Expedition Newsnet searches over 18,000 articles per week to bring you the latest adventures, field research reports, and expeditionary news from around the globe. ExpeditionQuest members have access to full text articles and our weekly e-mail service.
News Headlines |
Nov 14, 2024 |
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Best dive sites in Hurghada?
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One of the best dives in the world - the Thistlegorm - can be dived from Hurghada, as well as many excellent reefs. Learn more...
SCUBA News...
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Diving Madagascar: is it any good?
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Madagascar, the world's fourth largest island, hosts one of the world's longest continuous coral reefs. The country is famous for her unique land animals, but her seas are also full of life not found anywhere else. And she doesn't
SCUBA News...
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Diving Baja California
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Separating the Pacific from the Sea of Cortez, the Baja California peninsula has some beautiful diving from the unique Sand Falls to Cabo Pulmo and beyond.
SCUBA News...
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Everest BC Trek via Everest BC 3 Peaks and 3 Passes Trip Report
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"Despite the tough days, the team continues to smile and enjoy the trail, always a good thing! Once across the glacier and around the corner, Gokyo sits lake-side, back-dropped by Cho Oyu, the 6th highest mountain in the world, pi
International Mountain Guides
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Thailand Dive and Sail
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Scientific Manta Ray Expeditions in cooperation with the Marine Megafauna Foundation every year in February and March. Plus diving at the Similans October to May.
SCUBA News...
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Two Kilimanjaro Trip Reports from climbers on the same team!
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"Climbing Mount Kilimanjaro (and doing a safari) was on my Bucket List for a long time. I always thought it was something I would do later on. I am now convinced that Kilimanjaro and Safari should not wait until retirement but sho
International Mountain Guides
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Dolpo Nepal Trek Trip Report
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Story and spectacular photos from the remote Dolpo regeion of Nepal by photographer and IMG Guide Adam Angel
International Mountain Guides
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New Horizons spacecraft still on track for Pluto flyby
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The New Horizons spacecraft is still on track for its historic July 14 flyby of Pluto despite experiencing a technical glitch Saturday.
In a statement released Sunday NASA said that New Horizons will resume normal science opera
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Sawfish Have Virgin Births: First in the Wild
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he first known virgin births in the wild have been documented among critically endangered smalltooth sawfish in Florida waters. The discovery, reported in the journal Current Biology, marks the first time that living offspring fro
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UW Men's Rowing Makes History
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The Washington Huskies men’s crew team swept into the record books Sunday by winning their fifth-straight national championship, becoming the first collegiate team to do so in the storied history of the sport.he UW men’s varsi
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New NASA images may solve Ceres 'bright spot' puzzle
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series of new NASA images may explain the unusual bright spots on dwarf planet Ceres that have been puzzling scientists. The closest-yet images of Ceres were taken by NASA’s Dawn spacecraft on May 3 and 4 from a distance of 8,4
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Many dead after another powerful earthquake hits Nepal
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At least 48 people have died and another 1,261 have been injured in Nepal due to the latest large earthquake there, said Nepalese government spokesman Minendra Rijal. Thirty-two of the Asian nation's 75 districts were affected.
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Wind Power Without The Mills
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Vortex Bladeless is a radical company. It wants to completely change the way we get energy from the wind. Think wind stick instead of a massive tower with blades that capture blowing winds.
Wind stick. Really. Lest you think I
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Dutch Polar Explorers Likely Drown in Arctic
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Two Dutch explorers studying melting Arctic sea ice have apparently drowned after falling through thin ice, police said Monday. Marc Cornelissen and Philip de Roo were last seen on April 6 heading north on skis from Resolute — C
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A Resupply Mission in Trouble, are Astronauts?
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The six astronauts aboard the International Space Station are having a little trouble getting new supplies.An uncrewed Russian cargo capsule carrying 6,000 pounds of food and other supplies for the space station is currently spinn
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Global warming to blame for most heat extremes - study
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Global warming is to blame for most extreme hot days and almost a fifth of heavy downpours, according to a scientific study on Monday that gives new evidence of how rising man-made greenhouse gases are skewing the weather.
"Alr
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7-year-old boy discovers new species of dinosaur
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Bringing your kids to work has its benefits. Seven-year-old Diego Suarez was playing outside with his sister while his parents, both geologists, studied rock formations in the Andes in southern Chile. As they were playing, Suarez
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Florida's Christ of the Abyss: Photos
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The first underwater park in the United States is home to a fascinating piece of art with origins in Italy.
Off the Florida Keys, a 2,000 pound statue of Jesus Christ sits on the ocean floor in John Pennekamp Coral Reef State P
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Iceberg Will Be Home to Italian Adventurer for a Year
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You may remember that in March, we introduced you to two intrepid Cleveland men who decided to camp overnight on frozen-solid Lake Erie, and had pictures to prove it. But that crazy stunt seems almost mundane compared to the feat
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English Channel Crossing Record Confirmed
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The World Sailing Speed Record Council has ratified the establishment of a new Cowes (GBR) to Dinard (FRA) outright record. The 105-ft trimaran Lending Club, sailed by Renaud La Planche (USA/FRA), Ryan Breymaier (USA), and a crew
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Why Does an Octopus Walk Funny?
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Octopuses move with a simple elegance, but they have no rhythm, according to new research. Each of an octopus's eight arms is soft, flexible and muscular, and acts as if it has an infinite number of joints, said the study's lead a
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Rare sperm whale caught on tape
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The Gulf exploration crew that made headlines in 2014 for spotting ghost sharks, dumbo octopuses, vampire squids from hell, a sunken Nazi war boat and other oddities has made its first big discovery of a new season at sea.
This
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Nine Hundred Percent Over Budget
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With the 25th anniversary of the Hubble Space Telescope next week, people are again thinking about its big successor. The very first month that this part of Science 2.0, the communications portal, went live, in January of 2007, we
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Attempting To Demystify Lake Erie Algal Bloom
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Researchers from the University of Michigan are working relentlessly to understand toxicity of the algal bloom in Lake Erie. There have been ongoing efforts for the reduction of phosphorus, along with other nutrients, from being w
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Italian Espresso Machine Headed for Space Station
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The next space station grocery run will carry caffeine to a whole new level: Aboard the SpaceX supply ship is an authentic espresso machine straight from Italy.
SpaceX is scheduled to launch its unmanned rocket with the espress
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Antarctic ice shelves rapidly thinning
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A new study led by Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the Univ. of California, San Diego (UC San Diego) researchers has revealed that the thickness of Antarctica’s floating ice shelves has recently decreased by as much as 18
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New Window to Change Color with Weather
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eather could power the next generation of smart windows. Researchers have created glass that tints by harvesting energy from wind and precipitation. The approach offers an alternative to other smart windows powered by batteries, s
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Mars rover Curiosity spots strange
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Climbing up Mt. Sharp in the middle of Gale Crater, NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity has discovered two-tone veins of minerals that reveal multiple episodes of water flowing through rock — even after the lake that once filled the b
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Archaeologists Unearth Ottoman War Camel in Austria
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“The partly excavated skeleton was at first suspected to be a large horse or cattle. But one look at the cervical vertebrae, the lower jaw and the metacarpal bones immediately revealed that this was a camel,” said Dr Galik, wh
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New 2015 Safety Protocol for Everest
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For the first 28 years of Everest exploration, starting in 1922, the Nepalese side of the mountain was off-limits; climbers launched their attempts from the Tibetan side. Once the Nepalese government opened the mountain to climber
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