Indigenous art exhibition heads to China

An exhibition of Indigenous art from the Papunya region in central Australia will go on show in China later this year.

The works from the National Museum of Australia showcase the movement that kick-started the commercialisation of Indigenous art in the 1970s.

The Papunya movement is known for its signature-style dot paintings on large canvases in palettes of red, yellow, black and white.

The artists transformed their Dreamtime stories onto the vast canvases and boards that were provided to them through a government arts program.

By the late 1970s they had established the Papunya Tula Artists Company and the style they have now become renowned for.

Papunya Painting: Out Of The Australian Desert will be on show at the National Art Museum of China in Beijing from June until August.

- AAP

Scientists find meteorite that came from innermost asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter

Washington, September 18 (ANI): In a very rare finding, scientists have discovered an unusual kind of meteorite in the Western Australian desert and have uncovered that it came from the innermost main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

Meteorites are the only surviving physical record of the formation of our Solar System.

However, information about where individual meteorites originated, and how they were moving around the Solar System prior to falling to Earth, is available for only a dozen of around 1100 documented meteorite falls over the past two hundred years.

According to Dr Phil Bland from the Department of Earth Science and Engineering at Imperial College London, the lead author of the study, “We are incredibly excited about our new finding. Meteorites are the most analysed rocks on Earth, but it’s really rare for us to be able to tell where they came from.”

The new meteorite, which is about the size of cricket ball, is the first to be retrieved since researchers from Imperial College London, Ondrejov Observatory in the Czech Republic, and the Western Australian Museum, set up a trial network of cameras in the Nullarbor Desert in Western Australia in 2006.

The researchers aim to use these cameras to find new meteorites, and work out where in the Solar System they came from, by tracking the fireballs that they form in the sky.

The new meteorite was found on the first day of searching using the new network, by the first search expedition, within 100m of the predicted site of the fall.

The meteorite appears to have been following an unusual orbit, or path around the Sun, prior to falling to Earth in July 2007, according to the researchers’ calculations.

The team believes that it started out as part of an asteroid in the innermost main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

It then gradually evolved into an orbit around the Sun that was very similar to Earth’s.

The new meteorite is also unusual because it is composed of a rare type of basaltic igneous rock.

According to the researchers, its composition, together with the data about where the meteorite comes from, fits with a recent theory about how the building blocks for the terrestrial planets were formed.

This theory suggests that the igneous parent asteroids for meteorites like today’s formed deep in the inner Solar System, before being scattered out into the main asteroid belt.

Asteroids are widely believed to be the building blocks for planets like the Earth, so the new finding provides another clue about the origins of the Solar System. (ANI)

Australia plans to kill 650,000 camels

Canberra (Australia), Aug.9 (ANI): Australian Government officials plan to wipe out 650,000 camels in the remote Outback area of the country.

A Sky News report has said that marksmen are being roped in to shoot down thousands of came from helicopters.

It is being said that the meat of these dead animals will be turned into burgers in a bid to halt these thirsty dromedaries from barging into people’s homes and ripping up their bathrooms looking for water.

Camels were first introduced to Australia in the 1840s to help explorers travel through the Australian desert. There are now about one million camels roaming the country. They compete with sheep and cattle for food, trample vegetation and invade remote settlements in search of water.

But some remain opposed to a mass slaughter.

Camel exporter Paddy McHugh, who runs camel catching operations throughout Australia, said a cull would be ineffective.

“What happens in 15 years when the numbers come back again? Do we waste another 9.5 million pounds,” McHugh said.

But Tony Peacock, CEO of the University of Canberra’s Invasive Animals Cooperative Research Center, said: “To be shot from a helicopter is actually quite humane, even though that sounds brutal. If I was a camel, I’d prefer to just get it in the head.”

Glenn Edwards, who is working on drafting the government’s camel reduction program, said the camel population needs to be slashed by two-thirds to reduce catastrophic damage.

Last week, Erin Burnett, an anchor on American financial news channel CNBC, labeled Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd a serial killer on US TV, after his government announced plans to spend 19 million dollars to cull feral camels in the outback.

A stern-faced Burnett said during a segment on CNBC, “There is a serial killer in Australia and we are going to put a picture up so we can see who it is.”

A large photo of Rudd was then shown.

“That would be the Prime Minister of Australia, Kevin Rudd,” Burnett said. “OK, well, do you know what he is doing? He has launched air strikes – air strikes – against camels in the outback,” she said.

Burnett, with a stuffed toy camel in front of her, broke away from her usual analysis of stock movements on Wall St to vent about the camel cull.

She raised the issue during a segment with CNBC’s colourful financial guru Jim Cramer.

Burnett said there were a million camels living in the wild in Australia.

“They are slaughtering them?” Cramer, looking shocked, asked Burnett. “They are slaughtering them,” Burnett replied.

She also complained the meat and milk from the camels would be wasted.

“Apparently, there is a billion dollars of meat out there,” Burnett said.

“Are they going to do anything with it?” Cramer asked. “No. They’re just slaughtering them,” she said.

“That’s genocide. Camelcide,” Cramer commented.

Burnett then told Cramer she hoped Australians would see her segment.

Camels, which now number more than one million, are destroying fragile ecosystems and trampling all over indigenous sacred sites.

They foul ancient water holes and chomp through the boughs of endangered native trees.

Traveling in large, aggressive packs, they prevent Aboriginal women from venturing into the countryside, for fear of being attacked or trampled.

The situation is expected to get worse, with the camel population predicted to double every eight to 10 years unless action is taken.

The problem has grown so large that the Australian government recently pledged 10 million pounds towards developing a camel control plan. (ANI)