
REVEALED: What you should NEVER touch in an airport... and the vile consequences if you dare to
Travel, especially in crowded environments like airports and airplanes, increases the potential for exposure to viruses, particularly those that spread through respiratory droplets and contact with contaminated surfaces.
Your browser does not support iframes.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
9 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Train carrying 220 cars of coal derails in West Virginia
A coal train derailment in West Virginia early Sunday has caused major disruptions, including the suspension of Amtrak service between Huntington and New York City. The CSX freight train went off the tracks around 12:30 a.m. in St. Albans, a city of about 10,800 residents located 10 miles west of Charleston. Authorities confirmed the train was made up of 220 cars, which carried approximately 100 tons of coal, and weighed 54 million pounds. Officials have not said how many cars derailed, but the incident caused widespread disruption in the eastern part of the city, according to the St. Albans Fire Department. The train was operated by CSX Transportation, a major freight railroad that hauls goods like coal, grain, and industrial materials across the eastern U.S. The route where the incident occurred - known as CSX's Kanawha Subdivision - is a key corridor for coal shipments through the region. As a result of the derailment, Amtrak has canceled its Cardinal passenger route in both directions. Passengers who left Chicago on August 2 are being bused from Huntington to Washington, D.C., with connections available to New York. The westbound Cardinal that was supposed to depart from New York will now originate in Huntington. Amtrak has not announced alternate transportation for passengers scheduled to leave from New York. No injuries have been reported. The cause of the derailment remains under investigation. The Cardinal is one of Amtrak's long-distance routes, running three times a week between Chicago and New York City via Indianapolis, Cincinnati, and Washington, D.C. The line passes through some of the most scenic parts of the Appalachian Mountains, including the New River Gorge in West Virginia. Service disruptions along the route can significantly impact travel plans, especially in rural areas where alternate transportation options are limited.


Daily Mail
10 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Stacey Dooley models a necklace inspired by infant daughter Minnie's name as she leaves the Zoe Ball radio show with boyfriend Kevin Clifton
Stacey Dooley ensured her daughter wasn't too far from her thoughts on Sunday as she left Zoe Ball 's radio show with boyfriend Kevin Clifton on Sunday. The couple - who have been dating since early 2019 - welcomed a daughter named Minnie together back in January 2023. And Stacey, 35, was seen wearing a bubbly font necklace which had her two-year-old daughter's name on it during their latest appearance in London. She looked super fashionable in a white top and camo trousers, adding a huge tote bag and glasses to finish off her daytime look. The mum-of-one scraped her locks into an elegant bun and was seen wearing a massive smile as they walked through the city together. Meanwhile, former Strictly Come Dancing star Kevin, 42, looked smart in a blue polo shirt and jeans as he carried a suitcase and bag beside his girlfriend. Back in May, Stacey revealed she took her baby daughter to a brothel in Nevada, while she was filming a documentary about prostitution in the United States. In the latest series of Stacey Dooley Sleeps Over USA, the presenter visited the oldest legal brothel in Nevada, the Mustang Ranch, to explore the lives of sex workers in the States. But she has now revealed that her daughter came along for the visit, when she was just eight-months-old, joking 'it sounds like a comedy sketch'. Stacey recalled the story at the Hay Literary Festival in Wales, during a panel with journalist Emma Barnett, where she discussed how she juggled balancing motherhood and work. The broadcaster explained that she brings her little girl along with her for filming - including to the more unusual locations. According to The Telegraph, she admitted: 'There's nowhere that child hasn't been. When she was eight months we had this gig in the diary to go to the States to make a documentary about this legal brothel in Nevada. 'I'd sort of signed the contract and was like: "oh, she'll be eight months, that'll be fine." 'Anyway, the trip comes, and I'm nowhere near comfortable leaving her so I take my eight-month-old child to this brothel in Nevada. 'I have to ask the sheriff for special permission, because she's under 18. It sounds like a comedy sketch, but it's legit!' Stacey explained that she had to rent a trailer for Minnie to stay in with dad Kevin and that the little girl would watch out the window while she was filming. She hilariously recalled that when she returned to the trailer to breastfeed, the prostitutes at the brothel would greet her daughter with: 'Morning Miss Minnie!' The presenter quipped: 'I'm like: she'll be open minded if nothing else!'


The Independent
12 hours ago
- The Independent
What to know about the earthquake that shook the New York area Saturday night
A relatively mild, 3.0 magnitude earthquake shook the New York metropolitan area Saturday night. Here's what to know. What happened? The earthquake hit in the New Jersey suburb of Hasbrouck Heights at about 10:18 p.m. Eastern time at a depth of about 6.2 miles (10 kilometers). It was felt fairly widely in northern parts of the state, southern New York and even in southern Connecticut. There were no initial reports of serious injuries or significant damage in New Jersey or across the Hudson River in New York City. City officials said that as of late Sunday morning they had not been called to respond to any building-related issues. The Big Apple has more than 1 million buildings. Many posts on social media reported the ground rumbling, and the U.S. Geological Survey reported more than 10,000 responses to its 'Did You Feel It?' website. Though people in the United States might associate earthquakes more often with the West Coast, scientists say these types of incidents on the East Coast are not unlikely. How frequent are earthquakes in the New York area? The area feels an earthquake about once every couple of years. 'The northeast part of the United States does not see large earthquakes very often,' said Jessica Turner, a geophysicist with the National Earthquake Information Center, which is a part of the USGS. Since 1950, only 43 other quakes of this magnitude and larger have occurred within 155 miles (250 kilometers) of Saturday's event, according to the USGS. A much larger, 4.8-magnitude quake that struck in Tewksbury, New Jersey, a little farther west of the city, in April 2024 was felt as far away as Boston and Baltimore. Some flights were diverted or delayed after that quake, and Amtrak slowed trains throughout the busy Northeast corridor. A smaller, 1.7 magnitude earthquake that hit the Astoria section of Queens, New York, in January 2024 stirred residents. The region sees a more damaging one only a couple times a century, if that. New York was damaged in 1737 and 1884 by earthquakes, according to USGS data. How do East Coast earthquakes compare with West Coast ones? The difference between East Coast and West Coast quakes lies in the 'mechanism,' said seismologist Lucy Jones. California is at the edge of the San Andreas fault system, which has two tectonic plates: the Pacific Ocean plate and the North American plate. Two plates move and push to build up stress, meaning earthquakes happen relatively frequently. New York falls in the middle of a plate, far from the nearest boundaries in the center of the Atlantic Ocean and in the Caribbean Sea — resulting in residual stresses and making it difficult to predict where earthquakes will occur. The area is also home to the well-known Ramapo Fault line. Geologists have not seen evidence that would suggest it has had a large earthquake in some time, but there have been smaller ones. Saturday's quake cannot necessarily be associated with this fault, experts say. The same size earthquake is felt over a much larger area in New York than it would be in California. 'The rocks on the East Coast are particularly cold and hard and therefore, do a better job of transmitting the energy,' said Jones. In California, the various faults are more akin to a broken bell, which doesn't transmit energy as well. Does this signal more to come? Every earthquake makes another one more likely, but within a range, scientists say. 'At just 3.0, the chances are there will not be another felt event,' Jones said, estimating about a 50-50 chance there will be no activity that can be recorded. 'Most likely is an unfelt, magnitude 1 or 2 aftershock.' ___ Associated Press writers Julie Walker in New York City and Michael Hill in Altamont, New York, contributed.