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Post by abbey1227 on May 19, 2021 11:22:31 GMT
Axios Galápagos Islands tourist attraction Darwin's Arch collapsesRebecca Falconer Wed, May 19, 2021, 12:14 AM Darwin's Arch in the Galápagos Islands, "considered one of the best places on the planet to dive" and observe marine species, has collapsed, the Ministry of Environment for Ecuador has announced. Why it matters: Although the ministry said the collapse of the 140-feet-high rock formation Monday was due to natural erosion, it casts a spotlight on a region that the United Nations has classified as "one of the world's most vulnerable places to the effects of climate change," per the New York Times. Of note: The tourist attraction and the nearby Darwin Island are named after the scientist Charles Darwin, whose study of species in the volcanic archipelago helped solidify his theory of evolution. But "warming waters" pose a grave threat to the species that Darwin observed, the NYT notes. Threat level: The UNESCO World Heritage-listed islands are at the "intersection of three ocean currents and are vulnerable to the El Niño weather system, which causes rapid warming of Pacific Ocean waters," the Times reports. Another Pacific island, Easter Island, southeast of the Galápagos archipelago, known for its moai statues, is already facing the threats of sea-level rise, coastal inundation and erosion, according to a UNESCO report.
Why not just say that it progressively evolved?
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Post by Prometheus on May 19, 2021 16:01:32 GMT
Words matter
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Post by abbey1227 on May 19, 2021 22:58:05 GMT
"Add it to the Black List."
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Post by Prometheus on May 20, 2021 3:30:42 GMT
"Add it to the Black List."
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Post by abbey1227 on May 20, 2021 12:02:18 GMT
what ISN'T these days?
I think I'd rather just whitewash the whole thing
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