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Kwabena Ofori Osei
16 Views · 1 year ago

This devoted father saves his chicks by tucking one under each wing.
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“Okavango: River of Dreams - Paradise“ premieres Wednesday, October 23 at 8|7c on PBS
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For full NATURE episodes, check out http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/episodes/

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Nature is a production of THIRTEEN for PBS. Throughout its history, Nature has brought the natural world to millions of viewers. The PBS series has been consistently among the most-watched primetime series on public television.

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Explore the landscape and wildlife of the Upper Okavango River, where the deep water shows elephants swimming and carving channels through the reeds and papyrus, setting small birds afloat to drift past hippos and crocodiles. A lioness severely injured by a buffalo is left for dead by her pride. Now disabled, she must survive in the swamp alone, hunting to feed her little cubs.

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More videos:
How an Egg Hatches - https://bit.ly/2J2TfLB
Bear Cub Check Up - https://bit.ly/3063a8H
Meet One of the Rarest Frogs on Earth - https://bit.ly/2XkSztD
The Wild Horses that Beat Extinction: https://bit.ly/2XiysaK
Studying Tree Kangaroos - https://bit.ly/2YnAveR

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
14 Views · 4 years ago

Sand dams are making a big difference in Eastern Kenya.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
9 Views · 4 years ago

Film by Nidhi Dutt and Daniel Boaden

People & Power investigates the environmental consequences of palm oil plantations in equatorial Africa.

There are few products so ubiquitous as palm oil. You can find its derivatives in chocolate, shampoo, toothpaste, detergent, ice cream, floor polish and a host of other products filling supermarket shelves.

Extracted from the fruit of the tropically-grown oil palm tree (Elaeis guineensis), it has become so versatile and sought after that the growing economies of Indonesia and Malaysia, the world's two largest producers, make some $40bn a year from its production and export.

Given that by 2020 global demand for palm oil is expected to double and then triple by 2050, it is no wonder that other developing countries, especially in sub-Saharan West Africa where the tree originates, have been looking enviously at Southeast Asia and hoping to emulate that success.

But palm oil cultivation does not come cost-free. If not done sustainably, say conservationists, it can have disastrous consequences for people and the environment. In Indonesia, for example, it has played a major role in deforestation which has seen the loss of more than 6 million hectares of primary forest over the last 15 years.

As rainforests are home to least half of this planet's species of plants, animals and insects, the negative impact on global biodiversity can only be imagined. In addition, indigenous communities are also destroyed as people who have lived happily off the forest's resources for generations, often do not own the land (at least not in a form recognised by governments, corporations and their lawyers) and are frequently displaced to make way for new plantations.

Boosting Cameroon's economy
It is against this background that the Central and West African state of Cameroon has been trying to get a palm oil industry off - or rather into - the ground. Its President Paul Biya, who has held office since 1982, has been looking for ways to give Cameroon's economy a boost.

His country is not as poverty-stricken as some on the continent. It has some modest oil resources and favourable conditions for agriculture and is comparatively stable politically, but it is not immune from many of the problems associated with developing nations, from chronically high unemployment and an inequitable distribution of income to corruption and inadequate public infrastructure.

Cameroon is also over-reliant on imports, which makes it susceptible to rising prices and food insecurity. According to the UN, more than 40 percent of the population are living under the poverty line, while over one-third of its children are suffering from chronic malnutrition.

Palm oil then, would seem to offer good prospects for additional growth. The tree is native to the region and the climate is perfect for its cultivation. And of course, there are plenty of international agribusiness conglomerates looking for suitable places in West Africa in which to replicate the stellar profits enjoyed by the industry in Asia.

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#AlJazeeraEnglish #PeopleandPower #Cameroon

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
13 Views · 4 years ago

As nations go, Tanzania is in its infancy. It was born in April 1964 of a union of Tanganyika, a former British colony, and Zanzibar, tiny islands off the East Coast of Africa which were formerly Arab dominated. This program explores many of the problems facing this struggling nation - poverty, sickness, education, and lack of trained manpower. Beyond this, the program focuses on Tanzania's policy of non-alignment in the Cold War and its willing acceptance of foreign aid from both Free World and Communist Bloc countries.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
26 Views · 4 years ago

IMPORTANT CORRECTION: The proper way to write the law of cosines is
C^2 = A^2 +B^2 - 2AB cos(Ψ)

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
12 Views · 4 years ago

How did scholars begin to decipher ancient scripts like the hieroglyphs?
Subscribe for regular science videos: http://bit.ly/RiSubscRibe

Buy Andrew's biography of Jean-François Champollion "Cracking the Egyptian Code": https://geni.us/WQwD

Very soon after the birth of the first written language - cuneiform - ancient Egypt developed its own writing: the hieroglyphic script, immortalised in the Rosetta Stone kept in the British Museum, which consists of a single royal edict, dated 196 BC, written in the hieroglyphic, demotic and Greek alphabetic scripts.

Andrew Robinson is the author of more than twenty-five books, issued by leading general and academic publishers. In addition to "Cracking the Egyptian Code", they include "The Last Man Who Knew Everything" (a biography of Thomas Young): https://geni.us/XIBXvR , and "Lost Languages: The Enigma of the World’s Undeciphered Scripts": https://geni.us/iqP0Q. A former literary editor of The Times Higher Education Supplement, he also writes reviews and features for newspapers, magazines and journals, in both the arts and sciences.

This talk was filmed in the Ri on 18 January 2019.

Watch the second talk on ancient codes, all about the cuneiform language by Irving Finkel: https://youtu.be/PfYYraMgiBA

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Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
24 Views · 4 years ago

When epidemiologists are faced with addressing questions that are too difficult, expensive or dangerous to test in the real world, they turn to mathematical modeling. Hear how scientists from the Institute for Disease Modeling are using models to guide global efforts towards the eradication and control of infectious diseases.

Science in the City connects you with experts in our community to explore the latest in science and technology. Events feature a presentation designed for general audiences followed by a discussion. PacSci hosts multiple Science in the City talks every month, each with a different topic. Learn more at pacsci.org/sitc

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
14 Views · 4 years ago

Interview Tanjo of Satang Jabang on permaculture
The benefits of permaculture in the Casamance. Tanju, a member of the managing board of the school Satang Jabang relates how the Jardin Botanique in Kafountine was founded. Permaculture being one of the solutions to counter drought in Africa as it preserves and maintains the water balance.

For more information on the permaculture formation:
Centre Satang Jabang:
+221 33 994 85 42
+221 77 564 54 98 (Ousmane)

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
27 Views · 4 years ago

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Baka Omubo
15 Views · 4 years ago

What is Wrong With Nigeria | Part 2 | Pan African Talks | Nigerian Problems Today |

Dr Bunmi Oyinsan talks further about the problems Nigeria is facing today.
Find out in this video to know what ails the country.

#NigerianProblems #NigerianHistory #AfricanSeries

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
10 Views · 4 years ago

Among the thousands of hunters enlisted by the Nigerian army to track and capture Boko Haram fighters, one stands out from the crowd.

Aisha Bakari Gombi towers over her band of hunters, one of the few women who has joined the fight against one of the deadliest armed groups in Africa.

With her shotgun slung over her shoulder, she ventures into the scrub of Borno, the northeastern province of Nigeria long plagued by Boko Haram attacks, hunting down their fighters.

Her bravery and keen hunting abilities have earned her the title of 'Queen Hunter'.

Government troops are quick to call on Aisha for her skills but slow to reward her efforts financially.

While she is unable to liberate many more captives held by Boko Haram due to a lack of resources, she will never stop trying.

Dive into the multiple worlds of Aisha, a commander, a hunter and a wife.

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Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
38 Views · 4 years ago

The Pacific island chain of Bougainville has begun voting in a long-awaited referendum on independence from Papua New Guinea (PNG).
More than 1,000 people waited on Saturday morning to cast their ballots at one polling station in the main city of Buka, as others formed makeshift choirs that stomped through the streets, waving independence flags, blowing bamboo pipes and chanting in chorus.
About 207,000 Bougainvilleans are registered to vote and decide whether the Melanesian isles will become the world's newest country. Their choice is between full independence or greater autonomy within PNG.

Al Jazeera's Nicola Gage reports from Port Moresby.

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#AlJazeeraEnglish #Bougainville #PapuaNewGuinea

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
27 Views · 4 years ago

Recording of the virtual launch of AEF's new video, hosted on June 11th 2021.

With the participation of filmmaker Rucha Chitnis, AEF grantee partner Rutendo Zendah from the African Centre for Biodiversity and Pius Ranee from the North-East Slow Food & Agrobiodiversity Society, as well as Anna Lappé from Panta Rhea Foundation, an AEF donor.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
31 Views · 4 years ago

Mathematics has an uncanny ability to describe the physical world. It elegantly explains and predicts features of space, time, matter, energy, and gravity. But is this magnificent scientific articulation an invention of the human mind or is mathematics indelibly imprinted upon the substrate of reality? #BrianGreene and leading thinkers parse the thorny problems of math’s existence.

This program is part of the Big Ideas series, supported by the John Templeton Foundation.

Participants:
David Z. Albert
Sheldon Goldstein
Silvia Jonas
Max Tegmark

Moderator:
Brian Greene

- SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS on “Does Math Reveal Reality?” through this short survey: https://survey.alchemer.com/s3/6429159/WSF

WSF Landing Page Link: https://www.worldsciencefestiv....al.com/programs/does

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Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
19 Views · 4 years ago

Oxfam vegetable gardens are helping people like Adjitti prepare for food shortages in Chad.
Find out more about Oxfam's reponse to the West and Central Africa food crisis - http://www.oxfam.org.uk/westafricaappeal

Yaw Ababio
3 Views · 2 months ago

Jamaica Gospel Radio - https://jamaicagospel.maax.site/
No Justice No Peace 5-7pm
More Info Justice 904 444 9444

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I Do Not Own Song/Songs In This Video, They Belong To It's Respective Owners. Please Support The Artist/Artists By Purchasing Their Album/Songs.
THIS VIDEO IS FOR PROMOTIONAL PURPOSES ONLY, NO COPYRIGHT INTENDED This video is only for promotion and entertainment all rights are for the Artist.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
42 Views · 4 years ago

She calls them #BrownLiveGold !! meet Roseanne Mwangi, a serial agri-preneur catching the early worms with her Black soldier fly venture. She believes in creating a sustainable and circular economy.

Here is how she does it..….She processes cut potatoes’ for the hotel industry -- The peelings are used as feed for the black soldier fly--- The fly larvae are rich in protein which she uses to feed her pigs and can feed poultry and fish---The waste from the larvae feed becomes organic manure for our farms. ... and how could I forget. The Pork, Fish, and poultry land on your plate!!!
How more circular can one get? Bravo!

Go ahead, click that subscribe button, like, share and then watch..

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ygrant
11 Views · 4 years ago

Welcome back to the 2nacheki! Here is your latest African news!
#AfricanNews
African presidents in US for UN assembly.
Sudan Authorities Report Failed Coup
France Begs for  ‘Forgiveness’ for its Abandonment of Algerian Collaborators.
Hotel Rwanda’s Paul Rusesabagina found guilty of terror charges.
Ethiopia and Egypt welcome call to resume dam talks
Cameroon Crowned African Women's Volleyball Champions!
Benin Startup Builds Computers Out of Jerricans, Distributes Them At Low Cost.

Thank you for watching! Have you liked this video yet? This is the greatest thing you can do to support our channel. Also please subscribe and share this video with friends and family.
Buy our Official Merchandise here https://www.2nacheki.shop/
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Baka Omubo
38 Views · 4 years ago

The mantra One Zambia One Nation is very divisive and must never bee have used or uttered. Even the declaration that Zambia is a Christian Nation is abhorrent. Once you are clear on ; Where did Zambians come from?
Are they autochthonous in Zambia?
You will rise up from the deadening effect of these and many other neo colonial mental conditioning tools. Find out more about us in this video. Share widely, Comment and Subscribe…
References;
BBC News | SCI/TECH | Earliest evidence of art found
https://face2faceafrica.com/ar....ticle/siamun-the-lit

Ọbádélé Kambon
43 Views · 6 years ago

The Northern Experience Discussion at the National Theatre




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