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155 million-year-old dinosaur at Dubai Mall

155 million-year-old dinosaur at Dubai Mall Kelly Clarke / 12 March 2014 Emaar asks public to give a unique name to the world’s rarest fossil A plant-eating dinosaur that met its demise at the bottom of a waterhole 155 million years ago has taken up residence at The Dubai Mall, and now it’s up to the public to name the rare find. The 24.4-metre-long and 7.6-metre-high Diplodocus longus was unveiled to an eager crowd on Monday evening, and as the curtain was drawn, a ricochet of gasps could be heard across the mall. “I was expecting to see a luxury car or yacht, not a dinosaur,” Italian tourist Vicardo Lorenzo told Khaleej Times. During the lead-up to the big reveal, many in the crowd speculated as to what was lurking behind the big, black curtain, and the wagging tongues were not disappointed. Expecting something “a little more mainstream”, Lorenzo said the 30-minute delay was well worth the wait. “I’ve been in Dubai for about five days and this will definitely be a memorable part of the trip for me. I mean a dinosaur fossil in a mall…it’s crazy, but a good crazy.” Mall becomes museum The latest, jaw-dropping attraction from Emaar is the first fossil of its size to go on display in such a public venue, and Houston Museum of Natural Sciences’ president and CEO Joel Bartsch, said it could make The Dubai Mall one of the most “important museum’s in the world”. The skeleton of the 24.4-metre-long and 7.6-metre-high dinosaur unveiled at The Dubai Mall on Monday. — KT photo by Juidin Bernarrd “This is the most important and complete fossil we have ever found. With a footfall of six million people per month, the mall is the perfect venue to show off this authentic discovery,” he said. Moments before the big reveal, Emaar’s Chairman Mohammed bin Ali Alabbar brought founder of Etihad Modern Art Gallery Khalid Seddiq on stage, before narrating how the story came to be. “My dear friend Khalid made this happen. Years ago we talked about bringing something like this to Dubai and he told me, ‘Mohammed, if you want a dinosaur, you’ll get a dinosaur’, and here we are today.” And when Khaleej Times asked why he wanted a dinosaur of all things, Alabbar joked: “Well for one, it’s a great directional sign within the mall. If you get lost, you can always meet at the dinosaur.” “Human beings are mesmerised by dinosaurs and fossils, so this is their chance to get up close and personal with a real one.” Final resting place Excavated by German Paleontologist Raimund Albersdoerfer in 2008 from the Dana Quarry in Wyoming, USA, experts took five years to excavate and prepare the bones. Found in the sleeping position, Albersdoerfer said the feeling upon discovery was intense. “My hammer hit something hard, then I saw a beautiful bone. I kept digging then found the next bone, and the next. It was an incredible feeling.” Towering above the floors of The Dubai Mall, the dinosaur’s new stance looks set for battle. Perched on its hind legs, with a long sweeping tail and slender neck, at first glance the dinosaur appears headless, but Albersdoerfer laid Khaleej Times’ speculation to rest. “It’s just a very, very small head.” World’s rarest fossil The most complete of any gigantic dinosaur ever found, the Diplodocus longus’ skeleton is more than 90 per cent intact, making it one of the rarest discoveries in paleontology history. “If you go to London, its largest exhibit is completely casted. Go to New York and they have a similar one but it is only about 30 per cent complete. Dubai is the first city to house such a thing.” So why choose a mall? Albersdoerfer said no museum in the world would get the same amount of visitors as The Dubai Mall, so what better place to showcase it. “Seddiq called me and said ‘Raimund, we’re going to buy this’, so I said okay. I’m absolutely happy. Here everyone can see it, people can get inspired by it, which is all I want.” The name game Referring to the colossal exhibit as “the lady”, Alabbar said the next step is to give the anonymous dinosaur an identity and he has tasked us, the public, with the job. “This is your chance to become more than just a spectator, so think of something unique,” he told an excited crowd. So, after 155 million years underground let’s do “the lady” justice and give her a name to be proud of. Tweet you suggestion at: #NameTDMDino kelly@khaleejtimes.com For more news from Khaleej Times, follow us on Facebook at facebook.com/khaleejtimes , and on Twitter at @khaleejtimes Continue reading

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Shortages, deprivation blight Syria after 3 years of war

Shortages, deprivation blight Syria after 3 years of war (AFP) / 11 March 2014 The agency released a striking picture showing thousands of residents crammed into a war-scarred street queuing for aid, illustating their desperation. Some survive by eating animal feed, others are reduced to living off vegetable peel. The human degradation in Syria, notably in areas besieged by the army, has reached levels unimaginable three years ago. Since the protests against President Bashar al-Assad in March 2011 descended into a bloody civil war, images of Syrian civilians suffering have become commonplace. Areas such as Yarmuk, Eastern Ghouta and Homs city have become synonymous with dire living conditions and shortages of basic goods, after regime forces besieged them. Authorities say they blockade the areas to root out “terrorists” — the government’s term for the rebels fighting to overthrow it — but NGOs like Amnesty International accuse them of using starvation as a “weapon of war”. Delivery of vital aid has also been hindered by groups hostile to international NGOs in parts of rebel-held northeastern Syria, according to the World Food Programme. The WFP said insecurity in the country had prevented food deliveries reaching 500,000 people. One of the worst affected areas is the Yarmuk Palestinian refugee camp in southern Damascus. Once a buzzing neighbourhood that was home to 170,000 people, Yarmuk became a battlefield between rebel and regime forces in 2012, and government troops imposed a choking siege on the area. Nearly 40,000 Yarmuk residents, both Syrian and Palestinian, are trapped inside, living in abject conditions: Amnesty says at least 60 percent are malnourished, and a Syrian monitoring group has says 120 people have died from hunger and lack of medical care in the camp. “The lexicon of man’s inhumanity to man has a new word: Yarmuk,” Chris Gunness, spokesman for the UN’s agency for Palestinian refugees UNRWA, told AFP. He said some people have been “reduced to eating animal feed,” adding women in the camp were “dying in childbirth for lack of medical services”. The agency released a striking picture showing thousands of residents crammed into a war-scarred street queuing for aid, illustating their desperation. Amnesty said the Yarmuk siege was “the deadliest of a series of armed blockades of other civilian areas, imposed by Syrian armed forces or armed opposition groups… across the country.” Sahar, a 56-year-old Yarmuk resident has already paid a heavy price in the conflict in Syria, losing her husband and son in the violence. But since the government cut the camp off from the outside world, she has lost “20 kilograms,” she told AFP via the Internet, a problem aggravated by her hypoglycemia and osteoporosis. “The shortages are an insult to our dignity”. For Sahar and thousands of others like her trapped in the camp, regular meals are a distant memory. “Days ago, some neighbours managed to bring in aubergines and rice from Babbila,” an area near the camp, she says. “It was the first time that I have had a meal in months,” she says, choking back tears. “We had almost forgot what ‘cooking’ meant.” Others in the camp told AFP stories that showed the extent of the degradation of a country that was once self-sufficient for food. “People are dying at home and the rats eat them before their neighbours can find their bodies,” says Jassem, an activist in Yarmuk. Since January, UNRWA has distributed nearly 8,000 food parcels in the camp, calling this “a drop in the ocean compared with the rising tide of need”. And in besieged areas, shortages of medical supplies, fuel, water and electricity are just as pressing. “Things that were normal before the siege, like television or heating, have become a luxury.” says Tarek, a teacher in the Eastern Ghouta area, which was nicknamed “Damascus’ orchard” before the siege. “A kilogram of margarine has risen from 50 Syrian pounds to 750 ($0.30 to $5), and a litre of diesel from 20 to 1,700 pounds,” he says over Skype. Eastern Ghouta residents have resorted to “digging wells, like in the olden times, but the water there is very polluted,” says Tarek, who teaches by candlelight in basements in case of shelling. The army has also encircled several areas of the central city of Homs, where 1,500 civilians were evacuated by the UN in February. At the beginning of March, the UN-mandated Commission of Inquiry on the human rights situation in Syria said more than 250,000 people were under siege across the country. It said government forces and rebels were using the tactic to force “people to choose between starvation and surrender”. The conflict has already claimed a terrible human toll, with more than 140,000 people killed since the uprising began Another 2.5 million people have fled abroad while 6.5 million have sought refuge inside the country. More than half of the country’s hospitals have been destroyed and 2.2 million children have been forced out of school in a country that once offered free healthcare and education to all.   For more news from Khaleej Times, follow us on Facebook at facebook.com/khaleejtimes , and on Twitter at @khaleejtimes Continue reading

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Dinosaur skeleton goes on display at Dubai Mall

Dinosaur skeleton goes on display at Dubai Mall Kelly Clarke / 11 March 2014 The 155 million-year-old dinosaur was discovered recently at the Dana Quarry in Wyoming. The 155 million-year-old dinosaur, discovered recently at the Dana Quarry in Wyoming, USA on display at Dubai Mall. Photo by Juidin Bernarrd/Khaleej Times A 155 million-year-old dinosaur has taken up residence at the Dubai Mall, and the public has been tasked with the job of naming it. The surprise unveiling of the 24.4 metre-long Diplodocus Longus saw the jaws of hundreds of shoppers drop to the floor at Monday evening’s reveal. The colossal exhibit has been noted as the rarest paleontology find in history, with more than 90 per cent of its skeleton intact. So what’s it going to be? Matilda, Penny, Candy… who knows, but let’s get naming. For more news from Khaleej Times, follow us on Facebook at facebook.com/khaleejtimes , and on Twitter at @khaleejtimes Continue reading

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