Scientists Make New Discovery about Northern Ireland’s Giant’s Causeway

People explore the basalt columns of the Giant’s Causeway on Northern Ireland’s north coast on March 20, 2025. (AFP via Getty Images)
People explore the basalt columns of the Giant’s Causeway on Northern Ireland’s north coast on March 20, 2025. (AFP via Getty Images)
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Scientists Make New Discovery about Northern Ireland’s Giant’s Causeway

People explore the basalt columns of the Giant’s Causeway on Northern Ireland’s north coast on March 20, 2025. (AFP via Getty Images)
People explore the basalt columns of the Giant’s Causeway on Northern Ireland’s north coast on March 20, 2025. (AFP via Getty Images)

The geological timeline for Northern Ireland's iconic Giant’s Causeway has been dramatically revised following new scientific research, according to The Independent.

New findings indicate that the volcanic activity responsible for the distinctive 40,000 basalt columns occurred over a significantly condensed period.

Scientists now believe the region's volcanic events, including those forming the Causeway, transpired in just 5.5 million years – a staggering eight million years less than earlier estimations.

Dr. Simon Tapster, geochronologist at the British Geological Survey (BGS), said: “Fundamentally, what we’ve done is by piecing together this tapestry of volcanic rocks all across the North Atlantic, but focusing on Northern Ireland, we have been able to reassess a major globally impacting volcanic event.”

“In doing that, and in reassessing the timescales, we have shown that actually it occurred in a much shorter duration,” he added.

The Giant’s Causeway’s distinctive landscape was formed during intense volcanic activity which forced molten rock up through cracks in the earth. Thick lava flows then cooled, contracted and cracked, creating about 40,000 basalt columns.

Tapster said the cutting-edge research by the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland (GSNI) and the BGS, has reconstructed a new timeline for volcanic activity across Northern Ireland.

It has allowed researchers to place the volcanic activity that led to the formation of the Giant’s Causeway within a much more precise global context for the first time.

The research has significantly updated the understanding of when specific volcanic events happened in Northern Ireland.

As a result, scientists can more confidently connect those events to activity and landmarks elsewhere, including Scotland.

It also connects the processes that caused the development of the Giant’s Causeway to a globally significant volcanic event seen in rocks as far away as Greenland about 60 million years ago.

The first lava flows of Northern Ireland’s Antrim Plateau previously were thought to have occurred millions of years before the Staffa basalts and the formation of Fingal’s Cave, but they can now be connected much more definitively as part of the same volcanic activity.

Researchers said it is the same for the Giant’s Causeway with formations on Rum, the Mourne Mountains, and magmatism in Skye.

Tapster said: “By looking at the timescales and the high resolution timeline, we’re able to match it up with various other locations, particularly in the Inner Hebrides in Scotland, the volcanics of Mull, Rum, the Isle of Skye, and taking a bigger view, looking at Greenland and the Faroe Islands.”

The research is part of a wider initiative at the British Geological Survey to improve the understanding of the UK’s geology through better quantifying geological time in the rocks.



King Abdulaziz Royal Reserve Records First Sighting of Red Phalarope

The red phalarope is a migratory seabird that spends most of its life cycle on the open ocean and breeds in Arctic regions. - SPA
The red phalarope is a migratory seabird that spends most of its life cycle on the open ocean and breeds in Arctic regions. - SPA
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King Abdulaziz Royal Reserve Records First Sighting of Red Phalarope

The red phalarope is a migratory seabird that spends most of its life cycle on the open ocean and breeds in Arctic regions. - SPA
The red phalarope is a migratory seabird that spends most of its life cycle on the open ocean and breeds in Arctic regions. - SPA

The King Abdulaziz Royal Reserve Development Authority announced that a specialized research team has documented the first confirmed sighting of a red phalarope (Phalaropus fulicarius) within the reserve, marking one of the rarest bird records ever documented in Saudi Arabia and the Arabian Peninsula, SPA reported.

Authority spokesperson Abdulaziz Al-Furaih said the bird was documented in February 2026 at the Sudair Artificial Wetland within the reserve.

The red phalarope is a migratory seabird that spends most of its life cycle on the open ocean and breeds in Arctic regions. Its appearance in an inland wetland in the Kingdom is considered an exceptional event, reflecting the reserve's growing environmental significance and its ability to attract rare species that migrate over long distances.

The discovery builds on a series of scientific achievements recorded in the reserve in recent years, including the documentation of rare species and the first confirmed breeding records of other species.

These accomplishments reinforce the reserve's position as a national platform for environmental research and monitoring and underscore its pivotal role in supporting the Kingdom's wildlife conservation and ecosystem sustainability objectives.


‘Pokemon Airport’ Opens to Help Japanese Quake-Hit Region

A "Pikachu" balloon is displayed at the Noto Airport in Wajima City, Ishikawa Prefecture on July 7, 2026. (JIJI / AFP)
A "Pikachu" balloon is displayed at the Noto Airport in Wajima City, Ishikawa Prefecture on July 7, 2026. (JIJI / AFP)
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‘Pokemon Airport’ Opens to Help Japanese Quake-Hit Region

A "Pikachu" balloon is displayed at the Noto Airport in Wajima City, Ishikawa Prefecture on July 7, 2026. (JIJI / AFP)
A "Pikachu" balloon is displayed at the Noto Airport in Wajima City, Ishikawa Prefecture on July 7, 2026. (JIJI / AFP)

An airport in a remote Japanese region hit by a deadly earthquake in 2024 was given a new look on Tuesday, temporarily nicknamed after the Pokemon universe, and its lobby adorned with a floating Pikachu on a plane-shaped balloon.

The Noto Peninsula has faced a decline in tourists since the powerful 7.5-magnitude quake on New Year's Day two years ago that claimed over 700 lives.

On Tuesday, a life-size Pikachu mascot dressed as a pilot joined officials for a ribbon-cutting ceremony to officially nickname the local facility "Noto Satoyama Pokemon With You Airport" and welcome visitors.

More than 100 Pokemon characters are displayed across the airport, including the lobby wall.

The name will be used for three years, according to the Pokemon With You Foundation.

Public broadcaster NHK reported in February that the number of visitors who stay overnight in the region remains at just over 30 percent of pre-quake levels.


Europe May Face ‘More Deadly Weeks’ as New Heatwave Builds, WHO Warns

A worker drinks water from a plastic bottle at a construction site in Bordeaux, southwestern France on June 22, 2026, as France experiences a ferocious heatwave. (AFP)
A worker drinks water from a plastic bottle at a construction site in Bordeaux, southwestern France on June 22, 2026, as France experiences a ferocious heatwave. (AFP)
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Europe May Face ‘More Deadly Weeks’ as New Heatwave Builds, WHO Warns

A worker drinks water from a plastic bottle at a construction site in Bordeaux, southwestern France on June 22, 2026, as France experiences a ferocious heatwave. (AFP)
A worker drinks water from a plastic bottle at a construction site in Bordeaux, southwestern France on June 22, 2026, as France experiences a ferocious heatwave. (AFP)

The World Health ‌Organization warned on Tuesday that Europe could face “more deadly weeks” ahead, with another intense heatwave forming over the Atlantic.

Temperatures in Portugal and southern Spain are expected to climb to 43 degrees Celsius (109 degrees Fahrenheit) in the coming days.

WHO Regional Director for Europe Hans Kluge held an emergency call on Monday with representatives from 41 countries in the region, ‌the European ‌Commission and civil society groups to ‌discuss ⁠lessons from the ⁠recent heatwave and preparations for the next one.

Kluge said in a statement that countries with heat-health action plans in place responded more quickly and better protected their populations during the June heatwave.

However, he said that less ⁠than half of WHO's European member states ‌had such a ‌plan in place.

Experts have said the June ‌20-28 heatwave was the most severe recorded in ‌Europe, causing disruption to power generation, damaging infrastructure and overwhelming healthcare systems.

The extreme heat was almost certainly driven by climate change, scientists said.

France, the ‌Netherlands and Belgium recorded 3,700 excess deaths, with authorities warning that the numbers ⁠are preliminary ⁠and could rise.

Temperatures hit 40 degrees Celsius in parts of Europe during the heatwave.

Kluge said care home residents, homeless people and socially isolated older adults were still not being reached consistently across Europe.

"The work now is on two fronts: fixing what failed in recent weeks before the next heatwave hits and building the kind of health systems that don’t just respond to extreme heat but are ready for it," Kluge said.