in the driver’s seat as they edge closer to the sunset of their respective careers. Root will have sights set on Tendulkar’s tally of 15921 runs and should he scale that peak, it will certainly be the crowning glory of his career.

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Why an imitation Santorini has appeared on the edge of the desert https://ination.online/why-an-imitation-santorini-has-appeared-on-the-edge-of-the-desert/ https://ination.online/why-an-imitation-santorini-has-appeared-on-the-edge-of-the-desert/#respond Thu, 19 Sep 2024 14:01:32 +0000 https://ination.online/?p=3069 White, domed buildings cascading into crystal blue waters. To the eye, it’s unmistakable. It’s the world-famous holiday destination of Santorini, Greece. But, something feels different. Perhaps it’s the hotter desert-climate breeze, or the Arabic calligraphy across the signage. A few hints here and there point towards the resort’s actual location: Abu Dhabi in the United […]

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White, domed buildings cascading into crystal blue waters.

To the eye, it’s unmistakable. It’s the world-famous holiday destination of Santorini, Greece.

But, something feels different. Perhaps it’s the hotter desert-climate breeze, or the Arabic calligraphy across the signage. A few hints here and there point towards the resort’s actual location: Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates.

The Anantara Santorini Abu Dhabi Retreat opened in February this year and is an hour’s drive away from the capital’s downtown. The concept is entirely inspired by the renowned Greek island.

Inside and out, it’s a world of white, beige and blue, marked by arched corridors and doorways. Its bespoke artwork, ambient music and detailed embroidery on the linen all add up to a Mediterranean fantasy.

Yet, beyond the intricate décor, for Rachid Bakas, the property’s general manager, it’s Abu Dhabi’s natural beauty that truly draws the link between both locations.

“You see the color of the sea next to us, and then the concept really comes together,” says Bakas. “The idea of Santorini really fits within this location, and that’s what makes this design immaculate.”

Replicas are not usually marketed as a luxurious experience. But, Anantara Santorini could be an exception. Its lowest-priced room costs approximately $800 per night. That’s double the average of Greece’s Santorini hotels during high season, according to Tripadvisor.

If the price isn’t an advantage, why would a traveler prefer to visit the hotel in Abu Dhabi, and not fly to Greece?

“It’s exclusive,” says Bakas.

“This gives you that intimacy, this gives you that privacy. It’s a hideaway – which you might not have actually in Santorini because especially in summer, everywhere is packed, everywhere is busy.”

Structurally, the hotel is divided into 22 rooms, accommodating a maximum of 44 guests at a time. All rooms lead to a living room-like common area, purposefully giving a very homey atmosphere, while encouraging visitors to walk through the facility’s different environments.

“The element of surprise is within the hotel itself and from the moment you walk, you keep discovering some nice corners and spaces,” says Bakas.

Anantara Santorini offers a range of experiences, including a cigar lounge, a cinema, a spa and yoga sessions by the pool or beach. Yet, more than entertainment, the hope is that guests can simply enjoy calmness and tranquility.

“Sometimes, people just want to be left alone, they don’t want to be asked to do activities all the time, and this is the balance that we offer,” the manager explains.

One more factor contributes to the facility’s quietness: a restricted age group. The minimum age for check-in is 18, even if accompanied by parents or guardians.

“You can really unwind, and feel away, and relax,” Bakas says. “It was not an easy decision, but we really wanted to be on a different level [than other resorts in the region].”

While hoping to leave an impression on the guests, the hotel staff also work hard to remove certain marks. The white walls are kept impeccably white, and there’s a team dedicated to just that.

“We have two painters on site, and their daily job is to go around and do touch-ups,” Bakas reveals.

The painters go around the rooms in between check-outs and check-ins, making sure all the surroundings are not gray, beige or eggshell – just white.

“After the touch-ups, you need to make sure that the color looks the same, we want to make sure people don’t see different strokes, so really, it’s a crazy big part of our preventive maintenance,” Bakas sighs, as he looks at the walls and ceilings, with a smile.

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These are some of Dubai’s most expensive luxury hotel rooms https://ination.online/these-are-some-of-dubais-most-expensive-luxury-hotel-rooms/ https://ination.online/these-are-some-of-dubais-most-expensive-luxury-hotel-rooms/#respond Thu, 19 Sep 2024 13:56:41 +0000 https://ination.online/?p=3065 The City of Gold is known for its all-out glitz and glamour — and with good reason: Dubai is bursting with five-star hotels that ooze opulence. With over 150 luxurious resorts located across the city, travelers who are willing to splash the cash are spoilt for choice. But if you want the crème de la crème, the money-no-object exceptional […]

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The City of Gold is known for its all-out glitz and glamour — and with good reason: Dubai is bursting with five-star hotels that ooze opulence. With over 150 luxurious resorts located across the city, travelers who are willing to splash the cash are spoilt for choice.

But if you want the crème de la crème, the money-no-object exceptional experiences, some of the city’s luxury hotels offer extravagant suites, penthouses and exclusive villas that are amongst the city’s, and the world’s, most expensive hotel rooms — costing up to $100,000 per night.

From $3,800 per night: The Royal Malakiya Villa at Jumeirah Dar Al Masyaf

The Royal Malakiya Villa is the ultimate in indoor-outdoor living. On its ground floor, expansive Arabian-inspired living spaces including a dining room and multiple lounge areas open onto a serene patio with a private plunge pool and cabanas. Upstairs, both bedrooms have large terraces overlooking the resort’s gardens and waterways, and on the roof, there’s space to dine, unwind, and sunbathe. To help them make the most of the space, guests here also have access to a private butler service, a dedicated “Abra” boat station, and access to the resort’s private beachfront.

From $8,860 per night: The Grand Atlantis Suite at Atlantis, The Palm

The Underwater Suite at Atlantis, The Palm, is probably its most famous room— but take your stay to the next level with the Grand Atlantis Suite, the hotel’s largest at 4,617 square feet (429 square meters). The suite’s private entrance is flanked by two giant fishtail fountains, and its terrace wraps around three sides of the building to provide views of both The Palm and the Arabian Gulf. Guests can enjoy butler service and 22-carat gold amenities, and soak in the outdoor hot tub or Jacuzzi. The room rate includes return airport transfers, daily access to Aquaventure Waterpark and The Lost Chambers, and access to the hotel’s exclusive Imperial Club (which offers breakfast, afternoon tea and sunset happy hour) and private beach access.

From $13,600 per night: The Marina Royal Suite at The Lana

This two-bedroom suite has one of the most coveted views in Dubai: the Burj Khalifa. The primary bathroom, with a standalone tub beside the window, overlooks the iconic downtown skyline. With a private terrace stretching almost the entire length of the suite and multiple entertainment rooms — including a lounge, dining room, and private kitchen — it’s the perfect party pad. The hotel is also home to one of the city’s only dedicated champagne bars and the UAE’s first Dior spa, so those with expensive tastes will be well catered to.

From $20,420 per night: The Royal Penthouse at Mandarin Oriental Jumeira

The newly renovated, 9,149-square-foot (850-square-meter) Royal Penthouse oozes luxury from the moment you step into the private elevator. Floor-to-ceiling windows offer seascapes from every corner of the bedroom and living space, while the private roof terrace boasts its own private 7-meter lap pool with panoramic views of the Arabian Gulf. A sunken outdoor fire pit, a 16-person dining room with a chef’s kitchen, and a private gym are all part of the exclusive experience here.

From $21,800 per night: The Royal Suite at Four Seasons Dubai

The 6,458-square-foot (600-square-meter) Royal Suite offers palatial living for couples accustomed to the finer things in life. This one-bedroom penthouse suite has an all-marble bathroom with an enormous round stone tub, a vast column-studded living room with a stocked bar and baby grand piano, a private gym with massage tables, a wood-paneled study, and a TV room. Accessed via a private elevator, this enormous suite also has an expansive terrace overlooking the resort’s palm-fringed pool and the Arabian Gulf.

From $32,700 per night: Presidential Suite at the Jumeirah Burj Al Arab

At this so-called “seven-star hotel,” the word luxury doesn’t seem sufficient. The walls and floors use 24,000 square meters of marble, the same kind used to carve Michelangelo’s David, and the all-suite hotel is also home to the world’s biggest Swarovski crystal ceiling, with 21,000 crystals worth 1.3 million UAE dirhams ($354,000). As standard, all guests at Jumeirah Burj Al Arab can request airport transfers in the hotel’s fleet of Rolls-Royces, and there are complimentary Hermès amenities in every room. So what’s left to add for the hotel’s most extravagant room? The two-bedroom Presidential Suite is a gold-gilded, velvet-clad, palatial duplex, spanning 7,179 square feet (667 square meters). It boasts butler service, a private personalized bar, and a nine-choice pillow menu. To top it off, the two primary bathrooms are kitted out with full-size jacuzzi tubs, surrounded by Roman-style gold marble columns.

From $100,000 per night: The Royal Mansion at Atlantis, The Royal

The most expensive room in Dubai, and one of the priciest worldwide, The Royal Mansion is the best of the best. The expansive 11,840-square-foot (1,100-square-meter) duplex has hosted entertainment royalty, including Beyoncé and Jay Z. Split across the 18th and 19th floor of the vertical resort, the suite has double-height floor-to-ceiling windows with a 360-degree view of the Palm and the Gulf. With a private entrance, elevator, and dedicated butler, the room is designed for the ultimate privacy. Guests can host dinners in the 12-seat dining room, and chefs from the resort’s 17 restaurants — including its celebrity chef venues — are available to cook in the suite’s private chef’s kitchen. There’s a ping-pong table made by Louis Vuitton and limited-edition board games made by luxury crystal ware brand Baccarat. Every single stay is customized, so the starting price is on application only — but it’s roughly estimated at $100,000 per night.

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Former Nazi bunker turned into hotel and leisure complex in Germany https://ination.online/former-nazi-bunker-turned-into-hotel-and-leisure-complex-in-germany/ https://ination.online/former-nazi-bunker-turned-into-hotel-and-leisure-complex-in-germany/#respond Thu, 19 Sep 2024 04:51:41 +0000 https://ination.online/?p=3061 At 58 meters tall – just a little taller than the Leaning Tower of Pisa, but with considerably more heft – the St. Pauli bunker in Hamburg, Germany, has dominated the city skyline for just over 80 years. Built using forced labor during Adolf Hitler’s Nazi regime, it’s a relic of the darkest period in […]

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At 58 meters tall – just a little taller than the Leaning Tower of Pisa, but with considerably more heft – the St. Pauli bunker in Hamburg, Germany, has dominated the city skyline for just over 80 years.

Built using forced labor during Adolf Hitler’s Nazi regime, it’s a relic of the darkest period in Germany’s history – but this concrete hulk has had a surprising rebirth.

The relaunched Hamburg Bunker is now packed with two restaurants, a five-story Hard Rock Hotel and a newly built pyramid-like rooftop bar and garden from which greenery flows abundantly over the concrete facade.

The REVERB by Hard Rock is a fitting addition to a city with an impressive musical history – this is, after all, where The Beatles began their career at the start of the 1960s.

The Karoviertel neighborhood in which the fortress-like bunker sits is a cool enclave filled with stylish coffee shops and vintage stores, plus the Knust nightclub in a repurposed abattoir.

The amenities

Rooms in the 134-key REVERB range from 180 euros for a classic room, with amenities including a 55-inch flat screen TV and Alexa in-room assistant, to 269 euros for a suite with sweeping citywide views.

The hotel also has the kind of modern details you’d expect in any self-respecting hip hotel, such as self check-in, smart technology and co-working spaces.

You don’t have to be a hotel guest to enjoy the bunker’s amenities, however. On the ground level, there’s the Constant Grind coffee shop and bar, and a Rock Shop for those seeking Hard Rock merch.

Bar-restaurant Karo & Paul, by German TV chef Frank Rosin, opened as a bar in April 2024 and occupies the first three levels of the building. The restaurant area is still coming soon.

The restaurant La Sala – Spanish for living room – is open for business on the fifth floor, offering lofty views and an international menu.

Finally at the top is the Green Beanie roof garden, with bar and walkway looping round the building, which can be accessed by the public for free.

The challenge

The Hamburg bunker was one of eight flak towers – above-ground anti-aircraft bunkers which doubled as air raid shelters – which Germany built after British air raids on Berlin in 1940.

The history the Hamburg Bunker wears is heavy, but a 76,000-tonne concrete behemoth with walls 2.5 meters thick can’t be easily demolished or ignored.

The only flak tower to have been completely destroyed is one at Berlin’s zoo, as the others are in heavily populated areas where the explosives involved would be too great a risk, AFP reports.

“The idea of raising the height of the building with greenery was to add something peaceful and positive to this massive block left over from the Nazi dictatorship,” Anita Engels, from the Hilldegarden neighborhood association which supported the project, told AFP.

The association has helped with this new chapter in the Hamburg flak tower’s history by collecting testimonies from people who lived in the wartime bunker as well as records of the hundreds of forced laborers who built it.

An exhibition on the first floor now tells the full story of the building’s history.

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The world’s best hotels for 2024 revealed https://ination.online/the-worlds-best-hotels-for-2024-revealed/ https://ination.online/the-worlds-best-hotels-for-2024-revealed/#respond Thu, 19 Sep 2024 04:47:55 +0000 https://ination.online/?p=3058 he Capella Bangkok didn’t have the easiest of beginnings. It opened in 2020, in the first year of a global pandemic that had the hospitality industry on its knees. However, just four years later, this sanctuary overlooking the Chao Phraya River has taken the top spot in the second edition of the World’s 50 Best Hotels list, […]

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he Capella Bangkok didn’t have the easiest of beginnings. It opened in 2020, in the first year of a global pandemic that had the hospitality industry on its knees.

However, just four years later, this sanctuary overlooking the Chao Phraya River has taken the top spot in the second edition of the World’s 50 Best Hotels list, which was announced at an awards ceremony in London on Tuesday night.

All of the hotel’s 101 rooms are spacious and light-filled, but the riverside villas, all with private gardens and plunge pools, are a unique highlight of this five-star offering in Charoenkrung, Thailand’s oldest neighborhood.

“When you come to Bangkok, it’s crazy, it’s chaotic, it’s funky, it’s noisy,” general manager John Blanco told CNN Travel after the ceremony in London’s Guildhall, “but when you come to the hotel, you’re in this little moment of Zen: the sanctuary, the garden with beautiful trees full of birds.”

Capella Bangkok’s director of marketing Josephine Png told CNN Travel her favorite spot in the hotel is “on the terrace by the river under the trees.” By day, it’s “super tranquil,” she said, but by night, the river comes alive with the spectacle of passing party boats.

Opening during the pandemic was a blessing in disguise, said Blanco, as it gave them time to get to know their neighbors. “Covid gave us an opportunity to really get warm and fuzzy and close with the Thais, who are amazing customers.”

Now the rest of the world has been discovering the hotel too – and many of them are making repeat visits, Blanco said. “Thailand is one of those destinations, it’s very sticky. It’s a destination that you fall in love with and you need more of. It’s almost like a drug.”

Asian success

Capella Bangkok was one of four hotels in the Thai capital to make the Top 50, with the Mandarin Oriental Bangkok and Four Seasons Bangkok at Chao Phraya River appearing at No. 12 and No. 14 on the list respectively, while The Siam was at No. 26.

It was very much Asia’s night, with seven out of the top 10 hotels being from the region.

Hong Kong was represented by the Rosewood at No. 3 and The Upper House at No. 5, while the 137-year-old Raffles Singapore – birthplace of the Singapore Sling cocktail – was in sixth.

In eighth place, Soneva Fushi in the Maldives was also winner of the Lost Explorer Best Beach Hotel Award 2024. After all, this is a resort so dedicated to barefoot luxury that guests hand over their shoes on arrival, and they are not returned until it’s time to leave.

The 45-story skyscraper Bulgari Tokyo, at No. 22, won the Nikka Best New Hotel Award 2024.

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What is a mass extinction, and why do scientists think we’re in the middle of one? https://ination.online/what-is-a-mass-extinction-and-why-do-scientists-think-were-in-the-middle-of-one/ https://ination.online/what-is-a-mass-extinction-and-why-do-scientists-think-were-in-the-middle-of-one/#respond Mon, 09 Sep 2024 11:59:32 +0000 https://ination.online/?p=3055   No species lasts forever — extinction is part of the evolution of life. But at least five times, a biological catastrophe has engulfed the planet, killing off the vast majority of species from water and land over a relatively short geological interval. The most famous of these mass extinction events — when an asteroid slammed into Earth […]

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No species lasts forever — extinction is part of the evolution of life.

But at least five times, a biological catastrophe has engulfed the planet, killing off the vast majority of species from water and land over a relatively short geological interval.

The most famous of these mass extinction events — when an asteroid slammed into Earth 66 million years ago, dooming the dinosaurs and many other species — is also the most recent. But scientists say it won’t be the last.

Many researchers argue we’re in the middle of a sixth mass extinction, caused not by a city-size space rock but by the overgrowth and transformative behavior of a single species — Homo sapiens. Humans have destroyed habitats and unleashed a climate crisis.

Calculations in a September study published in the journal PNAS have suggested that groups of related animal species are disappearing at a rate 35% times higher than the normally expected rate.

And while every mass extinction has winners and losers, there is no reason to assume that human beings in this case would be among the survivors.

In fact, study coauthor Gerardo Ceballos thinks the opposite could come to pass, with the sixth mass extinction transforming the whole biosphere, or the area of the world hospitable to life — possibly into a state in which it may be impossible for humanity to persist unless dramatic action is taken.

“Biodiversity will recover but the winners (are) very difficult to predict. Many of the losers in these past mass extinctions were incredibly successful groups,” said Ceballos, a senior researcher at the Institute of Ecology at the National Autonomous University of Mexico.

While the causes of the “big five” mass extinctions varied, understanding what happened during these dramatic chapters in Earth’s history — and what emerged in the aftermath of these cataclysms — can be instructive.

“Nobody’s seen these events but they’re on a scale that might be repeated. We’ve got … (to) learn from the past because that’s our only data set,” said Michael Benton, a professor of vertebrate paleontology at Bristol University in the United Kingdom who is the author of the new book “Extinctions: How Life Survives, Adapts and Evolves.”

A really bad day: Dino-killing asteroid and the iridium anomaly

While paleontologists have studied fossils for centuries, the science of mass extinction is relatively new. Radiometric dating, based on the natural radioactive decay of certain elements, like carbon, and other techniques revolutionized the ability to precisely determine the age of ancient rocks in the second half of the last century.

The developments set the stage for the work of the late Nobel Prize-winning physicist Luis Alvarez and his geologist son Walter, professor of Earth and planetary science at the Univeristy of California, Berkeley. Along with two other colleagues, they coauthored a sensational 1980 paper about the “iridium anomaly” — a 1-centimeter-thick (0.4-inch-thick) layer of sedimentary rock rich in iridium, an element rare on Earth’s surface but common in meteorites.

The researchers attributed the anomaly, which they initially identified in Italy, Denmark and New Zealand, to the impact of a large asteroid. They argued the unusual layer represented the exact moment in time when dinosaurs disappeared.

First met with skepticism, the iridium anomaly eventually was spotted in more and more places around the world. A decade later, a different group of researchers identified the smoking gun: a 200-kilometer-wide (125-mile-wide) crater off the coast of Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula.

The rock and sediment there had a similar composition to the iridium layers, and the scientists suggested the depression, called the Chicxulub crater, was caused by the impact of an asteroid. Researchers believe the other anomalies spotted across the globe were caused by scattering debris when the space rock struck Earth.

Most paleontologists now accept that the asteroid caused what’s known as the end-Cretaceous extinction. The strike triggered a period of global cooling, with dust, soot and sulfur thrown up during the impact blocking the sun and likely shutting down photosynthesis, a key process for life.

One fossil site in North Dakota has provided an unprecedented level of detail on what that day — and its immediate aftermath — was like. Debris rained down, lodging itself into the gills of fish, while huge tsunami-like surges of water unleashed by the strike killed dinosaurs and other creatures. Scientists have even figured out that the asteroid smashed into Earth in springtime.

The disappearance of massive dinosaurs created a world in which mammals — and ultimately humans — were able to thrive. And dinosaurs weren’t the total losers they are sometimes made out to be: Scientists now believe that the birds that flap around in our backyards directly evolved from smaller relatives of Tyrannosaurus rex.

In the wake of the Alvarez duo’s stunning discovery, it initially seemed to scientists as if a space rock impact might be a general mechanism that explained all mass extinction events identified in the geological record. But the end-Cretaceous extinction is the only one reliably associated with an asteroid, according to Benton.

A different culprit, however, does explain several smaller extinction episodes and at least two mass extinctions, including the largest on record.

Apocalyptic volcanoes that caused global warming

Something known as a hyperthermal event — a sudden warming of the planet — spelled doom for large segments of life on Earth on more than one occasion. These events have followed a predictable pattern: volcanic eruption, carbon dioxide release, global warming, acid rain, ocean acidification — resulting in a longer road to oblivion than the dino-killing asteroid but equally destructive.

The biggest mass cataclysm of all time, called the end-Permian extinction, occurred 252 million years ago. Some 95% of species disappeared on land and at sea as a result of global warming — with temperatures rising perhaps 10 degrees Celsius to 15 degrees Celsius (18 F to 27 F), Benton noted in his book.

Known as “the Great Dying,” the extinction event was marked by supervolcanic eruptions that expelled greenhouse gases in an Australia-size region known as the Siberian Traps in Eurasia. That led to extreme acid rain that killed plant life and left the land surface rocky as the precipitation washed rich soil into the oceans, which in turn became swamped with organic matter, Benton explained.

However, into the void that followed emerged different creatures that evolved from the survivors, displaying many new ways of existence with features such as feathers, hair and speedy locomotion, Benton said.

“One of the big changes … on land, it seems, was a great rise in energy of everything,” he explained. “All of the surviving reptiles very rapidly became upright in posture instead of (low and) sprawling. (Some animals) became warm blooded in some way because we track feathers back to the early Triassic dinosaurs and their nearest relatives, and on the mammals side, we track the origin of hair.”

When dinosaurs got big

Another period of extreme volcanic activity 201 million years ago marked the end-Triassic mass extinction. It has been linked to the breakup of the Pangea supercontinent and the opening of the central Atlantic Ocean. Many land reptiles vanished as a result of that catastrophic event, making way for the towering sauropods and armored plant eaters commonly seen in childhood dinosaur books.

“The dinosaurs were already around but they had not fully diversified,” Benton said. “And then in the early Jurassic, … the dinosaurs really took off.”

Deeper in time, a mass extinction event that ended the Devonian Period, a geological era when life thrived on land for the first time, was also attributed to a hyperthermal event likely triggered by volcanic activity 359 million years ago, according to Benton’s book.

Other research published in 2020 suggested that multiple star explosions — known as supernovae — may have played a role.

A less well-understood period of worldwide cooling soon followed. It’s thought that these twin crises — separated by only 14 million years — led to rapid changes in temperature and sea level that resulted in the loss of at least 50% of the world’s species, wiping out many armored fish, early land plants, and animals such as the fishapods, or the earliest elpistostegalians, that were making the transition from water to land.

The resulting loss of marine species made way for the golden age of sharks during the Carboniferous Period, when the predators dominated the seas and evolved to include a variety of species with different forms.

Sinking temperatures and sea levels

Colder temperatures and a drastic drop in sea levels — perhaps as much as 10 degrees Celsius (18 F) cooler and 150 meters (492 feet) lower, respectively — played a major role in the earliest identified mass extinction event, the end-Ordovician, according to Benton. That shift, which took place about 444 million years ago, led to the disappearance of 80% of species at a time when life was mostly limited to the seas.

What triggered the die-off was the massive Gondwana supercontinent (today’s South America, Africa, Antarctica and Australia) drifting over the South Pole during the Ordovician. When a land mass covers the polar region, the ice cap reflects sunlight and slows melting, resulting in an expanding ice cap that lowers sea levels globally.

Adding to the cataclysm was volcanic activity. However, in this case, it did not appear to make global temperatures warmer. Instead, phosphorus from lava and volcanic rocks washed into the sea, gobbling up life-giving oxygen from the oceans.

The looming sixth mass extinction

A growing number of scientists believe a sixth mass extinction event of a magnitude equal to the prior five has been unfolding for the past 10,000 years as humans have made their mark around the globe.

The dodo, the Tasmanian tiger, the baiji, or Yangtze River dolphin, and the Western black rhino are just a few of the species that have disappeared so far in what’s known as the Holocene or Anthropocene extinction.

While the loss of even one species is devastating, Ceballos of the National Autonomous University of Mexico has highlighted that the ongoing episode of extinction is mutilating much thicker branches of the tree of life, a metaphor and model that groups living entities and maps their evolutionary relationships.

Entire categories of related species, or genera, are disappearing, a process he said is affecting whole ecosystems and endangering the survival of our own species.

Ceballos and his study coauthor Paul Ehrlich, Bing Professor Emeritus of Population Studies at Stanford University, assessed 5,400 genera of vertebrate animals, excluding fishes. A single genus groups one or more different but related species — for example the genus Canis includes wolves, dogs, coyotes and jackals.

The duo’s analysis found that 73 genera had gone extinct in the past 500 years. This is much faster than the expected “background” extinction rate, or the rate at which species would naturally die off without outside influence — in the absence of human beings, these 73 genera would have taken 18,000 years to vanish, the researchers said.

The causes of these extinctions are varied — land-use change, habitat loss, deforestation, intensive farming and agriculture, invasive species, overhunting and the climate crisis — but all these devastating changes have a common thread: humanity.

Ceballos pointed to the extinction of the passenger pigeon, which was the only species in its genus, as an example of how losing a genus can have a cascading effect on a wider ecosystem. The bird’s loss, a result of reckless hunting in the 19th century, narrowed human diets in eastern North America and allowed the bacteria-harboring White-footed mice that were among its prey to thrive.

What’s more, some scientists believe the passenger pigeon’s extinction, combined with other factors, is behind today’s rise of tick-borne diseases such as Lyme disease that plague humans and animals alike, according to the study.

Not only do the destructive actions of humans have the potential to erode our quality of life in the long term, but their ripple effects could eventually upend our success as a species, according to Ceballos.

“When we lose genera, we’re losing more genetic diversity, we’re losing more evolutionary history, and we’re losing (many) more ecosystem goods and services that are very important,” he explained.

While branches of the tree of life are vanishing, the distribution of certain animal species is becoming more homogenized — the world is home to about 19.6 billion chickens, 980 million pigs and 1.4 billion cattle. In some cases, intensive farming can trigger outbreaks of disease like avian influenza outbreaks that rip through poultry farms and increase risk of spillover in wild migratory birds. Other farm animals act as hosts for virus that infect humans, with the potential to cause pandemics like Covid-19.

Ultimately, the planet can and will survive just fine without us, Ceballos added. But, like the iridium anomaly left by the dinosaur-dooming space rock, what might the final traces of human civilization look like in the geological record?

Some scientists point to the geochemical traces of nuclear bomb tests, specifically plutonium — a radioactive element widely detected across the world in coral reefs, ice cores and peat bogs.

Others say it could be something altogether more mundane, such as a fossilized layer of bones from chickens — the domesticated bird industrially bred and consumed across the world in mammoth quantities — that’s left as humanity’s defining legacy for the ages.

 

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The remarkable fossil that radically changed our understanding of the human story https://ination.online/the-remarkable-fossil-that-radically-changed-our-understanding-of-the-human-story/ https://ination.online/the-remarkable-fossil-that-radically-changed-our-understanding-of-the-human-story/#respond Mon, 09 Sep 2024 11:49:57 +0000 https://ination.online/?p=3052 Indonesian archaeologist Thomas Sutikna was nursing a fever in a hotel room on September 2, 2003, when a coworker shared news of what turned out to be a once-in-a-generation discovery. Earlier that day, a colleague’s trowel had hit a tiny human-like skull encased in 6-meter (19.7-foot) deep sediment in Liang Bua, a large cave in […]

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Indonesian archaeologist Thomas Sutikna was nursing a fever in a hotel room on September 2, 2003, when a coworker shared news of what turned out to be a once-in-a-generation discovery.

Earlier that day, a colleague’s trowel had hit a tiny human-like skull encased in 6-meter (19.7-foot) deep sediment in Liang Bua, a large cave in the highlands of the Indonesian island of Flores that Sutikna and his colleagues had been excavating since 2001. Sutikna’s fever immediately vanished, and after a fitful night’s sleep, he and his team set off for the site at sunrise.

They were thrilled to uncover more bones — some still attached to one another — in the same location at the high-ceilinged cave.

“There were leg bones, hand bones, tibia, femur, grouped in there, in one context.
Given the very fragile condition of the bone, it was not possible to lift it (out of the ground) immediately,” recalled Sutikna, now an archaeologist and researcher at Indonesia’s Center for Archaeometric Research at the country’s National Research and Innovation Agency.

To harden the brittle exposed bone, he applied some acetone nail polish remover bought from a cosmetics store mixed with glue the team had on site.
The team then brought the blocks of cut sediment containing the bones back to the hotel by minibus.

Wahyu Saptomo, one of the field archaeologists who had first told Sutikna about the discovery, remembered that they placed the blocks of soil on their laps — the safest place during a bumpy minibus ride on an unpaved road.

At first, the team thought perhaps the tiny skull and other bones belonged to a child, but as Sutikna cleaned the fossil at the hotel, he saw it had the molar teeth of an adult. It appeared to be a completely new kind of human, a female specimen with a perplexing combination of features that stood just over 3 feet (about 1 meter tall) and would have weighed around 66 pounds (30 kilograms).

“We were all surprised by the fossil, because after cleaning it could be seen that the teeth had all grown and were intact. The skull bones also showed that it was an adult bone, not a child’s skull,” said Sutikna, who subsequently took the fossil to Jakarta, the Indonesian capital.

Now, 20 years later, scientists are still struggling to definitively place this enigmatic piece of the evolutionary puzzle. But the journey sparked by its discovery has led to revelations that challenge what’s known about the human family tree.

Explosive discovery

The team and its international collaborators knew from the start that what they had found was groundbreaking, and they worked hard to keep their discovery secret for more than a year so the remains could be studied in detail.

When they released the results of their research, in two studies published in the high-profile scientific journal Nature just over a year later, the findings shook up the field of paleoanthropology and captivated a wider audience, making headlines around the world.

Nicknamed hobbit — the massively popular first “Lord of the Rings” film had come out in late 2001 — by Mike Morwood, the late Australian archaeologist who had spearheaded the dig, the Liang Bua specimen looked like something from the movie’s Middle Earth realm.

The volume of its braincase, measured with mustard seeds smuggled from Australia through Indonesian customs, was around 400 milliliters, similar to a chimpanzee. (The volume of a modern human braincase is 1,500 milliliters.) Its legs were short, with disproportionately large feet, and its arms long like a primate.

Initial dating of carbon in the sediment determined the remains to be 18,000 years old, which was startlingly young, putting the previously unknown species closer in time to us than the Neanderthals. (The dates were revised in 2016, estimating instead that the hobbit was 50,000 to 60,000 years old.)

The Liang Bua team named the species Homo floresiensis after the island where the fossils were discovered. (Two other names were considered: Homo hobbitus — passed over because it was thought to trivialize the find — and floresianus — rejected after the realization that it meant flowery anus.)

The discovery challenged the idea that humans evolved in a neat line from primitive to complex and underscored just how much remained unknown about the human story.

“(The specimen) was just wrong in about five different ways and unexpected to the point of people thinking like this can’t be possible,” said Paige Madison, a historian of paleoanthropology and science writer who is working on a book about the hobbit titled “Strange Creatures Beyond Count” to be published in 2025

How the hobbit came to be

Some experts in human evolution vehemently argued the Liang Bua bones were those of a modern human with a growth disorder — such as microcephaly, a condition that leads to an abnormally small head, a small body and some cognitive impairment. That assertion unleashed a fierce debate that took years to resolve.

The team that discovered the hobbit disagreed and put forward two theories. Most likely, members of the team thought, their find was a dwarfed offshoot of Homo erectus — the first human species to leave Africa and migrate around the world, the remains of which have been discovered in Java and elsewhere in Asia.

The shape of the teeth and skull morphology were similar, though Homo erectus stood much taller. It was possible, the researchers thought, that Homo erectus had done what some other species of animals that live on remote islands have — shrunk over time in response to limited resources.

However, the tiny brain case and chimplike wristbones suggested the hobbit was related to australopithecines — small-bodied hominins, best known from the famous Lucy fossil, that roamed Africa more than 2 million years ago. This potential link raised the possibility that australopithecines also once migrated out of Africa millions of years ago.

Exactly how the hobbit came to be is still an open question, said Chris Stringer, research leader in human evolution at the Natural History Museum in London.

“I’m on the fence on this one because I can see the evidence for both sides of the argument,” Stringer said, “and I think we really still don’t know where its origins are.”

However, the idea that the hobbit was a diseased modern human has been largely rejected, he said.

The subsequent discovery of two other small-bodied and small-brained hominins that lived relatively recently — Homo naledi in South Africa and Homo luzonensis in the Philippines — and the much larger Denisovans has led to a wider acceptance among paleoanthropologists that there have been many, diverse species of human, including several that coexisted with our own species, Homo sapiens. Before the discovery of the hobbit, many experts in human evolution thought essentially only one species of human had evolved through time, with regional variation.

‘So many unknowns’

Matt Tocheri, Canada research chair in human origins at Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, Ontario, first saw casts of the Liang Bua hobbit around 2006 during a presentation on the fossils’ conservation at the Smithsonian Institution. An expert in wristbone evolution, he was immediately stunned to see that the wrists more closely resembled those of an African ape than a human, an observation that swayed him toward the idea that Homo floresiensis is more closely connected to Lucy and her relatives than a scaled-down Homo erectus.

In 2014, a partial Homo floresiensis jawbone and teeth were found on a different site on Flores called Mata Menge and dated to 700,000 years ago — considerably older than the original specimen. They were similar in size, if not smaller, than those found in Liang Bua, suggesting that the Flores hobbits had acquired their extremely small body size by that early point, working against the idea that the hobbits were evolutionary dwarfs of some kind.

However, other experts argue that dwarfism could have happened even deeper in the past or on a different island.

It’s also possible, Tocheri noted, that the hobbit’s small stature is a result of sexual dimorphism — when the two sexes have different physical characteristics. The working hypothesis is that the Liang Bua hobbit is female because of the broader shape of its pelvis, and it’s not clear what a male hobbit might have looked like. While more than 100 Homo floresiensis fossils — likely belonging to six or seven individuals — have been unearthed to date, there’s only one relatively complete skeleton and only one skull, which is the most informative body part.

Tocheri, who is now closely involved with archaeological work on Flores, keeps an open mind. “There are still so many unknowns; we have to be very careful,” he said.

To resolve these debates and understand more about Homo floresiensis and its place in the human family tree, more fossil discoveries are needed, particularly in Asia. For example, Tocheri noted, there are no known Homo erectus wristbones for him to compare with the hobbit’s.

Scientists also hope to be able extract ancient DNA from Liang Bua. Attempts so far have been unsuccessful, but new techniques — including extracting DNA from cave dirt or decoding ancient proteins — could help shed light on which hominin the hobbit is most closely related to.

“They see it as kind of like a holy grail of genomes,” said Madison, the science writer. “It seems that the hobbit is probably at the edge of possibility as far as recovering a genome. Not because it’s too old, because they have genomes much older, but because the environmental conditions are so important in preserving that (DNA). And those hot environments, humid environments, those are really difficult environments for them to retrieve DNA.”

Homo floresiensis: A ‘whole other chapter’

There’s still much to learn about the hobbit. Sutikna marvels at how such a primitive-looking hominin might have reached Flores: Only Homo sapiens were thought to be able to make oceangoing vessels, and Flores has never been connected to a large landmass, so ancient humans couldn’t have walked there.

The study of ocean currents suggests that the species might have come from Sulawesi, an island to the north, rather than the closer islands to the west, although Homo floresiensis fossils have still only been found on Flores. Stringer said he thinks it’s possible that a group of hobbits was swept on a raft of land in the aftermath of a tsunami.

Archaeologists and paleontologists have also pieced together some information about the hobbits’ lives. Their island was home to a now-lost ecosystem of dwarfed elephants called stegodons that stood 1.2 meters (3.9 feet) high, colossal 2-meter-tall (6.6-foot-tall) storks, Komodo dragons and giant rats.

It’s not clear whether the hobbits would have hunted or scavenged these animals, although Tocheri said it was most likely the latter given the hobbits’ size. While charcoal has been found in the cave, it’s now thought that this evidence of fire use is associated with the later occupancy of modern humans, rather than the hobbits.

Another mystery is why the hobbits disappeared after surviving for so long on Flores. Sutikna said that a thick layer of volcanic ash was found just on top of the layer where Homo floresiensis was first found.

“We estimate that at least eight volcanic eruptions have occurred. And above the volcanic ash layer, we did not find any fossils of Homo floresiensis or other ancient animals,” he said. “However, we cannot confirm whether this natural disaster destroyed Homo floresiensis.”

Tocheri said it’s unlikely that a volcano alone doomed the hobbits. The island of Flores had always been volcanically active, and the hobbit had lived there for the nearly 1 million years. More likely, it was a combination of factors. A changing climate, perhaps combined with the arrival of Homo sapiens in the region, could have played a role, Tocheri said.

Whatever led to its extinction, the hobbit’s discovery teaches us about humanity’s place in the evolutionary tree and nature more broadly, according to Madison.

“We know a lot about evolutionary principles at this point, but sometimes I think we’re a little bit hesitant to apply them to ourselves,” Madison said. “I think that (this discovery) reminds us that we’re just one evolutionary outcome.”

Tocheri agreed. “It didn’t really rewrite what we knew, but it just explosively showed us that there was this whole other chapter.”

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Scientists reveal the face of a Neanderthal who lived 75,000 years ago https://ination.online/scientists-reveal-the-face-of-a-neanderthal-who-lived-75000-years-ago/ https://ination.online/scientists-reveal-the-face-of-a-neanderthal-who-lived-75000-years-ago/#respond Mon, 09 Sep 2024 11:43:44 +0000 https://ination.online/?p=3049 A 40-something woman was buried in a cave 75,000 years ago, laid to rest in a gully hollowed out to accommodate her body. Her left hand was curled under her head, and a rock behind her head may have been placed as a cushion. Known as Shanidar Z, after the cave in Iraqi Kurdistan where she […]

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A 40-something woman was buried in a cave 75,000 years ago, laid to rest in a gully hollowed out to accommodate her body. Her left hand was curled under her head, and a rock behind her head may have been placed as a cushion.

Known as Shanidar Z, after the cave in Iraqi Kurdistan where she was found in 2018, the woman was a Neanderthal, a type of ancient human that disappeared around 40,000 years ago.

Scientists studying her remains have painstakingly pieced together her skull from 200 bone fragments, a process that took nine months. They used the contours of the face and skull to guide a reconstruction to understand what she may have looked like.
The striking recreation is featured in a new documentary “Secrets of the Neanderthals” produced by BBC for Netflix, which is available for streaming on Thursday.

With pronounced brow ridges and no chins, the skulls of Neanderthals look different from those of our own species, Homo sapiens, said Dr. Emma Pomeroy, a paleoanthropologist and associate professor with the University of Cambridge’s department of archaeology who unearthed the skeleton and appears in the new film. The Shanidar Z facial reconstruction suggests that these differences might not have been so stark in life, Pomeroy said.

“There is some artistic license there, but at the heart of it is the real skull and real data on what we know about (these) people,” she said.

“She’s actually got quite a large face for her size,” Pomeroy added. “She’s got quite big brow ridges, which typically we wouldn’t see, but I think dressed in modern clothes you probably wouldn’t look twice.”

Neanderthals lived across Europe, the Middle East and Central Asia Mountains for around 300,000 years, overlapping with modern humans for 30,000 years or so. Analysis of DNA from present-day humans has revealed that, during this time, Neanderthals and Homo sapiens occasionally encountered one another and interbred.

New analysis

When Pomeroy first excavated the skeleton, its sex wasn’t immediately obvious because only the upper half of the body was preserved. It lacked telltale pelvic bones. The team that initially studied the remains relied on a relatively new technique involving the sequencing of proteins inside tooth enamel to determine Shanidar Z’s sex, which is revealed for the first time in the documentary.

Those researchers from the universities of Cambridge and Liverpool estimated the specimen’s height to have been around 5 feet (1.5 meters) by comparing the length and diameter of her arm bones with data on modern humans. An analysis of wear and tear on teeth and bones suggested she was in her mid-40s at the time of her death.

“It’s a reasonable estimate, but we can’t be 100% sure, actually, that they weren’t older,” Pomeroy said. “What we can say is this is someone who had lived a relatively long life. For that society, they probably would have been quite important in terms of their knowledge, their life experience.”

The cave where Shanidar Z was buried is well-known among archaeologists because a Neanderthal grave discovered there in 1960 led researchers to believe that Neanderthals may have interred their dead with flowers — the first challenge to the prevailing view that the ancient humans were dumb and brutish. Subsequent research by Pomeroy’s team, however, has cast doubt on that flower burial theory.
Instead, they suspect the pollen discovered among the graves may have arrived via pollinating bees.

Still, over the years scientists have found increasing evidence of Neanderthals’ intelligence, sophistication and complexity, including art, string and tools.

Neanderthals repeatedly returned to Shanidar Cave to lay their dead to rest. The remains of 10 Neanderthals have been unearthed at the site, half of which appear to have been buried deliberately in succession, research has found.

Neanderthals may not have honored their dead with bouquets of flowers, but the inhabitants of Shanidar Cave were likely an empathetic species, research suggests. For example, one male Neanderthal buried there was deaf and had a paralyzed arm and head trauma that probably rendered him partially blind, yet he lived a long time, so he must have been cared for, according to research.

Shanidar Z is the first Neanderthal found in the cave in more than 50 years, Pomeroy said, but the site could still yield more discoveries. During the filming of the documentary in 2022, Pomeroy uncovered a left shoulder blade, some rib bones and a right hand belonging to another Neanderthal.

“I think our interpretation at the moment,” she said, “is that actually this is probably the remains of a single individual, which has then been disturbed.”

Reconstructing the skull

Pomeroy described reconstructing Shanidar Z’s skull, which had been crushed relatively soon after death as a “high-stakes 3D jigsaw puzzle.” The fossilized bones were hardened with a glue-like substance, removed in small blocks of cave sediment and wrapped in foil before researchers sent them to the University of Cambridge for analysis.

In the Cambridge lab, researchers took micro-CT scans of each block and used the scans to guide extraction of bone fragments. Pomeroy’s colleague Dr. Lucía López-Polín, an archaeological conservator from the Catalan Institute for Human Palaeoecology and Social Evolution in Spain, pieced over 200 bits of skull together by eye to return it to its original shape.

The team scanned and 3D-printed the rebuilt skull, which formed the basis of a reconstructed head created by Dutch paleoartists Adrie and Alfons Kennis, twin brothers who built up layers of fabricated muscle and skin to reveal Shanidar Z’s face.

Pomeroy said the reconstruction helped “bridge that gap between anatomy and 75,000 years of time.”

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Last letters of pioneering climber who died on Everest reveal dark side of mountaineering https://ination.online/last-letters-of-pioneering-climber-who-died-on-everest-reveal-dark-side-of-mountaineering/ https://ination.online/last-letters-of-pioneering-climber-who-died-on-everest-reveal-dark-side-of-mountaineering/#respond Mon, 09 Sep 2024 11:38:20 +0000 https://ination.online/?p=3046 George Mallory is renowned for being one of the first British mountaineers to attempt to scale the dizzying heights of Mount Everest during the 1920s — until the mountain claimed his life. Nearly a century later, newly digitized letters shed light on Mallory’s hopes and fears about ascending Everest, leading up to the last days […]

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George Mallory is renowned for being one of the first British mountaineers to attempt to scale the dizzying heights of Mount Everest during the 1920s — until the mountain claimed his life.

Nearly a century later, newly digitized letters shed light on Mallory’s hopes and fears about ascending Everest, leading up to the last days before he disappeared while heading for its peak.

On June 8, 1924, Mallory and fellow climber Andrew Irvine departed from their expedition team in a push for the summit; they were never seen alive again.

Mallory’s words, however, are now available to read online in their entirety for the first time. Magdalene College, Cambridge, where Mallory studied as an undergraduate from 1905 to 1908, recently digitized hundreds of pages of correspondence and other documents written and received by him.

Over the past 18 months, archivists scanned the documents in preparation for the centennial of Mallory’s disappearance. The college will display a selection of Mallory’s letters and possessions in the exhibit “George Mallory: Magdalene to the Mountain,” opening June 20.

The Everest letters outline Mallory’s meticulous preparations and equipment tests, and his optimism about their prospects. But the letters also show the darker side of mountaineering: bad weather, health issues, setbacks and doubts.

Days before his disappearance, Mallory wrote that the odds were “50 to 1 against us” in the last letter to his wife, Ruth, dated May 27, 1924.

“This has been a bad time altogether,” Mallory wrote. “I look back on tremendous efforts & exhaustion & dismal looking out of a tent door and onto a world of snow & vanishing hopes.”

He went on to describe a harrowing brush with death during a recent climb, when the ground beneath his feet collapsed, leaving him suspended “half-blind & breathless,” his weight supported only by his ice axe wedged across a crevasse as he dangled over “a very unpleasant black hole.”

Other letters Mallory exchanged with Ruth were written at the time of their courtship, while he was serving in Britain’s artillery regiment during World War I. Throughout his travels, correspondence from Ruth provided him with much-needed stability during the most challenging times, said project lead Katy Green, a college archivist at Magdalene College.

“She was the ‘rock’ at home, he says himself in his letters,” Green said. The archivist recounted one note in which Mallory told Ruth: “I’m so glad that you never wobble, because I would wobble without you.”

Yet while Mallory was clearly devoted to his wife, he nonetheless repeatedly returned to the Himalayas despite her mounting fears for his safety.

“There’s something in him that drove him,” Green said. “It might have been his wartime experience, or it might have just been the sort of person that he was.”

‘Documents of his character’

In total, the collection includes around 840 letters spanning from 1914 to 1924; Ruth wrote about 440 of those to Mallory, offering an unprecedented and highly detailed view of daily life for women in the early 20th century, Green told CNN.

Together, the letters offer readers a rare glimpse of the man behind the legend, said Jochen Hemmleb, an author and alpinist who was part of the Everest expedition that found Mallory’s body in 1999.

“They are really personal. They are documents of his character. They provide unique insights into his life, and especially into the 1924 expedition — his state of mind, his accurate planning, his ambitions,” said Hemmleb, who was not involved in the scanning project. “It’s such a treasure that these are now digitized and available for everyone to read.”

Frozen in place

Three of the digitized letters — written to Mallory by his brother, his sister and a family friend — were recovered from Mallory’s body by the Mallory and Irvine Research Expedition, which ascended Everest seeking the remains of Mallory and Irvine.

On May 1, 1999, expedition member and mountaineer Conrad Anker found a frozen corpse at an altitude of around 26,700 feet (8,138 meters) and identified it as Mallory’s from a name tag that was sewn into his clothes.

Mallory’s body was interred where it lay at the family’s request, said Anker, who was not involved in the letter digitizing project.

“Having done body recoveries in other places, it’s very laborious, and it’s very dangerous at that altitude,” he told CNN. “We collected some of his personal effects that went back to the Royal Geographical Society,” including the three letters that were later scanned at Magdalene College.

Mount Everest, the highest peak in the Himalayan mountain range, is also the tallest mountain on Earth, rising 29,035 feet (8,850 meters) above sea level on the border between Nepal and Tibet — an autonomous region in China. Its Tibetan name is Chomolungma, meaning “Goddess Mother of the World,” and its Nepali name is Sagarmatha, meaning “Goddess of the Sky.”

However, these names were unknown to 19th century British surveyors who mapped the region, and in 1865 the Royal Geographical Society named the peak Mount Everest after British surveyor Sir George Everest, a former surveyor general of India.

Mallory participated in all three of Britain’s first forays onto Everest’s slopes: in 1921, 1922 and 1924. When he vanished in 1924, he was less than two weeks shy of his 38th birthday.

Many have speculated about whether Mallory and Irvine managed to reach Everest’s summit. The climbers were last seen in the early afternoon of June 8 by expedition member and geologist Noel Odell, who was following behind and glimpsed them from a distance. Odell later found some of their equipment at a campsite, but there was no trace of Mallory and Irvine.

“(Mallory) risked a lot despite the fact that he had a family back home and three small children,” Hemmleb said. “We don’t know whether it was really irresponsible to make that final attempt, because we don’t really know what happened. It could be that in the end, he simply had bad luck.”

So close, yet so far

Decades after Mallory’s death, Sherpa Tenzing Norgay and New Zealand mountaineer Sir Edmund Hillary became the first to reach Everest’s peak, summiting on May 29, 1953. In the years that followed, thousands attempted to climb Everest, with nearly 4,000 people reaching its summit. More than 330 climbers have died trying since modern records were kept, according to the Himalayan Database, which compiles records of all expeditions in the Himalayas; some of those bodies remain on the mountain, frozen where they fell and visible to climbers who pass them by.

“If you’re out in this environment, you make peace with your own mortality and the deaths of others,” Anker said. “You’re above 8,000 meters, and when there are weather changes or your own systems cease to function due to the lack of oxygen, it gets serious really quickly.”

When mountaineers are close to a mountain’s summit, they sometimes proceed even under dangerous conditions due to so-called summit fever, a compulsion to reach the peak even at the cost of their own safety. It’s unknown whether Mallory was in the grip of summit fever when he died, but he might have thought that his reputation depended on summiting.

“That was going to be the defining moment in his life,” Anker said.

By comparison, Mallory’s team member Edward Norton had attempted to summit four days earlier but turned back at roughly the same altitude where Mallory and Irvine were seen for the last time.

“I had a conversation with one of Edward Norton’s sons a couple of years ago,” Hemmleb said. “When I asked him, do you think it was mere luck that your father survived and Mallory died? He said, ‘No, I think there was one difference: My father, Edward Norton, didn’t need the mountain.’”

As a climber himself, Hemmleb took that message to heart.

“That is something I personally learned from Mallory,” he said. “You need to be very careful not to make yourself dependent on that summit success.”

A century has elapsed since Mallory’s death, but the digitizing of these letters assures that his story will keep being told, Hemmleb said.

“This will continue beyond my own lifetime, I’m certain of that,” he added. “In a sense, it’s the expedition that never ends.”

Mindy Weisberger is a science writer and media producer whose work has appeared in Live Science, Scientific American and How It Works magazine.

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