Settle photograph

Settle

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Artists Disclosure
Release dateMay 31, 2013
Labels Island Records
GenresHouse Music
UK Garage
Deep House
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Date of Upd.
ID2321132
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About Settle


Settle is the debut studio album by English electronic music duo Disclosure. It was released on 31 May 2013 by PMR Records and Island Records.

Seabed mining will stress jellyfish - scientists

Seabed mining will stress jellyfish - scientists
Nov 21,2023 11:21 am

... " Essentially re-creating a situation where sediment is disturbed and doesn t Settle - it s circulating through the water...

The secret mission to save LGBT Afghans

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Jul 25,2022 4:30 am

... Getty ImagesFleeing the Taliban20,000+Afghan refugees reSettled to UK since 2021 Taliban takeoverAround 80of those are known to be LGBT+ people or their families 40 millionestimated population of Afghanistan Tens of thousandsestimated LGBT+ people still in AfghanistanSource: UK government, United Nations, Micro Rainbow, StonewallAfter leaving Afghanistan, Bella, Ali, Ahmed and their companions were held in another country while their paperwork was processed before travelling to the UK...

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Shelter says 227,000 'no fault' evictions in three years is appalling
Apr 27,2022 3:25 pm

... " Millions of private renters are living in limbo - never truly able to Settle - in case their landlord kicks them out on a whim, " said Polly Neate...

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... The £120m scheme - which involves transporting people deemed to have entered the UK unlawfully to the east African country, where they will be allowed to apply for the right to Settle - has faced widespread opposition...

Carl beech: police are searching about VIP-abuse claims 'unlawful'

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Feb 16,2020 6:50 am

... Sir Richard praised the decision of the original investigating officer Det chief Paul TÜV Settle - to the end of the examination without the questioning of Lord Brittan, that was reversed after he was removed from the case...

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... For the, there was no mistaking the thrust of her message - Settle your differences and get on with it...

Seabed mining will stress jellyfish - scientists

Feb 16,2020 12:38 am

By Victoria GillScience correspondent, Bbc News

An experiment to test how seabed mining could affect deep Sea Life has revealed unexpected impacts on common jellyfish.

There is increasing interest in extracting precious minerals from what are called metallic " nodules" that naturally occur on the seabed.

But marine scientists are concerned about the harm that could be caused.

These researchers studied helmet jellyfish, using special tanks on a Research Vessel to simulate conditions created by mining activity.

They found that the gelatinous animals were " highly sensitive" to plumes of sediment - a condition created to mimic how mining would stir up seabed deposits.

The findings were published in the journal Nature Communications.

Deep-sea mining has been proposed - and opposed - for decades. Mining companies and other supporters say mineral deposits on the seabed can be collected in less environmentally damaging ways than mining on Land - and that it could help meet demand for materials for green technologies.

But many marine scientists point out that there will be consequences for Marine Life that we do Not Yet understand. Much of the Deep Ocean is unexplored, so seabed mining opponents also point out that mining activity could cause irreparable damage to ecosystems we do Not Yet understand.

So Far , there has been little research into how it would affect The Creatures that live their lives moving and floating through the water column, the vast area between The Surface and the seabed. One of The Lead researchers on this study, Dr Helena Hauss from the Norwegian Research Institute Norce told Bbc News that This Was the impetus behind the new experiment.

" The idea was to get hold of an organism that's globally distributed, and that would be exposed to these conditions in The Real world, " she explained.

Dark experiments

Because the jellyfish The Team studied are so sensitive to light, The Scientists worked at night. They captured about 60 animals and put them in temperature-controlled tanks, in a dark lab aboard their research ship.

Marine scientist Vanessa Stenvers, from the in Kiel, Germany, explained that this simulated the debris that would be disturbed and released by underwater vehicles extracting minerals from The Sea floor. " These are rotating tanks, " She Said . " Essentially re-creating a situation where sediment is disturbed and doesn't Settle - it's circulating through the water. "

The Experiment , which was part of the European, revealed some unusual effects on the jellyfish: When their bodies became coated in sediment, they produced excessive amounts of a protective mucus. Doing that, The Scientists explained, is energetically expensive, so The Animals used energy they would otherwise be expending on feeding or movement.

Samples taken from The Animals also showed signs of what the researchers called " acute stress" including activation of genes that are associated with wound healing.

Fragile creatures

Helmet jellyfish live throughout The World 's Oceans - Down to depths of several thousand metres.

They have fragile, gelatinous bodies. " That's not true just for jellyfish, but for worms and molluscs - lots of animals that live in the water column, " explained Dr Stenvers.

" You can afford to be fragile, because you'll be safe in the in the mid water. "

These animals also live in a world of relatively transparent water. One of the dominant forms of communication in The Deep sea is bioluminescence, which, The Scientists point out, only works in clear water.

Deep-sea mining activity, Dr Stenvers explained, is likely to change the conditions that these animals have evolved in.

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Source of news: bbc.com

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