SDX Energy provides production and capex guidance for 2021
26 Jan 2021
SDX Energy, the MENA-focused oil and gas company, sets out production and capex guidance for 2021. All monetary values are expressed in United States dollars net to the Company unless otherwise stated.
Mark Reid, CEO of SDX, commented: I am pleased to provide our production and capex guidance for 2021, where after a very solid year of production in 2020, we continue on a similar profile, albeit with some contingency worked in for maintenance in Egypt. Partially offsetting this, I am very pleased to report that Moroccan production has returned to the levels seen before last year s COVID-19 close down. This year s expected operating cashflows, together with our existing cash of approximately US$10 million, will provide ample liquidity to carry out a busy drilling campaign of nine to eleven wells targeting exploration and development opportunities in Egypt and Morocco, including the potentially transformatio
Press release content from Globe Newswire. The AP news staff was not involved in its creation.
Aya Gold & Silver: Zgounder Exploration Confirms High-Grade Silver Extension of Eastern Zone
Aya Gold & Silver Inc.January 25, 2021 GMT
Mont-Royal, Jan. 25, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) Key Highlights
ZG-20-13 intersected 1,273 grams per tonne (“g/t”) Ag over 5.5m, including 3,914 g/t Ag over 1.5m
ZG-20-36 intersected 1,587 g/t Ag over 3m
ZG-SF-20-01T intersected 845 g/t Ag over 11.5m
T28-20-2100-5 intersected 975 g/t Ag over 16.8m
T28-20-2100-19 intersected 1,317 g/t Ag over 4.8m
Surface results confirm a 90m extension to the east up to hole ZG-20-36
Starfish: Rare fossil helps answer the mystery of how they evolved arms
Starfish and their close relatives the brittle stars belong to a group called the echinoderms that have spiny skins.
Jan 22, 2021 13:17:48 IST
A chance discovery of a beautifully preserved fossil in the desert landscape of Morocco has solved one of the great mysteries of biology and palaeontology: how starfish evolved their arms.
Starfish are one of the most recognisable animals on our planet. Most people probably associate them with trips to the beach, walking in rock pools or swimming in the sea. They might appear simple creatures, but the way these animals’ distinctive biology evolved was, until recently, unknown.
Credit: Collections of the Claude Bernard University Lyon 1
Researchers from the University of Cambridge have discovered a fossil of the earliest starfish-like animal, which helps us understand the origins of the nimble-armed creature.
The prototype starfish, which has features in common with both sea lilies and modern-day starfish, is a missing link for scientists trying to piece together its early evolutionary history.
The exceptionally preserved fossil, named Cantabrigiaster fezouataensis, was discovered in Morroco s Anti-Atlas mountain range. Its intricate design - with feathery arms akin to a lacework - has been frozen in time for roughly 480 million years.
The new species is unusual because it doesn t have many of the key features of its contemporary relatives, lacking roughly 60% of a modern starfish s body plan.
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An avid climber and music lover, Allegra (
Matilda De Angelis, a rising star on the Italian film scene who is currently starring in the cast of the HBO mini-series
The Undoing alongside Nicole Kidman) is in Morocco when she, her partner and a couple of friends become the victims of an horrific terrorist attack. She is the only one to survive. Her body, despite its wounds, is slowly beginning to heal, but the trauma which engulfs her is relentlessly all-consuming. Fear and a thirst for revenge are the only emotions driving her forwards, pushing her towards a world of solitude and incomprehension. Left numb by her family and friends’ efforts to ease her suffering, Allegra is determined to face this personal trauma alone, despite everyone seemingly wanting to share in it.