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To Protect Africa s Endangered Elephants, Scientists Follow Their Footprints | Nicholas School of the Environment
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How forest elephants move depends on water, humans and also their personality
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With new CEO, Cenosco is on track to consolidate its Asset Integrity Management Software as a market standard
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THE HAGUE, Netherlands, April 21, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Cenosco announced today that Jan Poulsen has been appointed as the company s new CEO, succeeding Mischa Simonis. Poulsen will focus on further professionalising the company and steering Cenosco towards continuous product development. This will enable Simonis to focus on the product development side more exclusively.
The announcement comes on the heels of the news about Cenosco s new partnership with European software investor, Fortino Capital Partners. This investment milestone was communicated in early December 2020, marking the beginning of an accelerated growth journey for Cenosco. Poulsen s experience will be key in accomplishing the growth objectives.
Frebaco havreris slår rekord för Fazer Kvarn
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on December 17, 2020.
By Rachel Nuwer
In 2008, workers searching for diamonds off the coast of Namibia found a different kind of treasure: hundreds of gold coins mixed with timber and other debris. They had stumbled upon Bom Jesus, a Portuguese trading vessel lost during a voyage to India in 1533. Among the 40 tons of cargo recovered from the sunken ship were more than 100 elephant tusks.
More than a decade after the ship’s discovery, a team of archaeologists, geneticists and ecologists have pieced together the mystery of where the tusks came from and how they fit into the overall picture of historical ivory trade. The researchers’ analysis also revealed that entire elephant lineages have likely been wiped out since the Bom Jesus set sail, shining a light on the extent to which humans have decimated a species once found in far greater numbers across large parts of the African continent.