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South Jersey businessman fights to protect property amid Super Wawa plans
South Jersey businessman fights to protect property amid Super Wawa plans

Yahoo

time9 hours ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

South Jersey businessman fights to protect property amid Super Wawa plans

MANTUA, N.J. - A South Jersey businessman, Mike Campbell, is fighting to protect his property from being partially taken for road improvements linked to a new Super Wawa planned at a busy Mantua intersection. Campbell feels caught in a David vs. Goliath situation as Gloucester County officials propose using part of his property at Route 45 and Harrison Avenue to widen the road and add a turning lane. What we know Campbell purchased the small house as an office building five years ago. Since then, the county announced the need for highway improvements, coinciding with Wawa's plans to build a new superstore at the intersection. Campbell suspects a connection between the two developments and has put up signs targeting Wawa. What they're saying "I'm not slandering Wawa," Campbell stated, "I think with a period of time that they've been there if they were offended, I'd be hearing from their attorneys." In January 2025, the Mantua mayor addressed the intersection improvements and the Wawa proposal, stating on the city's website, "These intersection improvements are warranted, especially with the proposed Super Wawa coming to this area in the future." Residents like Johnny Greco acknowledge the potential impact of a Super Wawa on traffic: "If this is a Super Wawa, it's already a busy intersection and it'll become a lot busier." Carl Jackson, another resident, empathizes with Campbell's predicament: "It would suck for him. I don't know how to balance that out. It's a tough one." What's next Campbell is seeking fair compensation for his property loss and hopes his signs will bolster his cause. He has rejected the county's low offer for part of his property. We have reached out to the county and Wawa for comment and will provide updates as they become available. As the situation unfolds, Campbell's fight highlights the challenges faced by small property owners in the face of large-scale development projects. Solve the daily Crossword

Eni unveils plant for chemical recycling of plastic waste
Eni unveils plant for chemical recycling of plastic waste

Reuters

time19-06-2025

  • Business
  • Reuters

Eni unveils plant for chemical recycling of plastic waste

MANTUA, Italy, June 19 (Reuters) - Versalis, the chemical company of Italian energy group Eni ( opens new tab, on Thursday unveiled a demonstration plant based on its new proprietary technology for the chemical recycling of mixed plastic waste. The technology, dubbed 'Hoop', makes it possible to convert mixed plastic waste into a material that can be used to produce new plastic materials suitable for all applications, including food contact packaging and pharmaceutical packaging. The move is part of a strategy of the state-controlled group to overhaul its loss-making chemical business. A build-up of production capacity in China and high energy and raw material costs have put European petrochemical producers under unprecedented pressure, prompting groups including Eni, TotalEnergies ( opens new tab and BP (BP.L), opens new tab to shut down old plants or put assets up for sale. Eni said last year it would invest 2 billion euros ($2.3 billion) by 2029 to turn around its chemicals business, which accumulated 3 billion euros in losses in the last five years. The revamp hinges on starting new activities including plastic recycling, bio-refining and energy storage and shutting down several primary petrochemicals plants including steam crackers. Eni plans in the next few years to set up a new plant based on the 'Hoop' technology in Priolo, Sicily, where it will shut a steam cracker by the end of this year. "A final investment decision on the new recycling plant in Priolo could come next year," Versalis Chief Executive Officer Adriano Alfani said at an event to inaugurate the demo plant in Mantova. Versalis' new technology was developed through a joint project with Italian engineering firm S.R.S. (Servizi di Ricerche e Sviluppo), leading to a system that achieves high material recovery yields and offers flexibility in terms of input materials. ($1 = 0.8716 euros)

26 Dinosaur Facts That Are So Absolutely Bonkers I'm Questioning My Entire Education Right Now
26 Dinosaur Facts That Are So Absolutely Bonkers I'm Questioning My Entire Education Right Now

Yahoo

time19-05-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

26 Dinosaur Facts That Are So Absolutely Bonkers I'm Questioning My Entire Education Right Now

We've seen them in Dinosaur, Jurassic Park, and The Land Before Time, but how much do you really know about dinosaurs? After speaking with paleontologist Dr. Kenneth Lacovara, I can honestly say — I didn't know as much as I thought! I mean, did you know dinosaurs likely didn't roar or that they still have living descendants today? What about the actual size of a velociraptor? There's more, too. From the speed of a T-Rex to a pterosaur's extensive wingspan, here are more fascinating dinosaur facts you probably didn't know. For context, Dr. Lacovara has discovered some of Earth's largest dinosaurs, including the massive Dreadnoughtus from Jurassic World — he even consulted on early Jurassic films. This interview was conducted during a press trip to Mantua, New Jersey, to tour Edelman Fossil Park & Museum, which Dr. Lacovara founded and opened on March 29. It has been edited for length and clarity. weren't as big and threatening as you think. Universal Pictures / Via Helen H. Richardson/MediaNews Gr / Denver Post via Getty Images Dr. Lacovara says, "Velociraptors are nowhere near the size they were in Jurassic Park. A velociraptor skull is about six inches — they're roughly turkey-sized. So think about velociraptor as a pissed-off turkey. The size of the velociraptor in Jurassic Park is more like the size of a dinosaur named Deinonychus, which would be a terrible thing to encounter. You would be dead quickly. They were human-sized, fast, bipedal predators, equipped with deadly sickle-shaped claws, and thanks to their specialized wrists, they could swing those claws sideways in a motion able to impale and gaff hook their prey in a single, deadly strike." were EXTREMELY dangerous. Hadrosaurs, also known as duck-billed dinosaurs, are often portrayed as friendly, approachable creatures. According to Dr. Lacovara, that's far from the truth. "Too often, they are portrayed as dopey, friendly, gentle giants. In Jurassic Park, you can walk up and pet them. In reality, they will kill you." He adds, "There are no safe dinosaurs. Stay away from dinosaurs." 3.T-Rex had exceptionally good eyesight, despite what movies may have made you think. T-Rex are as dangerous as they've been portrayed. "They're the largest land predators ever. They had excellent vision. They could see you if you were standing still — they could smell you, too. Scientists estimate that those grapefruit-sized eyes could spot details with up to five times the sharpness of a falcon and 13 times better than a human. And, like birds and crocs today, T-Rex could see more colors than us, with vision extending into the ultraviolet range." "They were also fast — they could outrun the best Olympic sprinter." while you might not be able to outrun a T-Rex, you probably could out-maneuver one. "They can't turn well. Their head and their tail are so far apart, there's a lot of angular momentum, making it hard to turn around quickly. So if you were to be confronted by a T-Rex, don't try to outrun it, try to out-maneuver it." dinosaurs were precocial — meaning they were self-sufficient almost immediately after birth. "Some, like titanosaurs, got up and walked away just like an antelope does today. Others gave birth to altricial babies — think a little baby robin that's totally helpless when it's born. Some dinosaurs were born like that." oldest known dinosaur is the Nyasasaurus, which lived roughly 237 million years ago. "It lived in the Triassic period in Tanzania. It was small — maybe the size of a golden retriever. Other early dinosaurs are even smaller, more like the size of a house cat. They lived in a world dominated by crocodiles and other nasty reptilian beasts. Dinosaurs didn't become dominant until the Jurassic period, about 36 million years later." but pterosaurs are not dinosaurs. "They're flying reptiles." Related: 18 Adorable Celeb Pets That'll Make You Say "Awwww!" were the first creatures to fly that were bigger than a bug. The largest had a wingspan of 36 feet — roughly the size of a small plane. likely that dinosaurs didn't roar — they probably grumbled or whistled. "Dinosaurs don't roar like lions. They don't have a larynx. They have an analogous or a syrinx like birds and crocodiles. They probably made low gargles and grumbles and could have even made low whistles and pops like birds do." are descended from dinosaurs. "Your children's books lied to you about pterosaurs. The only dinosaurs that have ever flown are birds." Birds evolved from dinosaurs 150 million years ago during the Jurassic Park period. were among the most intelligent dinosaurs. Paleontologists measure dinosaur intelligence using a method called the encephalization quotient, in which their brain size is compared to their body size. "Troodon, a medium-sized feathered predator that lived in modern-day North America during the Cretaceous Period, is often considered one of the brainier dinosaurs because of its high EQ. However, Dr. Lacovara notes, "It's a crude measure. What is for sure is that dinosaurs were smart enough to be dinosaurs. Organisms tend to have the brains they need." would use its massive body weight to crush prey. Dr. Lacovara estimates Dreadnoughtus was about 65 tons. "That's nine times the weight of the T-Rex and about 10 times heavier than a Boeing 737. So you are not gonna mess with a T-Rex. Dreadnoughtus could lean against a T-Rex and press it into a tree and kill it." Related: 21 Extremely Rare Photos That'll Change Your Perception Of The Entire World of course, not all dinosaurs existed at the same time. For example, Dreadnoughtus didn't live at the same time as T-Rex, and T-Rex didn't exist with Stegosaurus. "Dinosaurs spanned 165 million years. Most of them never saw each other. T-Rex lived 66 million years ago and walked among the fossil bones of dinosaurs that are older than our fossils of T-Rex." animals, including frogs, turtles, sharks, clams, and fish lived millions of years before dinosaurs. contrary to what you may have heard, oil does NOT come from them. "Sorry, Elon Musk," Dr. Lacovara says, claiming he once got into a "Twitter fight" with Elon over whether dinosaurs produced oil. "It comes from the smallest creatures, marine plankton. There would never be enough dinosaurs in the world to make all the petroleum that we have." shows velociraptors had feathers — not scales like you've seen in the movies. Deinonychus is another dinosaur believed to have had feathers. dinosaur poop is called coprolite. dinosaur species could swim. "To clarify, Mosasaurs and Plesiosaurs were not dinosaurs — they were reptiles, but dinosaurs could do some swimming, just like any vertebrae animal. There are places where paleontologists have seen a dinosaur trackway that appears to be going into a lake, then the tracks become lighter and lighter until you see a few scrapes on the ground where their claws were swishing against the mud as they swam out into the lake." colors we've seen attributed to dinosaurs are completely fabricated. "The way we assess colors is by looking at modern analogs today. So for example, what color are really giant animals today? Well, disappointingly, they're gray — from whales to hippos and rhinos. So probably the really big dinosaurs were gray or very drab." dinosaurs, however, were probably very colorful. "They could have used their color for signaling. Today, we see animals use color for threat displays, mating displays, and camouflage, of course, so there are all kinds of uses for color and pattern that dinosaurs could have used, too." 2004, paleontologists found the skull of what was believed to be a new dinosaur species. It was named Dracorex hogwartsia, a nod to the Harry Potter books, and is known for its dragon-like head. But according to Dr. Lacovara, "there's convincing research that shows that Dracorex is really just a juvenile Pachycephalosaurus." Pachycephalosaurs have high, dome-like skulls and were first discovered around the mid-1800s. "If true, the Dracorex name would go away, and it would just be called Pachycephalosaurus." fossils are among the hardest to find. Paleontologists first discovered them in the early 1900s — sadly, those fossils were later destroyed in a bombing. "The fossils were first found in 1911 in Egypt. The bones were brought to the Bavarian Museum of Natural History and were on display for decades until those bones and the bones of three other species were destroyed in April of 1944 in an Allied bombing raid. They became known as the Lost Dinosaurs of Egypt — until paleontologists found more spinosaurus fossils in Morocco in 2014." Some scientists believe they were a swimming dinosaur. didn't roar at their food. "Just think – you don't walk up to your salad and yell at it before you eat it. It would have scared off prey." can't de-extinct a dinosaur. "The de-extinction portrayed in the Jurassic movies is probably not realistic. DNA is a water-soluble molecule and doesn't seem to persist that long. The oldest DNA that's been recovered from an organism so far is about 800,000 years, and the oldest environmental DNA is less than two million years. That's a long way from 66 million years and beyond. But scientists are, through genetic engineering, bringing back species that went extinct in the very recent past, such as the dodo, the marsupial wolf, and the mammoth." In April, scientists claimed to have resurrected the dire wolf over 12,000 years after it became extinct. asteroid event that caused dinosaurs to become extinct made global surface temperatures rise as hot as a toaster or pizza oven. "Geophysicists estimate that within an hour of impact, global surface temperatures soared to somewhere between toaster oven and pizza oven. If you were on Earth that day, exposed on the surface with nowhere to hide, you were toast." Most surviving creatures were able to burrow beneath the surface. the largest creature on Earth after the asteroid event was likely badger-sized. Were you surprised by any of these facts? Have any others to share? Write them in the comments below. And be sure to check out Edelman Fossil Park & Museum, which features dinosaur reconstructions, live animal exhibits, a dig experience at the backyard quarry (where thousands of fossils have already been unearthed), and more! Also in Animals: 21 Animals Mother Nature Encoded With A Secret Message

Inside the Seletti owner's colourful and kitsch home
Inside the Seletti owner's colourful and kitsch home

Times

time16-05-2025

  • Business
  • Times

Inside the Seletti owner's colourful and kitsch home

Every morning Stefano Seletti walks fifty metres across the yard to the farmhouse where he was born. 'I say, 'Ciao mamma, tutto bene?' And we get a coffee together.' Mother and son catch up on yesterday's news and chat about the morning's plans, and then both head to the office in the next building. The daily check-in is perfectly on brand for a doting Italian son, working for the family firm in Cicognara, in the Mantua countryside, but not quite what you might expect of the enfant terrible of contemporary design — the creative brain behind a chair bearing the legend 'Shit' and a mirror shaped like a penis. Much as she enjoys their morning confabs, 87-year-old Mamma Seletti will have none of

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