Telegram изъял 70% адресов каналов, которые не проявляли активность год или более (то есть отобрал у них короткое имя, как например моё @clockstackwheels). Дуров заявил, что, дескать, эти адреса принадлежали иранским киберсквоттерам. Хотя, зная его любовь к выдаче желаемого за действительное, могу предположить, что 70% каналов просто были заброшены. И у меня даже есть идеи, почему, но, думаю, вы и сами догадываетесь.
Тем не менее, независимо от истинных причин, чистить неактивные адреса я считаю правильным. Каналы созданы для того, чтобы быть живым фидом какой-то информации. Не обязательно блогом, это может быть даже технический канал с логом вашего CI/CD по работе.
Издание Telegram Info запустило петицию с требованием вернуть эти адреса. Вот что они пишут: Зачастую каналы используются авторами как личные визитные карточки, каталоги, энциклопедии и публичные архивы..
Я тоже так могу: Зачастую микроскопы используются владельцами как подставки для книг, линзы для поджига костра и инструмент забивания гвоздей!.
Думаю, то же самое (экспроприацию адресов) сделали бы с ботами, если бы на платформу ботов не положили огромный болт ещё несколько лет назад.
#web
🌎 Layers of ancient lake and ocean sediments serve as natural records of Earth's climate. By studying pollen, ash, and chemical changes in these sediments, scientists can reconstruct temperature, rainfall, and ecosystem shifts from thousands to millions of years ago. Some Greenland and Antarctic cores show detailed yearly changes stretching back over 100,000 years. ✨
#geology⚡#climate⚡#paleoclimate
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🌍 The Sahara was once a lush region covered with lakes and grasslands about 10,000 years ago. Ancient rock art and fossils show hippos and crocodiles lived where desert sands now stretch for miles. ✨
#historicalgeography⚡#paleoclimate⚡#sahara⚡#geography⚡#nature⚡#earth
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🌎 Layers of ancient coral reefs act as natural records of Earth’s climate history. By analyzing their growth bands, scientists uncover patterns of sea temperature and ocean chemistry stretching back millions of years. ✨
#coral⚡#geology⚡#paleoclimate
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🌎 Ancient lake beds called "playa lakes" preserve natural records of Earth's past. Layers of sediment in these basins capture pollen, plant remains, and even insect fossils, revealing climate cycles and environmental shifts over thousands of years. Some dry lakebeds in the U.S. Southwest show records going back 120,000 years. ✨
#geology⚡#paleoclimate⚡#lakes
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🌎 Mud layers at the bottom of lakes and oceans provide detailed natural records of Earth's past climates. These sediments contain pollen, fossils, and chemical traces, letting scientists reconstruct environmental changes over hundreds of thousands of years. ✨
#paleoclimate⚡#sediments⚡#geology
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🌎 Beneath the waters of the Bahamas, the so-called “blue holes” are deep, vertical underwater caves formed during past ice ages when sea levels were lower. Some exceed 300 meters in depth and preserve ancient fossils and climate records in their oxygen-poor layers. ✨
#ocean⚡#cave⚡#paleoclimate
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🌎 Around 252 million years ago, the Permian-Triassic extinction wiped out about 90% of marine species and 70% of land vertebrates. Massive volcanic eruptions in Siberia released greenhouse gases that drove rapid global warming, ocean acidification, and low oxygen levels—making it the largest extinction event in Earth's history. ✨
#extinction⚡#volcanoes⚡#paleoclimate
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🌎 Antarctic ice cores act as natural records of Earth's atmosphere, trapping ancient air bubbles that show CO2, methane, and temperature changes going back 800,000 years. ✨
#icecores⚡#paleoclimate⚡#antarctica
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🌎 Antarctica’s ancient ice sheets hold Earth’s longest direct climate records. Deep ice cores reveal trapped air bubbles, preserving atmospheric changes over 800,000 years. This helps scientists track greenhouse gas levels and temperature shifts across multiple ice ages. ✨
#Antarctica⚡#icecores⚡#paleoclimate
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🌎 Ice cores drilled from Antarctica and Greenland are frozen time capsules, preserving thousands of years of air bubbles, pollen, and tiny particles. By analyzing these layers, scientists reconstruct past temperatures, volcanic eruptions, and atmospheric changes stretching back over 800,000 years. ✨
#icecores⚡#paleoclimate⚡#atmosphere
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Sea Secrets - Arash Sharifi
Arash Sharifi, a Ph.D. candidate of marine geology and geophysics at the UM Rosenstiel School, takes us into the compelling world of #paleoclimate research. By using climate, #historical, and #archeological records, Sharifi shows how climate change has been affecting the world since the beginning of human #civilization.
@Enviro_Climate
https://youtu.be/ovy-57jx85Q?t=3
🌎 Coral reefs provide another remarkable natural record of Earth’s past. As corals grow, they form bands in their skeletons that reflect seasonal changes in water temperature, chemistry, and even extreme weather events. Some coral cores reveal ocean conditions dating back several centuries. ✨
#coral⚡#reefs⚡#paleoclimate⚡#oceanography
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