Distant Relatives photograph

Distant Relatives

Use attributes for filter !
Release dateMay 18, 2010
Labels The Island Def Jam Music Group
GenresHip Hop Music
Reggae
Reggae Fusion
Liked
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID1051535
Send edit request

About Distant Relatives


Distant Relatives is a collaborative studio album by American rapper Nas and Jamaican reggae artist Damian Marley, released May 18, 2010, on Universal Republic and Def Jam Recordings. Production for the album took place between 2008 and 2010 and was handled primarily by Damian Marley and Stephen Marley.

Hawaii fires: Relatives of residents struggle to help from afar

Hawaii fires: Relatives of residents struggle to help from afar
Aug 12,2023 7:01 am

... Talking of one of her Distant Relatives, Ms Johnson says he was found " in a lawn chair in his yard burnt to a crisp...

Joe Biden in Ireland: US president meets Michael D Higgins in Dublin

Joe Biden in Ireland: US president meets Michael D Higgins in Dublin
Apr 13,2023 7:30 am

... We call him a local Despite the rain, people lined the streets of Carlingford to welcome the US President back to Ireland - among them, Distant Relatives...

Joe Biden meets Leo Varadkar on tour of Ireland

Joe Biden meets Leo Varadkar on tour of Ireland
Apr 12,2023 2:20 pm

... On the next leg of his trip he met Distant Relatives in the Cooley Peninsula and the village of Carlingford in County Louth...

Oscars 2023: Everything Everywhere All At Once leads nominations

Oscars 2023: Everything Everywhere All At Once leads nominations
Jan 24,2023 11:41 am

... There was also a nomination in the best international film category for The Quiet Girl, about a shy young girl who goes to stay with her Distant Relatives for the summer...

Oscar nominations 2023: Top Gun leads sequels surge

Oscar nominations 2023: Top Gun leads sequels surge
Jan 23,2023 8:51 pm

... And there could be a nomination in the best international film category for The Quiet Girl - an excellent film about a shy young girl who goes to stay with her Distant Relatives for the summer...

Secret communication of sea animals discovered

Secret communication of sea animals discovered
Oct 25,2022 12:31 pm

... " We need to see common features across much more Distant Relatives to push our understanding back into hundreds of millions of years...

Why an Indian couple is suing son over grandchildren

Why an Indian couple is suing son over grandchildren
May 14,2022 4:15 am

... Everyone - from parents and parents-in-law to near and Distant Relatives and the wider society - has a say in the matter and in most cases, families begin nudging couples towards starting a family even before the bride s henna has faded...

Ukraine war: One shell that destroyed a family

Ukraine war: One shell that destroyed a family
Mar 15,2022 9:16 am

... We speak via video call, as Maryna is now sheltering with Distant Relatives in western Ukraine, along with her daughter Yanna and her grandson...

Secret communication of sea animals discovered

Mar 9,2022 8:57 pm

By Georgina RannardBBC News Climate and Science

A scientist has found that 53 sea creatures previously thought to be silent can actually communicate.

The Creatures were sending message All Along , but humans had never thought to listen to them, Gabriel Jorgewich-Cohen suggests.

He used microphones to record the species, including turtles, communicating they wanted to mate or hatch from The Egg .

The findings claim to re-write some of what we know about evolution.

They suggest that all vertebrates that breathe through their noses and use sound to communicate descended from a single ancestor 400 million years ago.

It is a strong claim in Evolutionary Biology which debates whether Living Things descended from a single ancestor or from multiple origins.

Mr Jorgewich-Cohen, a PhD student at University of Zurich, Switzerland began his work with a hunch that marine animals might communicate with sound.

He used sound and video equipment to record 53 species in captivity around The World , including at Chester Zoo in England.

The Creatures included 50 turtles, a tuatara, a lungfish and a caecilian.

It had been thought that all these animals were mute but Mr Jorgewich-Cohen suggests They Went unheard because their sounds were hard to detect.

" We know when a bird sings. You don't need anyone to tell you what it is. But some of these animals are very quiet or make a sound every Two Days , " he told Bbc News .

Mr Jorgewich-Cohen also suggested that humans have a bias towards creatures that live on land and so they ignored species underwater.

Video recorded of The Animals when they made noise allowed him to connect sound with an associated behaviour - to distinguish from accidental sounds that don't send a message.

" Sea turtles will sing From Within their egg to synchronise hatching, " he explained.

" If they call from inside, they all come out together and hopefully avoid being eaten. "

Turtles also make noises to indicate they want to mate, He Said , pointing to videos of turtle mating sounds that are popular on Social Media .

Mr Jorgewich-Cohen also recorded tuataras making sounds to guard their territory.

He then began to consider what The Discovery revealed about the evolution of noise-making animals.

Fossils often do not tell scientists enough about animals that lived millions of years ago so instead they compare the behaviour of living animals.

Using a technique called phylogenetic analysis, Mr Jorgevich-Cohen traced back The Relationship between noise-making animals.

The technique works by comparing behaviours of a species and mapping them like a Family Tree . If, for example, a human and chimpanzee share behaviour like making noise it suggests that the ancestor in common also produced sound.

He concluded that all Acoustic Communication in vertebrates descended from a single ancestor 400 million years ago, which was the Devonian period when most species lived under water.

That contrasts to recent work that 200 million years ago.

Biologist Catherine Hobaiter, who was not part of the research, told Bbc News that recordings of these 53 species was a welcome addition to what we know about Acoustic Communication .

" Comparing species like chimpanzees and humans only gets us back a few million years, " She Said .

" We need to see common features across much more Distant Relatives to push our understanding back into hundreds of millions of years. "

The research is published in the scientific journal Nature Communications .



Source of news: bbc.com

Distant Relatives Photos

Related Persons

Next Profile ❯