A new antenna on the International Space Station and receptors on the Argos satellite are allowing scientists to remotely monitor small animal and songbird.
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(Bloomberg) Just before the coronavirus pandemic shut down travel last spring, the princess who’s Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the U.S. paid a visit to the Wyoming Supreme Court in Cheyenne to talk about women’s rights with the tribunal’s three female jurists.
In July, Princess Reema bint Bandar Al Saud spoke about the Middle Eastern country’s plans for social reform and economic diversification alongside women business leaders at a virtual Zoom event hosted by the Colorado Business Roundtable.
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Scientists hail golden age to trace bird migration with tech
CHRISTINA LARSON, AP Science Writer
June 10, 2021
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1of21The antenna of an Argos satellite tag extends past the tail feathers of a female American robin as she feeds a worm to her hungry nestlings on a front porch in Cheverly, Md., Sunday, May 9, 2021. A new antenna on the International Space Station and receptors on the Argos satellite, combined with the shrinking size of tracking chips and batteries, are allowing scientists to remotely monitor small animal and songbird movements in much greater detail than ever before.Carolyn Kaster/APShow MoreShow Less
A new antenna on the International Space Station and receptors on the Argos satellite are allowing scientists to remotely monitor small animal and songbird.
A new antenna on the International Space Station and receptors on the Argos satellite are allowing scientists to remotely monitor small animal and songbird.