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Opel makes it official: New Astra in line for South Africa
Opel makes it official: New Astra in line for South Africa

The Citizen

time10-07-2025

  • Automotive
  • The Citizen

Opel makes it official: New Astra in line for South Africa

Said to be an 'advanced stage' of studying, the Astra will most likely make its comeback sometime in 2026. All-new Astra L said to have been a constant topic of discussion for South Africa. Image: Opel In a surprise turnaround, Opel's parent company, Stellantis, has confirmed that it is poised to bring the Astra back to South Africa after initially ruling out its entry due to declining demand for C-segment hatchbacks. Unveiled three years ago as the internally named Astra L, the first generation not to made or produced by long-time former parent company General Motors since being founded by UK sister brand Vauxhall as a rebadged version of the Kadett D in 1979, rides on the same EMP2 platform as the Peugeot 308, but with differences in dimensions and inside. Not coming… The second model at the time, after the Mokka, to incorporate the Blitz's Bold and Pure styling language, the unexpected u-turn comes shortly after a response on X, following its global announcement about the chances of it returning to South Africa. ALSO READ: Comeback star: Long awaited all-new Opel Astra officially revealed 'We have received confirmation that the new Astra will not be made available in South Africa,' the response. … until now Speaking to The Citizen on the sidelines of the new Grandland's unveiling at Montecasino in Johannesburg on Wednesday (9 July), which also formed part of Stellantis' annual Media Connect event, Opel Middle East and Africa Head, Falk Zimpel, said that the investigation in bringing the Astra to market 'is in an advanced stage'. Interior adheres to the same detox principle as the Mokka and new Grandland. Image: Opel Admitting that the model's reintroduction to South Africa had been a topic of much discussion, Zimpel added that the arrival was expected to take place next year, although an exact date of reveal wasn't disclosed. What to expect? Assembled exclusively at Opel's home plant of Rüsselsheim in Germany, the Astra L also became the first to feature a plug-in hybrid powertrain, although this would be an unlikely option for the local market. Similar to arch-rival Volkswagen's reinstated Golf 8.5, the local market Astra is likely to only become available with the long-serving 1.2-litre three-cylinder PureTech turbocharged petrol engine, also used in the Corsa. Astra L is the first in the nameplate's now 46-year history not to have been produced by General Motors. Image: Opel In Europe, the blown three-pot comes in two states of tune: 81kW/205Nm and 96kW/230Nm, with the standard transmission being a six-speed manual and, in the case of the latter, an optional eight-speed automatic. Neither is expected to receive consideration: the 1.6-litre plug-in hybrid, which produces a combined 132 kW, nor the performance all-wheel-drive GSe, which adds a second electric motor for a total output of 165 kW. Additional no-nos are the 1.5-litre Blue CDTI turbodiesel, the 1.2-litre mild-hybrid or the Astra Electric. Golf vs Astra resumes As it stands, the combination of the more powerful PureTech and eight-speed automatic would present the clearest option in rivalling the Golf, which itself makes use of the older 1.4 TSI engine rather than the newer 1.5 TSI Evo, paired to an eight-speed Tiptronic 'box. For the moment, no further details are known; however, some may emerge either before year-end or in the early part of 2026. NOW READ: It is a no: New Opel Astra won't be coming to South Africa

Scientists are x-raying the Amazon, unlocking a lost human history
Scientists are x-raying the Amazon, unlocking a lost human history

Washington Post

time10-04-2025

  • Science
  • Washington Post

Scientists are x-raying the Amazon, unlocking a lost human history

Now there's a way to see through it. COSTA MARQUES, Brazil — As the storm approached, the men hacked deeper into the forest, searching for clues that might unravel a century-old mystery. 'We need to go 50 meters ahead,' archaeologist Carlos Zimpel Neto said one morning in late January, looking down at his tablet, ignoring the booms of thunder. 'Then a little to the left, then a little to the right.' He put down the tablet and, mosquitos in pursuit, plunged deeper into the grip of a remote jungle that had once yielded one of the Amazon's most remarkable archaeological discoveries: a vast Portuguese military fortress rising above the Guaporé River. The 1913 sighting of the fortress, which had been abandoned by Portugal and lost to the forest, begged a question that historians and archaeologists have struggled to answer ever since. Where was the rest? Story continues below advertisement Advertisement Contemporaneous maps and historical records showed that the 18th-century Portuguese colony, which at its height sheltered at least 1,000 people, had extended far beyond the fortress. There was supposed to have been a city named Lamego. Military villas and churches. But the thick vegetation here along Brazil's border with Bolivia had concealed it all — until now. The 18th-century Príncipe da Beira Royal Fortress was discovered in 1913. The Portuguese colony that surrounded it is now being exhumed. Using a laser technology known as lidar, Zimpel and his team have rediscovered the lost Portuguese colony — finding an intricate urban system of canals, roads and military fortifications, and the remains of stone structures. The breakthrough, announced in October, was the latest example of how lidar is ushering in a new era of discovery in the Amazon. The laser sensor, which can be mounted on an airplane or drone, have given scientists the equivalent of X-ray vision, enabling them to puncture the forest's dense canopy like never before, and reveal the secrets of the world's largest rainforest. Scroll to continue From above, only thick vegetation is visible around the Príncipe da Beira Royal Fortress and a nearby village. 1 / 4 It had always hidden the remains of the lost colony. Then came lidar. 2 / 4 The images it produced aligned closely with a map drawn by a Spanish spy in the mid-1700s, showing roads, canals and a second fortress. A map of the area around the Príncipe da Beira Royal Fortress, drawn by a Spanish spy in the mid-1700s. (Digital Cartographic Catalog, Brazil's National Library) 3 / 4 The stone walls of a third military installation, known to locals as the 'labyrinth,' once housed a Portuguese battalion and a battery of cannons. 4 / 4 The discoveries extend beyond Brazil. Scientists have used lidar in Bolivia to reveal traces of 'urbanism that has not previously been described in Amazonia,' a 2022 Nature article reported, including evidence of 70-foot-tall pyramids and an elaborate water-management system. In Ecuador, lidar helped locate 'clusters of monumental platforms, plazas and streets' that rivaled Mayan settlements in Mexico and Guatemala, according to a study published last year in Science. The revelations have upended long-standing theories about the history of the Amazon, where scientists had long contended that the soil wasn't rich enough to support the kind of complex, agrarian societies found elsewhere in Latin America. As it turns out, evidence of such development was there all along — scientists simply lacked the tools to see it. Story continues below advertisement Advertisement 'This is the moment of our greatest advance and understanding of the forest,' said Luiz Eduardo Oliveira e Cruz de Aragão, a remote sensing researcher at Brazil's National Institute for Space Research. Zimpel, following a digital map built from lidar imagery, now broke out of the forest. Through the rain, he looked across a clearing where the city of Lamego once extended. Most of its structures, made from clay and palm fronds, had long since disintegrated. But over here was the broken foundation of a Portuguese church, with shards of roofing scattered about; over there were bits of broken ceramic, made 1,200 to 2,000 years ago. They'd been forged by members of an advanced Indigenous society, Zimpel said. He believes they were also responsible for large circular geoglyphs in the area — apparent only now through lidar analysis — that long predated the Portuguese. The technology, Zimpel said, hadn't just exposed the lost colony. It was also helping to rewrite the human history of the forest. Pulling the tops off the trees An Amazon Revealed researcher moves through the forest at night in search of archaeological remains indicated by lidar. The inscrutability of the Amazon has tormented explorers for centuries, driving many to the brink of madness, or to death. Theodore Roosevelt, who traversed the forest's depths in the early 1900s, called it a 'land of unknown possibilities.' To British adventurer Percy Fawcett, who disappeared in Brazil while hunting for a lost city, the forest was the 'last great blank space in the world.' Lidar — short for 'light detection and ranging' — is increasingly filling in the blank. Invented in the 1960s and first applied in the development of aerospace technologies, lidar measures the distance to an object by emitting a laser, then timing how long it takes to receive the reflection. When attached to a plane — or, more frequently nowadays, a drone — it can collect millions of data points to render an extraordinarily precise topographical image of the landscape below, achieving in weeks what would once have taken a lifetime. Here's how it works. Scroll to continue An airplane or drone with a lidar sensor flies over an area. The sensor measures the distance to an object by shooting a laser, then timing how long it takes to receive the reflection. 1 / 5 The sensor emits so many pulses — approximately 2,000 per square meter — that some filter through the forest canopy, resulting in rich datasets that researchers call 'point clouds.' 2 / 5 Simulated on a computer, the image is multilayered and three-dimensional. 3 / 5 All scientists have to do to analyze the Amazon forest bed is remove the canopy. 4 / 5 They can then see with clarity what's beneath the trees, gaining a vivid glimpse into the past. 5 / 5 'Like we're lifting up a rug,' said Eduardo Neves, who directs the Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at the University of São Paulo. 'We give it a little pull, and take a peek at what's below.' Over the past 15 years, as advances in technology have lowered costs, lidar has effectively remade modern archaeology, leading to the discovery of lost cities from Central America to Southeast Asia. And in this remote part of Brazil, where the Portuguese once tried to bring both the Amazon and the Spanish to heel, Zimpel found more than he could ever have imagined. Story continues below advertisement Advertisement Exploring the 'labyrinth' Ruins of the colonial village near the Príncipe da Beira Royal Fortress. Zimpel's journey began in the summer of 2016, when he set out on a long drive, interested in visiting the Príncipe da Beira Royal Fortress as a tourist. He traveled across the heavily deforested state of Rondônia until reaching a preserved patch of jungle at the end of the road. There, rising out of impenetrable greenery, was the decaying castle. Nearby was a village called a quilombo, populated by the descendants of enslaved Africans. One of its inhabitants was Elvis Pessoa, president of the community association and a local tour guide, who told Zimpel the story of his people. In the 1700s, as tensions mounted between the Portuguese and Spanish over who would control the region, Portugal built its largest colonial fortress. To complete the job, he said, thousands of enslaved Africans were shipped by riverboat from the distant coast. 'There is a lot of urgency right now. The forest here burned last year. It had never happened like that before.' Carlos Zimpel Neto, 42, archaeologist responsible for the Amazon Revealed project at Príncipe da Beira and professor at the Federal University of Rondônia 'We need to preserve these ruins to show that this is our history here.' Santiago Pessoa, 32, who has led the quilombo's archaeology efforts since the 2023 death of his brother, Elvis When the colonial powers finally settled their territorial dispute, the military outpost lost its strategic importance. The Portuguese, undoubtedly spending a fortune to maintain the colony, abandoned both the fortress and the slaves who'd built it. As the pair chatted, Zimpel mentioned that he was a professor of archaeology at the Federal University of Rondônia. This caught the attention of Pessoa, who said there were other structures hidden in the forest, grouped around a peculiar site that locals called 'the labyrinth.' Did the professor want to have a look? Zimpel was dubious at first. But out in the forest he came upon sights unlike any he'd witnessed in his career: Line after line of 15-foot-tall stone walls. A solitary doorway arch. The stone foundation of a rectangular structure. Zimpel, tablet in hand, supervises as his colleagues from the quilombo search for ceramic remains near the fortress. Zimpel began excavating, first with Pessoa, then Pessoa's brother, Santiago, after the community leader's death in April 2023. Meanwhile, he scrutinized maps sketched by the Portuguese and Spanish in the mid-1700s. He started to suspect that what he'd seen was the lost Portuguese colony. But he couldn't be sure. Not without lidar. In 2022, his archaeology colleague, Neves, received a substantial grant from the National Geographic Society to use the technology to study the forest. Neves, coordinator of an academic consortium called Amazon Revealed, wanted to explore at least 50 sites. Zimpel had one place in mind already. The next year, after 10 days of flyovers, he had his answer. The lidar images almost perfectly matched the maps from the 1700s. 'We had found it,' Zimpel said. Endangered history Cattle graze in a deforested area a few meters from the Príncipe da Beira archaeological site. As soon as the ruins had been uncovered, though, they appeared on the verge of being lost again. The Portuguese settlement, like many remnants of Amazonian antiquity, is in what's known as the arc of deforestation, a band that loops along the south of the rainforest and contains much of its destruction. Last summer, as a historic number of fires burned through the Amazon, blazing with particular ferocity in the arc, the forest that buffered the ruins went up in flames. The quilombo villagers, surrounded by cattle ranches and soy plantations, believed the fires were lit with criminal intent to clear land. 'We'd never thought the fire would get so close,' said Nucicleide da Paz Pinheiro, who became the president of the local association after Elvis Pessoa's death. 'It burned through 80 percent of our forest.' 'This work is important so my son isn't forgotten, who he was, and what he did.' Arminda Cayaduro Pessoa, 62, one of the matriarchs of the quilombo and mother of the late Elvis Pessoa 'They say it was the Portuguese who built this. But our people were the ones to build it, and many died doing it.' Nucicleide da Paz Pinheiro, 37, who became president of the community association after Elvis Pessoa's death Months later, in January, Zimpel went to meet with the quilombo villagers. He spoke with Pessoa's mother, then trekked back into the jungle with a sense of urgency. He wanted to see what remained of the ruins. But he also wanted to see what more he could find. With every additional discovery, he could petition the authorities to legally preserve more of the forest as an archaeological site. The damage was immense — blackened foliage, stunted regrowth, trees thinned out — but not as bad as Zimpel had feared. Story continues below advertisement Advertisement He looked down at his tablet and analyzed the lidar-created map, which showed signs of historical human activity straight ahead. He found a shallow ravine that ran in a perfect straight line. Then another a short distance away. Beside one was a large stone edifice. It was covered in mud and overgrowth, but apparently untouched by fire. Zimpel took a step back to admire it. 'This is one of the biggest structures we've seen,' he said. 'There are so many more houses out here than we thought.' As the mosquitos swarmed, Zimpel consulted his map once more and disappeared back into the forest.

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