tv Inland Visions RT November 3, 2023 5:30am-6:01am EDT
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to have resulted in the depths of thousands of innocent people including thousands of children. these has created the monstrous humanitarian situation, which has tragically west and in an a rated difficult situation. now the countries that seem to be speaking in favor of israel and seem to be defending to some degree or other, israel's activities tend to be countries that are closely aligned with the united states. ukraine, for example, spoke in support of israel from the podium of the general assembly. now the un general assembly has many times passed resolutions condemning israel and its crimes against the palestinian people. however, it is worth noting that aren't unlike the un security council, the un general assembly really does not have enforcement power. it can pass resolutions, but it does not have the ability to enforce. and at the un security council, many resolutions calling for a ceasefire have been vetoed as the united states, as a permanent member of the un security council. and as
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a permanent member can veto resolutions that could actually move ahead and result in action to halt is really activities. so at the moment, it appears that while the un general assembly may be lining up pretty solidly against israel, well, the of those defending israel, and echoing the words of the united states, blending the entire crisis on her mazda may only be a minority among number states, it's pretty clear that this resolution in the un general assembly will not mean anything compared to what it could mean if the un security council were to move ahead and take action. however, with the united states, as a permanent member and with the united states making clear, it will veto any resolution that does not put the blame for the current conflicts. squarely on the shoulders of the moss. it is unlikely that anything will result from the ongoing debate and anguish we are hearing from the floor of the un general assembly. i'll stay with our to international up next and learn divisions and looks
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at because i've been to bump to paradise clinic the sometimes nature throws us for a loop. this place for example, beyond the natural beauty of the baltic region. this place is a unesco world heritage site. we had crony in 5th national park and today we're gonna find out what makes this place so unique. moving, sends dancing trees, birds bridges, the creation of the baltic seas, winds and waves the flakes seemingly out of a fairy tale and white fleet, the mescal world heritage site. but global warming, the change of beyond recognition geologist and geographer. tv, unethical goals is the right person to talk to about the korean spit, national park. thank you for taking the time to bring us out here. i have to say
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that it's going to be hard time convincing my mom and family that i actually work for living with a setting like this. so here on the crony and spit, we have arid dried deserts. we have sand dunes, we have rich forest and we have the beach. what do we owe this great diversity to focus the logistics i use them as i say most many specialist schools, the crony and spit coastal plane, however, is characterized by unique landscapes form by sea and wind, the landscape of the colonial spit, and the small scale climate events that occur here when being counted anywhere else . as a result, you can see open white sand dunes, green forest, birch tree, cesspits, and even field of logins, you will only see it here. no good decided we're working on often sings. it comes from particles of sun rubbing against each other and you can make it happen with your feet. this is very fun. well rounded, silica send, when it's passed close up against each other. you open here real, so
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a screech or i'm in a squeal of words if you don't. so in the sense of the colonial spit you'll be dancing years are in choosing this the now i know that the wind is always blowing and the sand is very fine. so sand dunes don't stay in one place. how fast do they move in a? how do they change through time and the cost you a previous him there was no force them to spit. there was sun that stretched across the whole area. today we can see the long, great june bridge, which is composed of the same phone system. when the sun moves that speed exceeding 7 meters per 2nd to the cent pasco jumper, the and fly around above the tunes in a constant stream. when the windows down, the sun puts cool, settle, or roll off the steep slope of the tunes into the bay. but that's still pretty wide sense. what you see here is the phone watching the protective beach to enrich this gene, which was billed by humans in the 19th century. over the course of several decades . the cool it protected saplings planted on the pop plane from flying send that
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forest kept growing. and today this do, which provides protection against flying, send and see waves. what we see is a stable ridge, about 8 to 15 meters high, is covered by that station, which means there is no sand transfer to send is held together by the roots. were there all the spots which we have to protect? now, i know that the crony in lagoon is nearby. if the wind is always blowing the sand towards the lagoon, does that mean someday that lagoon will dry up and just be filled? the fence can yes, lives in you long enough. it's a little cold. the lagoon has a vast area. the several does not to choose greater than the area of remaining white sense of the sense may be transferred and end up with the lagoon, but they're still confined to the set. so just a few meters this and can only rise to laguna fluid by a few meters. so one thing that i've noticed while we're out here is that there, all these signs don't walk off the path,
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stay on the pathway. why is that what it is? yeah, because the covariance but is almost entirely covered by sun rather than 12 visitation here is very fragile way to get off the go and it will cause the eco trail and just will come on the pos a couple of times, 7 back. it may be enough to ruin it if the rest of it then wind will set to what blowing the send away and creating a large passage. so i understand that is to protect erosion. what else are you doing to protect this part from erosion? and generally, the yellow book us, okay, let me show you one more cell versus pneumonia. now the, the, the slope here, it's just one of the techniques we used to step along as an anchor send. one son comes in from the c wise and begins to move. it gets cooled by these intertwined branches. this helps make sure that the full gene is chloe again, is covered by that station. if vegetate your sales to grow on the slows in one season, week long, so cold beach cross,
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the main species being beach p even what collect seats right here. unplugged them on the slope to keep it covered, but fonts. very cool, thank you for taking the time to show us this and for preserving this for future generations. the drain grows are also known for holding together sandy soil. and one of them has become especially popular on the 20 and spit the korea. thank you for bringing us out here. this is truly a pleasure. we're in the so called dancing forest. what makes these trees dance? pretty tina you for months is develop. the reason for the distortion of the trunks is still unknown. we're trying to research this phenomenon. the best version biologists have come up with has to do with a parasite. the pine should mark the winter and caterpillar of the month. edith of buds thus damaging the growth which custer terminals but is destroyed and side
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shoots begin to develop, which result in unusual twists of the tree. so how long has this forest been dancing and been twisting like this, and do new trees when they come up to they start to deform as well? not the money into it, the more it is. so she said, well, the 4 is the 62 years old. at the moment, it was punched in 1961, she said, even in the winter and caterpillar of the pine shoots, mazda prefers young trees age. between 10 and 20 years, this forest has been the phone for over 30 years. we, the national park have done our in for his 3 experiments, where we planted young trees from our own nursery here and observe their growth. the trees however, would get weak, dry out and die within 4 or 5 years. the cost, again, a know, we don't know why. so i know that here at the dancing force, there are a lot of legends people come up with their own crazy ideas as to why these trees dance. what's your favorite? my only be mind again the my favorite legend is about the cauldron of young witches
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. they are said to have you frozen in the middle of a dense turning into these twisted pines. thank you very much. the news of birds fly over the crony and spit in the following spring. it's sort of a bird bridge used for feeding and sleeping as a migrate. so that's why the world's 1st corner. so logical station was established here almost a century ago to study for migration the under the thank you very much for meeting us out here to nice. how did you hear? um, so this is a unique place. it's very interesting to me, tell me what this isn't, what you do here. um that's all a field side where we started building migration and the main method to study abroad. migration key analysis that that's a binding. so if we're to my rings on those lag and then let them go. um,
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but before put in any device tracking july's reading or satellite drones, we discussed, we need to drive boats. so let's hear everybody's see our big final truck, which we use the treadmills on those. usually the small bus run those we our specialization in general is a small bus. rainbows. they do not fly too high. usually they fly just above the top of the trees. an hour trip, let them let us drug those using a please do wise to drive belts and then we're doing that. so what kind of birds do you find here? are there any species that are unique to this area of most of the bill? it's the not unique, but there is a specialist that's a c go, that's a huge ingle with a why to it's um, read book suspicious in not our region. the regional colonial suite, the single one builds here, but of course we don't trust them that to be on the flight to high or low. and
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that's now we know that you track the migration patterns. what about global warming? how does that affect the birds and their migration patterns? or, of course, is it has an effect. it has an impact on the both migration and just the the simple example that's a story with the early arrivals of the great kids. that's a small bus run boat and we realize not only our station that's an old uh for the year old. people are uh, realize this both started arriving early in order. but it doesn't mean that the bill could see the temperature in the region in our region, be in some way in spain, for example, no, of course not. is just a natural selection. the rate is they feed the nice things with small cuts up the list and that's a very nutritional food and early arrivals they have in the preferences because that she speak of the cup it was uh, was shifted towards the early um,
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dates because of the global warming and flowering appear in on the lease on the trees. uh shifted the peak uh earlier. so those of dates who arrived earlier, they have a preference as those will arrive later they of course, they do not have a preference, so they feed later arrivals. they feed the nice things with less nutritional food we beatles and survival rates of an investment. some their stuff goes lower and it means that natural selection likes to watch all those with arrived. something you can actually measure. now you mentioned banding, right? yeah. so the birds that you capture here, they get these aluminum rings. yep. uh, can you show me? sure. the, so that's
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a boot. mm hm. these are rings the 2nd wondering we use here. so what i'd take every now what does that, why? so it has a gap here. mm hm. so we just put the reading on the select libraries and as lightly press it's. so it's telling me on that software 0 me read it has to. it has to move. mm hm. so not to just show birds and it has a unique number, 2 lettuce and 5 digits. mm hm. and just one of the, as an address, it's the most cool. mm hm. so anyway, anybody are in europe will ever trip this mode with a reading. he or she will read most cool, written in legend. and of course it will recognize that the belt was ringed in russia. mm hm. and then they have to send the request to russian reading center, our colleagues from reading center by the number they uh, defined that the belt was the ring tier. and they will send us
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a request to give them all the data we records here. now. so i may release it. yeah, please. hello. if you ones you may have released me. yeah. okay. but oh just uh you can just like these uh what about like these? uh huh. uh not keep your fingers slightly not the squeeze, but like, uh like, yeah, okay. and then let them go, okay, like this. yeah. and you said that there's a way to tell whether it's ready to go. it's just really is meant to be on any. maybe you will hear those things from the bath. okay, here we go. if you're lucky, all right, here we go. for the right now, we're going on a scientific expedition to study maritime heritage. ecology of the region in the
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health farm of change is affecting the baltic sea. the pressure, thanks for taking this out here so that we can have the opportunity to see you work and how you work. so today is not a good example, but the baltic is known for it's for osha's storms. with climate change. my guess is these extreme events are going to start happening more and more. are you seeing this in your research? yeah, actually the storm activity is becoming more severe nowadays. actually the last 1020 years, it's became a more aggressive and severe a. so we're actually now losing our coast for the storm with give it to you. so yeah, unfortunately it is. that's my next question about losing the coast of claimants. i'll just say that within the next 60 years or so, we're going to see the see rise,
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at least by meter. does that mean these white beaches that we're used to seeing on the crony and spit in in the baltic sea region are going to be lost, but not specifically for this reason because flight can be for as baltic sea is divided from the rest of the world ocean via the dentistry. they are shallow. so we're sort of thing that our own april system spots. yes, our coast is going down due to the geological reasons, because the entire coast of fall on germany and russia in this part of the volts exceed experience as transgression processes. scandinavia, on the contrary, rise to the skies. fishermen refer to this as a lake instead of a c. uh, 1st of all, why is that? and, but we do know that the serenity of the region is dropping. and why is
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this and what effect will that have on the claimant? i will not say there's something in to use like dropping or going down really rapid . so it's a slow process. mode. 60 has to airs. oper, right? just run an deep one more sleep. so the deep one still is more sleeping about opera layer is go in less breakers and more fresh water over the years. but it's a really slow process. some of that's why dish around time to coal, both 60 uh a week. and then as a reason to ease the fact that our fish spaces are sort of more of are going to fish research that are from weeks because it's some brackish environments. so it has low whereby a diversity. mm hm. so i guess in our industry we say we buried the lead here. i should ask you, 1st and foremost we're on a scientific expedition. what are we doing in this scientific expedition, particularly where starting the greenhouse gases in water and they're solvable in
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water. so it's carbon dioxide and c h 4. so with the main uh, greenhouse gas, and guess is that where trying to locate in water. so it's our stopped for priority nowadays. you mentioned greenhouse gases when i think of greenhouse gases, i think of the atmosphere and the air that we breathe. i don't think of under water greenhouse as what are they, how are they different and how do you actually track them extra? it's the same and how is guessers out from, in essence here and in the ocean. lots they can go from here to the ocean and from the oceans to the 1st year. so it's amanda in cycle and between the hydro seer optimised fear and actually disappear. so yeah, all these guesses can be gaps through the filter plan, credenza will blackstone and go interested in the bottom settlements and so internally to steer. so there are the same uh,
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siege for carbon dioxide. so it's no difference about our world ocean. nancy's if they are actually nowadays saving us to the take and excess it's carbon dioxide from the us this year into the water and then into bottom settlements. i guess my devil's advocate question is, how do you come that greenhouse gases in the ocean and is there an actual need to do so? so there are 2 types of guessers in the ocean. the 1st one is that cases that came from the us here. and that's why we don't find them in the ocean. actually, it's better to find them from the very start from the very beginning, from the, our plans, from our cars, from few magnitude itself. and the 2nd part is those gas is like c, h 4, which came from organic reach, bottom settlements, and they are going into the watch or from watching settlements. and in this point,
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they're also sort of unbearable in this situation because it's a natural cost. it's not human impact, right. so it's hard to mitigate. it's all connected, isn't it? yeah, i don't want to keep you from your work any longer, so we'll let you get back to it. but thank you very much for taking the time to talk us. thank you very much, the so low. thank you for taking the time to meet us out here or take us out here. really. i know that you are a claimant, i'll just yourself, but you have interesting experience with maritime cultural heritage. so the baltic is known as the sea of sunken ships. why so many shipwrecks out here and how is it going this reputation? and we'll just go down the steps. i'm waiting for couples. i'm the baltic sea is relatively small and it's also a semi in close see, which means it suffers from
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a great deal of human activity in tennessee traffic and session offshore oil and gas production, the construction of canals, etc. so of course, all the objects we find under waters at the bottom of the sea are result of human activity, both now and in the past. so i should also mention that the baltic sea is cold, with significant fresh water in flow. this creates a perfect environment for the preservation of these underwater wrecks sides, allowing them to last for a very long time. besides, the naval ship were known as to read the nevada is, isn't truly found in the baltic sea. it's an organism that destroys, wouldn't ship. and that's why we have so many well preserved shipwrecks. finally, another big factor is the legacy of world war 2. after the war, some of the ships loaded with chemical weapons were intentionally sunk here in the baltic sea. from what my understanding is that
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a shipwreck that it has even been down there, maybe a 100 years has an effect on the ecology of the baltic system. is this true and what can we do about it? it's nice actually i'm stuck with them since it unless the this is not entirely true because what in ships don't typically harm the environment. yes. but the vessels that were scott of caring, chemical weapons, or ships loaded with fuel, could certainly have an impact on the eco system. these are older ships and the chemicals leaking into the environment could cause a rep, purple damage. if we're talking about fuel, then it's absolutely a threat, but in case of mustard gas, which is denser than water, it will mostly dressed along the sea but gradually diffusing. but nevertheless, it could also do a reversible harm to the ecology or you deal with the family. let's them you mean yes and you for your model. so it seems to me there's also a paradox. if it's too dangerous and too expensive to go down and actually clean up
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a shipwreck and this shipwreck will be poisoning the baltic. what can we do about it and what type of solutions are there and stuff i so guy, the problem with recovering something shipped isn't even the cost of foxes, but rather the matter of safety, like i said, the ships are quite old and the munition shows they carry are corroding and getting center. it is much safer to leave them as is because the mustard gas, which is obviously very dangerous, is also a very dense guys. some of it will do less damage for lease gradually into the environment. lifting the wreckage up and disturbing the metal would do more harm. therefore, the best option is probably not to disturb the wreckage and leave it be the same as for wooden ships, there is a different sort of challenge there. they are incredibly hard to preserve once on land exposed to the atmosphere. when the environment changes, they immediately start breaking down. the ships remain preserved and cold and
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moderately sold to water for a long time, keeping a wooden ship recovered from the bottom of the sea as a massive challenge. so it's always a hard question whether the ship is really worth recovering. now, um, what i think of shipwrecks, i think of a lot of things pirates, i think of school, but i've been but uh for me i'm interested in what's been the most exciting discovery for you. uh, recently um was up to the 6 you 2 years ago an expedition of ours found to ship about 50 meters long and 7 meters wide. we found it at a depth of about 26 meters. there was a science and education expedition, and in fact, it was a female student from one of our local universities who found the ship while on watch. the russell itself had not been previously identified. later upon investigation, it turned out to be a french fishing boat sounds quite
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a soviet pilot, who was never awarded to ship as a trophy. however, this is probably a bit of a surprise for many people, but not for us who study to see and deal with marine time heritage. it really is a misconception that the seat is now for small. that every nook and cranny has been explored. it's actually far from that. we continue to find pieces of the past on the c bed. very cool. now if you don't mind me asking um, not just shipwrecks, but cost. so from a climate tell, just a perspective to bring your joy to know that god you're making a difference and trying to save the world. really donald, just of course your shane. yes. or there's this feeling that climate technologist paleo claim, intelligence experts and climate modeling, nothing to do with fashion. i'm talking about people who design predictive models of climate change. there's a feeling that we can actually have an impact on our future on the future of our
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children. i know it might sound a bit dramatic, but it feels like we're saving the planet that we're part of this collective efforts that we can influence and change the world around us. at least when it comes to the ocean and the sea. thank you for taking the time to talk to me. i'll let you get back to work. thank you the, [000:00:00;00]
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the acceptance. and i'm here to plan with you whatever you do. do not watch my new show . seriously. why watch something that's so different. whitelisted opinions that he won't get anywhere else. welcome to planes or do have the state department c i a weapons makers, multi $1000000000.00 corporations. choose your fax for you. go ahead. change and whatever you do. don't want my show stay main street because i'm probably going to make you comfortable. my show is called stretching time. but again, it's not. we don't want to watch it because it might just change the way and say the russian states never saw one of the most sense community best of all sense set up the same assistance
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as being the one else calls question about this, even though we will then in the european union, the kremlin media mission, the state on the russians putting s r t sports net, keeping our video agency roughly all the band on youtube tv services. for what question did you say a request for check? the is real says it's more aimed is the destruction and come us is that even realistically possible? just destroying him, us entail the destruction of the palestinian people in gaza. then there's the question of who will roll gaza? and after the more so many questions, without answers,
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in the midst of the shower and the bone, the soldier monument was erected in 1947 in the estonian capital. my. the associates authorities, originally bells above the burial side of troops, remains its memorials of the soldiers who gave their lives in world war 2 will say it's good, but i need to go to the department in the morning and forgive for really transition in 2007, the custodial government decided to relocate the monument from the city center for one year on the front of me to a to the sooner frustrating to move divided the population. the stony is large of russian speaking community strongly opposed to an intense rising pro, gallons and talent. these have since become known as the problems and i drives
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people across the username and the government, which is the 11 people reported killed and then is rarely striking themselves of gaza as id of forces advanced into the enclave. same piece is not an option. most of this is the concept of a ceasefire is not currently on the table at all. the idea is that for and is conducting a war to dismantle from us. the seller has the power of sin and death. toll tops 9000 because those are struggling to find their surviving vol attempts to hear the story of this place. civilians taken care of a wounded girl whose parents have not been found while we were those sheets the hospital . this child was also sent there. her parents have not been found,
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