The Junior Age

Tag: news for children

Venezuela Lost All its Glaciers

The last remaining glacier of Venezuela is lost, after it shrunk so much that it has been reclassified as an ice field by the scientists. Venezuela was home to six glaciers in the Sierra Nevada de Mérida mountain range, which lies at about 5,000m above sea level. Five of the glaciers had disappeared by 2011, leaving just the Humboldt glacier, also known as La Corona, close to the country’s second highest mountain, Pico Humboldt. 

Venezuela is believed to be the first country in recent history to lose all its glaciers. “The loss of La Corona marks the loss of much more than the ice itself, it also marks the loss of the many ecosystem services that glaciers provide, from unique microbial habitats to environments of significant cultural value”, said Caroline Clason, a glaciologist and assistant professor at Durham University.

Word Check

According to NASA, a glacier is a large area of thick ice that remains frozen from one year to the next. They form when lots of snow falls in one location for many years. Over time–decades or centuries–the snow on the bottom gets squished down by the weight of falling new snow. This compressed snow becomes ice, forming a glacier.

Youngest and Oldest Indian Women to Scale Mount Everest

Sixteen-year-old Kaamya Karthikeyan has become the youngest Indian mountaineer to scale Mt. Everest from the Nepal side. She also became the second youngest girl in the world to achieve this great feat. 

Kaamya Karthikeyan is a class 12 student at Navy Children School, Mumbai. On May 20, she successfully summited Mt. Everest, along with her father S. Karthikeyan who is in the Indian Navy. She has completed six milestones in her mission to summit the highest peak of all seven continents. Kaamya Karthikeyan is now aiming to climb Mt. Vinson Massif in Antarctica this December to become the youngest girl to accomplish the ‘7 summits challenge’.

Did You Know?

In 1984, Bachendri Pal became the first Indian woman to climb Mt. Everest.

The First Indian Space Tourist: Gopi Thotakura

US based Gopi Thotakura made history as he became the first Indian space tourist! Indian born and commercial pilot Gopichand Thotakura took off on May 19 and reached the edge of space on a Blue Origin spacecraft, along with five other crew members. The whole journey, from take off to landing lasted only about ten minutes, during which the spacecraft attained a maximum height of about 105km from the Earth. 

The passengers got to experience weightlessness for a few minutes and observe the Earth from a height. One of the passengers on this Blue Origin spacecraft made history by becoming the oldest person to travel to space. American citizen, Ed Dwight, who is 90, described the experience as “life changing”.

What is Blue Origin?

Blue Origin is the space tourism project by Amazon owner Jeff Bezos.

Word Check

Space tourism is the term for people paying to go for a trip to space.

Record-Breaking Ocean Temperatures: What’s Behind the Rising Heat?

On analysing the data published by the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service, the BBC has said that the world’s oceans have suffered a year of record-breaking heat due to climate change. The seas have broken temperature records every single day for the past year. 

 

This has not only caused widespread coral bleaching, but has threatened the habitat for many marine species. For 13 months in a row, the sea surface temperature has been the warmest on record. According to experts, warmer sea temperatures may result in severe hurricanes and these changes could have long term effects on the Earth like rising sea levels. Greenhouse gases and El Niño have warmed the seas. 

World’s Oldest Orangutan Turns 63

Bella is the world’s oldest living orangutan in captivity. On April 16, Bella celebrated her 63rd birthday. Bella is a Sumatran orangutan and is estimated to be born in 1961. Ever since she was collected from the wild in 1964, she has lived at Hagenbeck Zoo in Hamburg, Germany. She was given a birthday cake made of soft-boiled rice and various fruits, which she shared with Berani, one of her adopted children.

Did You Know?

Orangutans typically live in the wild up to 35-40 years and normally up to 50 years in captivity.