New evidence points towards water on Moon

London, September 19 (ANI): Two separate lunar missions have found evidence which indicates that the polar regions of the moon are chock full of water-altered minerals.

According to a report in Nature News, early results from NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), launched on June 18, are offering a wide array of watery signals.

The Moon, in fact, has water in all sorts of places: not just locked up in minerals, but scattered throughout the broken-up surface, and, potentially, in blocks or sheets of ice at depth.

“We are on the verge of a renaissance in our thinking about the poles of the Moon, including how water ice gets there,” said Anthony Colaprete, principal investigator for the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS), which on October 9, will slam into a polar crater with the intention of ploughing up a plume of water ice for many telescopic eyes to see.

The initial LRO results confirm what was long suspected as a way for ice to stay trapped on the Moon for billions of years.

A thermal mapping instrument showed that permanently shadowed regions within deep polar craters are as cold as 35o Kelvin (-238o Celsius).

Project scientist Richard Vondrak said that they are the coldest spots in the Solar System – even colder than the surface of Pluto.

Variations in the flux of neutrons suggests variability in water content among craters.

But, the surprise comes from a different instrument on LRO, which counts slow-moving neutrons as a way of measuring hydrogen abundance in the top metre or so of the surface.

This hydrogen is often interpreted as a proxy for water ice, although it could also be molecular hydrogen or hydrogen trapped in other molecules.

The LRO instrument has already found a significant excess of hydrogen at the poles.

But, with added resolution, it is seeing surprising variability within the polar regions. Some of the craters appear enriched in hydrogen. Others are not.

Stranger still, some areas outside the crater walls, which were thought to get too hot for water to linger, show an excess of hydrogen.

Vondrak said this shows that the water could have arrived more recently, or that it can persist if buried as impacts till the lunar soil.

If the LCROSS impact spews up ice, it will eliminate the last vestiges of doubt about water on the Moon.

It could also start a new hunt: to find a record of impact events, such as water-rich comet strikes, that put the ice there in the first place. (ANI)

Scientists create world’s tiniest laser squeezing light

London, August 31 (ANI): A team of American scientists have created the world’s smallest laser by squeezing light into a space smaller than a protein molecule.

Project leader Xiang Zhang, a professor at the University of California (UC) at Berkeley, says that the breakthrough heralds a revolution in optical technology.

The researcher believes that this advance may pave the way for “nanolasers” that can probe and manipulate DNA.

It may also prove helpful in creating super-fast computers and for telecommunications, the researcher says.

“This work shatters traditional notions of laser limits and makes a major advance towards applications in the biomedical, communications and computing fields,” the Scotsman quoted Prof. Zhang as saying.

According to Prof. Zhang, the new “plasmon” laser compresses light into a gap five nanometres wide, the size of a single protein molecule.

Plasmons are the wave-like motions of excited electrons on the surfaces of metals. Binding light to these oscillations allows it to be squeezed much further than normal.

“Plasmon lasers represent an exciting class of coherent light sources capable of extremely small confinement. This work can bridge the worlds of electronics and optics at truly molecular length scales,” said Prof. Zhang.

The research team behind this breakthrough hope that one day they will be able to shrink light down to the size of an electron’s wavelength, about one billionth of a metre.

A research article on their latest work has been published in the journal Nature. (ANI)

Aliens in no mood to response to SETI right now

London, August 19 (ANI): The SETI (Search For Extraterrestrial Intelligence) telescope has produced its first scientific results, but unfortunately it’s still waiting for a response from the aliens.

The project, called the Allen Telescope Array (ATA) after benefactor and Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, went live in 2007.

It was designed to scan for broadcasts from alien civilizations with more consistency and a wider field of view than any previous effort.

Run jointly by the SETI Institute and the University of California, Berkeley, from a site in northern California, the ATA is ultimately intended to comprise 350 dishes.

But, even with its current complement of 42, it has an impressively wide field of view. It uses relatively small, 6-metre dishes that together can take in five square degrees of sky at a time – a box as wide as 10 full moons.

“At any one moment, you look into a very large piece of the sky,” said Jill Tarter, director of the SETI Institute. “At 350 (telescopes), the ATA just blows any other survey telescope out of the water. Even at 42, it’s interesting,” she told New Scientist.

According to Joeri van Leeuwen, an ATA team member who presented the project’s first results at a conference in the Netherlands in June, “You can see entire galaxies within one shot.”

One question the ATA aims to answer is a mystery of missing gas.

Star-forming regions don’t seem to have enough molecular gas to keep up the star-formation rates we observe.

Some researchers think atomic hydrogen might make up the difference.

ATA team members have searched for it in four groups of galaxies so far, but have not yet found any new intergalactic gas, deepening the mystery.

“This paper was our first science paper, so we’ve answered some questions, but we’re finding new questions again. This paper really shows that our setup is working, we have all the algorithms working, and we could easily upgrade to a more powerful system still,” van Leeuwen said.

Such surveys do not distract from the search for aliens, which – if they exist and are attempting to communicate – may send out broadcasts at wavelengths not commonly emitted by astrophysical objects. (ANI)

Boeing set to test unmanned aircraft in Australia

Brisbane, July 12 (ANI): Australian scientists and US aviation giant Boeing are set to test unmanned aircrafts, which would share airspace with piloted passenger planes without causing any collision.

In a non-descript shed in suburban South Park in Seattle, a team of young Boeing engineers are overseeing an experiment that provides a startling glimpse into the future.

Their 30-metre by 15 metre by five-metre-high unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) “swarming” laboratory looks like a small indoor cricket shed with model rotor aircraft parked on the concrete floor.

Suddenly the UAVs are airborne and swarming around the shed, their pre-determined tracks, altitudes and collision avoidance mechanisms already programmed in using advanced algorithms that could ultimately spell the end of piloted aircraft, The Courier-Mail reports.

The aim of this cutting edge science is to build the mathematical models that will allow uninhabited aircraft to fly safely in controlled airspace.

Boeing’s new Australian research chief Bill Lyons talks about the aim behind the experiment: “To allow (unmanned) systems to operate at least as well as human piloted systems.”

The algorithms developed in the swarm lab will soon be put to the test in the skies above Kingaroy in southern Queensland in the world’s first ever trial of unmanned aircraft inside controlled airspace.

Airspace authorities in both the US and Australia, highly wary of having pilotless drones in potential conflict with airliners carrying hundreds of passengers, will require 100 per cent guarantees before they will allow the two to mix.

Senior Boeing engineer John Vian said the major challenge for unmanned aircraft operating in controlled air space is safety.

“We don’t know how these systems will develop. For these systems to be viable they have to be reliable and totally autonomous. We develop the technology, how it is applied is up the customer,” Dr. Vian said. (ANI)

Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe is a poet too

London, July 11 (ANI): There’s more to Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe’s creative aspects than just acting, the teenage heartthrob is also a published poet, it has emerged.

Four poems written by the 19-year-old actor have been published in an underground fashion magazine, under the pen name Jacob Gershon.

Radcliffe’s pseudonym- Jacob Gershon- is a combination of his middle name, and the Jewish version of his mother’s maiden name, Gresham.

But the young star disclosed the secret in an interview with the Guardian.

“I didn’t want to publish it under my name. It’s the kind of thing I look back on and just think, ‘Ahhh!’” the Telegraph quoted Radcliffe as saying.

“As an actor, there is room for a certain amount of creativity, but you’re always ultimately going to be saying somebody else’s words.

“I don’t think I’d have the stamina, skill or ability to write a novel, but I’d love to write short stories and poetry, because those are my two passions. There is an art to a short story.

“I love Raymond Carver, and Chekhov – without making myself sound more highbrow than I am! When I don’t write in form and metre, I become unbearably self-indulgent. It’s what Robert Frost said: free verse is like playing tennis with the net down,” he added.

The verses are about infidelity, Pop Idol and Kate Moss’ former boyfriend- singer Pete Doherty.

The collection of his poems was published in November 2007 in Rubbish magazine-an annual publication with a circulation of 3,000, which describes itself as “a playful platform for fashionable people”. (ANI)

Omega Nebula’s ‘watercolors’ revealed in new image

Munich, July 8 (ANI): A new image captured by the European Southern Observatory (ESO) has reveled the Omega Nebula, a stellar nursery where infant stars illuminate and sculpt a vast pastel fantasy of dust and gas, in all its glory.

The Omega Nebula, sometimes called the Swan Nebula, is a dazzling stellar nursery located about 5500 light-years away towards the constellation of Sagittarius (the Archer).

An active star-forming region of gas and dust about 15 light-years across, the nebula has recently spawned a cluster of massive, hot stars.

The intense light and strong winds from these hulking infants have carved remarkable filigree structures in the gas and dust.

When seen through a small telescope, the nebula has a shape that reminds some observers of the final letter of the Greek alphabet, omega, while others see a swan with its distinctive long, curved neck.

Swiss astronomer Jean-Philippe Loys de Cheseaux discovered the nebula around 1745. The French comet hunter Charles Messier independently rediscovered it about twenty years later and included it as number 17 in his famous catalogue.

In a small telescope, the Omega Nebula appears as an enigmatic ghostly bar of light set against the star fields of the Milky Way.

In recent years, astronomers have discovered that the Omega Nebula is one of the youngest and most massive star-forming regions in the Milky Way.

Active star-birth started a few million years ago and continues through today.

The newly released image, obtained with the EMMI instrument attached to the ESO 3.58-metre New Technology Telescope (NTT) at La Silla, Chile, shows the central region of the Omega Nebula in exquisite detail.

The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has also imaged small parts of this nebula.

At the left of the image, a huge and strangely box-shaped cloud of dust covers the glowing gas.

The fascinating palette of subtle color shades across the image comes from the presence of different gases (mostly hydrogen, but also oxygen, nitrogen and sulfur) that are glowing under the fierce ultraviolet light radiated by the hot young stars. (ANI)

Robotic grasshopper to help explore Mars’ rocky geography

London, July 6 (ANI): Scientists have come up with the first robotic grasshopper based on the spring mechanism the insect has to propel itself, which may help explore Mars’ rocky terrain.

The Jollbot was masterminded by Rhodri Armour, who spent a year building the robot with colleagues at the University of Bath.

The robot, which can jump and roll, enjoys an edge over other machines due to its ability to launch itself over obstacles.

The remote-controlled Jollbot runs on a motor connected to a battery pack and a series of springs around the circumference, which help it leap up to half a metre.

Weighing only one kilogram, it has been made from soft plastic, and borrows dynamics from insects when it bounces on landing.

Armour said: “I was inspired by the way insects like the grasshopper jump around in extremely rough environments. Even with their comparatively long legs, an insect’s small size limits the possibility of using its muscles to directly provide the contraction needed for take-off.”

The researcher added: “That means all insects and smaller jumping animals use some sort of spring mechanism to store muscle energy and release it when required. It’s a bit like a mechanical catapult – with a lengthy energy storage phase and rapid release.”

The boffin further revealed that the project was meant to be low-cost, adding: “Jollbot was always intended to be inexpensive and as such many could be sent on exploratory missions in place of a single conventional robot. This would allow for some of them to fail.”

Dr David Williams, director general of the British National Space Centre, said that the University of Bath’s research helped boost homegrown innovation in space exploration.

He added: “We wish the project all the best.” (ANI)

Earth may become ‘Waterworld’ if rise in sea level continues

London, July 2 (ANI): If the alarming rise in sea level is anything to go by, the fictional world depicted in the Hollywood movie ‘Waterworld’ may soon be a reality.

According to a report in the Telegraph, this grim picture of planet Earth has been painted by climate scientists, who say that sea-level rise is now inevitable and will happen much quicker than most of us thought – and will last for centuries.

Even if greenhouse gas emissions stopped tomorrow, the oceans will continue to swell as they warm and as glaciers or ice sheets slide into the sea.

Scientists say that the “official” estimate of sea level rise by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change – 20cm to 60cm by 2100 – is misleading.

It could well be in the region of one to two metres, with a small risk of an even greater rise.

“When we talk of sea level rising by one or two metres by 2100 remember that it is still going to be rising after 2100,” said climate expert Dr Eric Rignot, of California University.

According to Dr Stefan Rahmstorf, of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany, “”There is a very close and statistically highly significant correlation between the rate of sea level rise and the temperature increase above the pre-industrial background level.”

His calculations suggest sea level will rise between 0.5 and 1.4 metres – and the higher estimate is more likely because emissions have been rising faster than the IPCC’s worst case scenario.

“I sense than now a majority of sea level experts would agree with me that the IPCC projections are much too low,” he said.Most of my community is comfortable expecting at least a metre by the end of this century,” said Dr Robert Bindschadler, of the NASA Goddard Space Flight Centre in Maryland.

For many islands and low lying regions including much of the Netherlands, Florida and Bangladesh even small rises will spell catastrophe.

Large parts of London, New York, Sydney and Tokyo could be among cities submerged beneath the waves unless a massive engineering effort can protect them against the waves. (ANI)

Creature dubbed ‘Loch Ness monster of the Vosges’ threatens French village

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London, Jun 22 (ANI): An elusive creature that has been dubbed the Loch Ness monster of the Vosges is being hunted by the French police, after residents reported seeing it on several occasions in a local pond.
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The creature, said to be a crocodile, was sighted in Xertigny, a village of some 3,000 inhabitants in the Vosges region in eastern France./pp
Villagers were so curious about the beast that they even tried luring it out of the water by placing a chicken on the bank of the pond, which was to no avail as the animal refused to appear./pp
The elusive creature has local authorities so worried that they are considering draining the pond after a special sonar device failed to bring light to the situation./pp
We have been around the pond several times and you can’t really say if anything is there, the Telegraph quoted Bruno Aime, vice-president of a local anglers’ association, as telling France Info radio./pp
I think it’s carp but it could also be a caiman of about 1.5 metres. The equipment doesn’t let you see the difference between a pike of a metre long and a caiman of 1.5 metres, he added./pp
Crocodiles are found only in zoos and parks in France. (ANI)/p

Andy Murray hopes to become the David Beckham of tennis

London, June 22 (ANI): Britain’s No.1 player Andy Murray hopes to become the David Beckham of tennis, as he bids to deal with the huge pressure of being a sporting superstar.

Murray has the same management team as football legend Beckham, and when the pair launched a campaign recently to increase awareness of malaria, they travelled together to meet Prime Minister Gordon Brown.

“When you start out as a professional, you look to keep the same friends, the same people you have always had around you and just try to be true to yourself and do things that are important to you,” the world No. 3 said.

“When you start changing as a person and getting an inflated opinion of yourself and having a big ego, it becomes a problem. It happens a lot in sport nowadays and David’s done a great job of not letting all the fame and pressure get to him,” The Sun quoted Murray, as saying.

“David seems a very nice guy. It was a bit strange when we went to Downing Street – but to get the chance to meet the Prime Minister was very, very nice. That’s one job I definitely would not want to do,” he said.

Murray has two physical-fitness trainers and also travels with physio Andy Ireland, who even gives the player acupuncture if he is suffering from any aches or strains.

“In terms of the physical stuff, I started doing that 18 months ago when I started working with the new fitness trainers and was just travelling with them every week. I was training during the tennis and it made a huge difference over the year,” Murray said.

“Because of doing that, I was able to start doing the 400 metre and 200 metre runs faster and better – and lifting heavier weights. It wasn’t one thing specifically in the gym I was doing it was pretty much every part of the body I was working.

“I now feel like I can last longer in matches, whereas before I might have played a five-set match in a Slam and felt fine but my recovery wasn’t as good. I’m just recovering better from tough matches now,” he added. (ANI)

56th anniversary of first ascent on Mount Everest celebrated in Siliguri

Silliguri, May 30 (ANI): The Himalayan Nature and Adventure Foundation (HNAF), a NGO in Siliguri on Friday celebrated the 56th anniversary of climbing the Mount Everest for the first time.

Sir Edmund Hillary of Newzeland and Nepali Sherpa Tenzing Norgay became the first people to reach the top of the 8,850 metre (29,035 feet) mountain on May 29, 1953.

The day was marked by felicitating the statue of Tenzing Norgey in the morning. A blood donation camp was organised later to promote adventure sports among the younger generation.

“The main objective is to promote adventure sports. We are promoting adventure sports because it has been losing interest in North and West Bengal,” said Dipesh Raha, general secretary, HNAF.

Chirag Chatterjee, a blood donor said it is a good way to promote adventure sports in the state.

“Definitely this event surely encourages us to look forward to adventure sports because we can meet various people who have remarkable achievements in adventure sports. There are many mountaineers joining this event and they are real life inspirations for us. That’s why this is a very successful event which draws us towards adventure sports,” said Chatterjee.

More than 3,000 people have climbed Everest from the Nepali and Tibetan sides since 1953. (ANI)

Bolt gives Ronaldo tips on speed and stability

London, May 16 (ANI): Cristiano Ronaldo has been told how to stop falling over by Usain Bolt.

Olympic champ Bolt, taking part in a 150metre street race in Manchester tomorrow, said: “I talked to Ronaldo and gave him a few tips.

“When he gets to top speed, he tips over a bit. It’s not that he dives. I told him to get his foot on the centre of gravity and then he would stay upright and he will go faster over longer distances. I also told him he should be more rough on opposing players. Then other guys will stop picking on him,” The Sun quoted him, as saying. (ANI)

Child’s ghostly image caught on new spirit-catching camera

London, May 13 (ANI): British spook hunter Paul Rowland has revealed that he might have invented a device by which he can capture spirits on camera, especially after he captured the ghostly image of a child with it.

The instrument works by using ultraviolet and infrared lights to enhance images other cameras miss, and the chilling discovery was made while taking a picture with the camera at the Welsh mansion he was working in.

“You can see a child-like figure and what appears to be an arm reaching out towards me,” the Sun quoted him as saying.

“I was standing with my back against the window ledge, just a metre away.

“This picture is my prized-possession,” he said.

The eerie shape was spotted at the haunted Plas Teg mansion, which is popular with paranormal groups, and 49-year-old Rowland said that he developed the gadget after watching TV shows like Most Haunted.

“I used to shout at the screen ‘why don’t you use this, or that’,” he said.

“But when I researched I found the technologies simply didn’t exist – so I started inventing them.

“The equipment I build is specifically for the purpose of paranormal investigations, unlike the borrowed technology used by other investigators.

“My belief is it will take new technology to reveal new evidence,” he added.

Rowland’s ghost-cam device is yet to get a proper name.

“The idea came about because I wanted to be able to carry technology around in one unit,” he said.

“I use blue and ultraviolet lights to enhance our capability in the dark.

“It also has a digital stills camera and camcorder – both of which can see in ultraviolet light.

“And there’s a live EVP (electronic voice phenomenon) system hooked up to it.

“With all great respect to mediums, nobody else can hear what’s going on.

“But I believe my devices can – through feedback – let people hold yes/no conversations with the dead.

“It’s almost as if the machine senses an energy build-up in the room and records it,” he added.

Rowland will be leading an investigation called The Paradox Experience in Scotland running until May 17. (ANI)

Timber smuggling continues in Manipur

Ukhrul (Manipur), May 12 (ANI): Illegal cutting and smuggling of timber continued with impunity in Manipur’s Ukhrul District, despite a Central court ban on felling of trees.

Little is known about timber smuggling along the porous Indo-Myanmar border.

In April 1995, India and Myanmar signed their first cross-border trade agreement. However, this agreement does not include timber. Officially, all timber exports have to pass via Yangon, but in reality, an illegal timber trade is flourishing between Manipur in India and Kachin state and Sagaing division in Myanmar.

The 1995 trade agreement includes provisions to upgrade roads connecting major trading towns in Myanmar to the Indian border. Once these roads are improved, cross-border trade could expand significantly given India’s growing demand for timber.

However, inspite of the intervention of the State Government to stop the ongoing illegal timber trade in Kamjong of Ukhrul district and Moreh of Chandel district and in other porous Indo-Myanmar border, the illegal timber trade poses a serious threat to the ecological balance of the area now.

These timber logs are shipped from Myanmar, Kamjong, Moreh to major plywood factory at Dimapur in Nagaland, defying the law.

“There are many checkpoints. We are checked and frisked at police gate and forest gate. Since we have officials permit, we proceed further after negotiating with them,” said Prem Kasang, who once worked as a timber logger.

According to reports, smugglers have been felling valuable trees like teak with impunity and remnants of burnt hill slopes as well as cut off woods can be seen lying scattered everywhere.

As informed by the District Forest Officer (DFO), Ukhrul District, in the past two years, they have seized more than 70 cubic metre of timber under seven or eight forest offence cases.

“Such complaints or allegations have come from some quarters. We have looked into the matter. My staffs including myself rest to this post. Since Manipur-Myanmar border is quite porous, I cannot rule out completely that there is no smuggling of timber. There might have been some instances of smuggling of timbers,” said L Joykumar Singh, District Forest Officer (DFO), Ukhrul District.

Singh also mentioned that they were unable to prevent the illegal timber trade in the area due to lack of adequate manpower and poor law and order in the state.

Timber is being smuggled at an alarming pace to feed a global wood-processing industry.

According to the State of Forest Report 2001, by Forest Survey of India, Dehradun, the forest cover of Manipur was 16,926 square kilometres, which was 75.81 per cent of the total geographical area of the state as against 17,384 square kilometres in 1999. By L C K Singh (ANI)

Tsunami hit New York City 2,300 years ago

London, May 4 (ANI): Scientists have come up with a scenario that suggests a huge tsunami crashed into the New York City region 2,300 years ago, dumping sediment and shells across Long Island and New Jersey and casting wood debris far up the Hudson River.

According to a report by BBC News, Steven Goodbred, an Earth scientist at Vanderbilt University, said that it may have been a large storm, but evidence is increasingly pointing to a rare Atlantic Ocean tsunami.

He said that large gravel, marine fossils and other unusual deposits found in sediment cores across the area date to 2,300 years ago.

The size and distribution of material would require a high velocity wave and strong currents to move it, and it is unlikely that short bursts produced in a storm would suffice, he explained.

“If we’re wrong, it was one heck of a storm,” said Goodbred.

According to Goodbred, the New York wave was on the Grand Banks scale – three to four metres high and big enough to leap over the barrier islands; but that it did not reach the magnitude of the 2004 Sumatran tsunami.

He first proposed the link between the layers of unusual debris found in sediment cores and a tsunami while studying shellfish populations in Great South Bay, Long Island.

He extracted many mud cores with incongruous 20cm layers of sand and gravel.

Their age matched that of wood deposits buried in the Hudson riverbed and marine fossils in a New Jersey debris flow in cores gathered by other researchers.

“The fist-sized gravel he found in Long Island would require a high velocity of water – well over a metre per second – to land where it did,” said Goodbred.

Among the fossils and shells sandwiched in the organic black mud of Sandy Hook Bay, New Jersey, Marine Geologist Cecilia McHugh of Queens College, City University of New York, discovered mud balls made from red clay that matched iron-rich sediments found onshore.

“The balls form their spherical shape only through vigorous reworking, and they do not form in small storms,” said Dr McHugh.

“I didn’t think much about it until we dated the deposit and came up with the same date that Steve did on Long Island,” she said.

According to Driscoll, to rule out the possibility of a severe storm, tsunami groups should collect more core samples to see whether the distribution of the debris is consistent. (ANI)

Italy’s elegant Forte dei Marmi still lures the jet set

Forte dei Marmi – At the turn of the century, the Tuscan coastal town of Forte dei Marmi became hugely popular with artists, aristocrats and intellectuals from all over Europe.

Nowadays, the “beautiful people” still flock here to spend their holidays among the pine trees. In downtown Forte dei Marmi, the fashionable Café Versilia on the Piazza Garibaldi was a popular haunt for famous cultural names such as English writer Aldous Huxley, Italian poet Gabriele d’Annunzio or German author Thomas Mann. The latter allegedly based the character of the sorcerer, Cipolla, in his 1929 novella Mario and Magician on someone he met on the premises.

The tranquil resort on the attractive Versilia coast continues to lure an immaculately-clad jet set and remains a byword for elegance. Guests sip a glass of prosecco under the linen sunshades which line the far-reaching golden sands.

The beach bars are abuzz in the summer months, competing for attention alongside an extensive range of water sport activities and an ambitious cultural programme. The main beach stretches five kilometres between the rivulets of Fiumetto in the south and Cinquale to the north.

The name Forte dei Marmi translates as The Fortress of the Marble and the first settlers in this swampy area were dealers in the glossy white rock whose use in architecture goes back to classical Greek times.

In the 16th century, a certain Michelangelo Buonarotti, the Renaissance all-round genius commonly known only by his first name, was commissioned by Pope Leopold X. to draw up plans for the road to connect the marble quarries at Massa and Carrara in Apennine Mountains with the coast.

The artist set to work and both the road and a 300-metre along the pier were built so that the prized stone could be hauled aboard sailing ships. Today both locals and tourists gather at the spot to admire the spectacular sunsets.

A century later, the resort began to attract fishermen, farmers and quarry workers and it was in 1788 under the aegis of Grand Duke Leopold I that the town acquired its most notable landmark, the red brick fort in the main square “Il Fortino.”

Tourism in Forte dei Marmi only began to boom after World War II when wealthy Italian industrialists chose it as a summer retreat. Today the “Fortino” is home to the Museum for Satire and Caricature and visitors can admire exhibits dating back to antiquity as well as contemporary works. For those who want more there is even a specialised multimedia archive on the topic.

This town of around 8,500 residents – known to its admirers as “Forte” – offers an unusually rich tableau of cultural activities. There are numerous galleries and the town is a useful springboard for visits throughout Tuscany. Lucca, Florenz and Pisa are only a short ride away by local train.

There are plenty of chic cafes to visit in the central Forti and the town offers a wide range of hotel accommodation to suit all budgets. Four-star hotels line the promenade behind a fringe of oleander and palm trees while the more reasonably-priced establishments are generally found in the centre or on side streets.

The nearby Apennines offers all manner of sporting pursuits such as hiking and climbing tours while at the seaside windsurfers and kite surfers will find plenty to keep them occupied. A fine way of seeing Forti is from the saddle of a bicycle since in contrast to most places in Italy, the town has an extensive network of cycle paths. (dpa)

World’s tallest man still undecided about entering Guinness Book of Records

London, May 1 (ANI): The ‘world’s tallest man’ has yet to decide if he would like the Guinness Book of Records to officially enter his name in their records.

Zhao Liang, 27, who is from China, is four inches taller than the current holder of the title, 2.36-metre herdsman Bao Xishun, and he needs two beds to rest his 8ft, 1in frame, reports the Telegraph.

As he recuperates in hospital on a makeshift iron bed in the northern city of Tianjin after an operation on his foot, he seems almost bored with his fame.

The hospital was forced to put together two standard-sized iron beds to accommodate the giant from central Henan province whose parents are of average height, but he still has trouble fitting his large frame onto the narrow mattresses.

His shoulders, hands, legs and feet are all oversized, and he finds it difficult to find clothes and shoes to fit. (ANI)

Fastest man on earth Bolt survives car crash

London, Apr 30 (ANI): World 100 and 200-metre record holder Usain Bolt has been admitted to hospital, following a motor car accident along the Vineyard Toll section of Highway 2000 in Jamaica.

Bolt’s car had been travelling into Kingston from Clarendon when the accident occurred. The road was slippery from afternoon showers.

Bolt and a female passenger were taken to a hospital in Spanish Town, near Kingston, where the Jamaican sprinter was treated before being sent home.

Bolt’s manager, Norman Peart, said the 22-year-old sustained nothing worse than scratches from thorn bushes when he stepped out of the car on the side of the road. “We are very relieved he’s OK. Everybody is fine,” Peart said.

Bolt is reported to have had a thorn stick him on the soft part of his left foot, after he stepped out of the car, The Guardian reported

Police sergeant David Sheriff reported that Bolt lost control of his BMW M3, a present given to him by his sponsors at Puma after his performances at the Beijing Olympics.

Bolt attended a specialist BMW M driver school at the Nürburgring in Germany last year to learn how to handle the high-performance car. (ANI)

Polish climber killed on Mount Dhaulagiri

Kathmandu – A Polish climber was killed in Nepal’s part of the Himalayan mountain range, making him the first casualty of the spring climbing season, the Nepalese government said Thursday.

Piotr Morawski, 37, died after falling into a crevasse on Dhaulagiri on Wednesday, the Tourism Ministry’s Mountaineering Department said.

Morawski was making his way between different camps on the mountain to acclimatize when the accident happened at around 5,600 metres.

The mountain has seen unusual amounts of snow and weather and visibility had been bad at the time of the accident, the ministry said.

The 8,167-metre Dhaulagiri is the world seventh highest peak. It was first scaled by members of a Swiss-Austrian expedition in May 1960.

Nepal’s spring climbing season starts from April and last until the end of May.

The majority of expeditions attempt to reach the summits from mid- to the end of May after spending several weeks on the mountain acclimatizing.

A total of 63 expeditions have received permission to climb mountains in the Nepalese Himalayas in the current season, Tourism Ministry said.

Twenty-five expeditions received permission to climb world’s highest peak, Mount Everest.

Nepal has opened 326 peaks for climbers. (dpa)

Oprah Winfrey offered to buy Steve Irwin statue

Washington, April 10 (ANI): Oprah Winfrey has been approached with an offer to buy a 60,000-dollar statue of tragic crocodile hunter Steve Irwin – because no one in his native Australia is interested in buying it.

Aussie sculptor Mitch Mitchell designed the two metre (6.5 foot)-high bronze tribute and hoped to sell it to a museum in Irwin’s native Melbourne.

However, Mitchell received no offers, which prompted him to approach the talk show queen, whose show Irwin appeared on before his death.

“He’s a Melburnian and he’s the most famous Australian there’s probably ever been,” Contactmusic quoted Mitchell as saying.

“It should stay in Melbourne. It’s the place of his birth and he deserves to be honoured, but nobody here wants to buy it,” Mitchell added. (ANI)