Tide
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Active from | 1998 |
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Genres | Rock |
Record labels | Vibratone Records |
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Cela pametna zalozba | |
Opera Omnia Records | |
Antstreet Records | |
TIDE | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 1796098 |
About Tide
Climate protest: More than 100 arrested at world's largest coal port
... Rising Tide - which organised the action - has called it the " biggest act of civil disobedience for climate in Australia s history"...
US midterms: Republicans' 'red wave' looking more like a ripple
... That might suggest the abortion issue did play a part in holding back the Republican Tide...
Fossil of largest Jurassic pterosaur found on Skye
... Researchers from the Hunterian Museum, in Glasgow, and the Staffin Museum, on Skye, had to extract the rock slab entombing the fossil - a painstaking process and noisy process racing the incoming Tide - and bring it to the University of Edinburgh...
Italy's Sardines push back against Salvini's nationalist tide
... And the Sardines might just turn the political Tide...
Anneka Rice: Strictly star reflects on Challenge Anneka effects
... sister Mary-Joy Langdon founded the Wormwood Scrubs Pony Centre charity in 1989 brier quay, Isles of ScillyThe challenge: the construction of a new quay for the island and brier, which was accessible at low Tide...
Alesha MacPhail murder trial: 'Evidence' dumped in skip
... Mr Morrison said he did not touch the knife - which he believed had been in the sea and left onshore by the receding Tide - but noted its location before continuing to search for Alesha...
Fossil of largest Jurassic pterosaur found on Skye
The World 's largest Jurassic pterosaur - a 170-million-year-old winged Reptile - has been found protruding from The Rocks of The Isle of Skye.
PhD student Amelia Penny spotted its sharp-toothed jaw in a layer of ancient limestone on Skye's coast.
That initial discovery, in 2017, has now been followed up with detailed examination of The Fossil skeleton.
Those studies, published in the journal Current Biology, show the flying dinosaur had a 2. 5m (8ft) wingspan.
The research, led by PhD student Natalia Jagielska, also revealed the creature was a species new to science.
It has now been given the Gaelic name Dearc sgiathanach (pronounced Jark Ski-an-Ach), which translates as " winged Reptile ".
Researchers from the Hunterian Museum , in Glasgow, and the Staffin Museum, on Skye, had to extract The Rock slab entombing The Fossil - a painstaking process and noisy process racing the incoming Tide - and bring it to the University of Edinburgh.
But it was well worth the effort.
" Dearc is a fantastic example of why palaeontology will never cease to be astounding, " Ms Jagielska said.
" Pterosaur fossils as complete as this are very rare.
" As Flying Animals , their bones are really light, just like today's birds.
" That makes them incredibly fragile and so they don't usually preserve as fossils. "
The remarkable condition and completeness of this Specimen - particularly The Detail preserved in its Skull - has already allowed scientists from the universities of Edinburgh and St Andrews and National Museums Scotland, where The Fossil will be displayed and studied further, to conclude Dearc had good eyesight.
" We look forward to studying Dearc in greater detail to discover more about how it lived and its behaviour, " Ms Jagielska added.
Prof Steve Brusatte, of the University of Edinburgh, who was leading The Isle of Skye Field Trip , called it " a superlative Scottish Fossil ".
" The preservation is amazing, far beyond any pterosaur ever found in Scotland and probably The Best British skeleton found since The Days of [Fossil Hunter ] Mary Anning in the early 1800s, " He Said .
And its size " tells us that pterosaurs got larger much earlier than we thought, long before the Cretaceous period when they were competing with birds, and that's hugely significant".
Source of news: bbc.com