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Identifican una nueva especie de dinosaurio gigante a partir de restos hallados en Tailandia

Kraig Pakulski 0 12 Article rating: No rating

Por Amarachi Orie, CNN

El descubrimiento de algunos huesos a la orilla de un estanque en Tailandia hace una década permitió identificar un nuevo tipo de dinosaurio, de tamaño colosal, cuello y cola largos, y con una dieta vegetal.

Bautizado como “Nagatitan chaiyaphumensis” por investigadores de Tailandia y Londres, este reptil es el dinosaurio más grande jamás descubierto en el sudeste asiático.

Con un peso estimado de 27 toneladas métricas —o casi 60.000 libras—, medía aproximadamente 27 metros de largo, o casi 89 pies, de acuerdo con el estudio publicado el jueves en la revista Scientific Reports. Para contextualizar, un Tyrannosaurus rex grande habría pesado entre 4.000 y 6.800 kilogramos y medido más de 12 metros de largo.

Nagatitan chaiyaphumensis pertenecía a un grupo de dinosaurios conocidos como saurópodos, que fueron los animales más grandes que jamás hayan existido. Entre estos dinosaurios herbívoros, de cuello largo y patas gruesas, con un torso que contenía un enorme intestino, estaban el Diplodocus y el Brontosaurus.

El húmero, o hueso de la pata delantera, del dinosaurio recién descubierto medía 1,78 metros (casi 6 pies) de longitud, de acuerdo con un comunicado.

“No tenemos muchos especímenes de ese tamaño en Tailandia”, dijo a CNN el viernes el autor principal del estudio y paleontólogo Thitiwoot Sethapanichsakul, estudiante de doctorado en University College London.

“Cuando vi el húmero por primera vez, era más alto que yo, y eso fue bastante sorprendente”, continuó y añadió que el dinosaurio tiene aproximadamente el doble del tamaño de otra especie de saurópodo conocida en Tailandia.

El hueso de la pata figuraba entre varios fósiles descubiertos por un residente local a orillas de un estanque comunitario en el noreste de Tailandia en 2016, durante la estación seca, cuando el nivel del agua era más bajo.

Los restos óseos se hallaron durante trabajos de campo realizados en la zona entre 2016 y 2019, y en 2024 se llevaron a cabo excavaciones adicionales.

Los investigadores —de UCL y del Departamento de Recursos Minerales de Tailandia, la Universidad de Mahasarakham y la Universidad Tecnológica de Suranaree— realizaron escaneos 3D de los restos, que provenían de los huesos de las patas, la columna vertebral, las costillas y la pelvis del dinosaurio, antes de que los análisis revelaran que el animal era una especie previamente desconocida.

El término “naga” en el nombre de Nagatitan chaiyaphumensis hace referencia al nombre de una serpiente mitológica del folclore del sur y sureste de Asia. “Los nagas también suelen asociarse con el agua, y dado que el dinosaurio se encontró a orillas de un estanque comunitario, nos pareció muy apropiado que el nombre hiciera referencia a una serpiente gigante”, explicó Sethapanichsakul.

“Titán” hace referencia a los gigantes de la mitología griega y al tamaño del animal, mientras que “chaiyaphumensis” alude a la provincia tailandesa donde se descubrió el dinosaurio.

“Cumple una especie de promesa de la infancia”, dijo Sethapanichsakul, originario de Tailandia. “Que algún día le pondría nombre a un dinosaurio. Y quería que fuera de Tailandia”.

Según el estudio, Nagatitan probablemente vivió durante el final del Cretácico Temprano, hace entre 120 millones y 100 millones de años. Habría vivido junto a dinosaurios herbívoros más pequeños, de tamaño mediano, similares a los iguanodontes, así como “una especie de forma muy temprana de lo que llamaríamos ceratopsios, primos del Triceratops”, dijo Sethapanichsakul.

El entorno en ese momento era “muy seco y cálido”, dijo, y añadió que el sitio donde se encontró el dinosaurio representa una especie de sistema fluvial sinuoso que habría tenido “peces y tiburone

SBCC Baseball forces winner-take-all game 3 at SoCal Regional Finals

Kraig Pakulski 0 13 Article rating: No rating
sbcc logo
Ventura High School grad Wylan Nelson dominates in win

SAN MARCOS, Calif. (KEYT) - Two-way star Wylan Nelson pitched and hit Santa Barbara City College past Palomar 14-1 to even up their SoCal Regional Finals series at a game apiece.

Sunday's winner advances to the 4-team State Championship in Irvine. First pitch tomorrow is 12 p.m. at Palomar.

Nelson pitched a complete game allowing just one run on four hits while striking out 12 batters.

The Western State Conference North Pitcher of the Year improves to 10-0 on the year.

At the plate he was 2-for-5 with 2 RBI and 2 runs scored.

Trailing 1-0 entering the fourth inning the offense came to life for the Vaqueros. Damos Deworken cleared the bases with a 3-run double to put SBCC up 5-1.

The Vaqueros broke the game wide open with a 6-run sixth inning highlighted by two-run singles from both Parker Hellekson and Lucas Carlisle.

It was just the second loss in the past 16 games for Palomar.

The post SBCC Baseball forces winner-take-all game 3 at SoCal Regional Finals appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Can coffee thrive in the shadow of the city?

Kraig Pakulski 0 9 Article rating: No rating

Story by Chris Lau, CNN. Photos by Bertha Wang

Hong Kong (CNN) — A coffee roaster hums like an idling train in the attic of LCC Roastery, churning out freshly cooked beans at the artisan coffee seller on Hong Kong’s Lantau Island.

Owner Ringo Lam is proud of the broad selection of beans on offer: a jar labeled “Ethiopia” promises a mix of “jasmine, floral, tropical fruit, pineapple” flavors. Another, from Colombia, offers hints of “butter, caramel, dark chocolate.”

But one stands out: “Lantau Bean.”

That jar holds Lam and his fellow coffee lovers’ daring dream to pioneer what many didn’t know was possible: growing coffee in the shadow of a metropolis.

The 55-year-old former tech entrepreneur has been working closely with farmers on Lantau –– an island known for its greenery and laidback lifestyle, a 30-minute ferry ride from Hong Kong’s bustling city center –– in a quest to cultivate the city’s very own beans.

Asia produces some of the world’s finest coffee, mostly in the southeastern part of the continent where a tropical climate blesses countries like Vietnam and Indonesia with a conducive environment.

In East Asia, love for the drink has grown exponentially in the past decade. But less favorable conditions –– namely, annual periods of extreme cold –– have hindered countries such as Japan and China from developing their crops (save for a few high-altitude, mountainous areas like the Yunnan region in mainland China or Alishan Mountain Range in Taiwan, where premium Arabica can still thrive.)

Hong Kong, a Chinese city of 7.5 million people who live mostly in urban areas, has more than 700 cafes but has never been seen as an ideal breeding ground for coffee beans. It has a stronger cultural attachment to tea and – disruptive summer typhoons aside – exorbitant land prices have made it more logical for the financial hub to import almost all of its own grains and vegetables rather than grow them. Let alone coffee beans.

So when Lam tells people about his ambitious plan, he often leaves them in bewilderment.

“All they see are just countries that you probably won’t plan to go,” Lam told CNN, jokingly giving a few examples. “Ethiopia, Colombia – that’s definitely not your top tourist places.”

“But suddenly, when someone is growing coffee so close to you, they will ask, ‘Can we really grow coffee in Hong Kong?’” he said.

The answer, it turns out, is yes. While high altitudes may boost flavor and complexity, it’s a misconception that coffee trees only thrive there. What determines their growth is whether the region falls under the so called the “coffee belt,” which is about 25 degrees north and south of the equator, says Katie Chick, an arboriculture instructor involved in running a coffee farm linked to the University of Hong Kong. Sitting 22 degrees north of the equator, the city is just within that band.

“Geographically speaking, Hong Kong is fit to grow. We just lack a bit of altitude,” said Chick, the assistant director of the university’s Centre for Civil Society and Governance. While many of the world’s most popular coffee regions are at more than 1,000 meters above sea level, Hong Kong’s highest point is less than that, and its farms are low-lying.

Chick said daily temperatures fluctuate more drastically high up in mountainous areas, which may spark more biochemical reactions in the beans, leading to more a complex taste.

“But that’s not the only requirement,” she said.

Her center runs the biggest coffee farm in Hong Kong, with 800 trees yielding up to 50 kilograms of beans per year. It was originally envisioned as a project to revitalize an old village in the countryside, but now Chick and her colleagues are selling their beans at local markets.

For Lam, it all started on a trip to Panama six years ago. He was there to visit

Can coffee thrive in the shadow of the city?

Kraig Pakulski 0 12 Article rating: No rating

Story by Chris Lau, CNN. Photos by Bertha Wang

Hong Kong (CNN) — A coffee roaster hums like an idling train in the attic of LCC Roastery, churning out freshly cooked beans at the artisan coffee seller on Hong Kong’s Lantau Island.

Owner Ringo Lam is proud of the broad selection of beans on offer: a jar labeled “Ethiopia” promises a mix of “jasmine, floral, tropical fruit, pineapple” flavors. Another, from Colombia, offers hints of “butter, caramel, dark chocolate.”

But one stands out: “Lantau Bean.”

That jar holds Lam and his fellow coffee lovers’ daring dream to pioneer what many didn’t know was possible: growing coffee in the shadow of a metropolis.

The 55-year-old former tech entrepreneur has been working closely with farmers on Lantau –– an island known for its greenery and laidback lifestyle, a 30-minute ferry ride from Hong Kong’s bustling city center –– in a quest to cultivate the city’s very own beans.

Asia produces some of the world’s finest coffee, mostly in the southeastern part of the continent where a tropical climate blesses countries like Vietnam and Indonesia with a conducive environment.

In East Asia, love for the drink has grown exponentially in the past decade. But less favorable conditions –– namely, annual periods of extreme cold –– have hindered countries such as Japan and China from developing their crops (save for a few high-altitude, mountainous areas like the Yunnan region in mainland China or Alishan Mountain Range in Taiwan, where premium Arabica can still thrive.)

Hong Kong, a Chinese city of 7.5 million people who live mostly in urban areas, has more than 700 cafes but has never been seen as an ideal breeding ground for coffee beans. It has a stronger cultural attachment to tea and – disruptive summer typhoons aside – exorbitant land prices have made it more logical for the financial hub to import almost all of its own grains and vegetables rather than grow them. Let alone coffee beans.

So when Lam tells people about his ambitious plan, he often leaves them in bewilderment.

“All they see are just countries that you probably won’t plan to go,” Lam told CNN, jokingly giving a few examples. “Ethiopia, Colombia – that’s definitely not your top tourist places.”

“But suddenly, when someone is growing coffee so close to you, they will ask, ‘Can we really grow coffee in Hong Kong?’” he said.

The answer, it turns out, is yes. While high altitudes may boost flavor and complexity, it’s a misconception that coffee trees only thrive there. What determines their growth is whether the region falls under the so called the “coffee belt,” which is about 25 degrees north and south of the equator, says Katie Chick, an arboriculture instructor involved in running a coffee farm linked to the University of Hong Kong. Sitting 22 degrees north of the equator, the city is just within that band.

“Geographically speaking, Hong Kong is fit to grow. We just lack a bit of altitude,” said Chick, the assistant director of the university’s Centre for Civil Society and Governance. While many of the world’s most popular coffee regions are at more than 1,000 meters above sea level, Hong Kong’s highest point is less than that, and its farms are low-lying.

Chick said daily temperatures fluctuate more drastically high up in mountainous areas, which may spark more biochemical reactions in the beans, leading to more a complex taste.

“But that’s not the only requirement,” she said.

Her center runs the biggest coffee farm in Hong Kong, with 800 trees yielding up to 50 kilograms of beans per year. It was originally envisioned as a project to revitalize an old village in the countryside, but now Chick and her colleagues are selling their beans at local markets.

For Lam, it all started on a trip to Panama six years ago. He was there to visit

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