CAA Quebec Foundation data At 70 kmh in a school

CAA-Quebec Foundation data | At 70 km/h in a school zone

In both Quebec City and Montreal, motorists driving within school zones are speeding, data collected by the CAA-Quebec Foundation shows. In the vicinity of schools, up to 96% of drivers exceeded the legal speed limit, with some exceeding 70 km/h in a 30 km/h zone.

Posted at 12:11 p.m

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Marie Eve Morasse

Marie-Eve Morasse The press

This emerges from an “observation activity” conducted by the CAA-Quebec Foundation last week.

In Quebec, the speed measurements were taken around noon near the Saint-Claude school. In a 30 km/h zone, drivers drove at an average speed of 45 km/h.

Among the 25 measures taken, two motorists were caught driving at more than 70 km/h.

“This is a very sad fact, as 92% of motorists speeded even though the signs were clearly in place,” the foundation writes in a press release.

Montreal drivers are hardly more disciplined. As the children arrive at school early in the day, the average speed in a 30 km/h zone is 40 km/h. This gap is “slightly smaller compared to the Quebec school, but we still find that nearly all drivers, or 96%, were still significantly overspeeding,” notes the CAA-Quebec.

The behavior of motorists approaching school zones is not much better. In Quebec, 96% of them drove over the 50 km/h limit (at an average of 56.7 km/h), while in Montreal six out of ten drivers exceeded 40 km/h and drove an average of 42.4 km / H.

The CAA-Quebec Foundation believes “there is still work to be done to make school zones safe.”

“We are concerned about speeding in school zones. It’s a very bad idea to put children at risk to try and save a handful of seconds at best,” said Marco Harrison, director of the CAA-Quebec Foundation.

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Four construction workers fall ill after carbon dioxide leaks at

Four construction workers fall ill after carbon dioxide leaks at LAX, one loses his pulse

Four construction workers at LAX airport fall ill – one seriously – after a gas leak: Terminal 8 is being evacuated as United Airlines flights are delayed

  • A gas leak at LAX has hospitalized four construction workers, one of whom is in critical condition
  • A man in his 50s was found without a pulse and not breathing in the utility room where the leak occurred
  • United Airlines flights to LAX were delayed but are scheduled to resume at 10 a.m. PT
  • A dangerous goods investigation only affected United Airlines facilities, the airport said

A carbon dioxide leak in a utility room in LAX airport’s Terminal 8 caused a construction worker to lose his pulse and stop breathing this morning.

The man, in his 50s, was found unconscious in the utility room where the leak started. Paramedics performed CPR and he was taken to a nearby Los Angeles hospital.

Upon arrival, his condition was listed as critical, the fire department said.

Three other workers, two men and one woman, were also in the room but were less affected.

The airport has announced that the leak has caused delays and that all United Airlines flights serving the airport will be stopped at their airport of origin.

Less than an hour later, it was announced that normal operations would resume and only trace amounts of carbon dioxide were detected.

United flights that were already airborne and en route to LAX continued as planned.

Those who didn’t depart due to the leak would do so after 10 a.m. PT, the airport said. The Los Angeles Fire Department said the leak occurred in a utility room.

According to officials, the utility room is located more than 200 feet from the Terminal 8 baggage area.

Authorities said workers heard a popping sound just before the leak.

A construction worker in his 50s was found passed out and without a pulse in a utility room at the United Airlines facility.  Three other workers were less severely affected but were hospitalized

A construction worker in his 50s was found passed out and without a pulse in a utility room at the United Airlines facility. Three other workers were less severely affected but were hospitalized

Los Angeles Airport’s Terminal 8 hosts major scheduled flights served by United Express and United Airlines.

The airport tweeted that only the United Airlines facility was affected by an ongoing dangerous goods investigation.

The Los Angeles Fire Department conducted a hazmat investigation at the United Airlines Terminal 8 facility

The Los Angeles Fire Department conducted a hazmat investigation at the United Airlines Terminal 8 facility

A hazardous materials team from the Los Angeles Fire Department rolled into the baggage claim area of ​​this terminal at approximately 7:00 am.

Terminal 8 was completely cleared of more than 100 passengers who were sent to Terminal 7 for “screening,” the airport said.

Only trace amounts of carbon dioxide were in the room, according to an 8.45am update from the fire service.

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Heavy Russian barrage on Ukraine no water for much of

Heavy Russian barrage on Ukraine, no water for much of Kyiv

Kyiv, Ukraine — A massive barrage of Russian cruise missile and drone strikes hit critical infrastructure in Kyiv, Kharkiv and other Ukrainian cities early Monday, knocking out water and electricity supplies in apparent retaliation for an alleged Ukrainian attack on the Black Sea Fleet.

Russia has intensified its attacks on Ukraine’s power plants and other vital infrastructure as the war enters its ninth month. As a result, power outages are already occurring in large parts of Ukraine.

“The Kremlin is taking revenge for military failures on peaceful people who are left without electricity and heating before winter,” said the governor of the Kyiv region Oleksii Kuleba.

Russia’s Defense Ministry said its forces had “conducted strikes with long-range, high-precision air and sea weapons against Ukraine’s military command and power systems.”

“The goals of the strikes have been achieved. All designated targets were hit,” the ministry said in a statement.

Meanwhile, 12 ships carrying grain left Ukrainian ports on Monday despite a Russian threat to reintroduce a blockade that threatened hunger around the world, Ukraine’s infrastructure ministry said. A ship brought Ukrainian wheat to Ethiopia, where a severe drought is affecting millions of people.

Ukraine’s Air Force said it shot down 44 cruise missiles out of more than 50 launched by Russia.

Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said Russian missiles and drones hit 10 Ukrainian regions and damaged 18 sites, mainly energy assets.

Hundreds of towns in seven Ukrainian regions were left without power, he said in a Facebook post, adding that “the consequences could have been much worse” if Ukrainian forces hadn’t shot down most of the Russian missiles.

Thirteen people were injured in the morning’s attacks, National Police chief Ihor Klymenko said on national television.

Loud explosions could be heard across the Ukrainian capital as residents prepared to go to work. Emergency services sent SMS warnings of an impending missile attack, and air raid sirens blared for three hours during the morning commute.

Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko said 80% of consumers in the city of 3 million were left without water because of damage to a power plant. By Monday evening, workers had reduced the percentage to 40% and the number of homes without power from 350,000 to 270,000. In order to reduce electricity consumption, the Kiev authorities increased the intervals between subways and replaced electric trolleybuses and trams with buses, Klitschko said. Subway operations resumed on Monday evening.

Across Kyiv, hundreds queued, often for more than an hour, to pump water by hand from wells to fill plastic bottles and cans.

“It’s affecting our lives, it’s really inconvenient,” said a 34-year-old resident, who agreed to give only his first name, Denis, as he collected water. “But the truth is, it’s not a problem. The problem is we have a war.”

Smoke billowed from the left bank of the Dnieper in Kyiv, either from a missile attack or where Ukrainian forces shot it down.

Associated Press reporters saw soldiers inspecting a crater and debris from where one of the missiles had landed on the outskirts of Kyiv. The rockets flew fast and low and sounded like bombs exploding, according to witnesses.

“It was really scary,” said Oleksandr Ryabtsev, 28, who was on his way to work. “I lifted my head and it flew there. You could see this cruise missile, I didn’t even go to work. I went home.”

Prime Minister Shmyhal said emergency power cuts were underway in Kyiv, Zaporizhia, Dnipropetrovsk and Kharkiv regions. “Today, just like in the past few weeks, it is important that Ukrainians use energy consciously and reduce the load on the grid,” the official said.

In the eastern city of Kharkiv, authorities said two strikes hit critical infrastructure and the metro stopped operating.

Critical infrastructure sites were also hit in the Cherkassy region south-east of Kyiv. According to local authorities, an energy plant was hit in the Kirovohrad region in central Ukraine. Remnants of a launched missile landed on civilian buildings in Vinnytsia, causing damage but no casualties, according to regional governor Serhii Borzov.

Parts of Ukraine’s train network were cut off from electricity, Ukraine Railways reported.

The attacks come two days after Russia accused Ukraine of a drone attack on Russia’s Black Sea Fleet off Russia’s annexed Crimea peninsula. Ukraine has denied the attack, saying Russia mishandled its own weapons, but Moscow nonetheless said it would retaliate by halting its involvement in a UN-Turkey-brokered deal to allow ships to pass safely to allow to transport grain from Ukraine.

Turkey’s Defense Minister Hulusi Akar urged his Russian counterpart Sergei Shoigu in a phone call Monday to “reconsider” Moscow’s suspension of its participation in the grain deal that has enabled more than 9 million tons of grain to be exported from Ukraine. According to a statement, Akar hailed the deal as an example of how problems can be solved through “cooperation and dialogue” and argued it was a “completely humanitarian activity” that should be kept separate from the conflict.

Monday’s strikes marked the third time this month that Russia unleashed massive attacks on Ukraine’s infrastructure. On October 10, a similar attack rocked the war-torn country after an explosion on the Kerch Bridge, which connects Crimea to mainland Russia – an incident Moscow blamed on Kyiv.

One of the Russian missiles launched by Ukraine landed on a Moldovan border town, causing damage but no casualties.

Moldova’s Interior Ministry released photos showing a thick plume of smoke rising over the northern town of Naslavcea on the border with Ukraine, and broken house windows.

In a further development, the Russian Defense Ministry on Monday reported the completion of a partial mobilization of troops, allegedly fulfilling a promise to end conscription at 300,000 men. However, some human rights lawyers warned that only Putin could end the call by signing a decree.

———

Suzan Fraser in Ankara, Turkey; Karel Janicek in Prague; and Sabina Niksic in Sarajevo, Bosnia, contributed to this report.

———

Follow AP’s coverage of the war at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

———

This story has been corrected to show that Monday’s strikes were the third major Russian barrage against Ukrainian infrastructure this month, not the second.

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Subscriptions could be the key to the future of social

Subscriptions could be the key to the future of social media companies

Consumers are spending a record number of hours on social media, but the platforms have struggled to capitalize on their time lately. Long-booming online advertising companies, historically the dominant way social media companies make money, have plummeted this year thanks to a flagging economy and Apple’s ad tracking changes that have made it harder for platforms to prove advertisers’ ROI.

Meta Platforms has seen a crater in year-over-year revenue growth over the past 18-plus months, falling from over 45% in last year’s first quarter to a 4% decline in last week’s third-quarter report. Snapchat parent company Snap Inc.’s growth fell off a similar cliff, declining over 60 percentage points over the same period. Shares of major social media companies, including Facebook-owner Meta Platforms, Snapchat, and Pinterest, have fallen an average of 60% this year as investors largely lost faith in their first act. Suddenly, subscriptions have gone from being a theoretical purchase option for a secondary revenue stream to a must.

They increasingly charge for exclusive features or content. As of the end of the third quarter, more than 1.5 million people were paying for a monthly subscription to Snapchat, which grants them access to “exclusive, experimental, and pre-release” features, such as: B. Longer display time for their stories and essentials a Halloween costume for their Bitmoji. On Twitch, people shell out as much as $24.99 a month to watch others play video games with a digital “flavor”.

Why pay for it? The sheer amount of time people spend on social media platforms — streaming, gaming, messaging, dating — better puts consumer spending habits into perspective. Whether it’s for joy, attention, or status, we pay for things like a premium car, a custom paint job and license plate, or a turbocharged engine. Today, on average, we spend less than an hour a day commuting in the car, but almost seven on our top 10 social media apps.

Beyond traditional social media, expect the ability to check out pretty much anywhere you socialize and otherwise go online. On Alphabet’s YouTube — whose own ad revenue fell 2% year over year in the third quarter — you can already pay for subscription-based products like YouTube Premium (ad-free plus music) and YouTube TV (streaming TV service).

Dating apps like Grindr allow you to pay to see more suitors in your area. On Match’s Tinder, you can pay to see suitors elsewhere. Would you like to “express yourself better” on Discord, perhaps with an animated avatar? It could cost you as much as $10 a month. And soon it seems likely that you will pay to watch your favorite tutorials via TikTok LIVE.

A challenge for social media platforms is that subscriptions and ads are often mutually exclusive. But that hasn’t stopped all platforms from selling an ad-free experience. A major perk of Twitter’s Twitter Blue subscription, which the company is reportedly planning to charge nearly $20 a month for, is the ability to read select articles from major news outlets for free.

The model may not prove profitable for Twitter. As reported by The Washington Post, citing Twitter’s own data, the users who see the most ads — roughly the top 1% of users in the US — are the same people most likely to join a subscription service and risk cannibalization. Perhaps for this reason, Meta, which already offers subscription options for Instagram and Facebook to help its creators generate recurring revenue, says it has no plans to offer subscriptions that would allow people to remove ads.

Will the social platform with the most users (meta overall) be best in the subscription game? Or the one who spends the most time (TikTok by ByteDance)? Or maybe the one used for work rather than play (Elon Musk’s Twitter)? If the online dating industry has taught us anything, consumers will likely continue to dabble in many but choose to pay for the one or two that matter most to them at any given time.

That would suggest that total number of users might be less relevant than engagement. Sensor Tower data shows that the time spent on the top social media apps has increased in recent years, but some apps are more addictive than others. Time spent on TikTok increased 26% from Q1 2020 to Q3 this year, this data shows; while Meta’s Facebook and Instagram also posted double-digit percentage gains. During the same period, time spent on Snapchat and Twitter decreased by 26% and 6%, respectively.

Subscribers may never be as lucrative for social media platforms as their advertisers, but the sector will struggle to grow without them.

Write to Laura Forman at [email protected]

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All rights reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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1667237858 Why horror movies kill at the box office all year

Why horror movies kill at the box office all year long

New York CNN store —

One of Paramount’s biggest blockbusters this year is a surprise hit that hasn’t faltered at the box office since it opened at #1 a few weeks ago. No, I’m not talking about Top Gun: Maverick. I’m talking about “Smile,” the studio’s chilling horror hit.

The film, in which Sosie Bacon plays a psychiatrist tormented by visions of horrifying grins, opened at the domestic box office in late September with $22.6 million. That total isn’t that remarkable on paper, but it was enough to take first place in its opening weekend and surpassed the film’s modest $17 million production budget.

“Smile” then did something Hollywood hadn’t counted on: it made almost the same amount of money in its second weekend, with ticket sales falling just 18% to $18.5 million. This is an almost unheard of stop for a great film. For example, Thor: Love and Thunder dropped nearly 70% over the second weekend in July.

And “Smile” has continued to find audiences, grossing nearly $200 million worldwide in the last month.

“When we first saw it, you could see how the audience reacted to it. They were just terrified. It went through the roof,” Marc Weinstock, Paramount’s global president of marketing and sales, told CNN Business. “We knew this was a film that people wanted to see in theaters.”

“Smile” also had a solid launch and marketing campaign that was accompanied by strong word of mouth. The trailer cleverly teased dark snippets of the film rather than give it all away. Paramount also promoted the film by having actors smile in the background of televised events.

“We’ve had people creepy smiling at a morning show and a few baseball games, and it went better than we hoped,” Weinstock said. “Even if you weren’t a fan of baseball, it went viral on social media.”

And “Smile” doesn’t just buck industry trends at the box office.

Plenty of horror films this year have done the same, showing that horror — aside from superhero films — is Hollywood’s most reliable box office genre.

Why horror movies kill at the box office all year

The film industry is still recovering from the pandemic. Audiences have been sporadic and overall box office in North America is down about 34% from pre-Covid levels in 2019. In short, it’s a spooky time for Hollywood.

Still, the horror seems to remain seemingly immune to the streaming revolution. Smile, Universal’s The Black Phone, and 20th Century Studios’ Barbarian are examples of low-cost horror films that are pulling audiences off the couch and into the theaters.

Even “Terrifier 2,” a slasher film about a murderous clown that has reportedly had viewers in theaters vomiting and fainting, is finding an audience. The film, which had a reported budget of just $250,000, has grossed more than $7.6 million worldwide — more than 30 times its production cost.

“The horror genre is no longer marginalized and has audiences drawn to the chills and thrills that only cinema can provide with its collaborative and immersive experience,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst at Comscore (SCOR), to CNN Business.

Not only does horror have widespread appeal – and is usually cheaply produced – the genre is also unique in Hollywood at this moment because the experience is markedly different for viewers watching at home or in the cinema. Studios benefit from high returns and cinemas can lure audiences away from Netflix (NFLX).

“Where else can you be in a room with hundreds of strangers all having the exact same experience?” said Weinstock. “You’re not distracted, you just sit there and have no idea what’s going to happen next. I think you can only experience that in the theater.”

“A systematic increase in quality over the years hasn’t hurt either,” adds Dergarabedian.

“The old model of underperforming, money-hungry scare fests that aimed to kill it on Friday and drop it massively on Saturday is largely a thing of the past as the genre’s new creative custodians focus more on providing a solid overall experience for viewers.” , he said. “The box office results were frighteningly impressive.”

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Bryan Harsin fired after 21 games as Auburn coach losing

Bryan Harsin fired after 21 games as Auburn coach, losing the record

Bryan Harsin defiantly took the stage at the College Football Hall of Fame and spoke the words that will forever be associated with his tenure on the Plains.

It was uncomfortable. It was unfounded… And it didn’t work.

At the time, Harsin was referring to the February investigation into his handling of Auburn’s football program, but over time it turned out those same words aptly summed up his tenure as head coach of the Tigers, which ended abruptly on Monday after a 41-27 loss to Arkansas , which dropped the Tigers below .500 for the first time since 2012. Auburn fired Harsin less than two years after his six-year, $31.5 million contract in a 3-5 start to the season, University President Dr. Chris Roberts announced this on Monday.

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“Auburn University has decided to change the governance of the Auburn University football program,” the university said in a statement. “President Roberts made the decision after a thorough review and evaluation of all aspects of the football program. Auburn will immediately begin searching for a coach who will return the Auburn program to a place where it consistently competes at the highest level and represents the winning tradition of Auburn football.”

An interim coach was not immediately named in the university announcement. Auburn owes Harsin 70 percent of his remaining salary — about $15 million — on his contract, which runs through December 31, 2026. Half of this acquisition is due within 30 days of its termination.

Harsin’s tenure on the Plains lasted just over 22 months, and he ends with a 9-12 record at Auburn that included a 4-11 mark against Power 5 opponents. He is the first Auburn coach to end his tenure with a losing record since Earl Brown’s three-year stint between 1948 and 1950 ended with a 3-22-4 record.

Harsin’s stint at Auburn wasn’t so bleak, but things quickly got out of hand for the 45-year-old following his somewhat surprising departure on December 22, 2020. The former Boise State coach was lured away from his alma mater by then-athlete director Allen Greene during a coach search that has been playing out as a high-stakes tug-of-war between influential Auburn boosters and Greene and then-President Dr. Jay Gogue was playing. Greene took control of the search in a power play, eventually ending up with Harsin, who went 69-19 in seven seasons as Boise State head coach but had no connections to the region, let alone experience coaching in the SEC.

A thoroughly underdog, Harsin has struggled to adjust to the rigors and demands of coaching in the SEC, particularly in Auburn, where going head-to-head with rivals Alabama and Georgia on the recruiting lane is paramount to the job. Harsin struggled to recruit at a consistently high level at Auburn, which only widened the gap between the Tigers and their league upper-league rivals.

He finished the 2021 cycle with the nation’s No. 19 class, although most of the class signed in the early signing phase prior to his hiring. His first full class ranked 21st nationally but ninth in the SEC, while the Tigers’ 2023 class was ranked 55th in the 247Sports Composite Team Rankings and 13th in the SEC at the time of his discharge.

The results on the field became more complicated. After a 6-2 start to Year 1, Auburn turned to wrap up the 2021 season and ended the year on a five-game losing streak. That slip included double-digit leads against Mississippi State, South Carolina and Alabama, and eventually lost the Iron Bowl in a four-overtime classic at Jordan-Hare Stadium. The year was capped with a loss to Houston at the Birmingham Bowl, which cemented the program’s first losing season since 2012 and its first five-game losing streak to end a season since 1950.

What followed was a tumultuous offseason for Harsin and the Tigers. Nineteen players entered the transfer portal between the end of the regular season and the start of spring training, while Harsin’s staff saw their own share of the turnover. Offensive coordinator Mike Bobo was fired after the Iron Bowl, while defensive coordinator Derek Mason took a pay cut to fill the same position at Oklahoma State. Defensive line coach Nick Eason joined his alma mater Clemson and edge coach/special teams coordinator Bert Watts joined the Denver Broncos. This, of course, comes after Harsin fired wide receiver coach Cornelius Williams and promoted former Boise State assistant Eric Kiesau from analyst to on-field coach after just four games into the season.

Harsin’s search for an offensive coordinator had its own hurdles before he finally hired Seattle Seahawks quarterbacks coach Austin Davis for the role. Davis’ time on the staff was fleeting, and he resigned for personal reasons just six weeks after being hired. Harsin eventually promoted Kiesau to offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach and Jeff Schmedding from inside linebackers coach to defensive coordinator. Both previously held those roles on his staff at Boise State, as the moves signaled that Harsin was doubling down on familiar faces on the staff as he attempted to shape the program in his image.

However, before Harsin could reshuffle his staff, he had to endure the university’s scrutiny of his handling of the program. Gogue announced at a board of trustees meeting in February that the university was “trying to separate fact from fiction” and would use the program to quickly determine Harsin’s future. Harsin hoisted his flag and vehemently defended himself in an interview with ESPN, in which he said, “Any attack on my character is bullshit.”

Former players spoke publicly about their experiences with Harsin over the past season, while current players rallied around the embattled coach. After an eight-day investigation and uncertainty over whether Harsin would see a second year, Auburn announced its decision to retain the coach and Gogue released a statement on the matter, explaining that it was “a waiver of the responsibility of the University” would not have followed up on concerns raised about the football programme. Gogue added that the University is committed to Harsin and will provide him with the necessary support to achieve his goals as head coach.

Although the examination took place in the rearview mirror, Harsin entered the year 2 on unstable ground. He spent the offseason restoring his image and reputation with the fanbase, alumni and donors, and at the SEC Media Days in July he urged everyone to just “watch” what’s happening on the field this fall.

The same message flashed across the video wall at Jordan Hare Stadium every Saturday this season during the team’s pre-game hype video: Harsin in the center of the screen with the words “JUST WATCH” on either side.

Everyone watched as Harsin’s vision unraveled. Two uneven performances against FCS and Group 5 opponents early in the season, followed by a humiliating loss to Penn State in what was the program’s worst home loss in a decade. Auburn escaped his SEC opener against Missouri in overtime before losing each of his next three. The deathblow came in the form of Saturday’s double-digit loss to the Razorbacks, which dropped the Tigers to 3-10 in the last calendar year and ended an uncomfortable, unfounded and ultimately dysfunctional coaching stint.

Tom Green is an Auburn beat reporter for the Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @Tomas_Verde.

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1667237724 In Canada 85 years later a researchers cameras were discovered

In Canada, 85 years later, a researcher’s cameras were discovered in a glacier

Researchers discovered abandoned equipment belonging to famous American photographer Bradford Washburn in 1937 (illustrative photo: a glacier on Ellesmere Island, Canada, photographed in March). MARIO TAMA/Getty Images via AFP Explorers discovered abandoned equipment owned by famed American photographer Bradford Washburn in 1937 (Image example: a glacier on Ellesmere Island, Canada, captured in March).

MARIO TAMA/Getty Images via AFP

Researchers discovered abandoned equipment belonging to famous American photographer Bradford Washburn in 1937 (illustrative photo: a glacier on Ellesmere Island, Canada, photographed in March).

EXPLORATION – An incredible treasure hunt on a Canadian glacier. After several months of searching, an international team of mountain explorers discovered cameras and climbing gear left behind by famous American explorer and photographer Bradford Washburn in 1937.

Last spring, “athletes embarked on an unprecedented mission: to find an incredible piece of history,” government agency Parks Canada said in a message posted to Facebook on Friday, Oct. 28.

The team from Teton Gravity Research, a company specializing in the production of extreme sports videos, traveled to Kluane Park in the Yukon. There they found the hiding place of Bradford Washburn’s cameras and climbing gear that had been trapped in the ice for the past century.

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Thirty years of unpublished data for glaciologists

Explorer and professional skier Griffin Post told People media that this treasure was spotted just an hour before a helicopter arrived. “That moment, when we indisputably saw their equipment, was so unreal (…)”, he enthused after months of “doubts” about the outcome of their mission.

“Buried in the ice since 1937, this cache contained three historical cameras with photos of what these mountains looked like 85 years ago,” Teton told Gravity Research on Facebook. The discovery could provide glaciologists with “unprecedented data on glacier movement” for 30 years, the company’s statement said.

In 1937 Bradford Washburn was on an expedition with three other climbers to attempt the ascent of Mount Lucania (5,226 meters), the third highest peak in Canada, which was then the highest peak ever climbed in North America. A mountaineer, photographer and cartographer, he was also director of the Boston Science Museum (Massachusetts), which he founded. He died in 2007.

Faced with extreme conditions on the descent, Bradford Washburn and another American mountaineer, Robert Bates, had to strip down their gear to the bare minimum. The material left behind along the way has become a treasure decades later.

See also on The HuffPost:

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newly graduated female pilots trained to pilot nuclear bombers

newly graduated female pilots trained to pilot nuclear bombers

In addition to the 80,000 soldiers recruited with partial mobilization and sent to the front lines to fight Ukrainian troops, Moscow has also decided to deploy pilots just graduated from Serov Higher Military Aviation School and trained in handling specialized combat aircraft.

Putin is the new strategic bomber. “Engine tested, ready for the new year”

Female pilots of Russian aviation

Women in particular have received an education that enables them to lead strategic nuclear bombers and transport aircraft.

Sergei Shoigu, Russia’s defense minister, commented on the recruitment of female pilots, arguing that they are “gloriously” carrying on a tradition. The reference is made to the Second World War when women were allowed to fly and take part in bombings. 23 women later proclaimed Heroes of the Soviet Union.

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