Read the latest news from regional and global sources, presenting different voices and perspectives.

Groundbreaking discovery reveals Southern Ocean’s circulation has reversed
For the first time in recorded history, researchers have identified a drastic reversal in ocean circulation within the Southern Ocean, a finding that carries profound implications for global climate patterns. This momentous study, led by the...
Today in High Prairie: July 10, 2025
Today in High Prairie! See what’s happening today in town, celebrity birthdays, local history, world history and your daily horoscope. Please send your birthdays and community events to southpeacenews@hotmail.com and/or spneditor@outlook.com....

How James Gunn's Superman Reinvents the Look and Feel of Kal-El's World
Back in Summer 2024, it’s safe to say all eyes were on Cleveland, Ohio. That’s when production on James Gunn’s Superman shifted to The Forest City and transformed several downtown blocks into a facsimile of Metropolis, complete with fake...

MAGA lemmings
President Donald Trump has corrupted the GOP like a hollowed out apple. As a person who is leaving one GOP state (North Carolina) for another (Iowa), I have seen the systematic destruction of the agricultural industry in both states through petty...

The delicate art of natural resource diplomacy
As competition for minerals that power the industries of the future heats up, the most successful countries would approach diplomacy with foresight and balance Resource competition has long underpinned international relations. However, it seems to...

Melting glaciers turn carbon-storing land into greenhouse gas sources
Summary: As glaciers retreat and expose the land beneath them, newly uncovered sediments first act to absorb greenhouse gases – but over time, they shift to emitting them. That’s the conclusion of a study published in Communications Earth &...

Heart of the matter: How Denmark’s focus on Ukraine and enlargement will define its EU presidency
During last week’s NATO summit, Denmark announced that it will allocate €1.26bn to support Ukrainian production of long-range drones for its war effort against Russia. Danish prime minster Mette Frederiksen’s support for Ukraine—with regards to...

Melon Music Awards 2025: Date, Venue, Ticket Sales, Voting Details, and More
Melon Music Awards (MMA) is gearing up to return with a new set of nominees, performers, presenters, and winners. The annual star-studded ceremony will be back with its 17th edition in December. Kakao Entertainment has shared some details about...

World’s oldest domesticated dog breed has lived with humans for 1,000 years, new study shows — but their population is plummeting
It gives new meaning to dog years. Various types of sled dogs have been used by humans across the Arctic for almost 10,000 years, but new research reveals one particular type to be the oldest continuously domesticated breed. According to a new...

Search Continues to Really Get the Lead Out
When Charles Lindbergh and his wife, Anne Morrow Lindbergh, embarked on their ambitious 1933 flight to survey over-water routes for airlines, they packed a secret weapon. The famous couple headed to some of the most isolated areas of the North and...
The water around Antarctica is getting saltier – and that is of global concern
The ocean around Antarctica is rapidly getting saltier at the same time as sea ice is retreating at a record pace. Since 2015, the frozen continent has lost sea ice similar to the size of Greenland. That ice hasn’t returned, marking the largest...

Are America’s Competitive Advantages Being Decimated?
The US is an unrivaled economic powerhouse. It accounts for 4% of the world’s population yet captures a whopping 24% of the world’s gross domestic product — the total value of goods and services produced by a country in one year. When comparing...

A Supreme Court Justice Wrote the Greatest “No Kings” Essay in History
Get clear, smart takes on every major ruling. Subscribe to support Slate’s legal coverage. Join Slate Plus In 1952 one Supreme Court justice wrote the greatest essay against one-man rule. Robert H. Jackson’s concurring opinion in Youngstown Sheet...

Rare earths emerge as a geopolitical lynchpin in the rising China-U.S. rivalry
“They’re going to deliver rare earths to us,” U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said in an interview on June 27. “And once they do that, we’ll take down our countermeasures.” Mr. Lutnick’s remarks came just a day after a White House official...

Critical Minerals of Peril and Power: The Five-Element Spine of the Modern Arsenal
The pilot slides his thumb across the F-35’s throttle and the jet answers with a whiplash of thrust, airframe flexing like a living blade. Hidden beneath that carbon-fiber skin is a cathedral of metals the color of dusk and midnight: magnets that...

International Year of Glaciers’ Preservation: save the glaciers!
The United Nations has designated 2025 as the International Year of Glaciers’ Preservation to highlight the importance of glaciers and ensure that those relying on them, and those affected by cryospheric (1) processes, receive the necessary...

Worker killed over theft allegation in Gazipur factory
A 19-year-old worker has been beaten to death inside a factory in Gazipur after being accused of theft, sparking widespread protests and forcing the owners to declare an abrupt shutdown. The management of Greenland Limited in Gazipur’s Konabari...

‘Completely unexpected’: Antarctic sea ice may be in terminal decline due to rising Southern Ocean salinity
The ocean around Antarctica is rapidly getting saltier at the same time as sea ice is retreating at a record pace. Since 2015, the frozen continent has lost sea ice similar to the size of Greenland. That ice hasn’t returned, marking the largest...

It happened today – this day in history – July 10
48BC: Julius Caesar barely avoids a catastrophic defeat to Pompey near the city of Dyrrachium (in what is now Albania). 138: Death of Roman emperor Hadrian aged 62. 988: The city of Dublin is founded on the banks of the River Liffey. 1040: Lady...

Pilot 4,300 miles over the polar ice cap says one item stopped altitude fidgets
Helicopter adventurer Jules Mountain says “I’ve never been good at following rules I don’t believe in” (Image: -) Most of us would balk at crossing the polar ice cap in a single-engine helicopter with no autopilot and no oxygen supply – one which...