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Repeat: 3" V, 72" H (8cm V, 183cm H) Bolt Size: 55 yards (50 m) Maintenance: Machine wash to 160°F (71°C). Curtains Target StoreTumble dry to 140°F (60°C).Software As A Service Reseller Agreement Country of Origin: GermanyEco Friendly Commercial Kitchen Flooring Flammability: This textile meets all appropriate flammability requirements for privacy curtain, upholstered walls and windows. See flame certificate for test results. Greenguard and Greenguard Gold Certified Contributes to LEED 2009 HC MR Credit 5, Furniture and Medical Furnishings Privacy Curtain: 1 year; Upholstered Walls: 3 years. See Terms and Conditions for more information. Materials Safety Data Sheet (MSDS)
51% Trevira CS Polyester, 49% Trevira CS Bioactive PolyesterDetails of the discovery which has been kept secret are due to be unveiled at the Cradle of Humankind. MAROPENG – In the next few hours the world will learn more about a historic discovery which has been made in South Africa. Details of a significant fossil discovery have been kept secret for years and are due to be unveiled at Maropeng in the Cradle of Humankind at 11am today.At 10:30am we'll find out about a significant discovery for humanity. — EWN Reporter (@ewnreporter) September 10, 2015 Shortly thereafter, a global embargo on all information relating to the find will be released and a month-long public exhibition will open. Professor Lee Berger led the expedition that unearthed a discovery, which now looks set to raise deep questions about what it means to be human. “We never imagined finding anything like this.” Berger, a paleo-anthropologist, says he feels privileged to be at the centre of this historic discovery.
He says it’s gratifying to see the interest taken in this development. “I feel very privileged, I think my colleagues feel very privileged. We also feel very privileged at the attention that the public and media has given to this scientific story because human origins isn’t just a scientific story, it’s our science story.” Berger, says the discovery was made in September 2013 and has been kept secret until now. He says the years spent researching the finding have been worth it. Discoveries like this in the past have fundamentally changed our understanding of human ancestry. “What we’re announcing today is the product of one of the largest scientific endeavours ever to occur in the history of palaeontology, bringing scientists from all over the world to study not only the fossils themselves but also the context of the fossils.” Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa is going to receive a private viewing, and then will address the nation about the significance of the discovery.
Wits University has described the find as a groundbreaking discovery of international importance. Scientists from around the world began arriving in South Africa on Monday and will today join ministers and other guests for the big reveal.This image mosaic shows the same patch of sky in various wavelengths of light. While the visible-light image (left) shows a dark sky speckled with stars, infrared images (middle and right), reveal a never-before-seen bundle of stars, called a globular cluster. The left panel is from the California Institute of Technology's Digitized Sky Survey; the middle panel includes images from the NASA-funded Two Micron All-Sky Survey and the University of Wyoming Infrared Observatory (circle inset); and the right panel is from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope.Globular clusters date back to the birth of our galaxy, 13 or so billion years ago. There are about 150 clusters sprinkled around the core of the galaxy like seeds in a pumpkin. Astronomers use these galactic "fossils" as tools for studying the age and formation of the Milky Way.Most clusters orbit around the center of the galaxy well above its dust-enshrouded disc, or plane, while making brief, repeated passes through the plane that each last about a million years.
Spitzer, with infrared eyes that can see into the dusty galactic plane, first spotted the newfound cluster during its current pass. Astronomers then searched for past references to the cluster and found only one undocumented image from the Two Micron All-Sky Survey.Follow-up observations with the University of Wyoming Infrared Observatory helped set the distance of the new cluster at about 9,000 light-years from Earth -- closer than most clusters -- and set the mass at the equivalent of 300,000 Suns. The cluster's apparent size, as viewed from Earth, is comparable to a grain of rice held at arm's length. It is located in the constellation Aquila.Astronomers believe that this cluster may be one of the last in our galaxy to be uncovered.The Two Micron All-Sky Survey image was obtained using near-infrared wavelengths ranging from 1.3 to 2.2 microns. The University of Wyoming Observatory infrared image was captured on July 31, 2004, at wavelengths ranging from 1.2 to 2.2 microns. The Spitzer image composite was taken on April 21, 2004, by its infrared array camera.