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MétéoMédia - Raptor tags along for free ride on California car, caught on video

Raptor tags along for free ride on California car, caught on video Caroline Floyd dimanche, 16 juin 2019 à 14:30 - No one seemed comfortable with this arrangement. You ve probably heard stories where people get into the wrong car thinking it s their rideshare pickup, but this video from Los Angeles takes things to a whole new level. Driver Rebecca Hobbs and her passenger Staci Eddy found themselves playing Uber to a red-tailed hawk last week, after the bird landed on the hood of their car amid downtown traffic and refused to leave. The incredible footage shows the unlikely trio navigating the streets of L.A. Both human and avian passengers seem pretty confused about what was going on.

Mexico
United-states
Canada
America
Rebecca-hobbs
Los-angeles
Staci-eddy
California-based-west-county-hawk-watch
North-america
West-county-hawk-watch
Canadian-raptor-conservancy
Meteo

MétéoMédia - Dog lost in U.S. snowstorm two years ago found in Manitoba, reunites with family

Dog lost in U.S. snowstorm two years ago found in Manitoba, reunites with family mercredi, 7 août 2019 à 14:20 - Charlie the dog escaped Grand Forks, N.D., home during snowstorm in winter 2016 A frail white dog with a distinctly goofy mouth that ran away from its U.S. home during the middle of a snowstorm in late 2016 was caught in a coyote trap before reconnecting with its American family on Monday in Canada. Charlie hadn t been seen by the family since he bolted out the door of their home in Grand Forks, N.D., as snow blanketed the yard more than 2 ½ years ago. Catherine Herzog and her family were deeply concerned about their lost dog, who had joined them when he was a tiny puppy that could fit in the palm of her hand, Herzog said.

Grand-forks
British-columbia
Canada
United-states
North-dakota
Reunion
American
Robert-zacharias
Catherine-herzog
Dana-hatherly
Hannah-zacharias
Facebook

MétéoMédia - Nearly 3 billion animals affected by Australian bushfires, report finds

Nearly 3 billion animals affected by Australian bushfires, report finds Isabella O Malley jeudi, 30 juillet 2020 à 15:45 - The researchers that contributed to this report say that climate change is making wildfires in Australia more frequent and intense. The severe bushfire outbreak in Australia from 2019 to early 2020 was the country’s worst fire season on record and nothing short of a catastrophe for the environment. Thousands of people faced emergency evacuations, global carbon dioxide levels climbed and footage of helpless marsupials engulfed in flames went viral worldwide. An interim report, with contributors from several scientific institutions and funding from World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), quantifies just how gruesome the bushfires death toll was - nearly three billion animals were killed or displaced, a number that is almost three times greater than the previous estimate.

Australia
Indian-ocean
Oc
California
United-states
Los-angeles
Mallacoota
Victoria
Dermot-ogorman
Mario-picazo
University-of-california

MétéoMédia - Australian bushfires kill three, destroy at least 150 homes

At least four other people remain unaccounted for on Saturday evening, with Prime Minister Scott Morrison saying he feared the number of deaths could rise.

Melbourne
Victoria
Australia
Noosa
Queensland
Glen-innes
New-south-wales
Sydney
Sunshine-coast
Christian-schmollinger
Robert-birsel
Anastasia-paluszek

MétéoMédia - Lost Viking 'highway' and artifacts revealed by melting glaciers

Lost Viking ‘highway’ and artifacts revealed by melting glaciers Isabella O Malley jeudi, 16 avril 2020 à 17:43 - Objects that were found on this Viking mountain pass in Norway include mittens, knives, horseshoes and walking sticks. Melting glaciers in Lendbreen, Norway have revealed a lost mountain pass and artifacts that were used by the Vikings. A new study details these findings and the work that researchers have done at this site since it was first uncovered in 2011. The researchers believe the mountain pass was used for local traffic, trade and long-distance travel during the Roman Iron Age in 300 AD to the Viking Age in 1000 AD. Their fieldwork found an undated stone-built shelter and a large number of stone structures that could be landmarks or memorials, which indicates that this mountain pass had some type of significance to the people travelling through.

Norway
Oppland
Nord-trøag
Roman-iron-age
Viking-age
Iron-age
Bronze-age
Meteo
Prevision
Matao
Metao

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