Skip to Content

Month: November 2023

Siguen las evacuaciones en Kentucky tras el descarrilamiento de un tren que derramó azufre fundido y desató un incendio

Rocío Muñoz-Ledo (CNN) — Las autoridades instaron a la población del centro de Kentucky a evacuar en la víspera del Día de Acción de Gracias después de que más de 15 vagones de un tren de carga se descarrilaran, derramando azufre fundido y desatando un incendio que este jueves sólo estaba contenido en un 50%,

Continue Reading

China says seasonal germs, rather than ‘unusual or novel pathogens,’ behind spike in pediatric respiratory illness, WHO says

By Jen Christensen, CNN (CNN) — Chinese health authorities told the World Health Organization on Thursday that a spike in cases of children with pneumonia or respiratory illness in the northern part of the country stems from typical seasonal germs rather than any novel or unknown pathogen, the organization said. After asking for more information

Continue Reading

Quién es Geert Wilders, el político antiislámico que se impuso en las elecciones en Países Bajos

Sofía Benavides (CNN Español) — Geert Wilders, del Partido de la Libertad (PVV), resultó ganador en las eleciones celebradas este miércoles en Países Bajos, y su victoria podría tener efectos profundos para el país europeo. Su manifiesto antimusulmán, antiisilámico, anti Unión Europea y escéptico de la guerra en Ucrania le permitió obtener 37 escaños y

Continue Reading

Officials begin clearing debris while 3 remain missing in Alaska landslide that left 3 dead

WRANGELL, Alaska (AP) — Searchers looking for three people who remain missing after a massive landslide that killed three others and injured a fourth have changed their strategy from holding an active search to a reactive search that will involve methodically clearing the highway. Since Monday night’s slide, officials have inspected the site by air

Continue Reading

Air pollution from coal-fired plants is much more deadly than originally thought, study finds

By Jen Christensen, CNN (CNN) — No pollution is good for anyone’s health, but a new study found that scientists may have significantly underestimated just how deadly pollution from coal-fired plants can be. It also shows how tighter regulations can work. The study, published Thursday in the journal Science, found that exposure to fine particulate

Continue Reading
Skip to content