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After four years, the IHF Women’s Youth (U18) World Championship will make its comeback in North Macedonia, the first-ever edition with 32 teams at the start. After the COVID-19 pandemic forced the cancellation of the previous edition in Croatia in 2020, the best players in the world in this category will take to the court in North Macedonia’s capital Skopje, in three different halls, ready to fight for the coveted gold medal.
Live blog: Now we know! Denmark and Republic of Korea are in the final. A nail-biting match between the two powerhouses awaits us on Wednesday. Before that, the Netherlands and Hungary will battle for the bronze medal. France and Sweden play for fifth place, the two surprise teams Iceland and Egypt for seventh place.
The President's Cup ended today, with Spain emerging victorious and claiming the President's Cup trophy and 17th place.
Live blog: There you have it! The sixth day of the 2022 IHF Women’s Youth World Championship is now over and we have a single team that managed to progress to the quarter-finals, the Republic of Korea. The Asian side joins Iceland, Denmark and Egypt, with the four other berths to be delivered tomorrow.
Don’t forget, we have just a few hours of rest and we will be back, with a full 16-games card and the final answers before we move over to the knock-out phase of the competition.
Today’s games:
Researchers found an underwater landfill while looking for chemical discharges from mobiles and electronic devices
Researchers found an underwater landfill while looking for chemical discharges from mobiles and electronic devices
Research scientists in Norway recently set out on a scientific cruise in the Trondheim fjord to collect water samples and specimens of marine species. What they stumbled over was quite different from what they were looking for.
No, this isn’t seaweed. It’s a mass of wet wipes, sanitary pads and other waste that people have flushed down the toilet. Photo: Julia Farkas/SINTEF
Rare earth elements are key components in many of the technologies that we use in our everyday lives – from batteries and mobile telephones to fertilisers. But these elements can leak out into the sea as pollution, and be absorbed by, and have a negative impact on, marine life. In order to research this phenomenon, researchers were out taking samples in the Trondheim fjord, a