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EXCLUSIVE Atlantis is finally FOUND off coast of major city, archaeologist claims... and he's got video to prove it

EXCLUSIVE Atlantis is finally FOUND off coast of major city, archaeologist claims... and he's got video to prove it

Daily Mail​a day ago
Plato's writings describe an advanced civilization that built grand temples and massive harbor walls before being swallowed by the sea more than 11,600 years ago.
Now, an archaeologist believes he has found Atlantis just two miles off the coast of Cádiz, Spain.
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EU turns to private funding to boost quantum technology ambition
EU turns to private funding to boost quantum technology ambition

Reuters

time8 hours ago

  • Reuters

EU turns to private funding to boost quantum technology ambition

BRUSSELS, July 2 (Reuters) - The European Union is seeking to attract private funding to help it take the lead in quantum technology by 2030, EU tech chief Henna Virkkunen said on Wednesday, as the bloc works to cut its reliance in the sector on the United States and China. Quantum technology will make processing significantly faster than conventional computing, has the potential to impact every part of the economy and could be worth trillions of dollars within the next decade, according to McKinsey. "We have to now focus more on private funding because we are very strong already in public funding," Virkkunen told a news conference as she announced the EU Quantum Strategy. The European Commission and EU countries have in the last five years provided more than 11 billion euros ($13 billion) in public funding to quantum technology. "Only 5% of the global private investments on quantum are now coming to Europe. So we will especially work on the private funding part in the coming months," Virkkunen said. The EU Quantum Strategy also envisages EU countries pooling their expertise and resources in research, quantum infrastructures and the ecosystem of start-ups and scale-ups as well as focusing on dual use of the technology in security and defence. Virkkunen said start-ups in particular should be helped. "European quantum startups, they are vulnerable to being bought by foreign entities or moving to areas with better funding and this is why it is crucial to act now," she said. She said the Commission will propose legislation called a Quantum Act next year to build on the strategy. ($1 = 0.8501 euros)

Groundbreaking discovery in Egypt's Great Pyramid shatters view on how mysterious structure was built
Groundbreaking discovery in Egypt's Great Pyramid shatters view on how mysterious structure was built

Daily Mail​

time10 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Groundbreaking discovery in Egypt's Great Pyramid shatters view on how mysterious structure was built

Archaeologists have uncovered ancient inscriptions inside Egypt 's Great Pyramid that they say confirm who built the monument 4,500 years ago. Egyptologist Dr Zahi Hawass and his team recently explored a series of narrow chambers above the King's Chamber using imaging technology, finding never-before-seen markings left by work gangs from the 13th-century BC. They also unearthed tombs south of the pyramid, the eternal resting places of skilled laborers, complete with statues of workers muscling stones and 21 hieroglyphic titles like 'overseer of the side of the pyramid' and 'craftsman.' '[The discoveries] confirm that the builders were not slaves. If they had been, they would never have been buried in the shadow of the pyramids,' Dr Hawass said during an episode of the Matt Beall Limitless podcast. 'Slaves would not have prepared their tombs for eternity, like kings and queens did, inside these tombs.' The idea that slaves built the pyramids traces back to the ancient Greek historian Herodotus, who wrote in 440 BC that 100,000 slaves worked in three-month shifts over 20 years. shifts. The latest findings also shed light on how the pyramid was built, revealing that limestone from a quarry just 1,000 feet away was hauled to the site using a rubble-and-mud ramp, remnants of which were found southwest of the monument. Dr Hawass is now working on a new expedition, funded by Beall, which will send a robot into the Great Pyramid's 'Big Void', marking the first excavation of the structure in modern history. The Great Pyramid of Giza is the largest Egyptian pyramid and was constructed by Pharaoh Khufu, who ruled during the Fourth Dynasty of the Old Kingdom. It is also one of three within the Giza plateau, the other two include the Pyramid of Khafre and the Pyramid of Menkaure, as well as the Great Sphinx. All shrouded in mystery due to their unclear construction methods, precise astronomical alignment and still-debated purpose. Inscriptions were previously found inside the Great Pyramid during the 19th century, sparking debate that the writings were forged hundreds of years after it was built. 'There was some debate on whether or not that could be a forgery, but now you're saying that you've discovered three more cartes within the King's Chamber,' Beall asked Dr Hawass. The archaeologist then showed images never shared with the public, showing the names. 'They were found in chambers that are difficult and dangerous to access, and they use writing styles that only trained Egyptologists can accurately interpret,' said Dr Hawass. 'It's nearly impossible that someone in recent times could have forged something like this. You must climb about 45 feet and crawl through tight spaces to even reach those chambers.' The archaeologist admitted that some European visitors managed to enter and left their names scratched into the stone in the late 18th and 19th centuries. 'But the inscriptions we found are clearly much older, original graffiti from ancient Egyptian workers,' Dr Hawass added. Alongside these inscriptions, the second major discovery was the tombs of the pyramid builders. Dr Hawass and his team found tools inside the tombs, such as flint tools and pounding stones that would have been used in the Great Pyramid's construction. 'The base of the Great Pyramid is made from solid bedrock, carved 28 feet deep into the ground,' he said. 'This means that after marking the square base, the builders cut down into all four sides of the rock until they created a level platform of solid stone, no blocks, just bedrock. You can still see this today on the south side of Khufu's pyramid.' He continued to explain that the workers operated in teams, some cut the stones, others shaped them and the rest transported the material using wooden sleds pulled over the sand.' He added that the rocks were then moved using ramps, which the archaeologist said he found evidence of. 'The ramp had to come from the southwest corner of the pyramid and connect to the quarry,' said Dr Hawass, 'We excavated this area, and in the site labeled C2, we found remnants of the ramp, stone rubble mixed with sand and mud. When the ramp was dismantled, they didn't remove every trace, and what was left behind is what we uncovered.' The conversation switched to the upcoming exploration of the Big Void, which Dr Hawass is leading. ' I am funding the exploration of the Big Void,' Beall said, adding that he is helping the team build the robot for the mission. The podcaster explained that they were working on a robot, no larger than a centimeter, which will travel through a tiny hole drilled into the side of the Great Pyramid. The Big Void, discovered in 2017, stretches for at least 100 feet above the Grand Gallery, an ascending corridor that links the Queen's chamber to the King's in the heart of the pyramid. Dr Hawass believes he will locate the lost tomb of Khufu inside the void. 'I think it's unlikely that it's a tomb, just because there's never been a tomb,' Beall said. 'There's never been a Pharaoh discovered in any of these in any of the main pyramids ever.' The excavation is slated for around January or February next year.

Astronomers track object that may have originated outside the solar system
Astronomers track object that may have originated outside the solar system

The Independent

time11 hours ago

  • The Independent

Astronomers track object that may have originated outside the solar system

Astronomers are monitoring an object headed our way that may have wandered over from another star system. Scientists have discovered what might be only the third known interstellar object to pass through our solar system, the European Space Agency said Wednesday. The harmless object is currently near Jupiter hundreds of millions of miles (kilometers) away and moving toward Mars, but it should get no closer to the sun than that, according to scientists. It's too soon to know whether the object, designated for now as A11pl3Z, is a rocky asteroid or a icy comet, or how big and what shape it is. More observations are needed to confirm its origins. NASA said it is monitoring the situation. Astrophysicist Josep Trigo-Rodriguez of the Institute of Space Sciences near Barcelona, Spain, believes it is an interstellar object based on its odd path and extreme speed cutting through the solar system. He estimates its size at roughly 25 miles (40 kilometers) across. The first confirmed interstellar visitor was in 2017. It was dubbed Oumuamua, Hawaiian for scout, in honor of the observatory in Hawaii that discovered it. Classified at first as an asteroid, the elongated Oumuamua has since showed signs of being a comet. The second object confirmed to have strayed from another star system into our own is 21/Borisov, discovered in 2019 and believed to be a comet. ___ The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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