Salvaged Shipwreck Porcelain Gets New Life in Malaysia

Smashed crockery from the historic 400-year-old Portuguese Wanli shipwreck was almost consigned to the scrap heap before Malaysian artist Alice Chang saw the potential to transform the shattered plates and cups. Mohd RASFAN / AFP
Smashed crockery from the historic 400-year-old Portuguese Wanli shipwreck was almost consigned to the scrap heap before Malaysian artist Alice Chang saw the potential to transform the shattered plates and cups. Mohd RASFAN / AFP
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Salvaged Shipwreck Porcelain Gets New Life in Malaysia

Smashed crockery from the historic 400-year-old Portuguese Wanli shipwreck was almost consigned to the scrap heap before Malaysian artist Alice Chang saw the potential to transform the shattered plates and cups. Mohd RASFAN / AFP
Smashed crockery from the historic 400-year-old Portuguese Wanli shipwreck was almost consigned to the scrap heap before Malaysian artist Alice Chang saw the potential to transform the shattered plates and cups. Mohd RASFAN / AFP

Chinese porcelain shards salvaged from a famous shipwreck are being reimagined in Malaysia, hundreds of years after the Portuguese vessel is said to have sunk in battle.

The smashed 17th-century crockery was almost consigned to the scrap heap before Malaysian artist Alice Chang saw the potential to transform the shattered plates and cups, said AFP.

After chancing upon a social media post selling the porcelain fragments, the 57-year-old bought about 50 kilograms (110 pounds) for more than 10,000 ringgit ($2,370).

Her recent solo exhibition "Me, Then Blue" at her studio in Ampang, a suburb of the capital Kuala Lumpur, turned the porcelain into sculptures representing submerged dreamscapes.

Her materials are fragments of a once-great cargo of blue-and-white pottery made in Jingdezhen, China's renowned porcelain capital.

The cargo was carried by a Portuguese merchant vessel that sank around 1625, likely due to a battle off Malaysia's coast.

It was discovered in 1998 after pottery appeared in fishermen's nets, with the vessel then named the Wanli after the Ming Dynasty emperor who ruled when the ship sank.

It was hailed as one of the most significant maritime finds in Southeast Asia and is now recognized under UNESCO's Silk Roads Program.

But while intact porcelain pieces were preserved in museums, Chang said the broken shards were "cast aside as useless".

"The 400 years of broken porcelain tell a story of our past and a look into our future. If nobody wanted them, they would be thrown away, and that is such a waste," said Chang.

She used the shards to create the "ambience of this exhibition like it's immersed in the deep blue sea", Chang told AFP.

"This is part of Malaysia's history... its maritime legacy often goes unrecognized, and this discovery felt like a forgotten chapter waiting to be told," she said.

'Beauty in brokenness'

At the heart of Chang's exhibition stood 11 sculptures, adorned with salvaged shards, accompanied by 20 oil paintings.

Working with the broken porcelain pieces was "deeply personal" for Chang, a second-generation Malaysian with Chinese roots who often felt culturally unmoored.

"Through the Wanli shipwreck and working with the pieces, I feel reconnected... I have been told I'm not very Chinese because I'm married to an Italian. So I'm neither here nor there," she chuckled.

"This project reconnected me to my Chinese roots. I actually travelled to China to search and understand my culture."

Some of her sculptures evoked ornate vases while others resembled cascading waves, with mirrors beneath them mimicking the glimmering seabed.

They show "the beauty in brokenness", Chang said.

"Depending on your perspective, you can turn brokenness into something beautiful."



Bear Mauls Man to Death in Bulgaria

A bear smells a brick of ice on a hot afternoon at the Veermata Jijabai Bhosale Udyan and Zoo in Mumbai on May 10, 2026. (Photo by Punit PARANJPE / AFP)
A bear smells a brick of ice on a hot afternoon at the Veermata Jijabai Bhosale Udyan and Zoo in Mumbai on May 10, 2026. (Photo by Punit PARANJPE / AFP)
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Bear Mauls Man to Death in Bulgaria

A bear smells a brick of ice on a hot afternoon at the Veermata Jijabai Bhosale Udyan and Zoo in Mumbai on May 10, 2026. (Photo by Punit PARANJPE / AFP)
A bear smells a brick of ice on a hot afternoon at the Veermata Jijabai Bhosale Udyan and Zoo in Mumbai on May 10, 2026. (Photo by Punit PARANJPE / AFP)

A bear mauled to death a man at Vitosha, a mountainous region just outside Bulgarian capital Sofia, police told AFP on Sunday.

"The findings of the medical examiner and a wildlife expert show that marks found on the body are those of a female bear accompanied by her cub," a Sofia police spokesperson said.

Police did not disclose the age of the victim, but Bulgarian media reported him as being in his 30s.

His body was located Saturday afternoon near a road connecting two chalets in the northwestern part of the mountainous area around half an hour by road out of Sofia rising to 2,295 meters (7,500 feet) and located about 30 minutes from Sofia.

Vitosha is a popular hiking destination for residents of the Sofia, being home to a range of wild animals, including deer, roe deer, wild boars and wolves.

The area is believed to be home to around a dozen bears.

The last recorded case of a person killed by a bear in Bulgaria dates back to 2010, in the Rhodope Mountains in the country's south.


Saudi Arabia: Imam Turki Reserve Authority Reaffirms Commitment to Protecting Endangered Species

The Imam Turki bin Abdullah Royal Nature Reserve Development Authority logo
The Imam Turki bin Abdullah Royal Nature Reserve Development Authority logo
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Saudi Arabia: Imam Turki Reserve Authority Reaffirms Commitment to Protecting Endangered Species

The Imam Turki bin Abdullah Royal Nature Reserve Development Authority logo
The Imam Turki bin Abdullah Royal Nature Reserve Development Authority logo

The Imam Turki bin Abdullah Royal Nature Reserve Development Authority reaffirmed its commitment to protecting endangered wildlife species through a comprehensive ecosystem of environmental programs and initiatives aimed at preserving biodiversity, restoring ecological balance, and developing natural habitats within the reserve, coinciding with Endangered Species Day.

The authority emphasized that its efforts align with the objectives of Saudi Vision 2030 and the Saudi Green Initiative through a scientific and field-based approach focused on wildlife protection, the reintroduction of endangered species, and enhancing environmental sustainability within one of the Kingdom’s largest royal reserves.

These efforts contribute to preserving the national natural heritage for future generations.

The authority explained that the reserve is home to rich biodiversity, including several wildlife species of high environmental value. Environmental protection and monitoring teams continue to track wildlife, limit practices that negatively affect natural habitats, and implement specialized breeding and rehabilitation programs aimed at enhancing the survival and growth of threatened species in their natural environments.

The authority stressed that protecting endangered species is not only an environmental responsibility, but also an investment in ecosystem sustainability and quality of life.

It added that the development of vegetation cover, protection of natural resources, and promotion of community awareness constitute key pillars of its environmental strategy.

The impact of these efforts has been reflected in increased biodiversity and improved natural habitats within the reserve in recent years.


Spacecraft to Probe How Earth Fends Off Raging Solar Winds

This photograph shows the Smile spacecraft (gold) fixed to a Vega-C rocket adaptor (black cone) on 25 March 2026, in Kourou, French Guiana, in preparation for liftoff from Europe's Spaceport. (Photo by ESA / AFP)
This photograph shows the Smile spacecraft (gold) fixed to a Vega-C rocket adaptor (black cone) on 25 March 2026, in Kourou, French Guiana, in preparation for liftoff from Europe's Spaceport. (Photo by ESA / AFP)
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Spacecraft to Probe How Earth Fends Off Raging Solar Winds

This photograph shows the Smile spacecraft (gold) fixed to a Vega-C rocket adaptor (black cone) on 25 March 2026, in Kourou, French Guiana, in preparation for liftoff from Europe's Spaceport. (Photo by ESA / AFP)
This photograph shows the Smile spacecraft (gold) fixed to a Vega-C rocket adaptor (black cone) on 25 March 2026, in Kourou, French Guiana, in preparation for liftoff from Europe's Spaceport. (Photo by ESA / AFP)

A joint European-Chinese spacecraft is set to blast off Tuesday to investigate what happens when extreme winds and giant explosions of plasma shot out from the Sun slam into Earth's magnetic shield.

Particularly fierce solar storms can knock out satellites, threaten astronauts -- and create colorful auroras in the skies of northern and southern latitudes.

To find out more about this little-understood space weather, the van-sized SMILE spacecraft is tasked with making the first-ever X-ray observations of Earth's magnetic field.

The spacecraft is scheduled to launch on a Vega-C rocket at 0352 GMT on Tuesday from Europe's spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, on the northeastern coast of South America.

Lift-off was originally planned for April 9, but was postponed due to a technical issue.

SMILE -- or the Solar Wind Magnetosphere Ionosphere Link Explorer -- is a joint mission between the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

"What we want to study with SMILE is the relationship between the Earth and the Sun," explained Philippe Escoubet, an ESA scientist working on the project.

Solar wind is a stream of charged particles shot out from the Sun. Sometimes this wind is kicked up into a huge storm by massive eruptions of plasma called coronal mass ejections.

Hurtling at around two million kilometers (1.2 million miles) an hour, these powerful blasts take a day or two to reach Earth. When they arrive, Earth's magnetic field acts as a shield, deflecting most of the charged particles.

However, during particularly intense events, some particles can penetrate our atmosphere, where they have the potential to take out power grids or communication networks. They also create dazzling auroras known as the northern or southern lights, AFP reported.

During the worst geomagnetic storm on record in 1859, bright auroras were seen as far south as Panama -- and telegraph operators around the world were given electric shocks.

Solar winds can now also pose a danger to satellites orbiting Earth, as well as astronauts sheltering inside space stations.

Given these threats, scientists want to learn more about space weather, so the world can better forecast and prepare for big blasts in the future.

To help with this endeavor, the SMILE mission plans to detect the X-rays emitted when charged particles from the Sun interact with the neutral particles of Earth's upper atmosphere.

The spacecraft will observe this phenomenon from several important locations, including the magnetopause -- where the magnetic shield deflects solar particles.

It will also soar above the Earth's poles, where X-ray photons are visible, according to Dimitra Koutroumpa of France's CNRS institute who is working on the mission.

On Tuesday, the spacecraft will be placed 700 kilometers above Earth before heading on an extremely elliptical orbit.

SMILE will be at an altitude of 5,000 kilometers when it flies over the South Pole, where it will transmit data to a research station in Antarctica called Bernardo O'Higgins.

But the spacecraft will be 121,000 kilometers above Earth when it swings over the North Pole, to take in a far wider view over a longer period of time.

Among other things, this will allow the mission to "observe the northern lights non-stop for 45 hours at a time for the first time ever", according to the ESA.

The spacecraft has four scientific instruments, including a UK-built X-ray imager, as well as a UV imager, ion analyzer and magnetometer all made by the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

SMILE is expected to start collecting data just an hour after it is put into orbit.

The mission is designed to run for three years, but could be extended if all goes well.