Thanks for checking out What a Weird Week, a podcast with Ten Weird Things from this week's news. This is episode 3.24 ... weird and wild ... for Full Show Notes and Podcast Links see (www.Shownotes.page).
link to the BBC podcast about the war in Ukraine - if you want to understand what's happening there, it is a good way to get informed. It's called Ukrainecast (https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0bqztzm)
(https://www.sciencealert.com/huge-new-study-finds-the-optimal-number-of-daily-steps-is-far-less-than-we-re-told?dc_data=1730090_samsung-carnival-canada&utm_source=taboola&utm_medium=taboola_news&ui=c37023ea-d37e-4608-95a9-f62a5d93a6b9-tuct72832d7)
Two of the biggest names in their respective fields not only share a cause, but also the byline of a new novel — an artistic collaboration that sparked a blooming friendship. #CBSVillage https://t.co/WYdgJagt4X
— CBS News (@CBSNews) March 7, 2022
(https://www.ctvnews.ca/mobile/sci-tech/fossil-of-328-million-year-old-octopus-relative-still-has-suckers-on-its-arms-1.5811100?dc_data=6814179_samsung-carnival-canada&utm_source=taboola&utm_medium=taboola_news&ui=887debba8a88d8ec350fdf91bdc9c449c8f74a6520e15e10923d10bb303da669)
Some #GOODNEWS to kickstart your Monday morning! 🦇💚
— Greenpeace Australia Pacific (@GreenpeaceAP) March 13, 2022
The Hill’s horseshoe #bat has been rediscovered in a dense cloud forest in Rwanda, East #Africa, after being thought to be extinct for 40 years.
More 👉 https://t.co/qPwr8V3YdO
(https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-60662541?utm_source=nextdraft&utm_medium=email)
In our #SundayTODAY photo of the week, wreckage of the ship “Endurance” was discovered this week after sinking in 1915. The Endurance will remain where it is and be protected as a historic site. pic.twitter.com/hoBRDkfMVM
— TODAY (@TODAYshow) March 13, 2022
New Spider invasion...
Millions of the large Joro spiders spun three-dimensional golden webs in dozens of Georgia counties last year https://t.co/QftJRkUi27
— CBS News (@CBSNews) March 8, 2022
Also Number 1 (three way tie?!)...
The rose-veiled fairy wrasse is new to science. It lives at depths from 131 to 229 feet (40 to 70 meters) in the waters around the Maldives. "The name honors the fish's stunning pink hues, as well as the pink rose, the national flower of the Maldives."https://t.co/3kAGAHXTwb
— OceanX (@oceanx) March 10, 2022
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