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C-130 crashes in Amazon, 66 dead; Valero refinery explosion triggers shelter order
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China Mapping Ocean Floor for Submarine Warfare, Reuters Finds
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What happened: Eight Chinese state-owned research vessels spent only 6% of their time in designated deep-sea mining areas over five years (January 2021-January 2026), instead conducting extensive seafloor mapping in militarily strategic waters near Guam, Taiwan, the Bering Sea, and undersea cables. The vessels, equipped with powerful bathymetric sensors, traveled 102,000 kilometers in exploration zones and repeatedly operated near U.S. military installations, submarine routes, and critical undersea infrastructure.
Why it matters: The detailed ocean floor maps China is creating could enable submarine navigation in contested waters and threaten undersea fiber-optic cables that carry your internet and communications traffic. This intensifying U.S.-China competition is accelerating deep-sea mining plans that scientists warn could irreparably damage marine ecosystems, with one 2025 study showing biodiversity had not recovered 44 years after a mining test.
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129 Articles •
Explosion at Valero Refinery in Port Arthur, Texas, Triggers Shelter-In-Place
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What happened: An explosion at Valero's Port Arthur refinery yesterday evening around 6:30 p.m. ignited a fire in a diesel processing unit, sending black smoke plumes visible for miles and prompting shelter-in-place orders for western Port Arthur, Sabine Pass, and Pleasure Island. The blast, heard up to 11 miles away and suspected to involve an industrial heater, resulted in no injuries with all 770 personnel accounted for, though the 435,000-barrel-per-day facility was shut down.
Why it matters: The shutdown of one of America's largest refineries comes during a critical period of elevated fuel prices driven by Middle East tensions, with gasoline averaging $3.96 per gallon nationally. While no evacuations were ordered and air quality monitoring is ongoing, the disruption to 435,000 barrels per day of gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel production could impact fuel availability and prices in your area.
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534 Articles •
At Least 66 Killed in Colombian Air Force C-130 Crash
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What happened: A Colombian Air Force C-130 Hercules crashed yesterday shortly after takeoff from Puerto Leguízamo in Putumayo, near the Peru border, killing 66 people including 58 soldiers, six air force personnel, and two police officers. The aircraft was carrying 125 people when it failed to gain altitude, struck a tree, and caught fire, detonating ammunition onboard.
Why it matters: This is one of Colombia's deadliest military aviation disasters in recent years, raising urgent questions about aging aircraft safety and military modernization amid budget constraints. The crash has sparked political debate over reduced flight hours and procurement delays, while investigations continue into whether systemic failures or negligence contributed to the tragedy.
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69% of sources are Original Reporting
21 Articles •
Noem's Mount Rushmore Ad Costs Taxpayers $286K, Senators Reveal
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The details: DHS spent over $20,000 on horse rental and nearly $3,800 on hair and makeup for Kristi Noem's Mount Rushmore ad filmed in October 2025. The production, part of a $220 million no-bid contract campaign, cost taxpayers $286,137 total and included a $60,000 signing bonus to The Strategy Group, whose CEO is married to Noem's former spokesperson.
Why it matters: The spending prompted congressional investigations into DHS contracting transparency and contributed to Noem's dismissal earlier this month. Senators Peter Welch and Richard Blumenthal are demanding full records from politically connected firms that received no-bid contracts, raising concerns about oversight of taxpayer-funded campaigns and potential conflicts of interest.
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38 Articles •
CERN Takes Antimatter on Its First-Ever Road Trip
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What happened: CERN scientists successfully transported roughly 100 antiprotons on a truck around a 4-kilometer loop of the CERN campus on Tuesday in a four-hour test operation. The antiprotons were suspended in a specially designed one-tonne transportable trap (BASE-STEP) using supercooled magnets at -269°C, demonstrating that antimatter can be moved away from CERN's magnetically noisy environment for precision experiments at quieter labs across Europe.
Why it matters: This breakthrough will enable more precise antimatter measurements by delivering antiprotons to specialized labs like Heinrich Heine University in Düsseldorf, where magnetic interference is minimal. The tiny amount transported—equivalent to about 100 hydrogen atoms—poses zero public safety risk; even complete annihilation would release energy undetectable except by instruments, roughly one-millionth of a joule or the energy needed to press a keyboard key.
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68% of sources are High Factuality
13 Articles •
Soviet Nuclear Submarine Leaks Radioactive Material from Norwegian Seafloor
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What happened: The Soviet submarine K-278 Komsomolets, which sank in April 1989 after a fire killed 42 crew members, is intermittently leaking radioactive strontium, cesium, uranium and plutonium from its corroding reactor 1,680 meters below the Norwegian Sea. A 2019 ROV survey captured visible plumes seeping from ventilation pipes and the reactor area, with isotope levels near the hull reaching 400,000 to 800,000 times normal background levels, though contamination drops sharply within meters due to rapid dilution.
Why it matters: While the wreck's two nuclear torpedo warheads remain sealed by 1994 titanium patches and rapid dilution prevents broader environmental harm, the corroding reactor fuel poses a long-term radiological hazard requiring continued surveillance as the hull loses stability over time. Nearby marine life shows slightly elevated cesium levels but no deformities, and sediment contamination remains limited, though Russian authorities deemed full removal too risky and costly decades ago.
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69% of sources are High Factuality
11 Articles •
ISS Images of Russian Missile Strike on Kyiv Verified by Analysts
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What happened: A time-lapse video from the International Space Station captured a large-scale Russian missile attack on Kyiv on the night of December 26-27, showing ten ballistic missiles and thirty cruise missiles targeting the capital. The rare orbital footage shows missile trajectories, Ukrainian air defense interceptions, and explosions near residential areas and the Trypilska Thermal Power Plant.
Why it matters: Russia continues coordinating massive missile and drone waves to overwhelm air defenses and disrupt electricity and heating during winter, with the Kyiv CHP plant hit thirteen times since 2022. The February 24 visit by Ukraine's Energy Minister and EU leaders highlighted ongoing damage to infrastructure supplying heat to 500,000 residents, leaving hundreds of buildings without power and heating.
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91% of sources are Original Reporting
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