Friday, 3 January 2025

Possible piece of space junk falls onto Kenyan village.

Experts from the Kenya Space Agency are investigating after a large metal ring fell onto the village of Mukuku in Makueni County, about 50 km to the southeast of Nairobi, at about 3.00 pm on Monday 30 December 2024.  The ring is about 3.5 m in diameter, and weighs about 500 kg, and is described as having been hot when it landed. The current working theory is that the ring may be a separation ring from a multi-stage launch vehicle.

A metal ring which fell on the village of Mukuku in Kenya on Monday 30 December 2024. AirLive.

This is the first time a piece of space junk has fallen onto Kenya, and it is unlikely that there will be a repeat in the near future. To date, no-one on Earth has been injured by space junk, but some cases of damage to property have been reported. This is likely to be an increasing problem, as the amount of traffic between Earth and orbit increases every year, and there is no internationally recognised legal code for managing the debris produced by such events. In December 2024 there were 30 rockets launched into orbit by four different space agencies and five commercial organizations.

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Using strontium isotope ratios to try to determine the origin of victims of the transAtlantic slave trade.

Between the fifteenth to nineteenth centuries, at least 12.5 million people were abducted from sub-Saharan Africa and taken as slaves to the Americas, and to a lesser extent Europe, the largest forced migration in Human history. This has had a profound impact on the demographics, economics, and politics of both Africa and the Americas, and while is some ways the process was well-documented (we have, for example, documented records of the voyages of at least 30 079 vessels which were involved in the slave trade, including records of ports they visited and the number of captives they transported), we know very little about the identities of the individuals involved and their actual points of origin.

Recent studies have used genetic information from archaeological remains from the Caribbean, Brazil, North America, St Helena, and South Africa, have had some success in determining the populations from which individuals descended, this cannot tell us where they a person was born or brought up.

Strontium isotopes (specifically the ratio between the isotopes strontium⁸⁷ and strontium⁸⁶) in water are largely determined by bedrock, as well as rainfall and geomorphology, and is taken up and incorporated into biomineralized tissues, such as tooth and bone. Importantly, these ratios remain stable over archaeological timescales, enabling archaeologists to use them to determine the origin of Human and Animal remains, as long as a geological reference map, with the isotope ratios present in appropriate locations, is available. 

In sub-Saharan Africa, strontium isotope ratios have been used to trace the migration routes of large Mammals, and to determine the origin of ivory seized from smugglers, as well as to analyse landscape use by early Hominins, but has been under-used in other spheres, such as historical archaeology, largely because data on strontium isotope ratios are not available for large areas of the continent, and in particular much of West and West-Central Africa, the areas from which the overwhelming majority of slaves were taken to the New World. This is in part due to the high cost associated with carrying out strontium isotope testing over large areas, with the added complication that some parts of the continent are plagued by ongoing conflicts and political instability, making the necessary fieldwork difficult and dangerous.

In a paper published in the journal Nature Communications on 30 December 2024, a team of scientists led by Xueye Wang of the Center for Archaeological Science at Sichuan University and the Anthropology Department at the University of California Santa Cruz, present strontium isotope ratios from 778 new environmental studies from 24 African countries, mostly in West and West-Central Africa, which they combine with 1488 previously published strontium isotope ratios from other studies, to build a more detailed map of strontium isotope ratios across sub-Saharan Africa. These are then compared to ratios obtained from Human remains at two cemeteries in the Americas associated with African slaves, the Anson Street African Burial Ground in Charleston, South Carolina, and the Pretos Novos Cemetery in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Strontium⁸⁷/strontium⁸⁶ ratios in Africa range from 0.70381 to 0.87810, a far higher range than is known from any other continent studied. Some areas have a high proportion of radiogenic strontium⁸⁷, notably those areas with an underlying Archaean bedrock, such as Angola, Zimbabwe, Zambia, western Tanzania, northern South Africa, Côte d'Ivoire, Liberia, Sierra Leone, and southwestern Mali. Other areas have a very low level of strontium⁸⁷, particularly areas of East Africa covered by Mesozoic-Cainozoic volcanic rocks, and areas of South Africa covered by flood basalts, as these tend to generate soils with a high cation exchange capacity and clay content. Strontium ratios are also affected by precipitation levels and elevation, both of which impact the weathering rate of silicate rocks.

Geological map and sampling locations. (a) Simplified geological map. (b) Map showing the environmental sampling locations from this study and previously published work. The sampling locations focused on filling gaps in West Africa, West-Central Africa, and parts of South Africa, covering all major geological units across the African continent south of the Sahara. Wang et al. (2024).

Strontium isotope ratios were analysed for five individuals from the Anson Street African Burial Ground for which genetic analysis had been used to determine a population-of-origin, and five individuals from the Pretos Novos Cemetery, for which this data was not available, but oxygen isotope ratios, which can be used to determine diet, were.

Two of the Anson Street African Burial Ground individuals had previously been determined to be of West-Central African origin, both of which produced strontium isotope ratios consistent with an origin in eastern-central Angola. The remaining three individuals were all determined to be from West Africa by genetic analysis. The first of these produced a strontium isotope ratio which indicates that they could have originated from a wide area, including large regions of Liberia, Côte d’Ivoire, Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Mali. The remaining two individuals showed much higher levels of radiogenic strontium, consistent with having come from either a 100 km stretch of the coast of southern Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana, or from the eastern part of Guinea.

Four of the five individuals from the Pretos Novos Cemetery produced strontium isotope ratios consistent with having come from different regions of Angola or South-East Africa, while the fifth produced a result consistent with having come from parts of Guinea, Nigeria, Cameroon, or South Africa. 

Oxygen isotope ratios suggest that this individual grew up in a region where the main crops were C₄ Plants. This would exclude the 'Rice Coast' of West Africa, which runs from Guinea Bissau through Guinea into western Côte d’Ivoire, or the vegecultural zone of southern West Africa, where the predominant crops are Manioc, Yams, and other C₃ root vegetables, but would include parts of central Nigeria where the main crops are Sorghum and Millet, and parts of northern Cameroon where different areas would have grown Sorghum and Millet or Maize (itself introduced from the Americas by European traders). Potentially, a South African could have also had a diet dominated by C₄ Plants, which are easily grown in many places there, but Wang et al. consider this less likely, given the much larger number of slaves taken from West Africa to Brazil.

The four other individuals from Pretos Novos Cemetery are hypothesized to have come from different parts of Angola based upon strontium isotope ratios. This was supported by the oxygen isotope analysis, which suggests they did not share common dietary habits in early life. This is consistent with the known agricultural practices in Angola at the time, with different regions emphasizing the cultivation of manioc and other root crops, or maize and millet.

Wang et al. are confident that improved groundwater sampling from a wider area of Africa would have the potential to greatly improve our ability to determine the origin of African remains from the New World. With the limited sampling available, they were able to provide approximate locations of origin for ten individuals from two well-studied burial grounds, one in the United States and the other in Brazil, and while their answers cannot be taken as 100% reliable at this stage, none of them contradict data from previous studies, nor do they suggest improbable points of origin for the individuals examined.

There are still some notable gaps in the strontium ratio maps used by Wang et al. most notably Namibia and the Sahel Region. Wang et al. identify these regions as being sparsely populated, and therefore unlikely to have been heavily targeted by slavers. This is probably true for Namibia, where the most habitable areas are separated from the coat be large areas of desert, but certainly isn't true for the Sahel Region, which was home to powerful states such as the Mali Empire, and where travellers such as Mungo Park recorded extensive activity by slavers. Sampling is also limited for Mozambique, from where historical records show that at least half a million people were taken as slaves in the first half of the nineteenth century. The method is further limited in that it can only trace the origins of people born and raised in Africa, anyone raised in the Americas will have a strontium isotope signal from there, no matter where their parents came from.

Wang et al. also note that an improved isotope map for Africa, particularly if it includes other elements, such as oxygen, hydrogen, sulphur, and carbon, has the potential to improve not just our ability to identify the origins of Human remains from archaeological contexts, but also items such as smuggled wildlife and timber. It also has the ability to improve our understanding of wildlife migrations, or historic dispersals, including those of species extinct today. Moreover, it also has the ability to help identify the thousands of African migrants who perish in the Mediterranean Sea during their passage to southern Europe, something which has been described as potentially the greatest humanitarian disaster in Europe since the Second World War.

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Thursday, 2 January 2025

Two new species of Solenogastre from the Gulf of Mexico.

Solenogastres (Aplacophora) are a unique group of Molluscs which have vermiform bodies (i.e. are 'worm-shaped'), lack shells (although some have calcareous sclerites), and have a greatly reduced mantle and foot. This anatomy long led evolutionary biologists to conclude that Solenogastres represent a 'primitive' state for Molluscs, and they were interpreted as an early-branching clade with a sister-group relationship to all other Molluscs. Modern genetics-based taxonomy has reviewed this slightly, showing that the Solenogastres are the sister group to the Chitons (Polyplacophora), a superficially Gastropod-like group which have segmented shells and lack internal torsion, with these two combined forming the out-group to all other Molluscs. There are currently about 300 species of described Solenogastres, although it is thought that their true diversity is much higher. Solenogastres are notoriously difficult to locate and identify, particularly for non-specialists. Most species are less than 5 mm in length, many live infaunally in marine sediments, some of them on the oceans deep-abyssal plains, while others live epifaunally or on the bodies of Corals of Hydrozoans.

In a paper published in the journal ZooKeys on 31 September 2024, Carmen Cobo of the Department of Invertebrate Zoology at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, William Farris, Chandler Olsen, and Emily McLaughlin, of the Department of Biological Sciences at the University of Alabama, and Kevin Kocot, also of the Department of Biological Sciences at the University of Alabama, and of the Alabama Museum of Natural History, describe two new species of Solenogastre from the Gulf of Mexico, collected from Autonomous Reef Monitoring Structures.

Autonomous Reef Monitoring Structures are standardised structures used to sample marine life on reefs. They are made up of multiple stacked flat plates which mimic a complex reef-environment. These structures are screwed onto a reef-surface, where they attract settling benthic organisms, and can be collected at a later date, without damaging the overall reef-structure. The Autonomous Reef Monitoring Structures examined by Cobo et al. where placed on reefs in the Gulf of Mexico by the Research Vessel Point Sur in May 2019, and collected in August 2021.

One of the Autonomous Reef Monitoring Structures deployed in the Gulf of Mexico from which Solenogasters were collected. Cobo et al. (2024).

The first new species described by Cobo et al. is placed within the genus Dondersia and given the specific name tweedtae, in honour of marine biologist Sarah Tweedt, who collected the specimens used in the study, for her outstanding work studying invertebrate biodiversity using Autonomous Reef Monitoring Structures. It is described from a single specimen from an Autonomous Reef Monitoring Structure deployed at a depth of 82 m.

The single known specimen of Dondersia tweedtae is about 14 mm in length and 0.55 mm wide at the mid-body, although in life the Animal expanded and contracted its body as it moved. It is bright pink in colour, with a dorsal keel made up of seventeen distinct bright yellow lobes. It has a smooth appearance, with a covering of scale-like sclerites, of which there are three different types. 

Habitus of Dondersia tweedtae. (A) Field photographs of the holotype showing the contractions and extension range (usnm 1718003). (B) Photograph of the holotype preserved in ethanol B’ detail of the lobes of the dorsal keel. Star indicates the anterior end of the Animal. Cobo et al. (2024).

The second new species is placed within the genus Eleutheromenia and given the specific name bullescens, where 'bullescens' derives from the Latin 'bullescere', meaning 'to bubble', in reference to the protrusions on the dorsal keel of the Animal. The species is described from two specimens collected from an Autonomous Reef Monitoring Structure placed at a depth of 82 m within the Gulf of Mexico, about 100 km to the west of the structure from which Dondersia tweedtae was collected.

The specimens of Eleutheromenia bullescens are 10-12 mm in length and 0.5-1.0 mm in width at their midsections, although again, in life these Animals expanded and contracted their bodies as they moved. They were light orange in colour, with a dorsal keel made up of numerous lobes, and a covering of spines formed from hollow sclerites, some of which are hook- or harpoon-shaped.

Habitus of Eleutheromenia bullescens. (A), (A’) Field images of the Holotype (USNM 1718004) (B), (B’) Field images of the paratype (USNM 1718005). (C( Paratype in 95% ethanol. (D) Detail of the dorsal lobes in the holotype (decalcified mid-body region). Images were captured using Olympus DSX100 optical microscope with anti-halation and fast HDR adjustments; brightness 0016 to 0022, texture 50-71, contrast 36-50. Star indicates the anterior end of the animal. Arrow indicates detached lobes and their 'pedunculi'. Cobo et al. (2024).

Both Dondersia tweedtae and Eleutheromenia bullescens have distict dorsal keels, something not generally found in Solenogastres, combined with brighter colouration than is typical for the group. Despite this, they were confirmed by both morphological and genetic analysis to be members of distantly related groups. Furthermore, the structures of the dorsal keels are quite different in the two species, strongly suggesting that this is a result of convergent evolution, rather then recent common ancestry. the reason for this is unclear, though Cobo et al. note that in the absence of shells, Solanogastres have adopted a range of other defence strategies, including mimicry, crypsis, autotomy, production of defensive chemicals, or the retention of exogenous biochemically active compounds and cnidocytes (the stinging cells of Cnidarians) from their prey. They further note that the lobes which make up the dorsal keel of Eleutheromenia bullescens contained a number of cells which appeared to be derived from another organism, including one possible cnidocyte.

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Wednesday, 1 January 2025

Asteroid 2024 YW8 passs the Earth.

Asteroid 2024 YW8 passed by the Earth at a distance of 28 323 km (0.074 times the average distance between the Earth and the Moon, or 0.0002% of the distance between the Earth and the Sun, but 27 915 km above the altitude at which the International Space Station orbits), with a relative velocity of about 8.83 km per second, slightly after 9.25 pm GMT on Monday 30 December 2024. There was no danger of the asteroid hitting us, though were it to do so it would not have presented a significant threat. 2024 YW8 has an estimated equivalent diameter of 1-2 m (i.e. it is estimated that a spherical object with the same volume would be 1-2 m in diameter), and an object of this size would be expected to explode in an airburst (an explosion caused by superheating from friction with the Earth's atmosphere, which is greater than that caused by simply falling, due to the orbital momentum of the asteroid) more than 42 km above the ground, with only fragmentary material reaching the Earth's surface.

30 second image of 2024 YW8 taken with the Elena Planetwave 17" Telescope at Ceccano in Italy on 30 December 2024. The asteroid is the small point at the centre of the image, indicated by the white arrow, the longer lines are stars, their elongation being caused by the telescope tracking the asteroid over the length of the exposure. At the time when the image was taken, the asteroid was about 2.5 million km from the Earth. Gianluca Masi/Virtual Telescope Project.

2024 YW8 was discovered on 30 December 2024 (a few hours before its closest approach to the Earth) by the University of Arizona's Mt. Lemmon Survey at the Steward Observatory on Mount Lemmon in the Catalina Mountains north of Tucson. The designation 2024 YW8 implies that the asteroid was the 222nd object (asteroid W8 - in numbering asteroids the letters A-Z, excluding I, are assigned numbers from 1 to 25, with a number added to the end each time the alphabet is ended, so that A = 1, A1 = 26, A2 = 51, etc., which means that W8 = (8 x 25) + 22 = 222) discovered in the second half of December 2024 (period 2024 y - the year being split into 24 half-months represented by the letters A-Y, with I being excluded).

The relative positions of 2024 YW8 and the Earth at 9.00 pm on Monday 30 December 2024. JPL Small Body Database.

2024 YW8 is calculated to have a 594 day (1.60 year) orbital period, with an elliptical orbit tilted at an angle of 2.19° to the plain of the Solar System which takes in to 0.91 AU from the Sun (91% of the average distance at which the Earth orbits the Sun) and out to 1.82 AU (1.82 times the distance at which the Earth orbits the Sun, more than the distance at which the planet Mars orbits). 

The positions and orbits of 2024 YW8 and the planets of the Inner Solar System at 9.00 pm on Thursday 30 December 2024. JPL Small Body Database.

2024 VW8 is therefore classed as an Apollo Group Asteroid, which is an asteroid that is on average further from the Sun than the Earth, but which does get closer. 2024 VW8 is calculated to have fairly regular close encounters with the Earth, with the last thought to have happened in January 2017 and the next predicted for December 2028. The asteroid is also predicted to have occasional close encounters with the planet Mars, with the next predicted for April 2069.

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Two-year-old girl killed by landslide in Catbalogan City on Samar Island, Philippines.

A two-year-old girl has been killed and three other people have been injured after a landslide destroyed a house in the Barangay Basiao area of Catbalogan City on Samar Island, Philippines. The incident happened late in the evening of Sunday 29 December 2024, following several days of rain in the area.  Landslides are a common problem after severe weather events, as excess pore water pressure can overcome cohesion in soil and sediments, allowing them to flow like liquids. Approximately 90% of all landslides are caused by heavy rainfall. The three people injured are described as  35-year-old man, a 30-year-old-woman, and a baby girl, who were members of the family living in the house. A neighbouring house was also damaged in the incident.

The remains of a house destroyed by a landslide in Catbalogan City on 29 December 2024. RPN DYKC Cebu.

Residents of nearby homes have been evacuated while the situation is assessed, and local government units are also carrying out assessments, and where necessary further evacuations, in other areas which may be at risk of landslips. Much of the island of Samar is currently suffering froom flooding, associated with the Northern Monsoon.

Monsoons are tropical sea breezes triggered by heating of the land during the warmer part of the year (summer). Both the land and sea are warmed by the Sun, but the land has a lower ability to absorb heat, radiating it back so that the air above landmasses becomes significantly warmer than that over the sea, causing the air above the land to rise and drawing in water from over the sea; since this has also been warmed it carries a high evaporated water content, and brings with it heavy rainfall. In the tropical dry season the situation is reversed, as the air over the land cools more rapidly with the seasons, leading to warmer air over the sea, and thus breezes moving from the shore to the sea (where air is rising more rapidly) and a drying of the climate.

Diagrammatic representation of wind and rainfall patterns in a tropical monsoon climate. Geosciences/University of Arizona.

Southeast Asia has two distinct Monsoon Seasons, with a Northeast Monsoon driven by winds from  the South China Sea during the Southern Hemisphere Summer and a Southwest Monsoon driven by winds from the southern Indian Ocean in the Northern Hemisphere Summer. Such a double Monsoon Season is common close to the equator, where the Sun is highest overhead around the equinoxes and lowest on the horizons around the solstices, making the solstices the coolest part of the year and the equinoxes the hottest.

The winds that drive the Northeast and Southwest Monsoons in Southeast Asia. Mynewshub.

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