The Lead photograph

The Lead

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First episode dateMay 22, 2017
Final episode dateJune 30, 2017
Networks MediaCorp Channel 8
Number of episodes 30
GenresRomance
Drama
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2259163
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About The Lead


The Lead is a 30 episode Singaporean drama produced and telecast on Mediacorp Channel 8. The show aired at 9pm on weekdays and had a repeat telecast at 8am the following day. The Series is repeated at 5. 30pm on Channel 8 on weekdays after Legal Eagles.

Ruth Perry: Inquest hears head felt humiliated after Ofsted inspection

Ruth Perry: Inquest hears head felt humiliated after Ofsted inspection
Nov 29,2023 2:01 pm

... Mr Perry said his wife thought The Lead inspector was a bully and she was left feeling " powerless"...

Toxic gas putting millions at risk in Middle East, BBC finds

Toxic gas putting millions at risk in Middle East, BBC finds
Nov 27,2023 9:41 pm

... Respiratory disease is one of The Leading causes of death in the region, with the rates of asthma in Pollution from IraqThe BBC analysis indicates that in the case of Kuwait, some of this man-made pollution is coming from flares 140km away in Iraq...

America Ferrera: We are still just fighting to be visible

America Ferrera: We are still just fighting to be visible
Nov 27,2023 4:11 am

... " How lucky and fortunate I have been in my career to be coming up in a time where I was met with the sparse opportunities that exist for a young Latina actress to get to be The Lead… much less a lead that is self-determining and is not represented as a as a poor immigrant criminal, or a hyper-sexualized Latina...

Delhi pollution: Indian Supreme Court's 40-year quest to clean foul air

Delhi pollution: Indian Supreme Court's 40-year quest to clean foul air
Nov 26,2023 9:51 pm

... The Supreme Court has often taken The Lead in reforms to clean up Delhi s air - some of its orders include rules on the kind of vehicles that should run in the city; the relocation of thousands of smoke-spewing factories; and the sealing of businesses to reduce emissions...

The job sharing apps that feel like online dating

The job sharing apps that feel like online dating
Nov 26,2023 8:41 pm

... The scheme helped Emma Wright find her job share partner in The Lead up to her return to Ford this year after her second period of maternity leave...

Seabed mining will stress jellyfish - scientists

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

... 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...

Troubles Legacy Act to be challenged at Belfast High Court

Troubles Legacy Act to be challenged at Belfast High Court
Nov 21,2023 2:01 am

... But a judge selected one as The Lead case due to the " broad spectrum" of issues covered by their challenge...

Nuclear-armed submarine suffered malfunction

Nuclear-armed submarine suffered malfunction
Nov 20,2023 7:41 am

... In January this year it was reported that on HMS Vanguard, The Lead boat of the four Vanguard-class submarines, while it was undergoing maintenance work...

Seabed mining will stress jellyfish - scientists

Nov 20,2023 3:51 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.

Related Topics

Source of news: bbc.com

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