Tag: discovered

  • Discovered in the deep: the superbuilder sea anemones that make verandahs

    Discovered in the deep: the superbuilder sea anemones that make verandahs

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    Deep in the Kumano Sea off the south-eastern coast of Japan, hermit crabs crawl around sporting what look like pearly pink flowers on their shells. But these are not floral arrangements – they are members of a newly discovered species of sea anemone, Stylobates calcifer, which live on the hermit crabs’ shells.

    This kind of sea anemone and hermit crab cohabitation is not unique: dozens of anemone species live exclusively with hermit crabs. It’s a win-win situation – the anemones’ petal-like stinging tentacles protect the crabs from predators, while they hitch rides to new feeding grounds and get leftover scraps of the crab’s food.

    But this new anemone species goes one step further – it extends the hermit crab’s home. The anemone secretes a covering over the snail shell in which the crab lives and, when it reaches the edges, it just keeps going – rather like building the crab a veranda on the front of its house.

    An anemone on a hermit crab’s shell
    A hermit crab was filmed in an aquarium spending almost two days pushing its anemone into letting go of the old shell and moving to a new shell. Photograph: Akihiro Yoshikawa

    And they will not just build extensions for anyone. “This sea anemone is home for only one hermit crab species,” says Akihiro Yoshikawa, from Kagoshima University, who discovered the anemone when several were brought up in trawlers’ nets from 100 to 400 metres (330-1,300ft) down.

    So it is perhaps no surprise that hermit crabs are keen to keep hold of their petally pals and, when the time comes for a crab to move into a new snail shell, it takes its anemone with it.

    Yoshikawa named the sea anemone calcifer after a character in one of his favourite childhood films, the 2004 animation Howl’s Moving Castle. The film is an adaptation of the fantasy novel of the same name in which Calcifer, a fire demon, is bound by a magical pact to the wizard Howl’s castle, which moves about from place to place – much like a hermit crab.

    But moving one’s sea anemone is no easy task. Yoshikawa was lucky enough to film a crab-calcifer anemone duo in an aquarium in his laboratory as they moved shells – something nobody had ever seen before. The crab took almost two days to painstakingly pinch, prod and cajole the anemone until it eventually let go of the old shell and fixed on to the new one.

    Yoshikawa found plenty of crabs without stinging companions, which suggests calcifer sea anemones are in short supply in the deep sea. This is probably another reason why the crabs go to such trouble to keep their anemones. But it does not explain why hermit crabs risk moving shells when their anemones could so easily be stolen mid-transfer – especially when these handy shell friends can build extensions for growing crabs.

    Some of the answer may be that the anemone’s expanded shell is not an ideal home for the hermit crabs. “I think the crabs consider the anemone’s shell as a temporary home,” says Yoshikawa, noting that the extended structure “is very thin and not strong compared with the snail shell”.

    Plus, moving house is a good way to get rid of unwanted visitors. Hundreds of other species live on and inside hermit crab shells, but not all of them are welcome. Scale worms take up residence, stealing the hermit crabs’ food and gorging themselves on their eggs. Yoshikawa thinks the hermit crabs may swap shells to escape.

    Curious to know what calcifer sea anemones eat, Yoshikawa offered his captive specimen a selection of delicacies – including skipjack tuna and live shrimp – which it mostly ignored. He thinks the anemones swallow small particles of organic matter that fall down into the deep sea, known as “marine snow”. The anemones fix on to the backs of hermit crabs, hoisting themselves off the seabed with their mouths upturned in an ideal snow-catching position.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Coal worth Rs 23 cr discovered during I-T raid in Jharkhand

    Coal worth Rs 23 cr discovered during I-T raid in Jharkhand

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    Ranchi: The Income Tax (I-T) Department has unearthed a stock of 22,000 metric tonne of coal during raids conducted at the premises of Agriti Minerals Private Ltd, a Jharkhand-based company involved in the business of mining products.

    During investigation, it was revealed that the coal was meant to be supplied to two power plants in the state, but instead was illegally dumped by the company. The coal was stored at the company’s bases at Kuju town in the Ramgarh district.

    In the assessment done by the I-T Department, it has been revealed that the value of illegally dumped coal at the company’s premises is Rs 23.75 crore. The department had conducted a survey on March 20-21 at the company’s locations in Ranchi and Kuju.

    During the survey, it was found that the company has a huge stock of coal at its premises as compared to the details entered in its stock register. The evaluation of this stock was done by the experts of Central Mine Planning and Design Institute (CMPDI), a Central government company.

    Investigation revealed that this coal was to be supplied to Maithon Power Limited and Koderma Thermal Power Limited, but the company dumped it. The plans were to illegally sell the coal at high prices in the market.

    The businessman running the company has also accepted the proof of having an undisclosed income of Rs 4.5 crore. He has also agreed to pay a tax of Rs 1.5 crore to the I-T Department.

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    #Coal #worth #discovered #raid #Jharkhand

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Oldest pearling town dis­cov­ered in Unit­ed Arab Emi­rates

    Oldest pearling town dis­cov­ered in Unit­ed Arab Emi­rates

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    Abu Dhabi: A group of archaeologists in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) announced the discovery of the oldest pearling town is located on Siniyah Island in Umm Al Quwain, local media reported.

    This city, which covers an area of ​​12 hectares, flourished during the period between the end of the sixth century and the middle of the eighth century AD, that is, before the emergence of Islamic civilization, according to the Department of Tourism and Antiquities in Umm Al Quwain.

    The researchers’ findings revealed on Monday that the city was one of the “largest surviving urban agglomerations ever” in what is today the UAE.

    It is believed that thousands of residents lived in this city, and many of them depended on the pearl industry.

    The houses were built from the local beach rocks, using traditional materials available in the surrounding environment of the city, while the roofs were made of palm trunks.

    “This is a discovery of major significance for the history of Umm Al Quwain, the UAE and the wider Arabian Gulf,”

    “For the first time, we have the opportunity to study a pearling town from over 1,300 years ago,” he added.

    Sheikh Majid bin Saud Al Mualla, chairman of the emirate’s Department of Tourism and Archaeology, told The National News.

    Pearl hunting has been an essential part of the country’s heritage for more than 7,000 years, in addition to being a source of livelihood.



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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Egypt: 30ft hidden corridor discovered in Great Pyramid of Giza

    Egypt: 30ft hidden corridor discovered in Great Pyramid of Giza

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    Cairo: The Egyptian government has announced the discovery of a hidden 9-metre-long (30 feet) and 2.10-metre-wide corridor behind the 4,500-year-old Great Pyramid of Giza, known as Khufu Pyramid, which “will lead to further findings”.

    Addressing a press conference on Thursday, Minister of Tourism and Antiquities Ahmed Issa said that “the discovery is a result of the international ‘ScanPyramids’ project that was launched in 2015 by the Ministry of Antiquities to study the structure of the pyramids without using harmful drilling methods”, reports Xinhua news agency.

    “It will lead to further findings,” he added.

    An international team, consisting of experts from Egypt, France, Germany, Canada, and Japan, has been working on analyzing a cavity behind the pyramid’s north face that was first discovered in 2016, he added.

    Scientists used non-invasive and non-destructive surveying techniques called muons radiography.

    Also addressing the same press conference, Mostafa Waziri, head of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, said that the unfinished corridor was likely created to redistribute the pyramid’s weight around either the main entrance now used by tourists, almost seven meters away, or around another as yet undiscovered chamber or space.

    “We’re going to continue our scanning so we will see what we can do … to figure out what we can find out beneath it, or just by the end of this corridor,” he added.

    Five rooms atop the king’s burial chamber in another part of the pyramid are also thought to have been built to redistribute the weight of the massive structure, he said, adding that it was possible the pharaoh had more than one burial chamber.

    The Great Pyramid of Giza is the last of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World that is still standing today.

    It was constructed as a monumental tomb around 2560 BC during the reign of the Pharaoh Khufu, or Cheops.

    Built to a height of 146 meters (479 feet), it now stands at 139 meters and was the tallest structure made by humans until the Eiffel Tower in Paris in 1889.

    (Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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    #Egypt #30ft #hidden #corridor #discovered #Great #Pyramid #Giza

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )