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Drought hits over a million people in southern China: report

by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 18, 2007
A drought described as the worst in 50 years in parts of southern China has left over a million people short of drinking water, state media reported Tuesday.

More than one million residents in Guangxi region and nearly 250,000 in Guangdong province have been impacted by the drought since September, the China Daily reported.

Guangxi recorded just 0.5 millimetres of rainfall between November 5 and December 10, the lowest since 1951, while 75 percent of its sugar cane crop has been affected by the water shortage, the report said.

The water level of the Beijiang river in northern Guangdong fell to just 3.79 meters (12.5 feet) in early December, forcing ships to be delayed until dredging could be carried out.

Droughts in China occur frequently, with the north of the country particularly parched.

But in recent years areas in the traditionally wet south have also had unusually dry weather that some Chinese experts have said may be linked to global warming.

China's water shortages have been exacerbated by pollution that has increased at alarming rates during the nation's past three decades of rapid economic growth.

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Moss Genome Shows How Plants Invaded The Land And Learned To Survive Heat And Drought
Berkeley CA (SPX) Dec 17, 2007
Some 400 million years ago, on a lifeless lakeshore lapped by waves, floating algae learned to survive in the open air and launched an invasion that transformed the Earth into a green paradise. The secrets of these first steps onto land are now being revealed thanks to the sequencing of a modern descendent of these first land dwellers, a dainty moss called Physcomitrella patens that sprouts on recently exposed shorelines, quickly fruits, and then dies.







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