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Tiny computers mounted on snail shells helped reveal how one species escaped extinction

Tiny computers mounted on snail shells helped reveal how one species escaped extinction On the island of Tahiti, scientists have discovered how one snail species survived extinction while others fell prey to an invasive carnivorous snail. Using tiny millimetre-sized computers, they found the native white-shelled Partula hyalina snail had been using sunlight to survive. Social Sharing CBC Radio · Posted: Jul 16, 2021 3:18 PM ET | Last Updated: July 16 A rosy wolf snail in Tahiti with a Michigan Micro Mote computer mounted on its shell. The snail is an invasive species, and has attacked indigenous tree snails on the island.(University of Michigan )

The world's 'loneliest whale' can teach us a lot if we listen to it, says filmmaker

The world's 'loneliest whale' can teach us a lot if we listen to it, says filmmaker
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Woman watched her street become 'wild river' amid floods in Germany

Woman watched her street become wild river amid floods in Germany Anja Menzel says scenes in parts of her country right now are just devastating. More than 125 people have died after catastrophic flooding in parts of Europe. Social Sharing CBC News · Posted: Jul 16, 2021 5:23 PM ET | Last Updated: July 16 A woman with an umbrella walks through a flooded street on July 14 in Hagen, Germany, after heavy rain hit parts of the country, causing widespread flooding. A Hagen resident told As It Happens a flooding creek turned her street into a wild river. (Ina Fassbender/AFP/Getty Images)

'There's got to be justice done' says chief calling for help identifying unmarked residential school graves

As It Happens guest host Duncan McCue his mother had gone to the Kamloops residential school. Here is part of their conversation. Chief Christian, what was going through your mind as you were sitting there listening to the residential school survivors, listening to them share their stories today? Well, it s so difficult because my mother went to residential schools, to actually to Kamloops Residential School, so just thinking of my mom, actually. And then as most of the survivors have never told us the story of what happened to them, so that was going through my mind, as the survivors were talking because they were children when this happened, five, six, seven years old. And I was thinking, wow, that they had nobody to protect them and look after them. And that s kind of what was I going through my mind. And I just think there s got to be justice done for these children that have revealed themselves, you know, the 215-plus that are missing not only here, but right across Canada

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