MITRA MANDAL GLOBAL NEWS

Chinese city launches giant panda-related promotional campaign in Poland

WARSAW, Oct. 29 (Xinhua) -- Chengdu, the capital city of southwest China's Sichuan Province, initiated a three-day giant panda-related promotional campaign here on Friday.
Activities in the campaign include interactive programs featuring virtual reality(VR) devices and people dressed in panda costumes, a selfie contest on the social networking site Facebook, as well as dancing, martial arts and food shows.
Shen Yulin, director of the External Activities Bureau of the Chengdu Association for Cultural Exchange with Foreign Countries, said the campaign would enhance Chengdu's reputation as the hometown of the giant pandas, which is a symbol of China and enjoys global popularity.
Under the theme of "Panda Rail·VR Chengdu", the campaign also emphasized the city's direct link to Europe via a rail cargo service between itself and Poland's Lodz. The rail has become a popular logistics route for Chinese trade with Europe.
Giant pandas are one of the world's most endangered species. Fewer than 2,000 pandas live in the wild, mostly in the Chinese provinces of Sichuan and Shaanxi.
Warsaw is the second stop of the Chinese city's promotional campaign. Earlier this month, similar activities were held in Frankfurt, Germany.

Archeologists explain life in southwest China 3,400 years ago

KUNMING, Oct. 29 (Xinhua) -- People living 3,400 years ago in southwest China's Yunnan province ate snails and lived in different houses in winter and summer, latest findings from a historical site showed.
The site in Xingyi village of Yuxi city was discovered in July 2015 during construction of a primary school. Houses, tombs, coffins, ash pits, roads, ditches, pottery, stoneware and bronzeware were all found there.
A Xinhua reporter saw piles of snail shells at the site. Zhu Zhonghua, an archaeologist with Yunnan cultural relics and archaeological research institute, said the snails were of two types.
"One was unique to lakes in Yunnan and they are hard to find today. The other is known to have been used by people in prehistoric times for food and decoration," he said.
"The amount of shells is quite large," he continued. "They have the top broken and there is a large amount of pots around. We concluded that the shells were discarded by humans after the snails inside were eaten."
Examination of bones found at the site revealed them to be 3,400 years old.
"Most of them were fishermen, living off snails, fish, crabs and clams," Zhu said. "They also grew rice, raised cattle and pigs, and hunted birds, deer and elephant. They lived in square houses in the summer and semi-subterranean dwellings in winter."
Excavation of the site is almost complete.

World - Middle East

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Global News -India Headlines PTI

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Medical -Science News- Source- newswise daily wire

Sleep Loss Tied to Changes of the Gut Microbiota in Humans
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Can a Brain-Computer Interface Convert Your Thoughts to Text?
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UCI and NASA Document Accelerated Glacier Melting in West Antarctica
Two new studies by researchers at the University of California, Irvine and NASA have found the fastest ongoing rates of glacier retreat ever observed in West Antarctica and offer an unprecedented look at ice melting on the floating undersides of glac...
– University of California, Irvine
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Male Birth Control Shots Prevent Pregnancy
Men can take birth control shots to prevent pregnancy in their female partners, according to a new study published in the Endocrine Society’s Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. ...
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Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
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Many Kids Not Ready for Kindergarten
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– Michigan State University
Developmental Psychology


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How Hooded Seals Are Transferring Contaminants to Their Pups
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Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry


Faced With Ambivalence, Powerful People Are Less Decisive
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Psychological Science


Indirect Effects of Rising CO2 Levels on Ecosystems More Important Than Previously Thought
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1605036113


Antibody Breaks Leukemia’s Hold, Providing New Therapeutic Approach
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– University of California San Diego Health Sciences
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High Quality Evidence Suggests Vitamin D Can Reduce Asthma Attacks
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Cochrane Review


How AIDS Conquered North America
Researchers were able to restore HIV genomes from serum samples more than 40 years old, enabling them to reconstruct the origins of the AIDS pandemic in unprecedented detail...
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Nature


Researchers Use Video Gamelike Test to Study Learning and Recovery in Stroke Patients
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Extreme Cold Winters Fueled by Jet Stream and Climate Change
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Team Discovers Rare Triple Star System Using ALMA
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Nature
Embargo expired on 26-Oct-2016 at 13:00 ET


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– Imperial College London
European Journal of Physics

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