
Racing Sailors to Double as Ocean Scientists in European Waters
The fleet will gather measurements on water temperature, salinity, oxygen, CO2 levels, microplastics and environmental DNA during the offshore competition from Aug. 10 to Sept. 20.
Some teams will deploy drifter buoys designed to transmit meteorological information for years afterward.
'We know conditions in our ocean are changing rapidly but scientists need more data to better understand what is happening, the pace of change and how this impacts ocean health,' said Lucy Hunt, Ocean Impact Director of The Ocean Race and a marine biologist.
'Due to the vastness of the ocean, reliable data is very sparse, and there are many areas that are undersampled.'
The race begins in Kiel, Germany and visits Portsmouth (England), Porto (Portugal), Cartagena (Spain), Nice (France), Genoa (Italy), and Montenegro's Boka Bay.
Organizers report that the 2023 around-the-world race generated more than 4 million data points for researchers.

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Yomiuri Shimbun
4 days ago
- Yomiuri Shimbun
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Japan Times
01-08-2025
- Japan Times
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Yomiuri Shimbun
01-08-2025
- Yomiuri Shimbun
Europe's Oldest Settlement Built on Top of Lake Found in Albania
LIN, Albania (Reuters) — Archaeologists working on the shores of Ohrid Lake in Albania are convinced they have uncovered the oldest human settlement built on a European lake, finding evidence of an organized hunting and farming community living up to 8,000 years ago. The team, from Switzerland and Albania, spends hours each day about three meters underwater, painstakingly retrieving wooden stilts that supported houses. They are also collecting bones of domesticated and wild animals, copper objects and ceramics, featuring detailed carvings. Albert Hafner, from the University of Bern, said similar settlements have been found in Alpine and Mediterranean regions, but the settlements in the village of Lin are half a millennium older, dating back between 6,000 and 8,000 years. 'Because it is under water, the organic material is well-preserved and this allows us to find out what these people have been eating, what they have been planting,' Hafner said. Multiple studies show that Lake Ohrid, shared by North Macedonia and Albania, is the oldest lake in Europe, at over one million years. The age of the findings is determined through radiocarbon dating and dendrochronology, which measures annual growth rings in trees. More than one thousand wood samples have been collected from the site, which may have hosted several hundred people. It is believed to cover around six hectares, but so far, only about 1% has been excavated after six years of work. Hafner said findings show that people who lived on the lake helped to spread agriculture and livestock to other parts of Europe. 'They were still doing hunting and collecting things, but the stable income for the nutrition was coming from the agriculture,' he said. Albanian archaeologist Adrian Anastasi said it could take decades to fully explore the area. '[By] the way they had lived, eaten, hunted, fished and by the way the architecture was used to build their settlement we can say they were very smart for that time,' Anastasi said.