Gecko’s tail has a mind of its own

Washington, September 9 (ANI): A new study has found that the gecko tail literally has a mind of its own, as it exhibits not only rhythmic but also complex movements, including flips, jumps and lunges, after it is shed.

Anthony Russell of the University of Calgary (U of C) and Tim Higham of Clemson University in South Carolina carried out the study.

Geckos and other lizards have long been known for their incredible ability to shed their tails as a decoy for predators, but little is known about the movements and what controls the tail once it separates from the lizard’s body.

Although one previous study has looked at movement of the tail after it is severed, no study up to this point has quantified movement patterns of the tail by examining the relationship between such patterns and muscular activity.

“What we’ve discovered is that the tail does not simply oscillate in a repetitive fashion, but has an intricate repertoire of varied and highly complex movements, including acrobatic flips up to three centimetres in height,” said Russell, a biological sciences professor at the U of C.

“An intriguing, and as yet unanswered, question is what is the source of the stimulus is that initiates complex movements in the shed tails of leopard geckos,” said Higham.

“The most plausible explanation is that the tail relies on sensory feedback from the environment. Sensors on its surface may tell it to jump, pivot or travel in a certain direction,” he added.

The ability of an animal, or part of an animal, to move without the active control of higher centres in the brain is well known, but this generally occurs as a result of traumatic physical injury.

Tails of lizards are shed under the animal’s own control.

Because of this, the behaviour of the shed part has adaptive evolutionary importance and its actions are programmed to assist in the owner’s survival.

The movements are coordinated by the part of the spinal cord that is housed in the tail.

The isolated tail serves as a vehicle for studying the ways that nerves and muscles act together to generate controlled but complex outputs in the absence of the influence of the brain.

The new study shows that the signals responsible for movements of the shed tail begin at the very far end of the tail, indicating that there is a control centre located there that is likely overridden by higher centres until the tail is shed, at which point its potential is realized. (ANI)

Stressed crops emit more methane emissions than previously thought

Washington, August 18 (ANI): Scientists at the University of Calgary (U of C) in Canada have found that methane emission by stressed crops could be a bigger problem in global warming than previously thought.

According to a U of C study, when crops are exposed to environmental factors that are part of climate change – increased temperature, drought and ultraviolet-B radiation – some plants show enhanced methane emissions.

Methane is a very potent greenhouse gas; 23 times more effective in trapping heat than carbon dioxide (CO2).

“Most studies just look at one factor. We wanted to mix a few of the environmental factors that are part of the climate change scenario to study a more true-to-life impact climate change has on plants,” said David Reid, a professor in the Department of Biological Sciences, who co-authored a paper with research associate Mirwais Qaderi in the advanced on-line edition of the journal Physiologia Plantarum.

Reid and Qaderi analyzed methane emissions from six important Canadian crops – faba bean, sunflower, pea, canola, barley and wheat – that were exposed to combinations of three components of global climate change: temperature, ultraviolet-B radiation and water stress (drought).

What they found was troubling.

These stresses caused plants to emit more methane. In a warmer, drier world, methane might be a bigger contributor in global warming than previously thought.

When it comes to the greenhouse effect, methane could be considered the misunderstood and often overlooked orphan greenhouse gas.

Much of the attention has been focused on carbon dioxide, but more recently it has been realized that methane should also be considered as a very significant greenhouse gas.

Its concentrations have more than doubled since pre-industrial times.

While the growth rate of methane concentrations has slowed since the early 1990s, some scientists say this is only a temporary pause.

“Our results are of importance in the whole climate warming discussion because methane is such a potent greenhouse warming gas,” said Qaderi.

“It points to the possibility of yet another possible feedback phenomena which could add to global warming,” he added. (ANI)

‘E-mosquito’ to make painful pinpricks history for diabetics

Washington, Apr 25 (ANI): University of Calgary researchers have made a discovery that could change diabetics’ lives forever.

A skin patch, called ‘Electronic Mosquito’, could provide a less-invasive alternative for diabetics who need to take regular samples of their own blood to keep glucose levels in check.

The common method of drawing blood from fingertips and using glucose testing strips and metres can be painful, inconvenient and time-consuming.

Therefore, electrical engineers at the Schulich School of Engineering at the University of Calgary have patented the device.

The patch is approximately the size of a deck of cards and contains four micro-needles that “bite” sequentially at programmed intervals. The needles are electronically controlled to penetrate the skin deep enough to draw blood from a capillary, but not deep enough to hit a nerve. This means patients would experience little or no pain.

The patch could be worn anywhere on the body where it could obtain accurate readings of capillary blood. A sensor in each cell of the e-Mosquito measures sugar levels in the blood. This data can then be sent wirelessly to a remote device such a computer or a monitoring instrument worn on the wrist. The system could even be connected to an alarm to alert patients or doctors when blood sugar levels enter the danger zone.

“This is a dramatic improvement over manual poking, particularly for children and elderly patients,” says Martin Mintchev, director of the Low Frequency Instrumentation Lab at the Schulich School of Engineering.

“Our approach is radically different and offers a reliable, repeatable solution with the minor inconvenience of wearing something similar to an adhesive bandage,” the expert added.

Mintchev spent three years designing the e-Mosquito along with Karan Kaler, director of the Schulich School’s Bio-Micro Electromechanical Systems (MEMS) Laboratory. (ANI)

Sharks, Bruins top field for Stanley Cup Playoffs

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The San Jose Sharks and the Boston Bruins will be the top conference seedings when the Stanley Cup playoffs begin on Wednesday.

The league-leading Sharks will host the eighth-seeded Anaheim Ducks on Thursday in one of four Western Conference opening series, the NHL said on Sunday.

Defending Stanley Cup champions Detroit (2) will open at home against Columbus (7) on Thursday, Vancouver (3) host St Louis (6) on Wednesday and Chicago (4) will face Calgary (5) a day later.

The best-of-seven matchups shift to the home of the lower seeds after two games.

In the East, conference leader Boston will host Montreal (8) on Thursday, while second-placed Washington will begin its series against New York Rangers (7) at home on Wednesday.

New Jersey (3) will meet Carolina (6) at Newark on Wednesday, while Pittsburgh (4) host Philadelphia (5) on the same day.

St Louis’s 1-0 victory at Colorado on Sunday, the final day of the regular season, determined the final Western pairings.

In the East, Philadelphia’s 4-3 loss to the New York Rangers on Sunday gave Pittsburgh fourth place and the home-ice advantage in their series.

(Reporting by Gene Cherry in Raleigh, North Carolina; Editing by John O’Brien)

Here is how Bush spends his retirement in Texas

Dallas (Texas, US), Apr.11 (ANI): Eight years after serving as the 43rd President of the United States, George W Bush loves to lead the simple life in Dallas, Texas.

Bush almost always arrives at his Dallas office by 7:30 a.m., a few minutes before many of his employees. He works on his book with the help of a speechwriter, leaves for a late afternoon bike ride and spends his evenings reading or watching televised golf or baseball.

Neither he nor Laura like to cook, so they have relied on food brought by friends or prepared meals from EatZi’s, a local market.

Their 1.13-acre property — valued at about 2.4 million dollars — is cocooned by 40 acres of private land and a trout-filled lake.

Two oak trees shade the front yard. The Secret Service occupies a house next door. A barrier of orange cones, two police cruisers and four Secret Service agents who scan the perimeter with binoculars restricts entrance into the cul-de-sac. The Bushes plan to install a permanent gate outside the cul-de-sac later this year.

He spends most of his weekends with his wife Lauraat their isolated ranch in Crawford, Texas, where he likes to wake up early, roam the 1,600 acres with a chainsaw and cut new bike trails.

Most of his weekdays are spent 95 miles north, in Preston Hollow, an upper-class section of Dallas where he lived for seven years before becoming governor of Texas in 1995. He has declined to give interviews, except to discuss baseball or his book, and neighbours remain silent so as not to violate his privacy.
About once each week, Bush travels to give a speech or raise money for his 300 million dollar presidential center, but he always moves inside an insulated bubble.

On a trip to Calgary last month, he flew into town on a private jet and ate in a private room at a restaurant with three friends and the Secret Service. Eighty police officers provided extra security.

Bush works with a dozen aides from his administration, socializes with friends he has known for decades and lives in a conservative neighbourhood that voted for him — both times — by a ratio greater than 2 to 1.

He dismisses analysis of his presidency as premature, regrets little and refrains from engaging in the snippety back-and-forth between the Obama administration and Bush loyalists such as Karl Rove and Dick Cheney.

Bush feels content with his presidency, friends said. Now he will try to explain his two terms by writing a book and building a presidential center at Dallas’s Southern Methodist University, so that history will have the means to judge him fairly. (ANI)

Now, a robot vacuum cleaner that senses human emotions

London, March 29 (ANI): University of Calgary researchers have announced the invention of a specially-equipped robot vacuum cleaner that can sense human emotions.

The scientists say that the Roomba robot vacuum cleaner uses a special headband to capture bioelectric signals from the forehead of a human user, and then infers stress from muscle tension readings.

The system involves a control software programme that reinterprets natural muscle tension as estimating the user’s stress level, they add.

“Two distinct robotic behaviours corresponding to two extreme emotional states, either relaxed or stressed, are triggered when the stress reading reach a threshold. Robot actions are then influenced by these stress readings. When a person shows high stress (~levels 3 and 4), the robot enters its cleaning mode but moves away from the user so as not annoy them. When a person is relaxed (~level 1), the robot (if cleaning) approaches the person and then stops, simulating a pet sitting next to its owner. If the reading is in between these two levels, the robot continues operating in its current mode until the stress reading reaches a threshold,” New Scientist magazine quoted the researchers as saying.

Telling about the unique feature of this system, the researchers said that the robot’s behaviour is controlled by human emotion instead of any explicit commands.

The university team have described the new system in a paper titled ‘Using Bio-electrical Signals to Influence the Social Behaviours of Domesticated Robots’. (ANI)

Bush has written 30,000 words of his memoir ‘Decision Point’

Washington, Mar 19 (ANI): Former US President George W. Bush has written about 30,000 words of his memoir tentatively titled “Decision Points” that will cover everything from how he found faith, to how he quit drinking and chose Karl Rove and Dick Cheney for their respective jobs.

A contract with Crown, an imprint of Random House, is to be announced on Thursday. The same publisher issued both of President Obama’s books, Politico reports.

The first chapter will be about the former president’s early life leading up to his decision to run for president, and the final chapter will be about the financial crisis.

Aides say Bush is taking a disciplined approach, working two to three hours each morning, writing 1,000 to 1,500 words a day.

He has been typing on computers at his ranch in Crawford, his home in Dallas and his office in Dallas, and on a laptop he carries on planes and the ride between the ranch and the city.

On a trip this week to Calgary, Canada, for his first public speech since leaving office, he edited print outs.

“He wanted to do something different – less conventional and chronological, not an exhaustive history,” an aide said.

“He thinks it’ll be more interesting for people to read now, and a more important contribution to history, if he can focus on the big stuff. And he wants to write a book that people will read, not just buy.”

Robert Barnett, the Washington lawyer who negotiated the deal, said the former President began writing two days after he left Washington, and spends two to three hours working on the book each morning on his computer at his Dallas office.

The book is due to be out in the fall of 2010, after Laura Bush has published her book earlier that year. The aide said it would be very different from Bush’s first book, “A Charge to Keep”. (ANI)

Bush says he does not want spend his time criticizing Obama

Calgary (Canada), Mar.18 (ANI): Former US President George W Bush has said that he does not want spend his retirement criticizing his successor Barack Obama.

“He [Obama] was not my first choice for president, but when he won I thought it was good for the United States of America. I was deeply touched and I was deeply moved when I saw African Americans on TV weeping and saying, ‘I never thought it was possible,’” the Globe and Mail quoted Bush, as saying during a luncheon speech here.

“I want the President to succeed. I love my country more than politics. I’m not going to spend my time criticizing him. There are plenty of critics in the arena. He deserves my silence and if he wants my help he can pick up the phone and call me,” Bush added.

Bush also defended his decision to invade Iraq, saying: “risk takers,” not government are needed to salvage the world economy.

Bush was greeted with a standing ovation when he took the podium by close to 2,000 guests who paid 4,000 dollars per table.

“This is my maiden voyage. My first speech since I was the president of the United States and I couldn’t think of a better place to give it than Calgary, Canada,” he said to applause.

The invite-only event titled a “Conversation with George W. Bush” was banned to the press and organizers were coy about providing details leading up to the event.

But organizers had no trouble filling seats at the 195 tables.

For 43 minutes, Bush delighted the audience with stories about life as commander in chief and now as a civilian. (ANI)

Discovery of cat-sized dino suggests ‘mini dinosaurs’ prowled North America

Washington, March 17 (ANI): New analysis of the fossil of a dinosaur that was found in 1982 in Canada has suggested that it was smaller than a modern day housecat, which indicates that there might have been many ‘mini dinosaurs’ prowling the continent of North America.

The analysis was done by Nick Longrich, a paleontology research associate in the University of Calgary’s Department of Biological Sciences and University of Alberta paleontologist Philip Currie.

They describe a new genus of carnivorous dinosaur that was smaller than a modern housecat and likely hunted insects, small mammals and other prey through the swamps and forests of the late Cretaceous period in southeastern Alberta, Canada.

Weighing approximately two kilograms and standing about 50 centimetres tall, Hesperonychus elizabethae resembled a miniature version of the famous bipedal predator Velociraptor, to which it was closely related.

Hesperonychus ran about on two legs and had razor-like claws and an enlarged sickle-shaped claw on its second toe.

It had a slender build and slender head with dagger-like teeth.

“It was half the size of a domestic cat and probably hunted and ate whatever it could for its size – insects, mammals, amphibians and maybe even baby dinosaurs,” Longrich said.

“It probably spent most of its time close to the ground searching through the marshes and forests that characterized the area at the end of the Cretaceous,” he added.

Fossilized remains of Hesperonychus, which means “western claw,” were collected in 1982 from several locations including Dinosaur Provincial Park.

The most important specimen, a well-preserved pelvis, was recovered by Alberta paleontologist Elizabeth Nicholls, after which the species is named.

The fossils remained unstudied for 25 years until Longrich came across them in the University of Alberta’s collection in 2007.

Longrich and Currie focused on fossilized claws and a well-preserved pelvis for their description.

“The claws were thought to come from juveniles. They were just so small. But, when we studied the pelvis, we found the hip bones were fused, which would only have happened once the animal was fully grown,” Longrich said.

“Hesperonychus is currently the smallest dinosaur known from North America. But, its discovery just emphasizes how little we actually know, and it raises the possibility that there are even smaller ones out there waiting to be found,” he added.

“Judging by the amount of material that was collected, we believe animals the size of Hesperonychus must have been quite common on the landscape,” he further added. (ANI)

Bush to embark on a speaking tour next month

Washington, Feb 24 (ANI): Former President George W. Bush will embark next month on a series of speeches that will take him to Canada, Europe and Asia, his advisers have said.

The former president already has plans for about 10 speeches over the next year, and will do more, Politico reported.

During his final news conference, Bush had predicted that he would be back in the saddle quickly. He has stuck to that: An offering for speeches went up on the Washington Speakers Bureau website on January 29, the week after he left the White House.

Bush, who moved to Dallas last week after spending the first month of his ex-presidency at his ranch, is also working on a book about major decisions he made as the 43rd president.

The first speech will be March 17 in Calgary, Alberta. The Canadian event, to be held in a convention center before a largely business audience, is being promoted as “A conversation with George W. Bush”. It is closed to the press.

“President during a period of great consequence, George W. Bush shares thoughts on his eight momentous years in the Oval Office and discusses the challenges facing the world in the 21st century,” the brochure says.

Washington Speakers Bureau also represents the former first lady, Laura Bush, and the younger brother of the former president, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush

The suggested topic is “Remarks by George W. Bush.” The offering notes that he travels from Texas. “Fees based on event location,” the bureau says (ANI)

Bush to embark on a speaking tour next month

Washington, Feb 24 (ANI): Former President George W. Bush will embark next month on a series of speeches that will take him to Canada, Europe and Asia, his advisers have said.

The former president already has plans for about 10 speeches over the next year, and will do more, Politico reported.

During his final news conference, Bush had predicted that he would be back in the saddle quickly. He has stuck to that: An offering for speeches went up on the Washington Speakers Bureau website on January 29, the week after he left the White House.

Bush, who moved to Dallas last week after spending the first month of his ex-presidency at his ranch, is also working on a book about major decisions he made as the 43rd president.

The first speech will be March 17 in Calgary, Alberta. The Canadian event, to be held in a convention center before a largely business audience, is being promoted as “A conversation with George W. Bush”. It is closed to the press.

“President during a period of great consequence, George W. Bush shares thoughts on his eight momentous years in the Oval Office and discusses the challenges facing the world in the 21st century,” the brochure says.

Washington Speakers Bureau also represents the former first lady, Laura Bush, and the younger brother of the former president, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush

The suggested topic is “Remarks by George W. Bush.” The offering notes that he travels from Texas. “Fees based on event location,” the bureau says (ANI)

Bush to embark on a speaking tour next month

Washington, Feb 24 (ANI): Former President George W. Bush will embark next month on a series of speeches that will take him to Canada, Europe and Asia, his advisers have said.

The former president already has plans for about 10 speeches over the next year, and will do more, Politico reported.

During his final news conference, Bush had predicted that he would be back in the saddle quickly. He has stuck to that: An offering for speeches went up on the Washington Speakers Bureau website on January 29, the week after he left the White House.

Bush, who moved to Dallas last week after spending the first month of his ex-presidency at his ranch, is also working on a book about major decisions he made as the 43rd president.

The first speech will be March 17 in Calgary, Alberta. The Canadian event, to be held in a convention center before a largely business audience, is being promoted as “A conversation with George W. Bush”. It is closed to the press.

“President during a period of great consequence, George W. Bush shares thoughts on his eight momentous years in the Oval Office and discusses the challenges facing the world in the 21st century,” the brochure says.

Washington Speakers Bureau also represents the former first lady, Laura Bush, and the younger brother of the former president, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush

The suggested topic is “Remarks by George W. Bush.” The offering notes that he travels from Texas. “Fees based on event location,” the bureau says (ANI)

Bush to embark on a speaking tour next month

Washington, Feb 24 (ANI): Former President George W. Bush will embark next month on a series of speeches that will take him to Canada, Europe and Asia, his advisers have said.

The former president already has plans for about 10 speeches over the next year, and will do more, Politico reported.

During his final news conference, Bush had predicted that he would be back in the saddle quickly. He has stuck to that: An offering for speeches went up on the Washington Speakers Bureau website on January 29, the week after he left the White House.

Bush, who moved to Dallas last week after spending the first month of his ex-presidency at his ranch, is also working on a book about major decisions he made as the 43rd president.

The first speech will be March 17 in Calgary, Alberta. The Canadian event, to be held in a convention center before a largely business audience, is being promoted as “A conversation with George W. Bush”. It is closed to the press.

“President during a period of great consequence, George W. Bush shares thoughts on his eight momentous years in the Oval Office and discusses the challenges facing the world in the 21st century,” the brochure says.

Washington Speakers Bureau also represents the former first lady, Laura Bush, and the younger brother of the former president, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush

The suggested topic is “Remarks by George W. Bush.” The offering notes that he travels from Texas. “Fees based on event location,” the bureau says (ANI)

Bush to embark on a speaking tour next month

Washington, Feb 24 (ANI): Former President George W. Bush will embark next month on a series of speeches that will take him to Canada, Europe and Asia, his advisers have said.

The former president already has plans for about 10 speeches over the next year, and will do more, Politico reported.

During his final news conference, Bush had predicted that he would be back in the saddle quickly. He has stuck to that: An offering for speeches went up on the Washington Speakers Bureau website on January 29, the week after he left the White House.

Bush, who moved to Dallas last week after spending the first month of his ex-presidency at his ranch, is also working on a book about major decisions he made as the 43rd president.

The first speech will be March 17 in Calgary, Alberta. The Canadian event, to be held in a convention center before a largely business audience, is being promoted as “A conversation with George W. Bush”. It is closed to the press.

“President during a period of great consequence, George W. Bush shares thoughts on his eight momentous years in the Oval Office and discusses the challenges facing the world in the 21st century,” the brochure says.

Washington Speakers Bureau also represents the former first lady, Laura Bush, and the younger brother of the former president, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush

The suggested topic is “Remarks by George W. Bush.” The offering notes that he travels from Texas. “Fees based on event location,” the bureau says (ANI)

Swinging arms contribute nothing to human gait

London, Feb 11 (ANI): Contrary to the common belief that swinging arms help drive the human gait, a new study has revealed that they contribute nothing to the way of walking.

Herman Pontzer, a biomechanics researcher at Washington University in St Louis, said that humans swing their arms simply because it would take extra mental and physical effort to keep them still.

He said that arm swings have the added benefit of keeping our heads from bobbing back and forth as we walk.

While teaching an undergraduate laboratory class, Pontzer asked his students to test a critical prediction of the model: as a person walks, their arms and legs should move in tandem.

Instead, the students found that a person’s arms and legs move slightly out of sync. Our torsos act as a dampener, causing arm motions to lag slightly behind the legs, he hypothesised.

A scale model showed the same lag.

“I went to [a store] and we spent half an hour in the toy section looking for a big box of Legos and spent the rest of the night building that thing,” New Scientist quoted him, as saying.

Next, Pontzer set out to show that real humans, not just Lego models, swing their arms passively when they walk.

His team analysed the movement and muscles of 10 volunteers as they walked and ran on a laboratory treadmill.

The results strongly confirmed predictions of Pontzer’s original hypothesis.

Adding extra weight to test subjects’ arms caused leg and arm movements to shift even further out of sync.

Similarly, when volunteers folded their arms in, reducing inertia, the lag between arm and leg shortened.

And when walkers and runners crossed their arms, they suffered no loss in efficiency.

Pontzer’s team found that those muscle contractions that researchers noticed in the 1960s seem to stabilise the shoulder, not drive motion.

John Bertram, a biomechanics researcher at the University of Calgary in Canada, says understanding how arms swing naturally could aid in the design of prosthetic limbs, making movements more efficient and realistic-looking.

The study is published in the Journal of Experimental Biology. (ANI)

Calgary woman, 60, gives birth to twins following donor eggs from India

Toronto, Feb 6 (ANI): A 60-year-old Calgary woman became the oldest Canadian to become a mum as she gave birth to twins on February 3, after receiving donor eggs from India.

Ranjit Hayer and her husband Jagir had been trying for four decades to conceive, and last year after she was refused treatment at Canadian fertility clinics because of her age, she travelled to India for help, reports Globeandmail.com.

During the pregnancy, Ranjit faced some complications, but was able to give birth to the boys by C-section at Calgary’s Foothills Hospital, with her family reporting that mother and sons were doing well.

“Mother is fine and babies are fine,” said Tony Hayer, who is Ranjit’s nephew.

“After waiting so long, they are just overjoyed right now. It’s part of Canadian history,” he added.

The babies were born seven weeks prematurely, and the pregnancy is said to have caused the mother to suffer from hypertension, diabetes and potentially fatal haemorrhaging, with the birth of the babies now raising ethical questions.

The couple’s obstetrician, Colin Birch, told CBC Radio’s The Current that he is fully aware of the ethical criticisms the case presents.

“We can do so much, but the question is, should we do it just because we can do it,” he said.

The birth and pregnancy has caused an ethical debate to arise, with the cut-off age for fertility treatments being 50 in Canada.

“Some of these cases tar and feather fertility clinics and the people seeking them out,” said Cal Greene, medical director of the Calgary Foothills Regional Fertility Program.

“What we don’t find acceptable in Canada may be quite acceptable in India. There is an industry of poor women there being paid a pittance to be egg donors.

“It’s simply not as safe to have a baby in post-reproductive years as it would be to have a baby when nature intended it. Medically, it’s very risky for both the mother and the babies,” Greene, who cited high blood pressure, toxaemia and gestational diabetes as ailments that occur more often among older pregnant mothers, said.

Another reason Canadian fertility clinics erect barriers to women older than 50 is the potential of parents dying before their child fully matures.

“We don’t consider it in the best interests of the child,” Greene said.

A third ethical issue arises from Hayer’s foreign treatments. While the procedure took place in India, the Canadian health-care system has cared for her ever since.

“It can be very expensive for the health-care system,” said University of Manitoba ethics professor Arthur Shafer.

“If many women in their 60s want to give birth, you have to ask how that will burden the health-care system,” he said.

Shafer, unlike some critics, rejects many of the arguments against post-menopausal pregnancy.

“Is it wise, prudent or optimal? Probably not,” he said.

“But in this country we let competent adults make procreative decisions for themselves,” he added. (ANI)

Compucom Software gets order worth Rs 7.67 crore

Avalanches in Canada leave eight missing New York/Calgary – Eight snowmobilers remained missing on Monday following two avalanches in the Canada province of British Columbia, authorities said.

The first group of victims were trapped in the first avalanche on Sunday, and when others tried to pull them out they were caught in a second, the Canadian broadcaster CTV said.

Three of the eleven were able to free themselves and received medical treatment.

The rescue effort was called off because of darkness Sunday evening and crews resumed their work on Monday. The avalanches took place about 300 kilometres southwest of Calgary. (dpa)