Heatwave Hits More Than One in Two People in France

 A woman with a hand fan sunbathes in the Tuileries Garden as temperatures rise in Paris during a second heatwave affecting a large of France, June 19, 2026. (Reuters)
A woman with a hand fan sunbathes in the Tuileries Garden as temperatures rise in Paris during a second heatwave affecting a large of France, June 19, 2026. (Reuters)
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Heatwave Hits More Than One in Two People in France

 A woman with a hand fan sunbathes in the Tuileries Garden as temperatures rise in Paris during a second heatwave affecting a large of France, June 19, 2026. (Reuters)
A woman with a hand fan sunbathes in the Tuileries Garden as temperatures rise in Paris during a second heatwave affecting a large of France, June 19, 2026. (Reuters)

More than half of France's population was dealing with scorching temperatures on Friday, according to AFP's calculations, with hundreds of schools adapting their timetables to keep students out of broiling classrooms.

Around 41 million people -- out of the country's some 69 million residents -- were affected by an orange heat alert issued by the weather office, the second-highest category, urging residents to be "very cautious", according to a calculation based on population figures from the national statistics agency.

The heatwave prompted 784 primary and secondary schools out of the country's 60,000 teaching establishments to adjust their hours, including 150 that closed completely, said Education Minister Edouard Geffray.

France's national weather agency has warned the heatwave would be "widespread, prolonged, and intense". Friday's heat warning covered the Paris region and much of the east and center of the country.

Temperatures were expected to peak at around 40C in some regions from Sunday onwards.

President Emmanuel Macron has called for "great vigilance" and for "taking care of the oldest, the most vulnerable".

Health Minister Stephanie Rist has urged youth to be "really careful with alcohol and physical activity" as the country gears up for its annual "La Fete de la Musique" on Sunday, a nationwide music festival when millions of people usually dance in the streets nationwide.

A 30-year-old man died on an athletics track outside Paris on Thursday.

This is already France's second heatwave this year, following an unusually hot spell in May that shattered records across half the country.

France experienced its hottest spring this year since records began in 1900, with the average nationwide temperature over March to May around 1.7 C above the norm.

Scientists warn that heatwaves in Europe are becoming more frequent as a result of climate change.



What Full-time Working Moms and Dads Want, By the Numbers

A family prepares to fish along a jetty at sunrise in Port Aransas, Texas, on Aug. 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)
A family prepares to fish along a jetty at sunrise in Port Aransas, Texas, on Aug. 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)
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What Full-time Working Moms and Dads Want, By the Numbers

A family prepares to fish along a jetty at sunrise in Port Aransas, Texas, on Aug. 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)
A family prepares to fish along a jetty at sunrise in Port Aransas, Texas, on Aug. 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)

Most mothers and fathers who work full-time say they sometimes parent while at work and vice versa. Most are upset to miss out on events with their kids, and many don’t have enough time to exercise. But moms and dads seem to have different perceptions on who does most of the chores, and mothers were more likely than fathers to say that having children made it harder to advance at work.

Those are some of the findings about full-time working parents from a newly released Pew Research Center study, which surveyed 2,242 working parents between March 2-15, The Associated Press said.

Here's a look what full-time working parents want, by the numbers:

Households where both the mother and father work full time: 52% That's according to a Pew Research Center analysis of US Census Bureau data looking at the work arrangements of mothers and fathers with children under 18 who are married or live together. A decade ago, 46% of such families had two full-time working parents. In 1975, it was just 31%.

The increase has been driven largely by mothers who have bachelor's or postgraduate degrees. It has occurred during a period when women have outpaced men in obtaining college educations.

In families where mothers and fathers live together, about 56% of moms with bachelor degrees and 69% of mothers with postgraduate degrees worked full time in 2025. That's an increase from 50% and 59% in 2000, respectively.

In contrast, the number of mothers without college degrees working full time stayed largely constant at 43%, compared to 46% in 2000.

Many parents are single, divorced or live with same-sex partners. In total, 89% of fathers and 59% of mothers with children under 18 work full time.

Parents who sometimes juggle work and child duties simultaneously: 70% In the new survey, moms were more likely to say they sometimes handle parenting tasks at work at least “sometimes,” at 81%. But a majority of dads — 62% — said they same. Most moms and dads — 63% and 57% respectively — say they sometimes take on work tasks while they are with their kids.

“One of the major findings we have from this study is just a large share of parents who experience these blurred boundaries between family and work. And we find that moms often carry more of the mental load that comes with trying to balance what their family needs with what their work demands," said Luona Lin, a Pew Research Center research associate who co-authored the study.

Parents who are upset by missing their children's activities because of work: 92% Full-time working moms and dads almost universally dislike missing out on a child's concert, sporting match or other activity thanks to their jobs. About 9 in 10 said they were “extremely,” “very,” or “somewhat” upset when this happened, including 55% who were “extremely” or “very” upset.

But the unhappiness is deeper among full-time working mothers: 65% said they were “extremely" or very" upset when they missed out, compared 45% of fathers who said the same. About 31% of mothers said they were “somewhat upset,” compared to 42% of dads who said the same.

“It’s not to say dads aren’t experiencing any of challenges in balancing work and family lives. It’s just that moms are experiencing more of it,” Lin said.

Parents who have a hard time finding time to exercise: 58% This was a bigger issue for moms than dads. While 65% of moms who work full time said they didn't have enough time to exercise, 52% of dads said the same. Full-time working moms were also more likely to say they had too little time for hobbies, friends, relaxing and spending time with their spouse or partner.

Parents who say moms do most of the chores: 52% But mothers and fathers seem to disagree here.

Among full-time working mothers, 63% say they do most of the chores. However, 50% of working fathers said chores were equally divided and only 25% said moms do most of it.

A similar dynamic plays out when it comes to parenting. About 63% of moms say they do most of the daily parenting tasks but only 41% of dads agreed. Instead, about 47% of dads say daily parenting tasks are split equally.

Parents who say having kids makes it harder to advance at work: 45% This was another area with a sharp gender divide. While about half, 52%, of full-time working mothers said being a parent made it “a lot” or “somewhat” more difficult to advance in their job or career, only 38% of fathers said the same. And while 61% of mothers said their job made it “a lot” or “somewhat” harder to be a good parent, 45% of fathers felt that way.

About 52% of full-time working mothers and 38% of fathers said they felt they couldn't give 100% at work mainly because of juggling work and family responsibilities. While 67% of mothers said they felt they couldn't give 100% at home, 50% of fathers said the same.

Despite their growing labor rate participation rate and college education levels, women are still far behind men when it comes to wages and career advancement. The so-called “motherhood penalty” has long been a major factor in the persistent wage gap between men and women.

Families with two full-time working parents who say the arrangement has financial benefits: 83% There were mixed feeling about the trade-offs of having both parents work full-time.

While about 83% of parents in that situation said it had a “somewhat” or “very” positive financial impact, about half, 49%, said it had a positive impact on their children's well being. Still, only about 22% said it had a “somewhat” or “very” negative impact on their children's well being, while about 29% said it had neither a negative or positive impact.


Indonesia to Capture Last-known Wild Bornean Rhino for IVF

A rhinoceros walks in Bandia Conservation Park, in Mbour, Senegal June 14, 2026. REUTERS/Raghed Waked
A rhinoceros walks in Bandia Conservation Park, in Mbour, Senegal June 14, 2026. REUTERS/Raghed Waked
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Indonesia to Capture Last-known Wild Bornean Rhino for IVF

A rhinoceros walks in Bandia Conservation Park, in Mbour, Senegal June 14, 2026. REUTERS/Raghed Waked
A rhinoceros walks in Bandia Conservation Park, in Mbour, Senegal June 14, 2026. REUTERS/Raghed Waked

Indonesia's government is racing to capture the last-known Bornean rhino in the wild in a bid to preserve the species through in-vitro fertilization, a government official told AFP on Friday.

Just two Bornean rhinos are known to exist in the world, both female: Pahu in Indonesia's Kelian rhino sanctuary, and Pari, living wild in Kutai Kartanegara regency.

Bornean rhinos are a subspecies of Sumatran rhinos, and officials believe they are close enough to interbreed and preserve some genetic heritage from the Bornean line.

Conservationists previously tried to extract eggs from Pahu for the process.

But she is around 40 and has various health problems, so the process has been unsuccessful so far, explained Ari Wibawanto, head of the provincial conservation agency in East Kalimantan, where both Kelian and Kutai Kartanegara are located.

The last hope lies with Pari, who appears younger than Pahu in images captured by monitoring cameras.

Conservationists have spent months preparing the capture, installing pit traps and even carrying out test runs.

"We carried out several simulations using cattle that are roughly the same size as Pari," he told AFP.

Rhino translocations are a risky process and have ended in disaster in Indonesia in the past.

Last year, a Javan rhino died shortly after a world-first translocation for the species, apparently due to preexisting conditions.

And in 2016, a female Sumatran rhino died after relocation because of an injury previously sustained from a poaching trap.

Ari said a dedicated team had been working on making the capture and relocation as smooth as possible.

"We strengthened our procedures to make sure they don't cause technical problems, health issues, or behavioral issues, so the animal doesn't get stressed," he said.

Once secured, Pari will be airlifted to a facility for monitoring before egg extraction.

"Sumatran rhinos are larger than Bornean rhinos. So, if we try to mate them manually or through normal natural mating, it is likely that it will not work properly," Ari said.

"We take egg cells from the Bornean rhino. We collect them and then fertilize them with sperm from the Sumatran rhino outside the womb."

If the fertilization is successful, a surrogate would likely be used for a safer pregnancy, Ari said.

The conservation body is also considering a cloning program by collecting samples of skin and gums, he added.

Fewer than 50 individuals each from the Javan and Sumatran rhino species are believed to exist in the wild, all of them in Indonesia, according to the International Rhino Foundation.

In 2024, scientists in Germany successfully conducted IVF of a southern white rhino, sparking hope that a similar method could be applied to another species of rhinos.


Fossils Challenge Assumptions on How Animals Adapted to Land

This undated image courtesy of The Field Museum shows an Embolomere fossil. (Photo by Arjan MANN / Field Museum / AFP)
This undated image courtesy of The Field Museum shows an Embolomere fossil. (Photo by Arjan MANN / Field Museum / AFP)
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Fossils Challenge Assumptions on How Animals Adapted to Land

This undated image courtesy of The Field Museum shows an Embolomere fossil. (Photo by Arjan MANN / Field Museum / AFP)
This undated image courtesy of The Field Museum shows an Embolomere fossil. (Photo by Arjan MANN / Field Museum / AFP)

Scientists have long posited the earliest water animals to transition to land had amphibious tadpole features, going through a metamorphosis akin to that of today's frogs.

But new research out Thursday in the journal Science challenges that conventional assumption. It presents analysis of rare fossils which scientists say fill knowledge gaps on the development of the creatures that gave rise to the first land-dwelling vertebrates.

The research centers on specimens excavated from the Mazon Creek fossil beds in northern Illinois, southwest of Chicago.

The world-renowned site features iron carbonate concretions that formed some 309 million years ago, fossilizing within them ancient creatures that had once thrived in the area's lush swamps, shallow seas and river deltas.

It's known for its exceptionally well-preserved specimens including soft tissue.
The new study analyzes dozens of fossils to examine the evolution between fish and tetrapods, or four-legged animals.

At the center was a specimen determined to likely be the baby of a crocodile-esque creature known as an embolomere, which lived mostly in the water but did develop little legs.

In its juvenile stage, popular thought would have anticipated it to show tadpole-like features like external gills, explained Jason Pardo, a research associate at Chicago's Field Museum and the study's co-lead author.

But it didn't, he said.

The body of the baby -- the specimen of which the researchers said are about the size of a short, narrow macaroni noodle -- instead showed evidence of direct development, meaning it was more or less put together the way they would be into adulthood.

That's not what we would expect to see in amphibians, whose metamorphosis from tadpoles into adults includes much more dramatic rearranging and development of organs and limbs.

"We now actually have some direct fossil record evidence," Pardo told AFP, "that this metamorphosis, this amphibian-like life cycle that we've for 150 years assumed was part of our history, turns out that it wasn't part of that at all."

John Long, an Australian paleontologist who has also done extensive research in this field, called the study "quite outstanding."

"Not much was known about their early life stages," he explained to AFP of the animals that gave rise to the first tetrapods.

"This detailed work on a bunch of simply glorious fossils nails it that they went straight into a juvenile phase so didn't need to go through the tadpole stage."

Jason Anderson of the University of Calgary said the "impressive" paper highlights "the power of fossils to address questions we thought impossible given they take place in short periods of time, and in tissues not normally preserved over hundreds of millions of years."

Both he and Pardo also noted that the study underscores that amphibians are impressive evolutionary creatures in their own right.

"Our amphibians, instead of being relicts of earlier stages in the evolutionary history of tetrapods, are themselves highly evolved creatures," Anderson told AFP.

The fossil serving as the focal point of the study had been in the collections at the Field Museum for a long time when the then-director showed it to paper co-author Arjan Mann, who became enthralled.

While both were doctoral students in Canada, Mann and Pardo puzzled over it for years.

Eventual analysis with scanning electron microscopy at the Canadian Museum of Nature allowed researchers to confirm it as a probable embolomere.

Throughout their research the duo analyzed that fossil's juvenile features along with another, smaller embolomere and other species of fossil baby tetrapod relatives.

Mann -- the Field Museum's Assistant Curator of Early Tetrapods -- noted that their research was made possible by the remarkable discoveries at the Mazon Creek site and the amateur scientists who for decades have combed it, a hobby that over the years turned up the specimens analyzed in the paper.

"This paper, in a way, is kind of a love letter to them, that shows the power of what we can do with working together with this community to synthesize really high-impactful new research," Mann told AFP.