﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><rss xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"><channel><totalitems>51</totalitems><casualities>1</casualities><lasthour>0</lasthour><title>GDACS EMM News Feed</title><description>
                                                        Europe Media Monitor (EMM) reads and analyses around 40.000 new news items per day from around 1000 sites worldwide. The text of the items, extracted using EMM's own text extraction algorithm, is indexed using Lucene (see http://lucene.apache.org). Please make sure your area of interest is not already covered by one of the pre-defined categories (alerts). If it is, we kindly ask you to use the feed from that category as this significantly reduces the load on our system. This site is a joint project of DG-JRC and DG-COMM. The information on this site is subject to a disclaimer (see http://europa.eu/geninfo/legal_notices_en.htm). Please acknowledge EMM when (re)using this material
                                                    </description><item><title>Laying low might have saved ground critters from dino-killing asteroid</title><link>https://www.futurity.org/mass-extinction-ground-dwellers-trees-2642052-2/?utm_source=rss&amp;utm_medium=rss&amp;utm_campaign=mass-extinction-ground-dwellers-trees-2642052-2</link><description>A new study suggests that ground-dwelling and semi-arboreal mammals were better able to survive a mass extinction 66 million years ago than tree-dwelling mammals, due to the global devastation of forests that followed the Chicxulub asteroid impact. The miles-wide asteroid that struck Earth wiped out....</description><pubDate>2021-11-03T19:26+0100</pubDate><guid>futurity-ef1f1d04efaf0546d93c1b4b43649552</guid><sortelement xmlns="emm">20211103192600</sortelement></item><item><title>Fire rages more intensely due to climate change</title><link>https://www.archyde.com/fire-rages-more-intensely-due-to-climate-change/</link><description>N After more than three months, the “Dixie Fire” finally went out on Monday. Named for a road it ran along, it was the second largest forest fire in California on record. Its flames have burned a scar of almost 4,000 square kilometers into the landscape, leaving charred trees and houses on an area larger than Mallorca.</description><pubDate>2021-11-01T13:53+0100</pubDate><guid>archyde-48e0c0f65c1312dcc0d427ff55790f9f</guid><sortelement xmlns="emm">20211101135300</sortelement></item><item><title>Harry, Chenla, Zahra: così i bambini pagano più di tutti la crisi climatica</title><link>https://www.corriere.it/esteri/21_novembre_01/bambini-crisi-climatica-12b4720e-3a95-11ec-850c-0c14b1133c9c.shtml</link><description>Dieci milioni di bambini nel mondo sono stati costretti ad abbandonare le proprie case a causa della crisi climatica nel 2020. È un numero tre volte superiore rispetto alle persone sfollate a causa di conflitti e violenze, secondo le stime di Save the Children, l’Organizzazione internazionale che da....</description><pubDate>2021-11-01T07:46+0100</pubDate><guid>corriere-29c2979c1180feca7226a1a698e6b180</guid><sortelement xmlns="emm">20211101074600</sortelement></item><item><title>MIL-OSI New Zealand: PHOTO SERIES: Surviving the Climate Crisis</title><link>https://foreignaffairs.co.nz/2021/11/01/mil-osi-new-zealand-photo-series-surviving-the-climate-crisis/</link><description>Source: Save The Children. As the COP26 summit begins, Save the Children has released a new photo series documenting the stories of children and their families living on the frontline of the climate crisis captured by world-renowned photographers in Australia, Cambodia, and Pakistan.</description><pubDate>2021-11-01T02:44+0100</pubDate><guid>foreignaffairs-nz-44a48f053b3260d48004902c35caec6d</guid><sortelement xmlns="emm">20211101024400</sortelement></item></channel></rss>