Italy Returns Ancient Stele, Illegally Exported, to Türkiye

This picture made available by the Carabinieri Command for the Protection of Cultural Heritage on Friday, April 28, 2023, shows a funerary stele, conventionally referred to as "Bride of the Desert" and illegally excavated in the ancient Roman archaeological site of Zeugma in eastern Türkiye. (Carabinieri via AP)
This picture made available by the Carabinieri Command for the Protection of Cultural Heritage on Friday, April 28, 2023, shows a funerary stele, conventionally referred to as "Bride of the Desert" and illegally excavated in the ancient Roman archaeological site of Zeugma in eastern Türkiye. (Carabinieri via AP)
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Italy Returns Ancient Stele, Illegally Exported, to Türkiye

This picture made available by the Carabinieri Command for the Protection of Cultural Heritage on Friday, April 28, 2023, shows a funerary stele, conventionally referred to as "Bride of the Desert" and illegally excavated in the ancient Roman archaeological site of Zeugma in eastern Türkiye. (Carabinieri via AP)
This picture made available by the Carabinieri Command for the Protection of Cultural Heritage on Friday, April 28, 2023, shows a funerary stele, conventionally referred to as "Bride of the Desert" and illegally excavated in the ancient Roman archaeological site of Zeugma in eastern Türkiye. (Carabinieri via AP)

Italy on Friday returned to Turkish authorities a funerary stele, dating from the second century and carrying a loving inscription to the dead woman's spouse, after investigation determined that it was illegally excavated from southeastern Türkiye.

Italy’s specialized Carabinieri paramilitary police art squad said it had determined after extensive investigation that the object was illegally exported, eventually winding up in a private home in Florence, Italy, after being purchased in France.

The art squad for decades has been in the vanguard of efforts to ensure that artistic and archaeological works are returned to their rightful country of provenance if exported without permission.

Its efforts have resulted in hundreds of artworks and artifacts being returned to Italy from prestigious museums and from private collectors worldwide.

The stone work depicts a noblewoman, wearing a veil and a tunic. Her right hand is placed on her left breast. Under the bust refiguring the deceased is an inscription in ancient Greek reading, “Satornila, the wife who loves her husband, farewell!”

The stele was illegally excavated near the ancient city of Zeugma, in what is near Gaziantep, in present-day southeastern Türkiye, the police said. It dates from the mid-to-late second century, the Carabinieri said.

Zeuguma, on the Euphrates River, was first an ancient Greek settlement and later became part of the Roman Empire. It was founded around 300 B.C. by a general of Alexander the Great.

The stele was handed over to the Turkish ambassador to Italy for return to Türkiye.



‘Once-in-a-Generation’ Expedition Launched to Survey Shipwrecks of Two Polar Heroes

Ship trapped in ice during an expedition to the Antarctic. (Getty Images)
Ship trapped in ice during an expedition to the Antarctic. (Getty Images)
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‘Once-in-a-Generation’ Expedition Launched to Survey Shipwrecks of Two Polar Heroes

Ship trapped in ice during an expedition to the Antarctic. (Getty Images)
Ship trapped in ice during an expedition to the Antarctic. (Getty Images)

A “once-in-a-generation” expedition will be launched this month to survey the last ships of legendary polar explorers Sir Ernest Shackleton and Captain Robert Falcon Scott.

The ships Quest and Terra Nova are the last link to Shackleton and Scott, who competed to reach the South Pole in the early 1900s before each died during an expedition, according to The Independent.

Now, The Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) and the Royal Canadian Geographical Society (RCGS) will conduct the first comprehensive visual survey of both Quest and Terra Nova to produce digital twins of the wrecks.

Their expedition on research vessel will map the shipwrecks and debris fields around their hulls using a combination of high-definition 5.2K video cameras and advanced Canadian “Voyis” photogrammetric technology.

Quest is the ship of Irish-born British explorer Shackleton, who died in 1922.

Its wreck was discovered in 2024, sitting on its keel under 390m (1,280ft) of frigid water off the coast of Labrador in Canada, 62 years after it went missing.

Shackleton’s death aboard the ship in 1922 marked the end of what historians call the “heroic age” of Antarctic exploration.

"The discovery of Quest in 2024 was only the beginning," said John Geiger, expedition leader and chief of the RCGS.

Terra Nova, Scott’s final ship, was first discovered by the Schmidt Ocean Institute in 2012.
Scott and his entire party had frozen to death on their return journey.

The vessel had sunk off the coast of Greenland in 1943 and was located using modern echo sounders.


Drones Spot Sharks 73 Times in Two Days off Sydney Beaches

This underwater photograph shows a tiger shark at a depth of 20 meters off Providencia Island, in the Colombian Caribbean Sea, on November 17, 2025. (AFP)
This underwater photograph shows a tiger shark at a depth of 20 meters off Providencia Island, in the Colombian Caribbean Sea, on November 17, 2025. (AFP)
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Drones Spot Sharks 73 Times in Two Days off Sydney Beaches

This underwater photograph shows a tiger shark at a depth of 20 meters off Providencia Island, in the Colombian Caribbean Sea, on November 17, 2025. (AFP)
This underwater photograph shows a tiger shark at a depth of 20 meters off Providencia Island, in the Colombian Caribbean Sea, on November 17, 2025. (AFP)

New dawn-to-dusk drone patrols of Sydney's beaches spotted sharks 73 times in the first two days, forcing multiple closures, data obtained by AFP showed on Friday.

Authorities launched the expanded drone program on Wednesday to protect beachgoers after a spate of shark attacks in Sydney and further across New South Wales.

Data from Surf Life Saving NSW, which runs the program, showed 73 shark sightings in greater Sydney by drone pilots on Wednesday and Thursday, with the greatest concentration at beaches north of the city, where 67 reports were made.

The drones only report bull, tiger and white sharks, species considered most likely to attack humans.

Lifesavers say it is likely some sharks are being spotted multiple times as they move through the ocean. But one group of 13 sharks swimming together was reported at a single beach at northern Sydney's South Narrabeen on Wednesday.

"Having so many drones out all day, they are picking up everything," said Surf Life Saving New South Wales spokeswoman Donna Wishart.

- 'Scared and paranoid' -

At northern Sydney's Dee Why Salty Surf School, owner Dan O'Connell was 15 minutes into a surf lesson on Friday when a drone spotted a shark near the beach and lifesavers evacuated the water for the second time that day.

O'Connell had just succeeded in coaxing his students into the ocean by telling them a shark was unlikely to venture near the knee-high water where they were practicing board moves.

"They were already scared and paranoid because the beach had been closed," he told AFP.

Drones made three shark sightings on Thursday at Dee Why Beach, with another sighting on Friday morning closing the beach for an hour before it reopened, only to close again.

Expecting beach closures will increase, O'Connell is diversifying his business to offer skateboarding lessons at the nearby carpark.

- 'Fairweather surfers' -

School groups had cancelled surf lessons after a child was killed by a shark in Sydney Harbour in January, and a woman was mauled at popular Coogee Beach last month.

"It has been really hard," he said.

"We will lose a percentage of fairweather surfers because they will feel paranoia more than the enjoyment they get from the ocean."

Northern Beaches Mayor Sue Heins told AFP millions of visitors are attracted to Sydney's coast each year, and the drones support safety.

"Naturally, increased surveillance will mean increased sightings," she said.

A surfer was killed by a shark on a northern Sydney beach in September.

New South Wales Premier Chris Minns said on Sunday that swimmers and surfers "will have to get used to" leaving the water as the world's biggest drone surveillance program ramps up.

"It is almost certain that sharks have always been present," said shark expert Daryl McPhee, an associate professor of environmental science at Bond University, who expects the high number of beach closures to continue for several weeks.

White sharks roam large distances but may "take up residence" where prey is abundant, he said, noting an increase in humpback whale populations and salmon.

"The sightings over the last couple of days have increased due to the increased drone spotting effort which is occurring at a time when conditions are right for coastal food resources of white sharks to be abundant."

There have been nearly 1,300 shark incidents around Australia since 1791, of which more than 260 resulted in death, according to a database of shark encounters with humans.


France Deaths Rose by 30% During Heatwave

This photograph shows a fire in mountain ranges during a wildfire in Pouzols-Minervois, southwestern France on July 2, 2026. (AFP)
This photograph shows a fire in mountain ranges during a wildfire in Pouzols-Minervois, southwestern France on July 2, 2026. (AFP)
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France Deaths Rose by 30% During Heatwave

This photograph shows a fire in mountain ranges during a wildfire in Pouzols-Minervois, southwestern France on July 2, 2026. (AFP)
This photograph shows a fire in mountain ranges during a wildfire in Pouzols-Minervois, southwestern France on July 2, 2026. (AFP)

France endured a rise of nearly 30 percent in the number of deaths recorded during the week of June 22, the peak of a record-breaking heatwave that battered the country, the public health authority said Friday.

Public Health France said in a new report there had been "an increase of 29.1 percent, corresponding to 2,025 additional deaths compared with the previous week" while noting that the figure was probably "an underestimate".

The number of deaths increased by 62 percent in the Paris region during the week starting 22 June, the report said. A similar spike has been reported in the Pays de la Loire region.

Some French politicians have denounced what they call the authorities' inadequate measures to help France face rising temperatures. The Greens on Thursday filed a no-confidence motion against the government of Sebastien Lecornu.

In June, France experienced a record-breaking heatwave which lasted around 11 days and saw temperatures climb above 40C in many places.

Around 15,000 people died in France during a severe heatwave in 2003, with many elderly people dying in nursing homes.

The June heatwave is considered more intense, but authorities say its consequences have been less severe.

"It will probably not be comparable," Health Minister Stephanie Rist said on Friday.

Nicolas Revel, director general of the Paris public hospital system, has said he expected the death toll from the June heatwave to be lower than that of 2003, but "probably" higher than an episode last year that claimed 5,700 lives.