Whether sent in at the click of a button or as a handwritten cheque in the post, donations from nearly 9,000 Mail readers have now helped us reach a stupendous £303,000 for the Remember Me campaign.
Your immense generosity has helped the drive for a national memorial to Covid victims at St Paul’s Cathedral reach a magnificent £1.7million.
Leaders at the London landmark, who have joined forces with the Mail to help raise £2.3million for the tribute, said they were ‘amazed and deeply moved’ by the kindness of our readers.
It has been just 18 days since the campaign launched. Yet more than 3,350 cheques – totalling £123,845 – have already arrived, including one from a 100-year-old reader who survived Covid.
“I keep telling everyone about how brave he was. It all went so well.”
Ms Tomlinson, of Inverurie, said canine donors are usually needed once or twice a year at the town’s Donview Vet Centre.
The dogs have to be big and healthy so she signed up one-year-old Baxter, who weighs around six stone.
He’s such a good boy, I’m really proud of him.
Vet and Baxter’s owner Emma Tomlinson
Last month, Ms Tomlinson was on shift when little Meryl was rushed in and needed surgery to survive.
The vet then raced home to collect her four-legged friend.
Una visión más clara del sílice oculto en el manto terrestre europapress.es - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from europapress.es Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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IMAGE: A transmitted light view through a 200-micron section of a peridotite sample, showing the three main minerals - olivine (clear-green), orthopyroxene (grey-green) and garnet (pink). view more
Credit: Dr Emma Tomlinson, Trinity College Dublin.
Geologists have developed a new theory about the state of Earth billions of years ago after examining the very old rocks formed in the Earth s mantle below the continents.
Assistant Professor Emma Tomlinson from Trinity College Dublin and Queensland University of Technology s Professor Balz Kamber have just published their research in leading international journal,
Nature Communications.
The seven continents on Earth today are each built around a stable interior called a craton, and geologists believe that craton stabilisation some 2.5 - 3 billion years ago was critical to the emergence of land masses on Earth.