a really good food source for native predators, the kind of animals that should be preying on water voles and eating them. it s just good to see them back where they should be, returning them back to the place where they should be in the first place. in total for this project, 350 animals will be released in two locations in cumbria, bringing a missing species back to the landscape where it belongs. victoria gill, bbc news, haweswater. thanks for watching. hello there. the next 2a hours looks fairly unsettled with the risk of some really heavy, thundery rain in places and also strong winds. so quite a mixture of weather to come for friday. windy in places. it will feel quite warm and humid, and we ll have thundery showers spreading northwards. now, we ve got two weather fronts associated with the low pressure system. this is the main weather front. ahead of it, we ll see a line of showers and storms spreading northwards. that s during friday. but through tonight, it should stay largely
shape of a rescue operation might look like, the coastguard had to admit it doesn t know. the spokesperson today was asked that question, how long does the search continue, and they said that when the moment comes to call it off, the families will be the first to know. john sudworth with the latest there in boston. asjohn suggested there, finding the vessel would be just the start of a complex rescue operation, as the position, surroundings and condition of the submersible could all present major challenges. 0ur science correspondent victoria gill has been looking at the key factors. the desperate search for the submersible now has a focus. the banging sounds that were picked up at the sea surface by detectors deployed by the rescue teams. they think that the sound is coming from the sea floor and relatively close to the wreck location. now, one of the things that this indicates is that the submersible is stationary and on the sea floor, and this drastically narrows down
it might detangle or cut or help free the submersible if it was hooked into the environment on the seafloor, but victor would not be able to help bringing this directly. getting the submersible to the surface. it is not strong enough. this remotely operated vehicle was used last year to retrieve a us fighterjet that sank in the south china sea after the pilot safely ejected. the recovery was at a similar depth to the titanic, and the vehicle fastened rigging and lift lines to the aircraft from a support ship. but any potential rescue of titan is likely to be technically complicated. the hope is that the tiny vessel can be located with enough time left to carry it out. victoria gill, bbc news. there were five places onboard the titan sub, and passengers had to pay nearly £200,000 each to get one. they have been bolted inside it.
it shows that we are our own people. iiust think it shows that we are our own people. iiust think it it shows that we are our own people. ijust think it makes it shows that we are our own people. ijust think it makes our it shows that we are our own people. ijust think it makes our country- ijust think it makes our country special, because they are not many monarchies around. special, because they are not many monarchies around. some people take it as a symbol monarchies around. some people take it as a symbol of monarchies around. some people take it as a symbol of pride monarchies around. some people take it as a symbol of pride that monarchies around. some people take it as a symbol of pride that we - monarchies around. some people take it as a symbol of pride that we have i it as a symbol of pride that we have a royat it as a symbol of pride that we have a royal family, and it brings people together~ a royal family, and it brings people together. it a royal family
yeah, nature really does need chaos. it needs randomness, it needs the freedom to be dynamic. it needs potential to be able to kind of change over time. knowing that we can, as a species kind of put back, we can restore this stuff, is hugely inspiring. victoria gill, bbc news, swindale back. he was the barrow boy who became the ballroom star, and found fame in his 60s as head judge on the bbc s strictly come dancing. len goodman, who s died at the age of 78, was a champion dancer whose expertise and authority as a judge was valued by an audience of millions. tributes have been paid by people in the world of ballroom dancing and entertainment, including his former colleague claudia winkleman who remembered a brilliant and kind man . 0ur entertainment correspondent lizo mzimba looks back at his remarkable life. let s hear from our head judge, len goodman.