-
Oil rises, stocks mixed as investors eye chances for end of Mideast war
-
Doubles champion Jamie Murray retires from tennis
-
Merz praises Lufthansa on centenary as strikes ruin party
-
France's Gulf veteran minehunter patrols Channel
-
Brazil Supreme Court orders probe into Flavio Bolsonaro for 'slander' of Lula
-
IMF chief warns of 'tough times' if oil prices stay high
-
Bosnia approves gas project by Trump-linked investors
-
Pupil kills nine, wounds 13 in new Turkey school shooting
-
Left-wing candidate Sanchez climbs to second place in Peru vote count
-
New tools rescue old art at Madrid's Prado museum
-
Cameroonians welcome pope on second leg of African tour
-
Verstappen understands 'bigger picture' in power unit debate: F1 boss Domenicali
-
Hearn wants Katie Taylor to top Croke Park bill, rules out Fury-Joshua in Dublin
-
Stocks edge higher as investors eye chances for end of Mideast war
-
Iran ups threats over naval blockade, but still talking to US
-
Critically endangered orangutan born at Madrid zoo
-
EU rejects Meta's pay-for-access remedy in WhatsApp AI chatbots probe
-
Pupil kills four wounds 20 in new Turkey school shooting
-
Left-wing radical 'confident' after late surge in Peru presidential poll
-
Starmer says 'won't yield' to Trump's Mideast war threats
-
Liverpool captain Van Dijk says PSG 'deserved' Champions League semi-final spot
-
England women's rugby star Kildunne reveals body issues struggle
-
Chinese suppliers, Mideast importers fret about war fallout on trade
-
Markets steadier on Mideast peace hopes, as war hits luxury goods
-
EU says age-check app 'ready' in push to protect children online
-
New Hungarian leader Magyar says pro-Orban president must resign
-
After three years of war, Sudan confronts devastation as donors gather in Berlin
-
Pope heads to Cameroon with message of peace for conflict zone
-
OpenAI announces restricted-access cybersecurity model
-
England's Stokes 'quite lucky' to be alive after facial injury
-
Keiko Fujimori: Peru's biggest political loser inches toward victory
-
Barcelona hope young talent learn from Champions League disappointment
-
The Middle East war: latest developments
-
French luxury firms Hermes, Kering knocked by disappointing sales
-
Ukraine veteran stages puppet shows to honour killed soldiers
-
Afghans comb riverbed in search of gold dust
-
Stocks rally, oil falls further as Trump fans fresh peace hopes
-
Double Olympic badminton champion Axelsen announces retirement
-
Peru candidate demands vote annulment as count tightens
-
Tom Cruise shares sneak peek of Inarritu comedy 'Digger' at CinemaCon
-
Rosalia caps journey from student to star with Barcelona concerts
-
AI expansion drives up profits at bullish tech giant ASML
-
Hamano strikes as Japan end US winning streak
-
Xi meets Russian FM as leaders flock to China over Middle East war
-
'Industrial' clickbait disinformation targets Australian politics
-
AI-driven chip shortage slowing efforts to get world online: GSMA
-
Ball hero and villain as Hornets sting Heat, Blazers eclipse Suns
-
Kanye West postpones France concert after minister's block call
-
Indonesia, France agree to boost defence industry ties
-
Super Rugby's Moana Pasifika to fold over financial problems
Antarctic and climate pioneer Claude Lorius, dies at 91
Leading glaciologist Claude Lorius, whose Antarctica discoveries in the 1980s helped prove humanity's role in global warming, has died at 91.
Lorius died on Tuesday morning in the French region of Burgundy according to Jerome Chappellaz, a palaeoclimatologist and former colleague who remains close to the family.
The French publisher Arthaud, which produced the glaciologist's memoirs, also announced his death in a statement.
A great scientist, "Claude was also of the finest calibre of polar expedition adventurers", said the famous French explorer Jean-Louis Etienne in a video posted on Twitter.
The dedicated polar explorer led 22 expeditions, in Greenland and above all in Antarctica, where he lived on and off for six years, starting from his first mission in 1957.
In the 1970s, Lorius began to suspect human involvement in the planet's warming.
But it wasn't until a 1984 expedition at the most remote Russian Antarctic base, Vostok, that Lorius was able to study ice cores drilled deep into the frozen polar landscape and confirm his suspicions.
He is perhaps most internationally renowned for research, published in 1987, into air bubbles trapped in the ice, which allowed scientists to look back over 160,000 years' worth of glacial records.
This research showed that while carbon dioxide had varied slightly over time, the concentrations of the greenhouse gas had rocketed as temperatures rose since the middle of the 19th century -- the dawn of the Industrial Revolution.
French research agency CNRS said that left "no room for doubt" that the warming was caused by the pollution from human activities.
From then on Lorius dedicated himself to mobilising the fight against global warming.
He was an inaugural expert of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) after the UN expert group was created in 1988.
In 2002, he was awarded the CNRS gold medal along with his colleague and friend Jean Jouzel.
A global figure, Lorius was the first Frenchmen to receive the prestigious Blue Planet Prize. He was awarded the Bower Medal for scientific achievement in 2017 by the Franklin Institute.
Lorius returned to Antarctica in his eighties to feature in director Luc Jacquet's documentary "Ice and the Sky" showcasing the explorer's extraordinary career. The film premiered at the closing ceremony of the 2015 Cannes Film Festival.
Y.Shaath--SF-PST