Minecraft is adding tridents, shipwrecks, dolphins and coral reefs in Spring 2018

Minecraft’s waters are currently a bit lifeless: if you’re not building an underwater base or raiding an ocean monument then there’s little reason to dive below the surface. That will all change next Spring with the arrival of the Update Aquatic, which adds shipwrecks, dolphins, and coral reefs.

The update will split the oceans into biomes, the team said at the Minecon Earth conference, with different type of fish, coral and kelp depending on the temperature of the water. You’ll be able to catch fish in a bucket and move them around, so you can build giant aquariums in your base.

The new structures, including shipwrecks and icebergs, will hide treasure, and dolphins will leap from the sea and guide you to that treasure, which is nice of them.

Tridents are the thing I’m most excited about: they’re weapons that you can use for both melee and ranged attacks. Throwing them will spear your target but it means you’ll lose the weapon forever, unless you enchant the trident so that it comes back to you like a boomerang. Once you’ve got that enchantment you’ll have a weapon that you can use in virtually any situation. You’ll also be able to enchant the weapon to let you dash short distances in water or in the rain.

Bubble columns will liven up underwater locales, while new physics rules will ensure water interacts properly with slabs and fence posts. It’s all in the video above: skip to 9:00 to see the new items, mobs and structures in action.

The development team also announced the results of a fan vote on what mob they should add to the game next, and the winner is a flying stingray that attacks you if you haven’t slept in days (it’s the top-right one below).

The enemy, which doesn’t have a name yet, spawns in high altitudes and is attracted to insomnia, so if you haven’t had some shut-eye for a while a group will swoop down and try to eat your flesh. Nasty.

Some bad news on the 4K Super Duper Graphics pack for the game: it was meant to come out this year but you’ll now have to wait until 2018 to make Minecraft prettier (or just download one of the many fan-made shader packs). 

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Harry and Meghan ‘set to move into’ romantic Windsor cottage complete with bedroom gilded dolphins and marble Graeco-Egyptian fireplace

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are believed to be moving into this plush Grade II-listed property – which was once the home of Princess Margaret ’s lover Group Captain Peter Townsend.

The newlyweds have already been for a viewing and fallen in love with the sprawling manor in Home Park after being offered it as a gift from the Queen, according to a source.

Nestled in the heart of the Crown Estate’s private 655-acre royal park, Adelaide Cottage was built in 1831 as a retreat for William IV’s wife Queen Adelaide.

The home comes complete with a bedroom with gilded dolphins and comes with a Graeco-Egyptian fireplace and is just a few minutes walk from Windsor Castle – where the couple married on May 19.

The source added: “There are seven gated entrances and exits to Windsor Castle so the newlyweds could come and go without worrying about being photographed.”

The newlyweds have reportedly already been for a viewing and fallen in love with the sprawling manor in Home Park
They were offered it offered it as a gift from the Queen, according to a source
The home is just a few minutes walk from Windsor Castle – where the couple married on May 19

a royal source told the Mailonline .

Adelaide Cottage, which underwent renovation in 2015, is described as “picturesque” by the heritage organisation Historic England.

It says the main bedroom in the generously sized cottage boasts a coved ceiling with gilded dolphins and rope ornament from a 19th century yacht, Royal George.

Princess Margaret has a doomed romance with Group Captain Peter Townsend
Group Captain Peter Townsend lived at Adelaide Cottage from 1945

It also has a marble Graeco-Egyptian fireplace.

The secluded property is located just east of Windsor Castle and is within easy distance from London.

It is also close to the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh’s private apartments and only a few miles from the Guards Polo Club in Windsor Great Park, which Harry regularly visits.

Kensington Palace was unavailable for comment.

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Paul Walker’s Daughter Is Carrying On His Legacy To Help Save The Oceans

Paul Walker’s daughter Meadow is carrying on her father’s legacy to help save the oceans. 

While the actor was likely best known for his role in the Fast and Furious films, Walker also had a passion for marine biology. He studied the subject at college and found time to pursue his interest in oceans in between starring in major Hollywood films.

In 2006, Walker became a board member of the Billfish Foundation, a non-profit dedicated to conserving and enhancing billfish populations around the world, while in 2010 he spent 10 days as part of the crew for a National Geographic series where they tagged great white sharks to gather DNA samples and study their migratory patterns.

The American tragically died in a car crash in 2013, after which his daughter Meadow launched the The Paul Walker Foundation, a charity which has the mission to simply ‘do good’.

Announcing the launch of the foundation in 2015, Meadow wrote:

Reflecting on my father, I found myself reflecting on his passions. His passion for the ocean, his passion for rescuing animals, his passion for helping people and his passion for spontaneous goodwill.

I wanted to start this foundation because I want to share that piece of him with the world. I want to share that part of him with others. I am tremendously proud to be launching The #PaulWalkerFoundation (@paulwalkerfdn) on his birthday. I can’t think of a better way to celebrate my father.

A post shared by Meadow Walker (@meadowwalker) on

The foundation works to keep Walker’s legacy alive and carry forward his passion for helping to save the ocean with donations being put towards ‘providing grants, scholarship opportunities and spontaneous acts of goodwill.’

The website reads:

The Paul Walker Foundation will continue to do the work that Paul started. We are focused on his passions and dedicated to his legacy. He is always in our hearts and we are reminded daily to do good and live life like Paul.

Paul’s passion for the ocean, a curious mind and a spontaneous heart lives on in The Paul Walker Foundation.

In 2015, the charity supported the Monterey Bay Aquarium, who awarded the Paul Walker Ocean Leadership Award and Youth Award to two people who were working hard to protect the ocean.

Speaking to , Meadow explained how the foundation’s donation to the aquarium helped continue her dad’s passion, saying:

My dad was in awe of the ocean and wanted to see it protected. It’s exciting to know scholarships and students will ensure the future of our oceans. It’s an honour to be supporting them and the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s teen program.

Julie Packard, executive director of the Monterey Bay Aquarium, said of the foundation:

The public knew Paul Walker best for his roles as an actor, the Fast & Furious series among many others. We knew him as an aspiring marine biologist and a lifelong friend of the ocean.

Growing up, Paul was inspired by Jacques Cousteau—his mentor and role model. He studied marine biology in college and planned to make that his career before he was drawn into acting. But the ocean was never far from his life—or his concerns.

I’m so happy that Paul’s daughter, Meadow Walker, has created the Paul Walker Foundation to carry her father’s ideals forward.

What an awesome way to preserve her father’s legacy!

If you have a story you want to tell, send it to [email protected] 

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Attenborough plea to rid oceans of plastic

The 91-year-old said it was time to save the “future of humanity” after the young animal was shown lying dead after its mother mistook the plastic toothpick for food in an episode of his BBC series Blue Planet II.

Writing in a Radio Times column, the iconic TV presenter highlighted the eight million tonnes of plastic being dumped into the sea every year, as well as global warming and overfishing.

He also called on Donald Trump to reconsider his threat to withdraw from the Paris Agreement.

Caroline Power discovered a 'sea of plastic' near the island of Roatán. Pic: Caroline Pwer Photography
Video:Retailers back bottle deposit scheme

The comments come amid concerns more than a million birds and 100,000 sea mammals and turtles die each year from eating plastic waste or getting tangled in it.

“Never before have we been so aware of what we are doing to our planet – and never before have we had such power to do something about it,” he said.

“Surely we have a responsibility to care for the planet on which we live? The future of humanity, and indeed of all life on Earth, now depends on us doing so.

“Plastic is now found everywhere in the ocean, from its surface to its greatest depths.”

Plastic pollution has reached the very depths of our oceans
Video:Plastic reaching the deepest parts of our oceans

Sir David spoke of animals being “strangled” by plastic.

“There are fragments of nets so big they entangle the heads of fish, birds and turtles, and slowly strangle them,” he said.

“Other pieces of plastic are so small that they are mistaken for food and eaten, accumulating in fishes’ stomachs, leaving them undernourished.”

He added: “Our wellbeing is inextricably bound up with the health of the oceans.”

However, he insisted “all is not yet lost” and urged people to reduce the amount of plastic they use in everyday life.

Mr Trump has insisted there was 'absolutely no collusion' between his campaign team and Russia

Image:Sir David says he hopes Donald Trump would change his views on the Paris Agreement

On the US President, the veteran broadcaster said he hoped Mr Trump would change his mind on the Paris Agreement, which aims to respond to the global climate change threat.

He said: “Let us hope that Trump will eventually recognise that the Paris Agreement was not about Pittsburgh, or even Paris, but the entire planet.”

Sky’s Ocean Rescue campaign has been urging people to cut out single-use plastic from their lives in a bid to help save the world’s seas.

Ghost fishing is one of the greatest problems facing our oceans
Video:Sky News Special Report: Our Ocean

Sir David Attenborough has called for action on plastic waste clogging up the world’s oceans after a baby albatross was killed by a toothpick in his latest documentary series.

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Just 13% of global oceans undamaged by humanity, research reveals

Just 13% of the world’s oceans remain untouched by the damaging impacts of humanity, the first systematic analysis has revealed. Outside the remotest areas of the Pacific and the poles, virtually no ocean is left harbouring naturally high levels of marine wildlife.

Huge fishing fleets, global shipping and pollution running off the land are combining with climate change to degrade the oceans, the researchers found. Furthermore, just 5% of the remaining ocean wilderness is within existing marine protection areas.

“We were astonished by just how little marine wilderness remains,” says Kendall Jones, at the University of Queensland, Australia, and the Wildlife Conservation Society, who led the new research. “The ocean is immense, covering over 70% of our planet, but we’ve managed to significantly impact almost all of this vast ecosystem.”

Jones said the last remnants of wilderness show how vibrant ocean life was before human activity came to dominate the planet. “They act as time machines,” he said. “They are home to unparalleled levels of marine biodiversity and some of the last places on Earth you find large populations of apex predators like sharks.”

Just 13% of the world’s oceans remain as wilderness

Much of the wilderness is in the high seas, beyond the protected areas that nations can create. The scientists said a high seas conservation treaty is urgently needed, with negotiations beginning in September under the UN Law of the Sea convention. They also said the $4bn a year in government subsidies spent on high seas fishing must be cut. “Most fishing on the high seas would actually be unprofitable if it weren’t for big subsidies,” Jones said.

The new work joins recent studies in highlighting the threat to oceans. Scientists warned in January that the oceans are suffocating, with huge dead zones quadrupling since 1950, and in February, new maps revealed half of world’s oceans are now industrially fished. “Oceans are under threat now as never before in human history,” said Sir David Attenborough at the conclusion of the BBC series Blue Planet 2 in December.

published in the journal Current Biology, classified areas of ocean as wilderness if they were in the lowest 10% of human impacts, either from one source, such as bottom trawling, or a combination of them all.

As most are on the high seas, very few are protected. “This means the vast majority of marine wilderness could be lost at any time, as improvements in technology allow us to fish deeper and ship farther than ever before,” Jones said.

Climate change is causing growing damage and Jones said Arctic wilderness areas protected by ice cover in the 1970s had now been lost after the ice melted and fishing boats were able to access them. It is increasingly a global problem, he said: “In future, as climate change gets worse, I think you can definitely say pretty much everywhere in the ocean is going to come under increasing level of threat.”

In the Antarctic, the major fishing companies now back the creation of the world’s biggest marine sanctuary. Photograph: Daniel Beltrá/Greenpeace

There are some bright spots, such as the remote corals in the British Indian Ocean Territory around Diego Garcia, from which islanders were controversially removed in the 1960s. In the Antarctic, major fishing companies now back the creation of the world’s biggest marine sanctuary.

The new study aimed to include the maximum area of likely wilderness, said Ward Appeltans, at the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission run by Unesco: “So the claim that only 13% of ocean wilderness remains is all the more striking.” He said the research focused on the ocean floor, and did not include impacts on the water column above it, and backed calls for a global ocean conservation treaty.

Jones said: “Beyond just valuing nature for nature’s sake, having these large intact seascapes that function in a way that they always have done is really important for the Earth. They maintain the ecological processes that are how the climate and Earth system function – [without them] you can start seeing big knock-on effects with drastic and unforeseen consequences.”

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Canada Passes A Bill That Bans The Captivity Of Dolphins And Whales

Recently, it has been prohibited by the Canadian government to keep Dolphins and whales in aquariums and also the government passed a bill that prohibits their imprisonment. The name of the bill would be S-203, it was first suggested in 2015, therefore, it has now finally been passed after three years of exhaustive legislative fights.

Furthermore, this bill is that there was support for it across many political parties which mean that issues related to the environment are not subject to party politics in Canada, and every citizen has to take a stand in order to protect the environment. Everyone has a role to play when it comes to environmental issues because we all share the planet earth. We live in it.

According to the bill S-203 which has passed, it bans the breeding of dolphins and whales in captivity, apart from that it also amends the present criminal code to include doing this as a criminal activity. However, Canadian marine parks can still keep the existing whales and dolphins who are under their care. Other than that, they have no rights to breed a new generation or capture more in the wild.

A lot of activists are still lobbying for the sending the remaining 55 cetaceans in captivity in Marineland to an open-water sanctuary. It is evident that the community is becoming more conscious and aware of how their activities are influencing the environment, Raising awareness from the government side is one of the best tools that can be used to change the things and reduce environmental issues. When there is an official law in place, so many things can be minimized and organizations will be stressed to follow suit.

Fortunately, one more Bill S-238 introduced to bans the import of shark’s fins. When there is a combine in political parties, Cetaceans can live with peace. Those Cetaceans do not have to end up in an aquarium for the watching preferences of humans.

The post Canada Passes A Bill That Bans The Captivity Of Dolphins And Whales appeared first on Auxx Me.

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Monster ‘great white shark’ feared to be prowling British coast after two dead dolphins found at popular beach resort

A monster great white is feared to be prowling off the British coast after two dead dolphins were found at a popular beach resort.

The dolphins’ corpses were discovered at Great Yarmouth in Norfolk – one, near the rollercoaster on the south beach – at the weekend.

They are the latest in a string of bodies mysteriously washed up in recent years, with a half-eaten 4ft-long seal found nearby in 2017.

Massive teeth marks had been gouged in the seal’s flesh, where something lurking in the deep had apparently ripped into it.

Great whites, which prey on dolphins, porpoises and seals, live for 70 years and don’t start breeding until they’re about fifteen.

One of the dead dolphins found at Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, over the weekend

here.

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Heatwaves sweeping oceans ‘like wildfires’, scientists reveal | Environment | The Guardian

The number of heatwaves affecting the planet’s oceans has increased sharply, scientists have revealed, killing swathes of sea-life like “wildfires that take out huge areas of forest”.

The damage caused in these hotspots is also harmful for humanity, which relies on the oceans for oxygen, food, storm protection and the removal of climate-warming carbon dioxide the atmosphere, they say.

Global warming is gradually increasing the average temperature of the oceans, but the new research is the first systematic global analysis of ocean heatwaves, when temperatures reach extremes for five days or more.

The research found heatwaves are becoming more frequent, prolonged and severe, with the number of heatwave days tripling in the last couple of years studied. In the longer term, the number of heatwave days jumped by more than 50% in the 30 years to 2016, compared with the period of 1925 to 1954.

As heatwaves have increased, kelp forests, seagrass meadows and coral reefs have been lost. These foundation species are critical to life in the ocean. They provide shelter and food to many others, but have been hit on coasts from California to Australia to Spain.

“You have heatwave-induced wildfires that take out huge areas of forest, but this is happening underwater as well,” said Dan Smale at the Marine Biological Association in Plymouth, UK, who led the research published in Nature Climate Change. “You see the kelp and seagrasses dying in front of you. Within weeks or months they are just gone, along hundreds of kilometres of coastline.”

As well as quantifying the increase in heatwaves, the team analysed 116 research papers on eight well-studied marine heatwaves, such as the record-breaking “Ningaloo Niño” that hit Australia in 2011 and the hot “blob” that persisted in the north-east Pacific from 2013 to 2016. “They have adverse impacts on a wide range of organisms, from plankton to invertebrates, to fish, mammals and seabirds,” Smale said.




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The scientists compared the areas where heatwaves have increased most with those areas harbouring rich biodiversity or species already near their temperature limit and those where additional stresses, such as pollution or overfishing, already occur. This revealed hotspots of harm from the north-east Atlantic to the Caribbean to the western Pacific. “A lot of ocean systems are being battered by multiple stresses,” Smale said.

The natural ocean cycle of El Niño is a key factor in pushing up temperatures in some parts of the ocean and the effect of global warming on the phenomenon remains uncertain, but the gradual overall heating of the oceans means heatwaves are worse when they strike.

“The starting temperature is much higher, so the absolute temperatures [in a heatwave] are that much higher and more stressful,” said Smale. Some marine wildlife is mobile and could in theory swim to cooler waters, but ocean heatwaves often strike large areas more rapidly than fish move, he said.

The researchers said ocean heatwaves can have “major socioeconomic and political ramifications”, such as in the north-west Atlantic in 2012, when lobster stocks were dramatically affected, creating tensions across the US-Canada border.

“This [research] makes clear that heatwaves are hitting the ocean all over the world … The ocean, in effect, is spiking a fever,” said Prof Malin Pinsky, at Rutgers University, US, and not part of the team. “These events are likely to become more extreme and more common in the future unless we can reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”

Dr Éva Plagányi at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) in Australia also likened ocean heatwaves to wildfires. “Frequent big hits can have long-lasting effects,” she said. “This study shows that record-breaking events are becoming the new normal.”

The damage global warming is causing to the oceans has also been shown in a series of other scientific papers published in the last week. Ocean warming has cut sustainable fish catches by 15% to 35% in five regions, including the North Sea and the East China Sea, and 4% globally, according to work published by Pinsky and colleagues.

“We were stunned to find that fisheries around the world have already responded to ocean warming,” he said. Another study showed that achieving the 2C climate change target set out in the Paris agreement would protect almost 10m tonnes of fish catches each year, worth tens of billions of dollars.

Separate work by Plagányi’s team showed that climate change will reverse the recovery of whales in the Southern Ocean by damaging the krill on which they feed. “Models predict concerning declines, and even local extinctions by 2100, for Pacific populations of blue and fin whales, and Atlantic and Indian Ocean fin and humpback whales,” they said.

“In the space of one week, scientific publications have underscored that unless we take evasive action, our future oceans will have fewer fish, fewer whales and frequent dramatic shifts in ecological structure will occur, with concerning implications for humans who depend on the ocean,” said Plagányi.

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Oceans suffocating as huge dead zones quadruple since 1950, scientists warn

Ocean dead zones with zero oxygen have quadrupled in size since 1950, scientists have warned, while the number of very low oxygen sites near coasts have multiplied tenfold. Most sea creatures cannot survive in these zones and current trends would lead to mass extinction in the long run, risking dire consequences for the hundreds of millions of people who depend on the sea.

Climate change caused by fossil fuel burning is the cause of the large-scale deoxygenation, as warmer waters hold less oxygen. The coastal dead zones result from fertiliser and sewage running off the land and into the seas.

The analysis, published in the journal Science, is the first comprehensive analysis of the areas and states: “Major extinction events in Earth’s history have been associated with warm climates and oxygen-deficient oceans.” Denise Breitburg, at the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center in the US and who led the analysis, said: “Under the current trajectory that is where we would be headed. But the consequences to humans of staying on that trajectory are so dire that it is hard to imagine we would go quite that far down that path.”

“This is a problem we can solve,” Breitburg said. “Halting climate change requires a global effort, but even local actions can help with nutrient-driven oxygen decline.” She pointed to recoveries in Chesapeake Bay in the US and the Thames river in the UK, where better farm and sewage practices led to dead zones disappearing.

However, Prof Robert Diaz at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, who reviewed the new study, said: “Right now, the increasing expansion of coastal dead zones and decline in open ocean oxygen are not priority problems for governments around the world. Unfortunately, it will take severe and persistent mortality of fisheries for the seriousness of low oxygen to be realised.”

Ocean dead zones

Furthermore, the level of oxygen in all ocean waters is falling, with 2% – 77bn tonnes – being lost since 1950. This can reduce growth, impair reproduction and increase disease, the scientists warn. One irony is that warmer waters not only hold less oxygen but also mean marine organisms have to breathe faster, using up oxygen more quickly.

There are also dangerous feedback mechanisms. Microbes that proliferate at very low oxygen levels produce lots of nitrous oxide, a greenhouse gas that is 300 times more potent than carbon dioxide.

In coastal regions, fertiliser, manure and sewage pollution cause algal blooms and when the algae decompose oxygen is sucked out of the water. However, in some places, the algae can lead to more food for fish and increase catches around the dead zones. This may not be sustainable though, said Breitburg: “There is a lot of concern that we are really changing the way these systems function and that the overall resilience of these systems may be reduced.”

The new analysis was produced by an international working group created in 2016 by Unesco’s Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission. The commission’s Kirsten Isensee said: “Ocean deoxygenation is taking place all over the world as a result of the human footprint, therefore we also need to address it globally.”

dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico and large scale meat production, said: “These dead zones will continue to expand unless the major meat companies that dominate our global agricultural system start cleaning up their supply chains to keep pollution out of our waters.”

Diaz said the speed of ocean suffocation already seen was breathtaking: “No other variable of such ecological importance to coastal ecosystems has changed so drastically in such a short period of time from human activities as dissolved oxygen.”

He said the need for urgent action is best summarised by the motto of the American Lung Association: “If you can’t breathe, nothing else matters.”

Oceans suffocating as huge dead zones quadruple since 1950, scientists warn

Areas starved of oxygen in open ocean and by coasts have soared in recent decades, risking dire consequences for marine life and humanity

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