A huge, ancient Maya city has been found in southern Mexico Lasers revealed that the city spanned roughly the same area as Beijing and may have been among the most densely populated in the region. 11/6/2024 - 2:12 am | View Link
Researchers uncover ‘lost’ Mayan megacity with hidden pyramids through use of laser Researchers from Tulane University uncovered more than 6,500 Maya structures in Mexico and unveiled a complex settlement landscape, challenging earlier assumptions about the urban and rural ... 11/4/2024 - 8:23 am | View Link
A Thousand Years Lost, Now Found: Ancient Mayan Megacity Emerges from Yucatan’s Jungle An ancient Maya city has emerged from the heart of the Mexican jungle, not through a traditional dig, but thanks to an astonishing twist of fate. Despite having lain lost and forgotten for over a ... 11/3/2024 - 4:33 am | View Link
How a PhD Student Discovered a Lost Mayan City From Hundreds of Miles Away And how did Tulane University graduate student Luke Auld-Thomas find ... Guatemala, Modesto Méndez, together with Ambrosio Tut, an artist and chronicler of the time, rediscovered Tikal, one of the ... 11/2/2024 - 3:03 am | View Link
Have We Discovered All the Mayan Cities? Newly-Found Metropolis with Pyramids Shows We’re Not Even Close A major Mayan urban center has been found in a recent lidar survey on the Yucatan Peninsula that includes pyramids and ball courts. The archaeologists triumphantly declare that the world is yet far ... 10/31/2024 - 3:59 am | View Link
Vladimir Putin did not come running. He let his spokesman react on Wednesday to the outcome of the U. S. presidential race, proclaiming that the Kremlin has no plans to congratulate Donald Trump on his victory. If the U. S. wants the peace deal Trump promised during his campaign, the Russians signaled that he would need to earn it, and the price for Ukraine would be particularly high.
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“The message is, if you want a deal, you’re going to crawl on your knees for it,” says Nina Khrushcheva, an authority on Russian politics and foreign affairs at the New School.
BUDAPEST, Hungary — Around 50 European leaders, including Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte, will be reassessing their trans-Atlantic relations in the hope that Donald Trump’s second U. S. presidency will avoid the strife and political pitfalls of his first administration.
Further compounding an already complicated situation, Germany — Europe’s troubled economic juggernaut — sank into political crisis after German Chancellor Olaf Scholz fired his finance minister.
The world will have just over two months to prepare for Donald Trump’s return to the White House, and whatever new foreign policy comes with it. His first presidential term—defined by trade wars, isolationism, and a deep skepticism towards the E. U. and NATO—may seem to offer a preview of what might come in the second.
Key political figures across the globe have begun extending congratulatory messages to former and future U. S. President Donald Trump, who won the presidential election early Wednesday morning.
Read More: How Trump Won
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Here’s what world leaders and key political figures have said so far on social media:
Australia
“Congratulations to President Donald Trump on his election victory,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese posted on X.
SEDAVI, Spain — Francisco Murgui went out to try to salvage his motorbike when the water started to rise.
He never came back.
One week after catastrophic flooding devasted eastern Spain, María Murgui still holds out hope that her father is alive and among the unknown number of the missing.
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“He was like many people in town who went out to get their car or motorbike to safety,” the 27-year-old told The Associated Press.
KYIV, Ukraine — North Korean troops recently deployed to help Russia in its war with Ukraine have come under Ukrainian fire, a Kyiv official said Tuesday.
It is the first time a Ukrainian official has said that Pyongyang’s units were struck, following a deployment that has given the war a new complexion as it approaches its 1,000-day milestone.
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“The first North Korean troops have already been shelled, in the Kursk region,” Andrii Kovalenko, the head of the counter-disinformation branch of Ukraine’s Security Council, wrote on Telegram.