Landmines in Angola: How African Elephants’ Amazing Sense of Smell Could Save Lives

CHISHURU, A MALE AFRICAN ELEPHANT, INDICATES A TARGET SCENT DURING TRIALS. IMAGE BY GRAHAM ALEXANDER.

Landmines in Angola: How African Elephants’ Amazing Sense of Smell Could Save Lives

By Ashadee Kay Miller, PhD Candidate, School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand. First published on The Conversation.

For 27 years Angola was gripped by civil war. Half a million human lives were lost and wildlife, too, was decimated to sustain troops. Rhino and elephants became valuable targets – rhino horn and ivory served as currency for arms among rebel forces.

During the conflict elephant populations fled across the border into Botswana, Zambia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. When the war ended in 2002 animal populations slowly started to return to their pre-conflict grazing grounds. But a huge problem remained: millions of landmines were still in situ and undetonated across Angola. Many elephants were killed and maimed by the explosives as they attempted to recolonise.

Data collected from collared elephants moving through the affected areas showed herds avoiding minefields. This suggested that at least some of the returning elephants had associated minefields with danger. What could this association be based on? Had the minefield-avoiding elephants seen others killed in those areas? Or had they associated the smell of landmines with danger, extrapolating risk to other areas where the odour was present?

We couldn’t answer all these questions. To narrow down our search my colleagues and I set about finding out whether elephants could smell the main component of landmines – Trinitrotoluene (TNT).

Symone Challenger Is Lensed By Jette Stolte in 'Nude' Natural Layers For Grazia France

Symone Challenger Is Lensed By Jette Stolte in 'Nude' Natural Layers For Grazia France

Canadian model Symone Challenger is styled by Tiphène Guissard in pale cutworks and natural layers for ‘Nude’, lensed by Jette Stolte for Grazia France June 14, 2019./ Hair by Tobias Sagner; makeup by Gregoris Pyrpylis

New York Is the First City To Fund Abortion Directly. Let's Make Sure It's Not the Last

New York Is the First City To Fund Abortion Directly. Let's Make Sure It's Not the Last

Last week, abortion access advocates in New York made history. When the ink dries on next year’s budget, New York will become the first city in the country to directly fund abortion by allocating $250,000 to the New York Abortion Access Fund (NYAAF), which supports anyone who is unable to pay fully for an abortion and is living in or traveling to New York state by providing financial assistance and connections to other resources. This funding will help ensure that every person is able to decide when and whether to become a parent regardless of their income, type of insurance, or citizenship status.

In the face of increasing attacks on abortion access throughout the country, New York City’s commitment to funding abortion sends a powerful message—one that activists in other cities and states can push for.

This is an essential step as we work toward ending the Hyde Amendment, which bans federal funding for most abortions. And we know it won’t be the last: Advocates in progressive cities like ours can seize the opportunity to turn supporters into champions, to advocate for policymakers who talk the talk about abortion access to also walk the walk. Even in progressive states, people face barriers to abortion access.

Trump’s Reelection Support is 50-50 in Texas, Biden and O’Rourke Lead the Democrats, UT/TT Poll Says

Trump’s Reelection Support is 50-50 in Texas, Biden and O’Rourke Lead the Democrats, UT/TT Poll Says

Half of the registered voters in Texas would vote to reelect President Donald Trump, but half of them would not, according to the latest University of Texas/Texas Tribune Poll.

Few of those voters were wishy-washy about it: 39% said they would “definitely” vote to reelect Trump; 43% said they would “definitely not” vote for him. The remaining 18% said they would “probably” (11%) or “probably not” (7%) vote to give Trump a second term.

“That 50-50 number encapsulates how divisive Trump is,” said James Henson, who runs the Texas Politics Project at the University of Texas at Austin and co-directs the poll. But, he added, the number is not necessarily “a useful prediction for an election that’s 16 months away.”

Among Republicans, 73% would “definitely” vote for Trump; among Democrats, 85% were “definitely not” voting for another term.

“This squarely focuses on Trump,” said Daron Shaw, professor of government at the University of Texas at Austin and co-director of the poll. However, he said, “it isn’t a matchup with a flesh-and-blood Democrat. It shows Trump’s relative weakness, compared to a generic Democrat in this state.”

Independents were less emphatic than either the Republicans or the Democrats, but 60% said they wouldn’t vote for the president in an election held today, including 45% who would “definitely not” vote for him.

Tom Craig Captures 'Poetry in Motion' As LVMH Stakes Strong Claim In Luxury Hospitality

Tom Craig Captures 'Poetry in Motion' As LVMH Stakes Strong Claim In Luxury Hospitality

British actress, poet and filmmaker Greta Bellamacina boards the Orient Express, headed for Venice in a fashion journey that’s pure ‘Poetry in Motion’. Photographer Tom Craig is behind the lens with styling by Leith Clark for Harper’s Bazaar UK July 2019./ Hair by Sebastien Bascle

Veroniek Gielkens Is Rockaway Biker Babe By George Katsanakis For Vogue Greece June 2019

Veroniek Gielkens Is Rockaway Biker Babe By George Katsanakis For Vogue Greece June 2019

Model Veroniek Gielkens is styled by Marilena Karagianni in rocker babe leathers, boots, and body-con sparkles from Philip Plein, Paolita, Karl Lagerfeld, Armani Exchange, Helmut Lang, Pinko, M Missoni and more. Photographer George Katsanakis goes to New York’s Rockaway Beach for the June 2019 issue of Vogue Greece.

Nina Kojovic Celebrates The Cutty Sark, Lensed By Yuval Hen For How To Spend It Magazine

Nina Kojovic Celebrates The Cutty Sark, Lensed By Yuval Hen For How To Spend It Magazine

Model Nina Kojovic poses aboard the Cutty Sark, bringing a flamboyant, dandified British Empire fashion story to Britain’s National Maritime Museum. The British clipper ship was one of the last tea ships, a triumph in design efficiency and speed — only to bow to the increasing dominance of steam propulsion ships.

Photographer Yuval Hen captures the 150th anniversary of the Cutty Sark in images styled by Hannah Teare for How To Spend It Magazine online June 13, 2019. Visit the site for product details including Valentino, Alexis Mabille, Fendi, Dior and more.

Queen Elizabeth Plans Meghan's B-Day Party At Balmoreal As Royals Eye Fall 2019 Africa Trip

Queen Elizabeth Plans Meghan's B-Day Party At Balmoreal As Royals Eye Fall 2019 Africa Trip

Today June 17th, Prince Harry is working with HALO representatives, representatives of the Angolan government, conservation experts and philanthropists worldwide to discuss how clearing landmines from the unique Okavango headwaters in Angola is step one in protecting this precious habitat.

Twice as large as the UK, the Kavango-Zambezi Trans-Frontier Conservation Area (KAZA) is Africa’s great wild space where Angola, Botswana, Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe converge. At its heart is the World Heritage Site of the Okavango Delta, fed by headwaters rising in the far southeast of Angola. The success of the KAZA is of crucial importance to the development of southern Africa.

Barbados PM Mia Mottley Proposes Museum To Honor Rihanna, The Nation's Famous Daughter

Top: Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley. Bottom: Rihanna

Barbados PM Mia Mottley Proposes Museum To Honor Rihanna, The Nation's Famous Daughter

Prime Minister of Barbados, Mia Amor Mottley is one shrewd woman. Rihanna supported her candidacy to become Prime Minister in 2018, then joining forces with Motley as Cultural Ambassador for Barbados in September 2018.

PM Motley has raised her own international profile significantly since becoming leader of her country. AOC featured yesterday her role in activating a deliberate, fast-track move towards 100% renewable fuels by 2030. Barbados is joined by Jamaica in the lead and also Dominica in a major drive towards sustainability, now fueled with the activism, money and connections of Richard Branson, who has launched a program throughout the Caribbean post Hurricane Maria.

Now Barbados Prime Minister wants to open a museum celebrating Rihanna and her Work, Work, Work, Work, Work.

Mottley revealed in London that conversations are already underway between Rihanna’s manager brother and the Barbados government on honoring the Caribbean island’s most famous daughter born Robyn Rihanna Fenty , according to The Voice.

The Resilience of Barbados Counters Trump’s ‘Sh-thole’ Remarks

The Resilience of Barbados Counters Trump’s ‘Sh-thole’ Remarks

By J.M. Opal, Associate Professor of History and Chair, History and Classical Studies, McGill University. First published on The Conversation.

In a recent interview with Vanity Fair, former attorney and future inmate Michael Cohen revealed some of the uglier things Donald Trump said to him during their many years together.

Among the alleged quotes: “Name one country run by a Black person that’s not a sh—hole.” (One wonders how Trump characterized the United States when Barack Obama was President.)

Rarely stated so bluntly, this racist trope is widespread. As always, Trump gives vulgar expression to quiet prejudice, making him sound “honest” to about 40 per cent of Americans no matter how many lies he tells. As Sarah Huckabee Sanders noted after a similar revelation last year, Trump’s straight-shooting bigotry is one thing his fans love about him.

Those who don’t love him need to fight back with specific examples from the real world. Time and again, we need to highlight the big, complex reality that Trump and many of his supporters call “fake news.” Otherwise, his twisted version of the truth will continue to displace objective reality.

Pamela Anderson Poses For Cedric Buchet In 'French Evolution' Interview In Porter Magazine #33 Summer 2019

Pamela Anderson Poses For Cedric Buchet In 'French Evolution' Interview In Porter Magazine #33 Summer 2019

Canadian-American actor, model and environmental-animal rights activist Pamela Anderson now lives in the south of France. The forever-blonde bombshell isn’t just channeling Brigit Bardot in her ‘French Evolution’ photo shoot, lensed by Cedric Buchet for Porter Magazine #33 Summer Escape 2019. Styled by Maya Zepinic, Anderson now lives in France. / Hair by Karim Belghiran; makeup by Pep Gay

Pamela Anderson is living her own best life, always moving to the beat of her own drum. At the time of her interview with Vassi Chamberlain, a large part of the interview was devoted to her year-old relationship with French team soccer player Adil Rami.

Jamaica Leads in Richard Branson-Backed Plan for a Caribbean Climate Revolution

Jamaica Leads in Richard Branson-Backed Plan for a Caribbean Climate Revolution

After hurricanes Irma and Maria tore through the Caribbean in 2017, devastating dozens of islands – including billionaire Richard Branson’s private isle, Necker Island – Branson called for a “Caribbean Marshall Plan.”

He wanted world powers and global financial institutions to unite to protect the Caribbean against the effects of climate change.

That hasn’t happened. So Branson and his government partners from 27 Caribbean countries hope that his celebrity, connections and billions will prod local politicians and the financial community to act.

In August 2018, at a star-studded event at the University of the West Indies in Mona, Jamaica, Branson helped to launch the Caribbean Climate-Smart Accelerator, a US$1 billion effort to kickstart a green energy revolution in the region.

Elza Matiz Is Vivid In 'From the Center of the Earth' By Ivan Aguirre For Harper's Bazaar Mexico

Elza Matiz Is Vivid In 'From the Center of the Earth' By Ivan Aguirre For Harper's Bazaar Mexico

Model Elza Matiz (aka Elza Luijendijk) is styled by Nestor De Luna in ‘Desde El Centro De La Tierra’ (From the Center of the Earth’. Photographer Ivan Aguirre captures the vivid images for Harper’s Bazaar Mexico and Latin America June-July 2019./ Hair by Cesar Vargas; makeup by Juan Peralta

Bronte Coates Takes Rome, Lensed By Cintia Barroso Alexander For Marie Claire Hong Kong July 2019

Bronte Coates Takes Rome, Lensed By Cintia Barroso Alexander For Marie Claire Hong Kong July 2019

Model Bronte Coates is styled by Donatella Pia in a bright, eclectic mix of sporty street looks for the July 2019 issue of Marie Claire Hong Kong. Cintia Barroso Alexander is behind the lens, capturing ‘Rome, by all means Rome’. / Makeup by Nina Tatavitto