Earth’s carbon levels are likely their highest in 15 million years

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We’ve entered some profoundly unfamiliar planetary territory.

Amid a backdrop of U.S. politicians still questioning whether the changing climate is attributable to humans (it is), it’s quite likely that we’ve actually boosted Earth’s carbon dioxide — a potent greenhouse gas — to the highest levels they’ve been in some 15 million years. 

The number 15 million is dramatically higher than a statistic frequently cited by geologists and climate scientists: That today’s carbon levels are the highest they’ve been on Earth in at least 800,000 years — as there’s irrefutable proof trapped in the planet’s ancient ice.

Though scientists emphasize that air bubbles preserved in ice are the gold carbon standard, there are less direct, though still quite means to gauge Earth’s long-ago carbon dioxide levels. These measurements, broadly called proxies, include the and the evidence stored in the breathing cells, or stomata, of ancient plants.

Scientists have identified this 15 million number by measuring and re-measuring proxies all over the world.

Ancient air stored in ice core bubbles.

Ancient air stored in ice core bubbles.

“It’s a good scientific documentation, but it’s an indirect measure,” Michael Prather a professor of earth system science at the University of California Irvine, said in an interview.

“And there’s several lines of evidence,” Prather, a lead author on UN climate reports, added, citing the carbon dioxide evidence in fossilized marine life. “It’s not just one person’s crazy number.”

Direct measures of the air show carbon dioxide levels have recently hit 410 parts per million, or ppm, the highest-recorded number in human history.

“For the most part, carbon dioxide was below 400 ppm for the last 14 million years or so,” Matthew Lachniet, a paleoclimatologist at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, said in an interview. 

There may have been a time, roughly 3 million years ago during an extremely warm period called the Pliocene Epoch — when sea levels were between 16 and 131 feet higher than today — when carbon concentrations could have approximated present levels.

“However, the concentration of CO2 currently in Earth’s atmosphere is higher or is nearly as high as it has been over any time period during the past 15 million years,” Daniel Breecker, a paleoclimatologist at the University of Texas at Austin Jackson School of Geosciences, said over email.

The critical difference today, however, is that carbon emissions are expected to continue rising. With the unprecedented burning of fossil fuels, carbon accumulations will simply keep going up. 

Different proxies, like phytoplankton (red), give scientists a good range (blue background) of past atmospheric carbon dioxide estimates.

Different proxies, like phytoplankton (red), give scientists a good range (blue background) of past atmospheric carbon dioxide estimates.

Image: United Nations/Ipcc

“Of course, C02 concentrations aren’t stopping today,” said Lachniet. “We’re probably going to blow through 550 to 600 ppm.”

Those sorts of high carbon concentrations haven’t been experienced on Earth in well over 20 million years, noted Lachniet.

“That makes this conversation even more stark,” he said.

Some folks in the climate community, though, have even argued that today’s climate has the highest concentration of total greenhouse gases — when gases like methane (natural gas) and nitrous oxide are added to the mix — in 20 million years. 

This idea, called the “carbon dioxide equivalent” has some support in the climate community, though a variety of climate scientists we reached out to weren’t aware of research supporting this 20 million-year claim.

In the end, it’s not just the actual concentration of carbon dioxide that matters — it’s how sensitive the planet ends up being to this dramatically rising carbon accumulation, noted Breecker.

Already, Earth has proven quite sensitive

Since the onset of the Industrial Revolution, Earth’s average temperature has risen by 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit, or 1 degree Celsius. 

Major consequences have already been regularly observed in Earth’s water cycle — bringing greater odds of extremes in deluges and drought. The most easily-predicted results, record-breaking heat waves and historic wildfires, are manifesting globally, as well as more complex atmospheric changes.

“It [global warming] raises sea levels and makes storm surges worse, it makes the atmosphere wetter, leading to flooding from extreme rainfall, and warming ocean temperatures provide extra energy to tropical storms,” climate scientist Stefan Rahmstorf, head of Earth System Analysis at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, said in September. 

“The polar ice is melting, in the ocean the Gulf Stream System is weakening, and in the atmosphere the jet stream is getting weird,” Rahmstorf added. 

Unlike previous geologic epochs, the defining circumstance today isn’t just notably high carbon in the air — it’s how fast it’s all accumulating. 

The natural world both loads and removes carbon from the atmosphere over long periods of thousands to tens of thousands of years.

For example, a warm period called the Eemian, which ended around 120,000 years ago, slowly melted a significant portion of Greenland’s ice sheets — even with profoundly lower carbon concentrations of around 280 ppm.

But these days, the climate hasn’t yet caught up.

“We’re warming so fast that we haven’t even begun to let Greenland melt,” noted UC Irvine’s Prather. 

Where civilization ultimately ends up, carbon-wise, is contingent upon how quickly global societies transition to clean energy, and generate electricity without a deep reliance on fossil fuels. 

“I would argue what’s really relevant is where we stabilize out,” said Lachniet. “Over the next hundred years we really set the next 10,000 years of climate history.”

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Leicester helicopter crash: Peter Shilton describes ‘horrendous’ scene

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Seeing the helicopter crash will live with us forever – Shilton

The helicopter crash in which Leicester City owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha died was “one of the most horrendous things anybody could ever see”, says former England keeper Peter Shilton.

Ex-Leicester player Shilton and wife Steph witnessed the crash outside King Power Stadium on Saturday.

Two members of staff, the pilot and a passenger were also killed after the aircraft spiralled out of control.

“It will live with us forever,” Shilton told the BBC.

The 69-year-old said the helicopter “seemed to be making a funny noise and started to spin” above them as they were walking to their car following the 1-1 draw with West Ham.

“It was surreal and we weren’t sure what was happening, but then it started to spiral. We realised it was out of control and all of a sudden it started coming towards us,” he said.

“Steph was panicking and it was shock, fear and all of a sudden it seemed to drop a bit and then crash – it all happened so quickly.”

Shilton said the helicopter then burst into flames. A team investigating Saturday’s crash, which happened at about 20:30 BST, have recovered the aircraft’s digital flight data recorder.

Leicestershire Police named the other people who died in the crash as Nursara Suknamai, Kaveporn Punpare, pilot Eric Swaffer and his partner Izabela Roza Lechowicz.

Shilton added: “My wife became hysterical. I was in shock, I think I still am. I grabbed hold of her. She wanted to do something, but obviously we couldn’t.

“The police arrived very quickly, then the fire engines came and we were so helpless.

“The image keeps coming back to me of the helicopter spiralling down.

“Knowing it was the chairman and thinking it could’ve been the whole family in there made it even worse – even though it couldn’t really be any worse.”

‘We will be in mourning for a long time’

Leicester City pay their respects at the King Power Stadium

Srivaddhanaprabha’s wife, Aimon, and son, Aiyawatt, laid a wreath in the middle of the pitch at the stadium on Monday before embracing the Leicester players and staff gathered around the centre circle.

Goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel earlier led his team-mates in paying tribute to the owner that many of them referred to as “The Boss”.

Shilton, who was born in Leicester and made over 300 appearances for the Foxes between 1966 and 1974, said the city “will be in mourning for a long time”.

Srivaddhanaprabha bought Leicester in 2010, helping them to win promotion to the top light in 2014 before the club claimed the 2015-16 Premier League title – despite odds of 5,000-1 – in one of the greatest sporting stories of all time.

During his stewardship of the club, he also donated £2m to the Leicester Children’s Hospital charity, £1m to the Foxes Foundation for community causes and £1m to Leicester University’s medical department.

“Leicester has lost a great man who did so much for the city,” said Shilton.

“Thankfully the rest of the family weren’t in the helicopter so his legacy will carry on, but he will be so sadly missed.

“We feel deeply for the rest of the family but there is so much respect for what he’s done for the club.”

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This iPhone XS Costs More Than $7,000

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Trump ‘not welcome’ in Pittsburgh after synagogue shooting

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Jewish leaders in Pittsburgh, including the former president of the Tree of Life synagogue that was targeted in Saturday’s deadly shooting, have said US President Donald Trump is not welcome in the city because of his rhetoric against minorities.

A letter published by Behind the Arc, which describes itself as a movement for progressive Jews, said Trump would not be welcome until he distanced himself from white supremacists. 

“For the past three years your words and your policies have emboldened a growing white nationalist movement,” the letter read, addressing the US leader directly.

“You yourself called the murderer evil, but yesterday’s [Saturday’s] violence is the direct culmination of your influence,” it continued.

The group said Trump had “undermined the safety” of Muslims, the LGBTQ community, people of colour, and those with disabilities.

“Yesterday’s massacre is not the first act of terror you incited against a minority group in our country.” 

Robert Bowers, the man police say is responsible for the slaying of 11 Jewish worshippers, had blamed a Jewish organisation, the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS) for helping bring immigrants to the US.

He said HIAS was bringing “invaders” into the country, in posts he made on Gab, a social media network that serves as a sanctuary for far-right activists barred from other sites.

Trump has condemned the killings and Bowers criticised the US president for not hating Jews strongly enough.

Opponents accuse Trump of having contributed to the climate of hate that made the attack possible.

Mourners at a memorial service at the Sailors and Soldiers Memorial Hall of the University of Pittsburgh [Cathal McNaughton/Reuters]

Speaking to CNN after the Behind the Arc letter was issued, Lynette Lederman, the former president of the Tree of Life synagogue said she agreed with the letter.

“I do not welcome this president to this city,” she said, describing the Republican leader as a “purveyor of hate speech”.

“The hypocritical words that come from him tell me nothing. 

“We have a very strong leadership in this city, we have a very strong mayor with very strong values, a very strong county executive…we have people who stand by us, who believe in values, not just Jewish values…and those are not the values of this president.”

Trump also drew criticism for saying that the synagogue should have had an armed guard. 

“If there was an armed guard inside the temple, they would have been able to stop him,” the president said just hours after the incident. 

Trump also called for the death penalty, and he said the shooting looks “definitely like it’s an anti-Semitic crime, and that is something you wouldn’t believe could still be going on”. 

According to a 2017 study by Brandeis University, 63 percent of the city’s Squirrel Hill community, where the shooting took place, were a little or somewhat concerned about anti-Semitism. About 18 percent were very much concerned, the study found. 

The Anti-Defamation League found that the number of anti-Semitic incidents in the US rose 57 percent in 2017 when compared with the previous year.  

Vigils

Communities across the US held ad-hoc vigils over the weekend to mourn those who were killed by Bowers, and more are planned for the week.

US flags were flown at half-mast over public buildings in the capital Washington, DC, and elsewhere to remember the victims.

People mourn the loss of life as they hold a vigil for the victims of Pittsburgh synagogue shooting in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S [John Altdofer/Reuters] 

A multi-faith ceremony in Pittsburgh drew Christian choirs and Islamic groups, who announced they had raised more than $123,000 in a crowdfunding campaign for survivors and relatives of those who died.

A separate GoFundMe campaign has raised more than $609,000 for those affected.

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OnePlus 6T review: Making affordable unbeatable

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The camera hardware themselves might not have changed, but the software algorithms that process the images has. OnePlus tells me it has incorporated a bunch of AI scene-detection and image-processing algorithms to get more accurate and lifelike photos.

These work kind of like the AI scene detection in Huawei and LG phones, but also completely differently, too. Simon Liu, OnePlus’s head of imaging, explained to me though the phone’s using AI to recognize people, objects, and scenes, they’ve tuned it to produce images that are more true to what your eyes see instead of exaggerating colors or contrast to create a more visually-appealing image (*ahem* Google *ahem*). Liu said the motivation behind the AI is to help preserve memories as you remembered them. As such, there’s no way to turn off the AI because it’s working invisibly in the background.

It’s a bold claim I was eager to test. And you guys know me and my comprehensive smartphone camera comparisons (If you haven’t seen them, you should check out our iPhone XS, XR, and Pixel 3 reviews), I literally went to town to see if the OnePlus 6T’s pictures are any good.

For the first test I shot a big pile of pumpkins and gourds. Shooting with multiple phones and comparing the shots is the only way to see which one has the best dynamic range. The OnePlus 6T took a brighter photo, but there seems to be just a little more detail and dynamic range on its predecessor, the OnePlus 6.

I usually side with an iPhone’s photos for its realistic colors, but in these shots both the iPhone XR and XS flattened all the oranges making them look like one big mass of round objects; you lose a lot of the subtle greens in many of the gourds. As expected, the Pixel 3 took the crispiest photo, but look at how dark it is — it looks nothing like what it did IRL. The Galaxy Note 9 camera actually did a good job splitting the difference between too bright and too dark.

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Erdogan inaugurates Istanbul Airport, one of world’s largest

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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has inaugurated a massive new airport project in Istanbul, which, once complete, is expected to become one of the world’s largest.

More than 50 foreign dignitaries from at least 18 countries on Monday attended the lavish opening ceremony of the first phase of the new facility, called Istanbul Airport, local media reported.

“Istanbul is a beautiful jewel between two seas … that’s why we called [the airport] Istanbul,” Erdogan said at the ceremony which coincided with the 95th anniversary of the Turkish Republic.

“We see Istanbul Airport as investment not only in our country but also in our region and the world,” he added.

Erdogan said the new facility will continue to grow for the next decade until all phases are completed by 2028, according to state-run Anadolu Agency.

It is expected that a daily 2,000 aircraft from more than 250 carriers will go through the airport by the end of 2018 to over 350 destinations, said Anadolu.

Constructed at an initial cost of $7.2bn, the new facility is expected to provide more than $30.65bn in revenue for the government and host 90 million passengers by the end of the 2018 and up to 200 million upon completion in 2028.

According to preliminary 2017 figures from the Airport Council International, Atlanta airport in the United States hosted almost 104 million passengers last year.

Next came Beijing with 95.7 million passengers, Dubai with 88.2 million, Tokyo with 85.4 million and Los Angeles with 84.5 million.

Praising Istanbul’s geographic location, a bridge between Asia and Europe, Turkish Airlines CEO Bilal Eksi said: “The opening of Istanbul New Airport will further contribute and create new opportunities to promote the cultural and commercial relations between Istanbul and Hong Kong”.

Among those present at the inauguration ceremony were Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir and leaders from Pakistan, Kyrgyzstan, Kosovo, Macedonia, Moldova, Albania and Serbia.

 

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) says global air traffic is growing at an annual rate of 3.5 percent, with 4.1 billion passengers expected to take to the air this year, doubling to 8.2 billion by 2037.

IATA has repeatedly warned that airports around the world will struggle to deal with this expansion, and has urged governments to make necessary investments.

According to IGA, the company responsible for constructing and operating the new facility in Istanbul, the airport will initially have three runways and, by 2028, six runways with a capacity of 500 aircraft.

Spread over an area of 76.5 million square meters, it will also boast car parks for around 70,000 cars.

The airport’s maiden voyage will be from Istanbul to the Turkish capital, Ankara, on October 31.

Meanwhile, Istanbul’s current main airport – named after Mustafa Kemal Ataturk – will remain in operation until the end of this year, Erdogan said, after which it will be closed to commercial flights.

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The Skater Kids of Mid90s Keep It Real In Jonah Hill’s Directorial Debut

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There’s a scene in Jonah Hill‘s Mid90s when young Stevie (Sunny Suljic) successfully lands his first ollie after weeks of repeatedly practicing, and falling, in the driveway. It’s the middle of the night, but he doesn’t care; he screams and jumps around in pure, raw elation, throwing his board with reckless abandon. It’s a specific feeling, landing your first trick, one that only someone who’s spent time on a board — and stuck inside their own head — can understand. (For Suljic, it was the first time he nailed a kickflip.)

It’s what makes Hill’s surprisingly sincere directorial debut such an achievement. He made a film about his own experience growing up in Los Angeles in the ’90s, when skateboarding was a grimy subculture for social outcasts, teenage misfits, and broken kids from broken homes. Thirteen-year-old Stevie is a lonely kid whose attempts at connecting with his violent older brother (Lucas Hedges) are often met with the elder’s fists. But everything changes when he befriends a group of burnouts at the local skate shop, Motor Avenue, and picks up a board.

That authenticity was key to Hill — and to the film’s young cast, most of whom were scouted at local skate parks around the Los Angeles area with the help of co-producer and skate consultant Mikey Alfred.

A24

Hill (right) with stars Hedges (left) and Suljic on the set of Mid90s.

Alfred, the 23-year-old creator of skate brand Illegal Civilization, introduced Hill and Hedges to 11-year-old Suljic at Stoner Skate Plaza. Suljic was small for his age — perfect for scrappy young Stevie — and he could really skate, having picked up a skateboard at age four. “The auditions were more of a rehearsal,” Suljic, now 13, told MTV News at the A24 offices in New York City. Hill, he said, just wanted to get a sense of everyone’s chemistry, and to prove his own skate cred to the cast, he landed a perfect kickflip the first day of shooting.

In the film, it doesn’t take long for Stevie to be accepted by the crew: charismatic Ray (Na-Kel Smith, a pro skater), who dreams of going pro; loudmouth Fuckshit (Olan Prenatt), who doesn’t see the point in dreaming at all; quiet Fourth Grade (Ryder McLaughlin), who films the group’s exploits; and try-hard Ruben (Gio Galicia), who brought Stevie into the group so the guys would have someone else to rag on. But in real life, they were already friends.

“We were just fucking around, trying stuff,” Smith said of the audition process. For Prenatt, another local skater from Venice, it was a similar vibe. “Mikey brought me into the audition,” he recalled. “I didn’t know anything that was going on. I just sat down and talked with Jonah and told him a story about how I used my girlfriend’s ID to get into somewhere, and we just started laughing. I guess he forgot to audition me.”

“I went into it just wanting to do the best job possible to not embarrass myself or embarrass anybody who was part of the movie,” Smith added. “Then I got good feedback, and everybody was telling me, ‘You did a good job.’ And I was like, ‘Bro, I honestly don’t know what the fuck that means.’”

A24

Smith (left) and Prenatt (right) on the set of Mid90s.

For Hill, the challenge wasn’t teaching a group of skater kids to be actors; it was bringing everyone else in the cast to their raw, emotional level, stripping away years of polish.

“I had never acted before, so I never understood, like, this is a good performance,” Smith said. Although they’re not playing themselves — Suljic will be the first to tell you that he’s nothing like meek Stevie — Hill found performers who could tap into something real and lived-in.

“After we finished it, I was like, ‘Damn, acting it tite. I really acted in a movie,’” Smith said. “But after [the premiere], I was like, ‘I got to do another one.’ I want to continue to push this and see how far I can take it.”

“Fuck yeah,” Prenatt added.

A24

As with most coming-of-age stories, especially ones about young people on the periphery, there’s a thrill to finding this kind of human connection — even when things get awkward. When Stevie has his first sexual experience with an older teenage girl who knowingly tells him that he’s “at that age before guys become dicks,” it’s uncomfortable to watch. He’s terrified. He doesn’t actually enjoy the experience until he tells his friends about it, eliciting cheers, high fives, and crude jokes.

“Everyone has gone through those cringey moments,” Suljic said. “When you have your first kiss, it’s always super awkward and not natural. It would be kind of weird if it wasn’t.”

But Mid90s also doesn’t shy away from the suffocating ennui that makes adolescence so unbearable; for Stevie, the scars and bruises remain long after the physical wounds heal. Suljic navigates Stevie’s turbulent mental state with a sense of weariness that only a an actual teen could possess.

“All of the those scenes have different feelings and different emotions attached to them, so it’s all about digging deep,” he said. “It’s hard acting everything.”

Although his biggest challenge wasn’t Stevie’s emotional turmoil or getting pummeled by Hedges; it was pretending to be a bad skateboarder, at least in the beginning. “I’ve been skating for so long, so it’s kinda weird for me to act bad,” he said.

A24

That being said, Mid90s really isn’t about the quality of the skating, but rather the feeling you get when it’s just you, the board, and a couple of friends hitting the pavement. When Ray tells Stevie about his younger brother’s death, he explains how he could barely get himself out of bed for weeks — until Fuckshit “literally dragged me out of bed and made me go skate.” It’s the only thing that made him feel like himself again. So, when Stevie gets lost in his own dark thoughts, it’s Ray who pulls him out and makes him skate.

“When I first started skateboarding, no one understood why I did it,” Smith said. “But now my mom can watch Mid90s and know what I was going through at that age. It’s just really good to see it portrayed in a real way and not like, sick dude!

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Leicester City players pay their respects

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Leicester City’s senior squad paid their respects to the club’s owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha who died in a helicopter crash on Saturday.

The players arrived at the King Power Stadium as a team on a coach before filing past the sea of tributes left outside the ground.

They paused in silence before the crowd burst into spontaneous applause.

Mr Vichai, two of his staff, a pilot and a passenger were all killed when the aircraft came down at about 20:30 BST.

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Apple Watch’s ECG feature release will reportedly be limited to U.S.

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The Apple Watch Series 4 comes with the ability to take an Electrocardiogram (ECG).
The Apple Watch Series 4 comes with the ability to take an Electrocardiogram (ECG).

Image: dustin drankoski/mashable

Apple prompted many oohs and ahhs when it unveiled its electrocardiogram (ECG) feature for Apple Watch Series 4 in September. At the time, the impressive technical feat was bolstered by the FDA approval Apple had received for this new health feature.

But Apple fans outside of the U.S. may have to wait a bit longer for the ECG feature, which hasn’t rolled out yet. And when it does, 9to5Mac reports that availability will reportedly be limited to the U.S., based on code spotted in iOS.

The limitation makes sense: an ECG is a medical feature, and therefore would need approval from any particular country’s health body. It appears this isn’t a case of “Ask for forgiveness, not permission.”

But 9to5Mac says the limitation is governed by software, not hardware. No matter where you are, the Apple Watch Series 4 will come with the sensors that enable the ECG. 

What’s more, if you’re outside of the U.S., there should theoretically be an easy way to get access to the ECG. All you have to do is go to your Apple Watch’s Settings and change your region to the U.S.A. However, that will also probably mess with the date, time, and weather alerts as well. But if you’re abroad with your new Watch and just need a quick heart reading, you may be able to deliver your own, uh, bypass.

Of course, none of this is to say how accurate or effective the ECG feature is. We’ll only be able to gauge that when it’s available, and so far Apple hasn’t given a date.

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