
Country diary: The hours pass quickly when you're brushing for trees
If I squint my eyes, I imagine the vast, stifling, steaming jungle; no grass or flowers, just tall trunks towering above and ferns below, insects flying all around. This was the Carboniferous era in the tropics, long before any dinosaurs or other land animals, and the first 'trees' – club mosses, giant horsetails – grew by 10 to 30 metres in a few months, before dying and falling into the swamps to eventually form our coal.
These plants grew so fast and abundantly that they changed the atmosphere, and hastened their own extinction, as we are now. Our guide, Dr Tom Hughes, who grew up locally, wrote his PhD thesis on this, and now he organises volunteers to gently dig and brush away the dust to reveal this ancient forest.
The slow process has its rewards. I find a long trunk of Calamites, as thick as a man's arm, divided into sections. Some have curving leaves like giant centipedes. After a while, you get your eye in for the marks you're searching for. I did this so thoroughly on a field trip once as a student that I started seeing them in the wallpaper of the fish-and-chip shop afterwards.
Among our other discoveries were a lovely black fern leaf and a bit of a beetle wing-case. Insects were often too delicate to fossilise, but there are dragonflies found at similar sites with 1m wingspans (I secretly hope I find one). Other patches like dark, shiny snakeskin turn out to be diamond-patterned Lepidodendron – another giant plant.
The dusty hours pass quickly, until our old hips and knees have locked up. We stumble out into the sun for a drink and look at other treasure seekers' finds.
Under the Changing Skies: The Best of the Guardian's Country Diary, 2018-2024 is published by Guardian Faber; order at guardianbookshop.com
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Telegraph
44 minutes ago
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The woman who says you can spot a psychopath at three years old
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The Sun
an hour ago
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But if it goes ahead, it will be an incredibly exciting project." 6 While Earth is the only planet known to host life, scientists estimate there could be hundreds of millions of potentially habitable worlds in our galaxy, the Milky Way. These worlds are very far away from Earth - with the closest potentially habitable world, Proxima Centauri b, located 4.2 light-years away. To spot these planets, even through the glare of their nearest star, HWO will need some next-generation instruments on board. Of the many instruments that HWO will have installed, it will need a tool to block out scattered light. "If you put your thumb up in front of the sun, you can sort of look around it. The problem you have is that we've got an atmosphere so all the sunlight scatters," Dr Massey explained. "But if you do that in space, block out the light of the star, there's no atmosphere. 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BBC News
6 hours ago
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