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Search Result for “Geologist”

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OPINION

Quakes jolt old fears

Oped, Editorial, Published on 08/07/2025

» Although geologists are urging calm and caution against panic, a recent series of tremors detected in the Nicobar Islands, located off the coast of Phuket and Phangnga provinces, as well as the northern province of Lampang, has been a powerful reminder of the need to ensure the country's tsunami warning system remains fully functional.

OPINION

The world wins when women win

Oped, Indermit Gill & Tea Trumbic, Published on 08/03/2024

» In May 1988, Alejandra Arévalo became the first female geologist to enter an underground mine in Chile. In doing so, she defied a popular myth: that a woman brings bad luck by venturing into a mine. She also broke the law. At the time, Chilean women were forbidden to work in underground mining or in any other job that "exceeded their strength or put at risk their physical or moral condition." Ms Arévalo's defiance helped spark a revolution. By 1993, the restrictions on women in mining had been abolished; and by 2022, women represented 15% of the Chilean mining workforce, a threefold increase since 2007.

OPINION

Give opportunities

Oped, Postbag, Published on 21/11/2023

» Re: "Myanmar still a ticking time bomb", (Editorial, Nov 19).

OPINION

The Soliloquy of Harold Callahan

News, Roger Crutchley, Published on 11/07/2021

» My thanks to former colleague Alan Dawson for alerting me to a scene from the Clint Eastwood film Sudden Impact which may throw some light on the hot dog and ketchup debate which featured in last week's column.

OPINION

Luang Prabang Dam a threat to World Heritage?

News, Philip Hirsch, Published on 29/06/2021

» The Lao government is intent on building a dam on the Mekong just upstream of the country’s old royal capital. Despite the project having undergone design work, environmental impact assessment and a prior consultation process managed by the Mekong River Commission (MRC), no heritage impact assessment has been carried out to date — despite requests by Unesco’s World Heritage Centre dating back as far as 2012 that the Lao government should do so. Ahead of next month’s World Heritage Committee meeting in China, of which Thailand is a current member, Unesco has asked that no construction work go ahead on the dam until a full heritage assessment has been completed.