• https://www.databridgemarketresearch.com/reports/global-quinoa-market

    #pricequinoa #onlinequinoa #whitequinoa #redquinoa #ricequinoa #buyquinoa #recipequinoa #brandquinoa #quinoanearby #drypasta&noodlesquinoa #flourquinoa #blackquinoa #brownquinoa #imagesquinoa #gluten-freequinoa #greenquinoa #packquinoa #crispsquinoa #femalequinoa #reviewsquinoa #driedfruitquinoa #seeds&bulbsquinoa #indiagatequinoa #cerealquinoa #quinoasale #usaquinoa #dogfoodquinoa #babyquinoa
    https://www.databridgemarketresearch.com/reports/global-quinoa-market #pricequinoa #onlinequinoa #whitequinoa #redquinoa #ricequinoa #buyquinoa #recipequinoa #brandquinoa #quinoanearby #drypasta&noodlesquinoa #flourquinoa #blackquinoa #brownquinoa #imagesquinoa #gluten-freequinoa #greenquinoa #packquinoa #crispsquinoa #femalequinoa #reviewsquinoa #driedfruitquinoa #seeds&bulbsquinoa #indiagatequinoa #cerealquinoa #quinoasale #usaquinoa #dogfoodquinoa #babyquinoa
    Quinoa Market – Global Market Size, Share, and Trends Analysis Report – Industry Overview and Forecast to 2032 | Data Bridge Market Research
    The Quinoa market was valued at USD 1.08 Billion in 2024 and is expected to reach USD 2.05 Billion by 2032, growing at a CAGR of 8.2% (2024-2032). Get insights on trends, segmentation, and key players with Data Bridge Market Research Reports.
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  • Timelapse of a poppy plant growing from seeds
    Timelapse of a poppy plant growing from seeds
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  • Tanzania's Massive Infrastructural Projects under President Samia Suluhu Hassan

    • 2,561km Standard Gauge Railway. It covers 1,637 km from Dar es Salaam to Mwanza, passing through Dodoma, Singida, Tabora, and Shinyanga. It extends 2,561km to DR Congo and Burundi.

    • 2,115MW Nyerere Hydropower Project will produce 5,920 GWh per year and will enable the country export electricity.

    • Tanzania's longest bridge, Busisi Bridge with a length of 3.2 km will reduce travel time from 3 hours by ferry to 4 minutes by bridge.

    • REA (Rural Electrification Agency) provided electricity for 2.5 million households in over 9,000 villages.

    • 1.2 million farmers benefited from the Government providing $111.2 million in subsidies for fertilizers and quality seeds in 2023.
    Tanzania's Massive Infrastructural Projects under President Samia Suluhu Hassan • 2,561km Standard Gauge Railway. It covers 1,637 km from Dar es Salaam to Mwanza, passing through Dodoma, Singida, Tabora, and Shinyanga. It extends 2,561km to DR Congo and Burundi. • 2,115MW Nyerere Hydropower Project will produce 5,920 GWh per year and will enable the country export electricity. • Tanzania's longest bridge, Busisi Bridge with a length of 3.2 km will reduce travel time from 3 hours by ferry to 4 minutes by bridge. • REA (Rural Electrification Agency) provided electricity for 2.5 million households in over 9,000 villages. • 1.2 million farmers benefited from the Government providing $111.2 million in subsidies for fertilizers and quality seeds in 2023.
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  • New evidence from the bottom of a lake in the remote North Atlantic Faroe Islands indicates that an unknown band of humans settled there around 500 AD, some 350 years before the Vikings, who up until recently have been thought to have been first human inhabitants. The settlers may have been Celts who crossed rough, unexplored seas from what are now Scotland or Ireland. The findings appear in the journal Communications Earth & Environment.

    Faroes are a small, rugged archipelago about midway between Norway and Iceland, some 200 miles northwest of Scotland. Towering cliffs dominate the coasts; buffeted by strong winds and cloudy weather, the rocky landscape is mostly tundra. There is no evidence that Indigenous people ever lived there, making it one of the planet’s few lands that remained uninhabited until historical times. Past archaeological excavations have indicated that seafaring Vikings first reached them around 850 AD, soon after they developed long-distance sailing technology. The settlement may have formed a stepping stone for the Viking settlement of Iceland in 874, and their short-lived colonization of Greenland, around 980.

    New study, led by scientists at Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, is based on lake sediments containing signs that domestic sheep suddenly appeared around 500, well before the Norse occupation. Previously, the islands did not host any mammals, domestic or otherwise; the sheep could have arrived only with people. The study is not the first to assert that someone else got there first, but the researchers say it clinches the case.

    In 1980s, researchers determined that Plantago lanceolata, a weed commonly associated with disturbed areas and pastures and often used as an indicator of early human presence in Europe, showed up in the Faroes around 2200 BC. At the time, this was deemed possible evidence of human arrival. However, seeds could have arrived on the wind, and the plant does not need human presence to establish itself. Likewise, studies of pollen taken from lake beds and bogs show that some time before the Norse period, woody vegetation largely disappeared—possibly due to persistent chewing by sheep, but also possibly due to natural climatic changes.

    Some Medieval texts suggest that Irish monks reached the islands by around 500. For one, St. Brendan, a famous and far-traveled early Irish navigator, was said to have set out across the Atlantic with comrades from 512 to 530, and supposedly found a land dubbed the Isle of the Blessed. Later speculations and maps say that this was the Faroes or the far southerly Azores, or the Canary Islands or that Brendan actually reached North America. There is no proof for any of this. Centuries later, in 825, the Irish monk and geographer Dicuil wrote that he had learned that hermits had been living in some unidentified northern islands for at least 100 years. Again, later speculations landed on on the Faroes, but there was never any proof.

    The first physical evidence of early occupation came with a 2013 study in the journal Quaternary Science Reviews, which documented two patches of burnt peat containing charred barley grains found underneath the floor of a Viking longhouse on the Faroese island of Sandoy. The researchers dated the grains to somewhere between 300-500 years before the Norse; barley was not previously found on the island, so someone must have brought it. For many archaeologists, this constituted firm evidence of pre-Viking habitation. However, others wanted to see some kind of corroboration before declaring the case closed.
    New evidence from the bottom of a lake in the remote North Atlantic Faroe Islands indicates that an unknown band of humans settled there around 500 AD, some 350 years before the Vikings, who up until recently have been thought to have been first human inhabitants. The settlers may have been Celts who crossed rough, unexplored seas from what are now Scotland or Ireland. The findings appear in the journal Communications Earth & Environment. Faroes are a small, rugged archipelago about midway between Norway and Iceland, some 200 miles northwest of Scotland. Towering cliffs dominate the coasts; buffeted by strong winds and cloudy weather, the rocky landscape is mostly tundra. There is no evidence that Indigenous people ever lived there, making it one of the planet’s few lands that remained uninhabited until historical times. Past archaeological excavations have indicated that seafaring Vikings first reached them around 850 AD, soon after they developed long-distance sailing technology. The settlement may have formed a stepping stone for the Viking settlement of Iceland in 874, and their short-lived colonization of Greenland, around 980. New study, led by scientists at Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, is based on lake sediments containing signs that domestic sheep suddenly appeared around 500, well before the Norse occupation. Previously, the islands did not host any mammals, domestic or otherwise; the sheep could have arrived only with people. The study is not the first to assert that someone else got there first, but the researchers say it clinches the case. In 1980s, researchers determined that Plantago lanceolata, a weed commonly associated with disturbed areas and pastures and often used as an indicator of early human presence in Europe, showed up in the Faroes around 2200 BC. At the time, this was deemed possible evidence of human arrival. However, seeds could have arrived on the wind, and the plant does not need human presence to establish itself. Likewise, studies of pollen taken from lake beds and bogs show that some time before the Norse period, woody vegetation largely disappeared—possibly due to persistent chewing by sheep, but also possibly due to natural climatic changes. Some Medieval texts suggest that Irish monks reached the islands by around 500. For one, St. Brendan, a famous and far-traveled early Irish navigator, was said to have set out across the Atlantic with comrades from 512 to 530, and supposedly found a land dubbed the Isle of the Blessed. Later speculations and maps say that this was the Faroes or the far southerly Azores, or the Canary Islands or that Brendan actually reached North America. There is no proof for any of this. Centuries later, in 825, the Irish monk and geographer Dicuil wrote that he had learned that hermits had been living in some unidentified northern islands for at least 100 years. Again, later speculations landed on on the Faroes, but there was never any proof. The first physical evidence of early occupation came with a 2013 study in the journal Quaternary Science Reviews, which documented two patches of burnt peat containing charred barley grains found underneath the floor of a Viking longhouse on the Faroese island of Sandoy. The researchers dated the grains to somewhere between 300-500 years before the Norse; barley was not previously found on the island, so someone must have brought it. For many archaeologists, this constituted firm evidence of pre-Viking habitation. However, others wanted to see some kind of corroboration before declaring the case closed.
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  • Did you know?

    Humans are the "most sensitive" to the castor oil seeds: it takes 1 to kill a full grown human, 11 to kill a dog, and a massive dose of 80 to kill a duck.

    The seeds contain ricin which is roughly 6000 times more poisonous than cyanide.
    Did you know? Humans are the "most sensitive" to the castor oil seeds: it takes 1 to kill a full grown human, 11 to kill a dog, and a massive dose of 80 to kill a duck. The seeds contain ricin which is roughly 6000 times more poisonous than cyanide.
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  • According to DNA studies, scientists have found the ancient baobab trees first grew in Madagascar 21 million years ago.

    Their seeds were later carried on ocean currents to Australia and mainland Africa, where they evolved into distinct species.https://t.co/SFWKmfwRcj
    According to DNA studies, scientists have found the ancient baobab trees first grew in Madagascar 21 million years ago. Their seeds were later carried on ocean currents to Australia and mainland Africa, where they evolved into distinct species.https://t.co/SFWKmfwRcj
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