Placeholder Image

字幕列表 影片播放

  • the results from New Hampshire are in, and they're our first topic today on CNN.

  • 10.

  • I'm Carla Zeus.

  • Wherever in the world you're watching.

  • Thank you.

  • Here's what happened on Tuesday night in the Granite State, Senator Bernie Sanders came out on top in the Democratic primary.

  • The lawmaker from Vermont received 25.8% of the vote, followed by Pete Buddha Judge, a former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, who got 24.5%.

  • Senator Amy Klobuchar, who represents Minnesota, came in third with 19.8%.

  • Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and former vice president Joe Biden rounded out the top five, though they didn't win any pledged delegates.

  • And that's really the name of the game here.

  • Whoever wins a majority of delegates through these state primaries and caucuses is likely to become a party's nominee for president.

  • So far, Senator Sanders and former Mayor Buddha judge lead in the Democratic delegate count.

  • But the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primaries are on Lee the 1st 2 contests.

  • There's still a long way to go.

  • After the results from New Hampshire came in, a few Democrats left the race, Senator Michael Bennet of Colorado businessman Andrew Yang and former Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick all suspended their campaigns.

  • They just weren't getting the votes they needed to stay in.

  • So now there are eight Democrats still in the race, and the next contest for them will be a caucus on February 22nd in Nevada.

  • On the other side of the political aisle, there's one candidate, former Massachusetts Governor Bill Weld, who's challenging incumbent President Donald Trump for the Republican nomination.

  • Former U.

  • S representative Joe Walsh of Illinois suspended his campaign after the Iowa caucuses last week.

  • But in New Hampshire, like in Iowa, President Trump easily won, getting around 85.8% of the vote there.

  • The next contest for Republicans take place in several states on Super Tuesday, March 3rd.

  • Second Trivia.

  • Which of these African countries has the most official languages?

  • South Africa, Egypt, Libya or night?

  • Syria, with 11 official languages, including Zulu Africans in English, South Africa has the most on this list, according to the World Wildlife Fund, a conservation group.

  • South Africa is one of the four main countries in Africa where you can still find rhinoceroses all but one species of these animals are endangered.

  • Thousands of them have been poached illegally hunted because their horns air used in traditional Asian medicine.

  • Even the sanctuaries that are designed to protect and preserve rhinos are under threat.

  • But they have a new weapon in the fight against poaching.

  • And believe it or not, it's a type of meerkat.

  • Our first store, I know.

  • When I was probably 67 years old in the Crew National Park and then on you, I wanted to particular on it to be leading the project that protects so many writers so successful in doing.

  • That's an absolute privilege of going off the wall.

  • We're building a smart based on technology that enables our engines to be able to secure the area without many of us who might be tourists giving, realizing what is happening.

  • Postcode near cut was the world's first.

  • If it is a specific time, people in the park we have not used the gate.

  • Our system will be able to pick those up.

  • It's difficult to find a person named two million Victor's.

  • It's like finding a needle in a stack of needles and being getting to him and catching him and people think?

  • Well, that's easy.

  • It's not easy what the market has effectively done since it sze first, deployment into these parts of Kruger has decreased poaching by up to 95% every day.

  • That market is working way of saving your honors.

  • Technology makes things possible, but people makes things happen.

  • It can't replace people, but it can make it much easier for the people to do the job.

  • It's also exciting to start using technology in a useful way, because often we feel that we do technology for the sake of technology.

  • But now we actually doing technology for the sake of saving a species you need to be able to sense.

  • Then you need to make sense of what you're sensing, and the third thing is you need to be able to respond to that.

  • These systems all need to talk to each other.

  • The boundary detection system alerts the Mickens make it, pollutes the rangers and alerts the helicopter.

  • The reaction through it's the aircraft able to transfer the acquisition of the poachers over to the cross.

  • People come from all over the world to come and see the wildlife in Africa.

  • If we're not able to conserve it had means those people will not come here.

  • Keystone species such as the rhino will be they for my young ones to appreciate us well, maybe even the next generations that follows them.

  • We enter a new era of conservation with various forms of technology, enable us to secure bigger areas and are in tight.

  • Better to what we need to be, huh?

  • Avocados, kale and now mushrooms.

  • The young guy are increasing in demand price and production.

  • In fact, the American Mushroom Institute says the U.

  • S is producing more mushrooms per month than it ever has before.

  • The industry trade group credits the increasing popularity of plant based diets for the mushrooming changes, but they're not just for salads.

  • Mushrooms can be used to make everything from furniture to clothing to shipping materials.

  • Mycelium foam, like what's made by a company called a cooperative, isn't always the most cost effective option for shipping.

  • But it is changing the way some people think about mushrooms.

  • Since the 19 fifties, humans have produced over nine billion tons of plastic, most of that is ending up in landfills and could take centuries to decompose, a miracle material found in nature could be the key to reducing plastic waste.

  • It's called Mycelium, and it comes from mushrooms.

  • Miss Ilium is like the root structure of a mushroom.

  • You're used to seeing a much from above ground.

  • Miss Ilium is like the roots beneath it, but no one that ever tried to use them to make materials.

  • Evan Dreyer is the CEO of Excavated, a company that has developed a way to grow my psyllium into specific shapes and sizes.

  • They start by taking organic plant ways and mixing it with my silly themselves, which act as a sort of natural glue.

  • The Miss Cillian grows through and around those particles, and it binds them together.

  • And you've got a grown product.

  • Excavators.

  • My psyllium products provide a natural alternative to packaging materials made out of plastic and styrofoam.

  • But at the end of its useful life, you can actually break it up, and you could put in your own garden.

  • So it's It's a nutrient, not pollute.

  • Excavated wants to take my psyllium to the next level.

  • Our current technical focus is developing the next generation of Sicilian materials from cell scaffolding.

  • Love, they're like materials, even meet replacements a k a.

  • My Psyllium bacon, which is still in its testing phases.

  • The company thinks by psyllium could also play a major role in construction and even in regenerative medicine.

  • It really has boundless possibilities, and it comes from its ability to move from the micro scale to the packers.

  • Time to turn up the radio to CNN.

  • 10 Cause Scientists say they have detected some mysterious radio signals from outer space.

  • Radio signals are nothing new, But what was picked up by a radio telescope in western Canada is a pattern of these signals that repeats every 16 days.

  • Scientists don't know why they think it's coming from a galaxy that's about 500 million light years away, so like outside our neighborhood and that it could be coming from a star.

  • Well, of course, all radio hits come from stars.

  • It's not really transforming information.

  • You just need to have the capacity to keep your antennas out and tune into whatever's dialed up an amplified across the universe.

  • And you'll not be disappointed in what speaker into your ear phones, radio punt, their ear transistor bill, Y'all on Carla Zeus Timberland High School is listening today, shout out to our viewers in ST Stephen, South Carolina, though I don't personally pick the schools we mentioned on Friday, I'll be giving a tip on how their chosen to subscribers of our official YouTube channel, that's all for CNN.

the results from New Hampshire are in, and they're our first topic today on CNN.

字幕與單字

單字即點即查 點擊單字可以查詢單字解釋

B1 中級

保護犀牛的新技術--2020年2月13日。 (New Tech In The Fight To Protect Rhinos | February 13, 2020)

  • 0 0
    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
影片單字