May 1 - 31, 2026: Issue 654

Our Youth page is for young people aged 13+ - if you are younger than this we have news for you in the Children's pageNews items and articles run at the top of this page. Information, local resources, events and local organisations, sports groups etc. are at the base of this page. All Previous pages for you are listed in Past Features

 

Forest High School Official Opening: May 15 2026

Students and staff have welcomed the opening of the new Forest High School. The ribbon was cut on the new campus on Friday May 15 by the Premier, the Hon. Chris Minns, alongside the Member for Wakehurst Michael Regan and Principal Nathan Lawler.

Doors opened day one, term one, 2026 in February of this year, but the school was officially opened this past week - making May 15 2026 the new Forest High School's 'Birthday'.

In December 2021 The NSW Department of Education made available drawings and artists' impressions of the new Forest High School. 

MORE HERE

 

Australian Interschools Surfing Championships 2026: Three Local Schools Take Part

Photo: Surfing Australia/Andrew Shield

Three local schools had teams in this year’s Australian Interschools Surfing Championships: – Barrenjoey High School: 6 teams, 3 in Juniors and 3 in Seniors, St Augustines College: 7 Teams – 3 Senior and 4 Junior teams, and St Lukes Grammar School Northern Beaches had 2 Senior Boys Teams.

The Australian Interschools Surfing Championships officially kicked off on Wednesday the 13th of May with an inspiring Opening Ceremony at the Broadbeach Cultural Centre Auditorium. More than 500 students from schools across the nation came together to celebrate the start of what will be an unforgettable two days of surfing and team spirit.

A highlight of the ceremony was the symbolic ‘Mixing of the Sands’, teams blended sand from their local beaches, to celebrate unity and a shared passion for surfing.

The opening ceremony also featured a high-profile guest panel including 1978 World Champion and Surfing Legend Wayne 'Rabbit' Bartholomew, ISA World Junior Surfing Champion Ziggy Mackenzie, Former Championship Tour Surfer India Robinson, and Surfing Australia High Performance Coach Pete Duncan.

Other speakers included, Kal Glanznig and Cooper Chapman from Blue Minds, who shared an inspiring message with students, encouraging them to look after their mental health and protect the ocean they love. Their words resonated deeply with the young audience.

Chris Symington, Surfing Australia Chief Executive Officer, couldn't be more excited to see teams surfing at a school level rise to such popularity.

"This event has grown incredibly quickly over the past three years, and it’s exciting to now see more than 500 students from schools right across the country coming together on the Gold Coast in 2026. While the focus is certainly on high performance surfing, what really stands out is the energy, school spirit, and positivity these students bring to the event.

The Gold Coast is such a wave-rich destination, and even this time of year we’re blessed with sunshine and a huge variety of quality surf, which creates an amazing canvas for the students to perform at their best.

At its core, surfing has always been about community, and seeing so many schools unite through a shared passion for the sport makes this event incredibly special, not just for competitive surfing, but for the broader surfing lifestyle and culture as well.”

MORE HERE

 

Mona Vale Raider's U21's

Photos: May 10 at Newport Oval, more in this week's Pictorial

2026 Junkyard Surf All Schools Surftag at Queenscliff

Local schools entered teams into the 2026 Junkyard Surf All School Tag competition held at Queenscliff Beach, and running from 17 March - 6 May 2026.

The surf was not huge but perfect, and all teams made the most of the clean conditions, showcasing incredible talent, teamwork and composure in challenging surf.

Narrabeen's youngest team, Junior A — Kaspian R, Easton S, Finn SS, Koda M and Benji C — surfed brilliantly throughout the day and made it all the way to the Semi-Finals, narrowly missing out on a podium finish. The team scored some amazing rides and gained valuable competition experience along the way.

Narrabeen's other junior team, team B — Taj A, Eli C, Finn O, Xavier C and Ryder N — were the stand-outs of the event. The boys surfed four strong heats to secure their place in the final against some outstanding competition.

In the final, Taj A got the team off to a flying start. Eli C followed with exceptional scores every time he paddled out, saving his best performance for last with an incredible 9.5/10 on his power wave. 

The rest of the team backed each other up perfectly, posting big scores, remaining calm under pressure and working strategically to finish their heats quickly and secure valuable bonus points. Their combined team total of 67.58 earned them the overall win — an outstanding achievement!

Congratulations to all students involved on an incredible few weeks of surfing and teamwork. Everyone is so proud of the way you represented your schools in and out of the water!

NSHS's winners

Results

Girls

  • 1 St Luke's Grammar Girls
  • 2 NBSC Mackellar Girls
  • 3 Oxford Falls Girls

Senior Boys - Final

  • 1 The Scots College A
  • 2 St Augustine's A
  • 3 NBSC Freshwater A
  • 4 Narrabeen Sports High B

Junior Boys

  • 1 Narrabeen Sports High B
  • 2 NBSC Balgowlah A
  • 3 St Luke's Grammar A
  • 4 St Paul's A

Primary Schools

  • 1 Avalon Public School
  • 2 Newport Public School
  • 3 Harbord Public School A
  • 4 Harbord Public School C

All Results at: https://liveheats.com/events/487259

 

Manly Warringah Netball Association Notice: Safety First

As we head into Game weekend, it has been wonderful to see such a big support crew down at the courts cheering on our teams. The atmosphere has been fantastic 💙

Just a little reminder though that we have a huge number of games running across busy venues, with limited space around the courts. Please ensure younger siblings are supervised at all times. Last weekend we had a few incidents with small children running into umpires, skating onto courts and balls travelling through active games.

John Fisher Park is an open public space, so children should also be supervised when heading to the canteen, toilets or the park.

For everyone’s safety:

❌ Please leave bikes, skateboards and scooters at home

❌ E-bikes are not permitted within John Fisher Park. If they are being used as transport to and from the courts, they are to be left at the bike racks along Abbott Road and not brought between the courts

❌ Our furry friends are best left at home too

❌ Chairs should be set up at the ends of courts and away from the umpire’s lines.

Thank you everyone for helping us create a safe and enjoyable environment for all players, officials and spectators this weekend. Let Netball be the winner.

 

Help! I’m almost finished school but don’t know what I want to do next

Rachel Claire/ Pexels
Emma Bradshaw, Australian Catholic University

As Year 12 students pass the halfway point of their final year, the question of “what next?” can start to loom large. Some students have a clear plan: a course they want to get into, a trade they want to start, or a gap year they are saving for.

But many find the question daunting, because the answer is, “I have no idea”.

If this is you, the first thing you need to hear is – not knowing is very normal. The second thing is – you do not need to know or decide your final destination now (or even soon).

Right now, you are being asked to make huge life decisions when you are still learning what you enjoy, what you are good at, the type of people you hope to work with, and what kind of life you want to build.

It is not realistic to think you will know all the answers to these questions at 17 or 18. These answers are supposed to reveal themselves over time, and they will.

Our research points to some strategies that may prove useful in moving forward, even if you don’t know exactly where you’re going yet.

Is my passion important?

One common approach you’ve probably tried is to ask yourself: what am I passionate about?

Personal interest can be a good starting point, but research suggests it’s not the whole picture.

All jobs have good and bad parts, and all futures have ups and downs. So the aim is not to expect constant enjoyment or getting everything you want. It’s to choose a next step that gives you a good chance of building toward a life that is meaningful, energising and right for you.

Our research finds this kind of life tends to emerge when three basic psychological needs are supported. These are:

  1. autonomy – feeling like you’re in the driver’s seat of your life

  2. competence – feeling like you can build skills and accomplish what needs to be done

  3. relatedness – feeling connected to and valued by people you care about.

Everyone experiences the satisfaction of these needs differently, so you need to gather evidence about what satisfies yours.

What makes you feel capable and in control?

So, the task is not to find your passion. The task is to create good evidence about yourself.

Instead of asking “what job title do I want forever?”, ask:

  • what kinds of tasks make me feel more capable after I do them?

  • when do I feel curious rather than just compliant?

  • what environments make me shut down or tune out?

  • what kind of people do I want around me all day?

These questions matter because they will point you towards the kinds of experiences you want to have every day. Hopefully, this gives you a practical way to think about next year and a way to talk to people about it too.

Parents, teachers, career advisers, family friends, older students, and people working in fields you’re curious about are all a good start.

But remember, you need to feel in charge of your life. Bring them in on your evidence gathering rather than asking them to decide for you. Saying something like, “I’m open to advice. But I need support to do my own thinking,” might help.

As your time allows, try new things and be open. This might involve taking a class, getting a casual job, volunteering or joining a team. Pay attention to what leaves you feeling more skilled, connected and in control.

It’s OK not to know

My own career trajectory has been far from linear. I had many (many!) jobs across three full-time careers before I discovered my current career in academic research satisfies my needs. All the dots connected in the end, none of my previous experience was wasted.

I use myself as an example to show how the next step will not make or break your whole life.

So choose a next step that is realistic, builds skills, and is most likely to support those basic psychological needs.

The form of that choice matters less than whether it gives you room to grow, build confidence, meet people, and gather better information about yourself.The Conversation

Emma Bradshaw, Research Fellow, Motivation and Behaviour, Australian Catholic University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

Sydney’s newest cultural venue to welcome the community for a weekend of free festivities

The NSW Government is opening the doors to The Cutaway at Barangaroo with a vibrant weekend of free music, art and culture, inviting Sydneysiders to experience the newly transformed world-class venue for the first time. 

Across Saturday 30 May and Sunday 31 May, visitors can enjoy a packed program of live music, immersive performances, interactive workshops and family friendly activities in one of Sydney’s most unique cultural spaces.

On Saturday 30 May, The Cutaway will come alive with music, large-scale projections, live art making and cultural workshops, offering a sneak peek into the venue’s exciting future as a major arts and events destination.

On Sunday 31 May, festival goers can get hands-on with weaving, flower crown making and jewellery workshops, alongside a range of free activities for all ages.

A diverse line-up of Sydney-based musicians, DJs and performers will showcase the creativity and energy of the city’s contemporary art scene, with performances from Kee’ahn, Ngaiire, Alice Ivy, Sophie Penkethman-Young, Shal, DJ Toaka and DJ Charlie Villas.

The popular Barangaroo Markets will also return for the special weekend celebration, transforming the streets of Barangaroo South with food, fashion, design and artisan stalls bursting with flavour, creativity and community spirit.

Festivities across the precinct will continue with free Aboriginal Cultural Tours and Yoga on Country as part of the Damulay Nguarang program, celebrating culture, connection and community throughout the weekend.

The reopening of The Cutaway forms part of the Minns Government’s broader work to revitalise Sydney’s cultural and nightlife economy by supporting live music, lifting concert caps and investing in world-class events, public spaces and cultural experiences across NSW.

Now transformed into a dynamic underground cultural destination, The Cutaway is set to host major events including the National Indigenous Art Fair, Sydney Festival and Vivid Sydney, alongside exhibitions, performances, festivals and community events, cementing Barangaroo as one of Australia’s leading cultural precincts.

What’s on:

Live music and art
Date: Sat 30 May, 1.00pm – 5.00pm
Location: The Cutaway

Barangaroo Markets
Date: Sat 30 & Sun 31 May, 10.00am – 4.00pm
Location: Barangaroo South, Waterman’s Cove

Visitors can grab a bite to eat or pick up something unique while supporting local businesses and creatives.

Cultural workshops
Date: Sat 30 May, 1.00pm – 5.00pm
Location: The Cutaway, Waranara Terrace Rooms

Young creators can drop in at any time to explore art, culture, movement, and discovery through fun, guided activities designed to spark curiosity. With stations running throughout the day, kids and young teenagers can wander, experiment and learn together in this vibrant, playful celebration of creativity and community.

Aboriginal Cultural Tours
Date: Sat 30 May, 10.30am – 1.00pm & Sun 31 May, 1.30pm – 4.00pm
Location: Barangaroo Reserve

Experience the rich history and cultural significance of Sydney Harbour with Aboriginal Cultural Tours at Barangaroo. Led by a team of knowledgeable Aboriginal educators, these tours immerse visitors in the native history of the area and the deep cultural importance of the land to the Gadigal people.

Damulay Ngurang
Date: Sun 31 May, 9.30am – 2.00pm
Location: The Cutaway

On Sunday, gather in the spirit of 'Damulay Ngurang' – meaning 'friendship place' in local Sydney language. Celebrate the resilience of First Nations people across the country under this years National Reconciliation Week theme "All In" — a call for action, responsibility, and collective effort to advance reconciliation and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander rights.

Yoga on Country
Date: Sun 31 May, 9.30am
Location: The Cutaway

Welcome to Country
Date: Sun 31 May, 10.10am
Location: The Cutaway

Craft workshops
Date: Sun 31 May, 11.00am – 1.00pm
Location: The Cutaway

For more information, visit: https://www.barangaroo.com/whats-on/campaigns/barangaroo-live

Minister for Planning and Public Spaces Paul Scully said:

“Sydney’s newest arts, cultural and events space, The Cutaway, is throwing open its doors to welcome everyone for a weekend of free festivities.

“As part of the Minns Government’s commitment to bringing more free entertainment and cultural experiences to our harbour precincts, Barangaroo Live on Saturday 30 and Sunday 31 May will showcase the incredible transformation of The Cutaway into a world-class arts and cultural venue.

“There are many fee activities to take part in while enjoying one of Sydney’s most iconic harbourside locations. It’s a great opportunity to check out Barangaroo and have some fun without breaking the budget.”

The Cutaway, Barangaroo. Photo: NSW Government

Six storytellers. Ten films. One winner. Race Around The World returns

ABC’s ground-breaking series Race Around The World returns on Sunday 7 June at 7.30pm on ABC TV and ABC iview, introducing a new generation of Australian filmmakers.

Hosted by Zan Rowe, with original Race Around The World breakout star John Safran returning as weekly judge, the re-imagined series will showcase the unique cinematic voice of six young Australians.

The rules are simple: six filmmakers travel solo through 10 countries, delivering a new short film every 10 days, over 100 days. 

Working entirely alone, they will shoot, write, edit and produce each film from start to finish, before dialling in from wherever they are in the world to share it with a live studio audience.

Each week, a rotating panel of expert judges including Margaret Pomeranz, Claudia Karvan, Danny Philippou, Bruce Beresford, Wayne Blair, Gracie Otto and more, will join John Safran to critique each Racer’s work.  

At the end of the season, the Racer with the winning score will receive their own personal project produced and funded by the ABC.

Introducing the Race Around The World Class of 2026: 

Elliot, New South Wales

Video Content Producer 

Elliot is a people first filmmaker drawn to complex, hard to reach stories. Curious, compassionate and fluent in Spanish and Portuguese, he works independently in volatile environments, earning trust quickly. With a background in psychology, he finds humanity, contradiction and resilience where few cameras go.

Jayden, Northern Territory

Marine Biologist 

Jayden is a marine biologist turned environmental photojournalist working solo in remote, high risk environments. Shooting, writing and producing end-to-end, he’s driven by strong ethics and optimism. Comfortable with isolation and extremes, his work spans conservation, people and climate change, including extensive work in Antarctica.

Kate, Victoria

Lollipop Lady 

Kate is an arts school graduate who works part time as a lollipop lady to fund her films. Her work blends sharp observation, dry humour and inventive restraint, revealing the odd logic of everyday spaces through cinematic revelatory nonfiction storytelling.

Lucinda, New South Wales

Author and Internet Personality

Lucinda is an author, comedian and internet personality best known as Froomes. She creates fast, instinctive, internet first work through her one woman studio, blending humour, sharp research and lived experience. Prioritising immediacy over polish, she uses comedy to probe beauty standards, gender, identity and culture.

Mikaela, Western Australia

Sports Marketing and Film Industry Freelancer

Mikaela is a Gen Z filmmaker with an instinctive grasp of digital culture. Her creative process is hands on and observational, building female centric stories from real moments. Blending social media vernacular with cinematic texture, creating emotive, people driven work grounded in everyday life.

William, Queensland 

Data Scientist

William is an articulate, upbeat and quietly nerdy filmmaker with a background in AI and data science. An ideas first, people driven storyteller, his tongue in cheek style avoids formal interviews, favouring movement, humour and empathy. He brings warmth and intelligence to character led documentaries and music videos.

Watch all your favourite programs on ABC iview now. 

Production credit: Race Around the World is produced by Endemol Shine Australia (a Banijay Entertainment company) for ABC. Endemol Shine Australia Executive Producer: Kate Paul. Endemol Shine Australia Director of Content: Amelia Fisk. ABC Executive Producer: Mark Sutton. ABC Head of Entertainment: Rachel Millar.

Cole reappointed as youth games general manager for Malta

Friday May 15, 2026

Hornsby resident and Paralympic swimming icon Ellie Cole AM PLY has been reappointed as Australian Team General Manager for the upcoming Malta 2027 Commonwealth Youth Games, continuing her leadership role within Australia’s high performance pathway.  

The eighth edition of the Youth Games will take place from 27 October to 4 November 2027, bringing together athletes aged 14–18 from across the Commonwealth for an inspiring celebration of sport and culture. 

One of Australia’s most decorated swimmers, Cole represented Australia at three Commonwealth Games (2010, 2018 and 2022) and four Paralympic Games (2008, 2012, 2016 and 2020). 

Across her distinguished career, she claimed three Commonwealth Games bronze medals and one silver medal, alongside a record-breaking 17 Paralympic medals, including six gold. 

Her reappointment follows a successful tenure as Australian Team General Manager at the Trinbago 2023 Commonwealth Youth Games, marking her continued progression in high performance leadership. 

She stepped into her first team executive role ahead of Trinbago 2023, following in the footsteps of her mentor, Petria Thomas OAM OLY — Chef de Mission for Birmingham 2022 and current Chef de Mission for Glasgow 2026. 

Cole said she was honoured to return to the role and continue supporting emerging athletes on the international stage. 

“To be appointed again as Australian Team General Manager for the Malta Youth Games is something I’m incredibly proud of,” Cole said. 

“Trinbago 2023 was one of the most rewarding experiences of my career outside the pool. It showed me just how important leadership is, not only for performance but for people too. 

“Youth Games environments are so special. You see athletes at the very start of their international journey — full of ambition, nerves and potential. Being able to support them through that moment is a privilege. 

“I’m looking forward to working closely with our athletes, coaches and staff, and helping create an environment where they can grow in confidence and understand what it means to represent Australia.” 

Chef de Mission for Glasgow 2026, Petria Thomas OAM OLY, praised Cole’s leadership. 

“Ellie brings authenticity, experience and a genuine connection to athletes,” Thomas said. 

“She leads with empathy while maintaining high standards, and the team will be in excellent hands in Malta.” 

Commonwealth Games Australia CEO Craig Phillips AM said Cole’s reappointment reflects her impact within the team environment. 

“Ellie has already proven herself as an exceptional leader,” Phillips said. 

“Her ability to connect with athletes, combined with her experience at the highest level of sport, makes her an invaluable asset to the Australian team.” 

The sport program will feature eight sports, including Athletics and Para Athletics, Netball, Sailing, Squash, Swimming and Para Swimming, Triathlon, Water Polo (4×4) and Weightlifting. 

Malta 2027 will host the largest Para sport program in the competition’s history, building on the landmark inclusion of Para Athletics at the most recent Commonwealth Youth Games in Trinidad and Tobago. The Games will also see the debut of Sailing and Water Polo at a Commonwealth Youth Games. 

Malta will host the eighth edition of the Commonwealth Youth Games, with previous games held in Edinburgh (2002), Bendigo (2004), Pune, India (2008), Isle of Man (2011), Samoa (2015), Bahamas (2017), and Trinbago (2023). 

 

Royal Australian Navy Jet Pilots in Action:1960s Aerobatics in HD Colour

By NFSA - Film Australia

This spectacular edition of Australian Colour Diary captures the precision, danger and adrenaline of Royal Australian Navy flight training in the 1960s. Filmed over the South Coast of New South Wales, the documentary follows pilots from the Royal Australian Navy’s 724 Squadron as they train in British-built Sea Venom jet fighters ahead of carrier operations at sea.

From rocket attacks and cannon fire exercises to breath-taking formation aerobatics performed at speeds of up to 500 mph, the film showcases the extraordinary skill required to fly these aircraft to their limits. The pilots, with an average age of just 25, are shown undertaking some of the most demanding manoeuvres in military aviation, including loop-the-loops, barrel rolls and tight “box four” formations flown just feet apart.

The film also offers a rare look inside HMAS Albatross at Nowra, the Navy’s land-based aviation training centre, and documents key aspects of carrier preparation including mirror landing systems, folded carrier wings and cartridge-fired jet start-ups.

Opportunities:

Barrenjoey Cup 2026: Bulldogs Vs. Raiders

Two proud local clubs. One massive rivalry built on years of competition, community and mutual respect.

The Barrenjoey Cup is more than just a game. it’s about two clubs pushing each other to be better every single season while continuing to grow rugby league on the Barrenjoey Peninsula. Avalon Bulldogs and Mona Vale Raiders share a genuine respect for the people, players, volunteers and families behind both clubs.

These two clubs site at 1 and 2 on the 2026 Northern Open Age Gold ladder as we go into Round 5 this Sunday.

A huge thank you to Johnson Bros Mitre 10 for getting behind the day and supporting local grassroots sport. Community sponsors like this help create opportunities for players, strengthen local clubs and keep weekends like this thriving for the next generation.

Big crowd. Big energy. Local footy at its best.

The Barrenjoey Cup is here and includes Ladies Day at the Bulldogs, from 1.30 pm on.

THIS SUNDAY, MAY 17, GAME STARTS AT 3pm - HITCHY (Hitchcock Park, Avalon)

Narrabeen Vs. Forestville at Lake Park

These two clubs site at 3 and 4 on the 2026 Northern Open Age Gold ladder as we go into Round 5 this Sunday.

Narrabeen JRLC Life Members Day

Narrabeen Sharks is a club that has an amazing history. The success of the club is due to many things, but the biggest thing that has gotten this club to where it is today is the people who give hours upon hours of their own time to ensure the club runs smoothly. On May 31st we will celebrate our life members. So please come down and support Narrabeen Sharks A Grade Vs. Avalon Bulldogs, and thank our life members at the same time. 

Manly Warringah Netball Association MWNA: 2026 Mens League

We are now seeking players, coaches and managers interested in representing Manly Warringah Netball Association in the 2026 Mens Metro League season.

If you are keen to be part of another exciting season of men’s netball, we would love to hear from you.

Interested members can nominate via the links below 👇

🔗 Players: HERE

🔗 Officials: HERE

Please share with anyone who may be interested in getting involved.

Seas the Day 2026

For the fourth year running Seas The Day, the Women's Surf Festival, returns to the beautiful Kingscliff Beach, NSW, on Saturday and Sunday the 20th & 21st of June.

Seas the Day 2026 promises to be a vibrant, empowering, and uplifting experience for women of all abilities.

The festival space will be buzzing with entertainment and dynamic HUBS, where keynote speakers dive into everything from the ins and outs of successful careers, training regimes, film and photography, mental well-being, and much more.

Surf competition entries are now OPEN! Last year was the first Para Surfer Division. It was such a fun weekend, so grab a couple friends and enter your team.


Bilgola SLSC Open Day; May 31


More free live music added to Vivid Sydney’s Tumbalong Nights

The NSW Government is adding more free live music to Vivid Sydney, with additional acts set announced for the popular Tumbalong Nights program.

Taking place at Tumbalong Park in Darling Harbour, Tumbalong Nights will feature an expanded line-up of local and international artists, offering even more free, all-ages performances across the festival.

In a special performance, legendary Australian band Eddy Current Supression Ring, will headline the stage on Friday 12 June for a rare live show and their first performance in Sydney over 15 years, with support from Ethiopia-via-Melbourne act Chikchika.

South Korean singer, songwriter and producer Dept will perform tracks from his most recent album Dream Age alongside K-Pop star SHAUN on Saturday May 30. Chinese rapper Chalky Wong is added to the line up on Friday 29 May, performing alongside already announced artists Sebii, Billionhappy and KimJ, while Australian singer-songwriter Gretta Ray performs with Matt Corby on Saturday 13 June. 

Tumbalong Nights will also host two special Sunday night party events, featuring a line-up of Sydney’s premier DJ crews. Vivid Fiesta brings the energy with a lineup of some of Sydney’s hottest Latin DJs, hosted by DJ Sebi D on Sunday May 24, while FBI Radio DJ and former Vivid Music Curator Stephen Ferris will host a night of funk and soul classics with Soul’d Out on Sunday May 31.

These artists join an already strong free program featuring: Nigerian afrobeat legend Seun Kuti, Jamacian reggae pioneers The Congos, alt-pop singer Mallrat and Moonlight Opera, a special night of Opera presented by the Australian Opera Young Artists Program.

From 22 May to 13 June, Vivid Sydney will once again draw millions of domestic and international visitors, powering NSW’s visitor and night-time economies and cementing Sydney’s status as a global leader in immersive cultural experiences.

Vivid Music delivers an electrifying line-up of global and homegrown talent, from intimate gigs to high-energy performances, with Tumbalong Nights a standout feature of the program.

Vivid Sydney is owned, managed and produced by the NSW Government’s tourism and major events agency, Destination NSW.

The full Tumbalong Nights lineup, including newly announced acts, is available at www.vividsydney.com/programs/tumbalong-nights

For more information on the Vivid Sydney program visit www.vividsydney.com

Photo: Destination NSW

Pathways for the Future gives insight into post-school choices

May 8, 2026: New data from a NSW Department of Education program will help shape policy on post-school pathways.

New data gathered through the Pathways for the Future program will be used by the NSW Department of Education to identify barriers and drivers of effective education and employment outcomes and help shape policy development.

The Pathways for the Future Program uses de-identified data to map how young people in NSW move through education into work. Findings from the program to date have been published in four fact sheets and two interactive data tools.

The Pathways Outcomes for Learners dashboard summarises the study pathways and outcomes of Year 10 students through to age 27. The interactive dashboard also allows users to see the results by region, gender, and other characteristics.

The dashboard reveals that women are more likely to attain higher qualifications by the age of 27, but earned a lower median income than men at every age from 21 to 27.​

At age 24, the median income for early school leavers is not substantially lower than for HSC completers. By age 27 however, students with higher levels of educational attainment are much more likely to earn a higher income.​

VET for Secondary Students is a strong pathway to post-school VET and A&T opportunities, with 80% of VETSS students enrolling in tertiary VET and 41% in A&T.​

66% of students from low socio-economic status (SES) areas complete year 12, compared to 86% of students from high SES areas. At age 27, 57% of students from low SES areas earn above minimum wage, but over 67% of students from high SES areas earn as much.

A refresh of the de-identified data occurs annually to ensure insights remain relevant. The upcoming 2026 refresh will include de-identified data from early childhood education students, primary and secondary school students, and students who have undertaken a vocational education and training qualification in NSW from 1996 to 2025.

The Australian Bureau of Statistics and Centre for Health Records Linkage are the approved authorities that link and de-identify the data. The department and its partners are committed to meeting all legal, privacy, ethics and data security requirements while maintaining the confidentiality and security of the data.

Students and learners can ask for their data to be withdrawn from the 2026 refresh of datasets through the Pathways for the Future webpage by 12 August 2026. People who have previously asked to have their data withdrawn from the Pathways dataset do not need to complete this form again.

Northern Composure is back – Entries now open  

Young musicians are being encouraged to apply to be a part of the biggest band competition with a cash prize pool of $3,000 and thousands more in industry prizes plus exposure to some of the biggest venue booking agents. 

Bands have until 31 May to secure a spot, with heats to be staged at Mona Vale Memorial Hall (Saturday 4 July), YOYO’s Youth Centre Forestville (Saturday 11 July) and Warriewood Community Centre (Saturday 18 July) before the final on Saturday 1 August at the PCYC in Dee Why. 

Mayor Sue Heins said it was a great opportunity for young people to perform in front of a live audience. 

“Every year we’re blown away by the level of young talent that comes through Northern Composure,” she said.

“For more than 20 years, this competition has been the Northern Beaches’ biggest platform for up-and-coming bands, helping launch the careers of some incredible artists. We’re excited to see which bands will step up this year and chase their dreams of a professional music career.

“It’s a chance for young bands to sharpen their skills, perform live in front of their peers and compete for an incredible music and marketing prize package. It’s all about getting involved and giving it a go.”

Northern Composure has a strong track record of discovering exceptional young musical talent, with past entrants including now well-known artists such as Ocean Alley, Lime Cordiale, Dear Seattle, The Rions, Crocodylus, C.O.F.F.I.N and Edgecliff.

Events are all ages, alcohol and drug free, with security present.

Tickets for the live events are $10 through Humanitix from June online or go to KALOF.com.au for more information.

See key dates below to get involved this year.

Registrations for bands open: Monday 4 May

Online info session: Monday 18 May. Register now >

Registrations for bands close: Sunday 31 May

Heat 1: Saturday 4 July, Mona Vale Memorial Hall

Heat 2: Saturday 11 July, YoYo's Youth Centre Forestville

Heat 3 TBC: Saturday 18 July, Warriewood Community Centre

Final: Saturday 1 August, PCYC Northern Beaches

Image: photographer Luke Rozzie 

Over 3 Decades at APS: Celebration of Mrs Weber on her retirement

Lisa Weber is retiring from Avalon Public School after 32 years as classroom teacher, and Deputy Principal.

Family and friends are celebrating her long lasting impact and incredible career with a retirement party at Avalon Surf Club, and are opening the invitation up to past and present APS families to pop in and celebrate with us. 

Details are:

Treasures of the Viking Age: The Galloway Hoard arrives this May at the ANMM

Treasures of belief, power and survival - buried for more than a thousand years

Opens May 28 until October 11

Step into the world of early medieval Scotland and explore the remarkable Galloway Hoard—a collection of Viking-age artifacts that offers a rare glimpse into the past.

One of the Britain’s most important archaeological finds of the century, The Galloway Hoard, will go on display at the Australian National Maritime Museum from May 28 until October 11.

Details hidden for over a thousand years have been revealed through conservation, painstaking cleaning and cutting-edge research by a broad range of experts led by National Museums Scotland.

The Galloway Hoard is the richest collection of rare and unique Viking-age objects ever found in Britain or Ireland. Buried around AD900 and discovered in 2014 in southwest Scotland, the Hoard brings together a stunning variety of objects and materials in one discovery. The exhibition features an array of treasures, including jewellery, personal keepsakes, and unique items sourced from as far as Central Asia.

The Galloway Hoard, weighing over 5 kilograms and comprising silver, gold, and other precious materials, was carefully interred in a manner that preserved delicate organic substances like silk and textiles—an exceptional find for this era. The diversity and rarity of the objects, along with ancient heirlooms, have significantly deepened understanding of the Viking Age in northern Europe.

This collection transports visitors to a pivotal era marked by the emergence of the regions now known as Scotland, England, and Ireland, set against the backdrop of Viking incursions and settlements.

For the first time in Sydney, and following successful showings in Adelaide and Melbourne, more than 90 artefacts from the Hoard will be exhibited, inviting audiences to uncover the identities and stories of those who concealed these treasures, delve into the broader Viking-age European context, and discover the advanced conservation and research efforts that continue to unveil the Hoard’s secrets.

Ms Daryl Karp AM, Director and CEO said, ‘The Galloway Hoard is a remarkable window into a significant period in maritime history, when the sea linked the land we now call Scotland with far-reaching routes of trade, travel and cultural exchange across Europe and beyond. The extraordinary craftsmanship, from intricate silver work to rare surviving textiles, reveal not only the wealth generated by these networks, but also the artistic imagination of the Viking Age.’

Dr Martin Goldberg, Principal Curator, Medieval Archaeology & History, National Museums Scotland said, ‘The Galloway Hoard has repeatedly drawn international attention since its discovery and acquisition by National Museums Scotland.  But this hoard was in many respects a journey into the unknown, and the exhibition presents all of the amazing discoveries we have made through our research. We’re delighted the exhibition can now be seen by audiences outside the UK, a once in a lifetime opportunity to experience these exceptional objects in person.’

The exhibition shows how the Hoard was buried in four distinct parcels. The top layer was a parcel of silver bullion and a rare Anglo-Saxon cross, separated from a lower layer of three parts: firstly another parcel of silver bullion wrapped in leather and twice as big as the one above; secondly a cluster of four elaborately decorated silver ‘ribbon’ arm-rings bound together and concealing in their midst a small wooden box containing three items of gold; and thirdly a lidded, silver gilt vessel wrapped in layers of textile and packed full of carefully wrapped objects that appear to be have been curated like relics or heirlooms. They include beads, pendants, brooches, bracelets and other curios, often strung or wrapped with silk.

Photo: National Museums Scotland

Discovering and decoding the secrets of the Galloway Hoard was a multi-layered process. Conservation of the metal objects has revealed decorations, inscriptions and other details that were not previously visible.

Many of the objects are types that have never been seen before in Britain and Ireland and proved challenging to identify. Some had travelled thousands of miles to reach Scotland.  

Some items are too fragile to travel long distances, particularly those with rare textile survivals. The exhibition uses AV and 3D reconstructions to enable visitors to understand these objects and the work that is being done with them.

The Galloway Hoard was acquired by National Museums Scotland in 2017 with the support of the National Heritage Memorial Fund, Art Fund and the Scottish Government as well as a major public fundraising campaign. Since then, it has been undergoing extensive conservation and research at the National Museums Collection Centre in Edinburgh. Further research has been supported by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), who awarded £1m for the three-year research project Unwrapping the Galloway Hoard, led by National Museums Scotland in partnership with the University of Glasgow. The project has also seen collaboration with experts from across the UK and Ireland, including The British Museum, Oxford University, University of Wales (Trinity St David) St Andrews University, and University College Cork.

Treasures of the Viking Age: The Galloway Hoard opens at the Australian National Maritime Museum on May 28 until October 11.

The high‑tech shipbuilding methods that helped Vikings dominate the seas

Barnabas Davoti/Unsplash
Lisa Bennett, Flinders University

Images of the sleek keels, elegant planks, and dragon-headed prows of Viking longships have been reproduced countless times on postcards, book covers, souvenirs and in television shows and movies.

These vessels are, quite literally, the poster-ships for the Viking Age, which was between around 750 and 1100 CE.

So what made these ships so special? And why were these advanced shipbuilding techniques so crucial to the Vikings’ success?

What drove this shipbuilding boom?

In Old Norse, there are two words for Viking: víkingr refers to a person, while víking is an activity. Neither word is inherently negative nor associated with violence.

A víkingr is someone (who may or may not identify as a pirate) who undertakes víking expeditions (sometimes to pillage, sometimes not), and whose life and livelihood have strong connections to the sea.

By the mid-eighth century, these people were keen to expand their horizons and branch out from local economies.

This coincided with a number of large and lucrative mercantile towns springing up around north-west Europe in this period.

Among other factors, Vikings travelled further westward and eastward as part of an ongoing and complex power grab for portable wealth, territory, and control of trade routes.

From the 750s on, the Vikings’ advanced shipbuilding technology helped give them the edge.

Gamechanging technology

The unique design of Viking ships and their trademark square sails were absolute gamechangers in this period.

There are many different types of Viking ship, but the most relevant here are the langskip (longship) and knörr (cargo ship).

Like all Viking vessels, these are clinker built. That means the hull’s long, curved sides are assembled out of slightly overlapping planks, and are held together by iron nails (the “clinkers”).

A Viking ship is displayed indoors.
The long, curved sides of the hull on a Viking ship were assembled out of slightly overlapping planks. Pexels/Erik Mclean

Along with their strong but slender keels and stems, this innovative construction made for incredibly flexible, light, and sinuous vehicles that could be powered by oars or by sail and withstand wild ocean swells.

With their narrow silhouettes and their ability to gently twist and yield to the waves, it’s no wonder longships were called snekkja (serpents), dreki (dragons) and skeið (sliders).

Another small but significant improvement that made longer-distance travel possible was the oar-hole.

Until the early Viking Age, pegs called tholepins stuck up from the gunwales (upper rim of the boat) to hold oars in place and act as fulcrums for rowing. This meant ships’ sides could never be very high above the water. (Imagine trying to row with your oar at head height.)

But by cutting holes through the side planks, which could be plugged when the oars were shipped and the sail raised, it became possible to build taller, more seaworthy ships.

The boats had shallow drafts (meaning not much of it was under the waterline). This enabled these “sea-snakes” to slither further inland than ever before, since they could tackle riverways other boats simply couldn’t navigate. They could also be dragged across land.

A depiction of Vikings sailing a longship from around  1100 CE.
A depiction of Vikings sailing a longship from around  1100 CE. Abbey of Saint-Aubin/Wikimedia

Longships also had symmetrical prows (meaning the “back” of the boat was just as high as the “front”).

This design allowed Viking raiders to pull right up on the riverbank, then “hit and run” – without all the slow awkwardness of reversing and turning the whole boat around for the getaway.

Square sails also increased both the distance and speed of Viking travel. Norse explorers like Eirik rauða (“the Red”) and his son Leif (who went to North America nearly 500 years before Columbus) wouldn’t have taken a warship to Iceland or Greenland.

Instead, they probably kitted out a knörr, a heavy-bellied merchant ship much like the one described in an ancient Icelandic text called Egil’s saga

richly painted above the plumbline and fitted with a black-and-red sail […] loaded with stockfish, hides and ermine, and a great quantity of squirrel skins and other furs […] a very valuable cargo.

When powered by four oars, a modern reconstruction of just such a knörr reached a speed of 1.5 knots. With the sail raised it sped along at 13 knots (around 24 km an hour).

A much larger longship with 60 oars could row at 4.5 knots and reach a maximum sailing speed of 17 knots (31.5 km an hour)!

Crafted by hand

The most impressive stats about Viking ships aren’t about how fast or far they went, but rather how much time, effort, and natural resources went into building them. The sheer industry of it all is astonishing.

Every piece was crafted by hand. Axes shaped the floor timbers, planking, masts and beams.

Dozens of oak trees (8-10 metres long and at least a metre across) went into the hull. Dozens more pine trees were burnt to make tar for sealing the wood (600 litres for a 60-oar longship, which took more than 2,000 hours to produce).

More pine and alderwood went into the oars and mast.

Then there’s all the iron: 450kg of it to make the 8,000 nails needed for this same longship.

An average knörr’s sail was 90m² (smaller than the longship’s) and used the wool of 200 sheep, all of which had to be spun into thread and woven into continuous lengths of fabric, each 65cm wide.

This spinning and weaving work took experimental historians 7,850 hours to recreate (around 4.5 years for one person).

Another month was needed to sew the sail panels together, cut it to shape and reinforce its edges. Then there’s the ship’s cordage: so much horsehair, hemp and linden bast (a plant fibre) for 3,000 metres of rope.

This constant and large-scale manufacturing paints an evocative picture of the Vikings’ everyday, shipbuilding life.

It was all hands on deck, so to speak.The Conversation

Lisa Bennett, Associate Professor in Creative Writing and English Literature, Researcher in Old Norse Literature, Flinders University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

2026 Premier's Reading Challenge

The Challenge aims to encourage a love of reading for leisure and pleasure in students, and to enable them to experience quality literature. It is not a competition but a challenge to each student to read, to read more and to read more widely. The Premier's Reading Challenge (PRC) is open to all NSW students in Kindergarten to Year 10, in government, independent, Catholic and home schools. Now in its 25th year, the NSW PRC is the largest reading challenge in Australia!

The Term 1 2026 booklist is now live! 462 new books have been added to the book lists. Additional book list updates occur at the start of Term 2 and Term 3. 

Click here, or visit the booklists page to check out the new titles added to the PRC booklists this year! 

Financial help for young people

Concessions and financial support for young people.

Includes:

  • You could receive payments and services from Centrelink: Use the payment and services finder to check what support you could receive.
  • Apply for a concession Opal card for students: Receive a reduced fare when travelling on public transport.
  • Financial support for students: Get financial help whilst studying or training.
  • Youth Development Scholarships: Successful applicants will receive $1000 to help with school expenses and support services.
  • Tertiary Access Payment for students: The Tertiary Access Payment can help you with the costs of moving to undertake tertiary study.
  • Relocation scholarship: A once a year payment if you get ABSTUDY or Youth Allowance if you move to or from a regional or remote area for higher education study.
  • Get help finding a place to live and paying your rent: Rent Choice Youth helps young people aged 16 to 24 years to rent a home.

Visit: https://www.nsw.gov.au/living-nsw/young-people/young-people-financial-help

School Leavers Support

Explore the School Leavers Information Kit (SLIK) as your guide to education, training and work options in 2022;
As you prepare to finish your final year of school, the next phase of your journey will be full of interesting and exciting opportunities. You will discover new passions and develop new skills and knowledge.

We know that this transition can sometimes be challenging. With changes to the education and workforce landscape, you might be wondering if your planned decisions are still a good option or what new alternatives are available and how to pursue them.

There are lots of options for education, training and work in 2022 to help you further your career. This information kit has been designed to help you understand what those options might be and assist you to choose the right one for you. Including:
  • Download or explore the SLIK here to help guide Your Career.
  • School Leavers Information Kit (PDF 5.2MB).
  • School Leavers Information Kit (DOCX 0.9MB).
  • The SLIK has also been translated into additional languages.
  • Download our information booklets if you are rural, regional and remote, Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander, or living with disability.
  • Support for Regional, Rural and Remote School Leavers (PDF 2MB).
  • Support for Regional, Rural and Remote School Leavers (DOCX 0.9MB).
  • Support for Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander School Leavers (PDF 2MB).
  • Support for Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander School Leavers (DOCX 1.1MB).
  • Support for School Leavers with Disability (PDF 2MB).
  • Support for School Leavers with Disability (DOCX 0.9MB).
  • Download the Parents and Guardian’s Guide for School Leavers, which summarises the resources and information available to help you explore all the education, training, and work options available to your young person.

School Leavers Information Service

Are you aged between 15 and 24 and looking for career guidance?

Call 1800 CAREER (1800 227 337).

SMS 'SLIS2022' to 0429 009 435.

Our information officers will help you:
  • navigate the School Leavers Information Kit (SLIK),
  • access and use the Your Career website and tools; and
  • find relevant support services if needed.
You may also be referred to a qualified career practitioner for a 45-minute personalised career guidance session. Our career practitioners will provide information, advice and assistance relating to a wide range of matters, such as career planning and management, training and studying, and looking for work.

You can call to book your session on 1800 CAREER (1800 227 337) Monday to Friday, from 9am to 7pm (AEST). Sessions with a career practitioner can be booked from Monday to Friday, 9am to 7pm.

This is a free service, however minimal call/text costs may apply.

Call 1800 CAREER (1800 227 337) or SMS SLIS2022 to 0429 009 435 to start a conversation about how the tools in Your Career can help you or to book a free session with a career practitioner.

All downloads and more available at: www.yourcareer.gov.au/school-leavers-support

Word Of The Week: Field

Word of the Week stays a part of your page in 2026, simply to throw some disruption in amongst the 'yeah-nah' mix. 

Noun

1. an open land area free of woods and buildings. 2.  an area of land marked by the presence of particular objects or features dune fields. 3.A field is an area of grass, for example in a park or on a farm. A field is also an area of land on which a crop is grown. 4. A sports field is an area of grass where sports are played. 5.A particular field is a particular subject of study or type of activity. 6. A field is an area of land or sea bed under which large amounts of a particular mineral have been found. 7.  A field is an area of a computer's memory or a program where data can be entered, edited, or stored. 8. In mathematics, a field is a set on which addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division are defined and behave as the corresponding operations on rational numbers do. A field is thus a fundamental algebraic structure that is widely used in algebra, number theory, and many other areas of mathematics. 9. A field is a representation of what is going on in a region of space. It’s defined as a function that takes a point in space and returns either a scalar (a number) or a vector (a number and a direction). Fields that are functions that return scalars are called scalar fields. You can see an example of a scalar field when you open a weather app and look at a map showing the temperatures in different locations. Fields that are functions that return vectors are called vector fields. Gravitational, electric, and magnetic fields are all examples of vector fields. We often call them just fields for short, as we care about vector fields more often than scalar fields in introductory physics. 10. Your field of vision or your visual field is the area that you can see without turning your head. 11. You can refer to the area where fighting or other military action in a war takes place as the field or the field of battle. 12. The field is a way of referring to all the competitors taking part in a particular race or sports contest.

Adjective

1. field-work  is used to describe work or study that is done in a real, natural environment rather than in a theoretical way or in controlled conditions.

Verb 

1. In a game of cricket, etc., the team that is fielding is trying to catch the ball, while the other team is trying to hit it. 2. someone fields a question, meaning that they answer it or deal with it, usually successfully. 3. If a candidate in an election is representing a political party, you can say that the party is fielding that candidate.

From field(noun) - Old English feld "plain, pasture, open land, cultivated land" (as opposed to woodland), also "a parcel of land marked off and used for pasture or tillage," probably related to Old English folde "earth, land," from Proto-Germanic *felthan "flat land" (Cognates: Old Saxon and Old Frisian feld "field," Old Saxon folda "earth," Middle Dutch velt, Dutch veld Old High German felt, German Feld "field," but not found originally outside West Germanic; Swedish fält, Danish felt are borrowed from German; Finnish pelto "field" is believed to have been adapted from Proto-Germanic). This is from PIE pel(e)-tu-, from root pele- (2) "flat; to spread." The English spelling with -ie- probably is the work of Anglo-French scribes.

Compare Paddock

"Paddock" originates from the Middle English parrok, derived from the Old English pearruc or pearroc, meaning an enclosed, fenced-off area or park. It is a variant of the word "park" and historically denoted a small, enclosed field, often for horses or livestock, with the word evolving from, and meaning, the fence itself.

Also:  "a toad, a frog," late 14c., paddok (late 12c. as a surname), probably a diminutive of pad "toad," from Old Norse padda; from Proto-Germanic pado- "toad" (source also of Swedish padda, Danish padde, Old Frisian and Middle Dutch padde "frog, toad," also Dutch schildpad "tortoise"), of unknown origin and with no certain cognates outside Germanic. Paddock-stool was an old name for a toadstool (mid-15c.). Pad in the straw was a 16c.-17c. expression meaning "something wrong, hidden danger.".

Hitchcock Park during Polo by the Sea days

What is a ‘digital detox’ and will it make me healthier?

SolStock/Getty
Joanne Orlando, Western Sydney University

Are you surrounded by screens?

Today, we rely on technology to do everything from sending emails to ordering food. But being constantly connected can leave us physically and mentally exhausted.

That’s why some people are doing “digital detoxes”, the practice of staying away from devices and social media for a set period of time.

The concept is gaining traction online, with supporters spruiking the health benefits of the “analogue lifestyle”. Some are even paying big bucks to go on “digital retreats”, with the aim of becoming healthier and happier.

But do digital detoxes actually work, or are they just another wellness trend?

What is a ‘digital detox’?

The term “digital detox” stems from detoxification, the process of safely getting a person off an addictive substance such as alcohol or drugs. This is usually done with support from a health-care professional.

So the idea of a digital detox is to step away from technology, to instead experience life with fewer distractions and foster relationships offline.

The trouble with tech

On average, young people in Australia look at screens for nine hours a day. Research suggests adults aren’t much better, with Australians aged between 45 and 64 spending up to six hours each day on screens.

As a result, more people are experiencing information overload, the idea of being physically and emotionally overwhelmed by an immense amount of data. A related concept is social media fatigue, a consequence of being constantly connected through online platforms.

But there are signs people are resisting the pull of technology. Some younger people are swapping screens for hands-on hobbies such as knitting, and joining chess clubs and other offline social activities.

They are also driving trends such as “raw-dogging boredom”, the practice of sitting through long haul flights without headphones. And friction-maxxing, the idea you can become a better, more resilient person by doing tasks that involve some level of difficulty, is also gaining traction online.

So in a sense, digital detoxes are just the latest online trend.

Do ‘digital detoxes’ work?

Current research suggests digital detoxes may have some benefits. But the evidence is far from conclusive.

One 2025 meta-analysis examined 20 randomised controlled trials, all looking at the effects of social media detoxes. It found taking a short break from social media had a small but positive effect on people’s feelings of life satisfaction and self-esteem. Participants also reported feeling less anxious, depressed and lonely.

In another 2025 study, researchers blocked participants’ smartphones so they could only receive calls and texts, over a two-week period. The results were striking. The researchers found this intervention had a greater positive effect on participants’ mental health than antidepressants. Importantly, this was because participants spent less time on their phones, but also spent this time doing beneficial activities such as socialising in person, exercising and being in nature.

Not for everyone

Digital detoxes may impact people differently, due to various factors.

One is cultural context. Research suggests people using social media in collectivist cultures such as Turkey may experience more social pressure to respond quickly and maintain extensive networks, compared to those in more individualistic societies. So people in collectivist cultures may benefit more from taking a break from social media.

Another is gender. Research suggests women mainly use social media to maintain relationships, and that they compare their physical appearance to others. This means they may benefit more from a digital detox, compared to men. One 2020 study found women who took a one-week break from Instagram felt significantly more satisfied with their life than women who stayed on it. However, the researchers did not see the same effect in men.

All about the approach

Current research suggests doing a digital detox may improve your mental health. But the way you approach it matters.

You shouldn’t just go cold turkey on technology. That’s because you’re less likely to sustain that change. One 2023 study found people who reduced their daily smartphone use by one hour experienced stronger and more lasting mental health benefits, compared to those who quit entirely.

Here are some tips to make your digital detox last:

  • identify any unhelpful habits, for example checking your phone too often or bringing it everywhere

  • make a plan to change those habits, for instance setting app time limits or only checking messages at certain times

  • set specific goals, such as taking a break from Instagram for one week

  • share your goals with family and friends, both so they can support you and understand why you may not reply to their messages

  • monitor your progress, for example by reflecting on whether you feel less anxious or are sleeping better.

It’s hard to stay present and connected in our increasingly digital world. But doing a digital detox could help. Importantly, the aim is not to eliminate technology from your life, but to use it in a more conscious, deliberate way.The Conversation

Joanne Orlando, Researcher, Digital Wellbeing, Western Sydney University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Budget 2026 brings a small tax handout to workers and a crackdown on tax breaks and trusts

Michelle Grattan, University of Canberra

All working Australians will receive a permanent $250 “tax offset” from next year in Treasurer Jim Chalmers fifth budget, which also cracks down on tax breaks for housing investors and trusts.

The tax offset in the budget will cost nearly $6.4 billion over the forward estimates.

Delivering the budget on Tuesday night Chalmers told parliament: “This [package] will help rebalance a system which is more generous to assets than it is to labour”.

As was widely predicted, the budget will limit negative gearing for housing to new builds from July next year.

But existing negatively geared properties will be “grandfathered” out of the change.

The 50% capital gains tax discount, will be replaced with an inflation-adjusted indexation.

This will apply to other assets, such as shares, as well as investment housing.

Chalmers told parliament: “our tax changes will help about 75,000 Australians achieve the dream of home ownership”.

Shadow Treasurer Tim Wilson flagged a fight over the housing tax changes. “We won’t be supporting these measures because it fundamentally undermines the pathway for young Australians […] to be able to buy their first home.”

Chalmers said the budget included “the most significant tax reform package in more than a quarter of a century”.

“This is about tax relief and tax reform to make our economy work for more Australians, businesses and future generations.”

“We’re delivering a fairer tax system for workers, first home buyers and future generations.”

The government is also introducing a minimum 30% tax rate on net capital gains from July next year, and on discretionary trusts from July 2028.

Chalmers said Treasury was now forecasting inflation to peak at about 5% because of the Middle East conflict.

“For the same reasons, it’s expecting growth to come in half a percentage point lower next financial year, to be 1.75% overall.”

He also presented “a more severe scenario” of what could happen, where the oil price peaked at US$200 before taking three years to come back down.

“We would still avoid a recession, but unemployment would spike to pre-pandemic levels and inflation would peak above 7%.”

Annual real wage growth is forecast to return from next year, while unemployment is expected to remain in the mid fours.

The budget deficit in the next financial year is projected to be $31.5 billion which is $2.8 billion better than earlier predicted.

Chalmers said the bottom line is expected to be better in every year over the forward estimates and the medium term.

“The budget position has improved by $44.9 billion and this makes it more than a quarter of a trillion dollars better than when we came to office.”

But the budget remains in deficit over the forward estimates and is not forecast to return to surplus until the mid 2030s.

Gross debt is forecast to be $982 billion at the end of this financial year. Chalmers described the budget as “ambitious in the face of adversity”.

“It’s a responsible budget, and a reforming budget, which builds resilience and bolsters our economy.

"There is more cost-of-living relief, more Medicare and more aged care, and more housing.

"It makes the tax system fairer and stronger for workers, businesses, first home buyers and future generations.”

The budget forecasts that Net Overseas Migration will be 295,000 for 2025-26 dropping to 245,000 in 2026-27.

Most of the major changes in the budget had been pre-announced, including the establishment of a new fuel security regime, an extensive haircut to the National Disability Insurance Scheme and $53 billion over the next ten years for defence.The Conversation

Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

We tested the new World Cup ball – this is what you need to know about how it will fly, dip and swerve

Small variations in the ball can influence how it behaves once it leaves the foot. Robbie Jay Barratt/AMA/Getty Images
John Eric Goff, University of Puget Sound

Every four years, the men’s World Cup delivers some certainties. The pitch dimensions are tightly regulated, offside is signaled with a flag, and referees end the match with a blast of a whistle. But one key piece of equipment is changed on purpose: the ball.

Adidas, which has supplied World Cup soccer balls since 1970, introduces a new match ball for every tournament, and with that comes fresh aerodynamic calculations for players. How will it fly through the air, weave and dip?

For the past 20 years, my engineering colleagues in Japan and England and I have put the new balls through their paces, investigating soccer ball aerodynamics. Our work begins by putting balls in wind tunnels to measure drag, side and lift forces. We use the measurements from these tests in trajectory simulations that tell us how the ball will behave in a real-game setting.

Putting the 2026 World Cup ball through the wind tunnel test.

That may all sound a little academic, and we do produce an academic paper on our findings. But what our data indicates could mean the difference between a goal or a miss for strikers, a save or a blunder for goalkeepers, and jubilation or heartache for fans.

At the World Cup, the ball is the most important piece of equipment in the biggest tournament of the world’s most popular sport.

This year’s ball, the Trionda, is especially interesting. When FIFA and Adidas unveiled it in fall 2025, the first thing many people noticed was the color and the paneling.

An orange ball and a black and white ball are under a trophy.
Earlier World Cup balls used many panels; modern balls use far fewer. Manfred Rehm/picture alliance via Getty Images

The ball’s red, blue and green graphics correspond to the three host countries, with maple leaf, star and eagle motifs representing Canada, the United States and Mexico. And for the first time in men’s World Cup history, matches will be played with a four-panel ball.

But with so few panels, has Adidas made the ball too smooth? That is the trap engineers fell into with the Jabulani ball used at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa that became notorious for sudden dips and swerves, which made goalkeepers’ lives far trickier.

You do not want the World Cup ball to feel like the start of a science experiment once it is in the air. And if it behaves strangely, players and goalkeepers notice immediately.

The evolution of soccer balls

World Cup balls have come a long way over the decades. If you go back to 1930, the ball looked very different. The first World Cup final used two different leather balls: Argentina’s Tiento in the first half and Uruguay’s T-Model in the second. Both were hand-sewn, multipaneled balls, inflated through a bladder opening that had to be tied off and tucked back beneath the laces. In damp conditions, the leather absorbed water, making the ball heavier and less predictable in play.

A ball nestles in the top of a goal.
Uruguayan keeper Enrique Ballestrero fails to save a shot from Argentina’s Carlos Peucelle in the final of the first World Cup. Keystone/Getty Images

By 1994 – when the United States last hosted the men’s tournament – the official ball, Adidas’ Questra, had evolved into a foam-based design. The modern World Cup ball is no longer just stitched leather. It is an engineered aerodynamic surface.

Trionda pushes that evolution further. It has only four panels, the fewest in men’s World Cup history, which have been thermally bonded – melded together using heat and adhesive.

Fewer panels might suggest less total seam length and therefore a smoother ball. And smoothness matters because the thin boundary layer of air clinging to the ball determines where the flow separates, how large a wake forms, and how much drag the ball experiences.

The Trionda has intentionally deep seams, three pronounced grooves on each panel and fine surface texturing.

But will these textures and grooves do the trick? To find that out, my colleagues and I measured the ball’s seam geometry and overall aerodynamic behavior. We compared it with Trionda’s four predecessors: 2022’s Al Rihla, 2018’s Telstar 18, the Brazuca used in 2014 and the Jabulani in 2010.

What the measurements show

In our wind tunnel tests at the University of Tsukuba, we measured something called the drag coefficient, which is a way of describing how much air resistance a ball experiences as it moves.

Using this data, we gained insights into how the airflow changes around the ball after it is kicked. The tests helped identify the drag crisis, the speed range in which changes in the boundary layer and flow separation produce a sharp change in drag, which can alter the ball’s acceleration, trajectory and range.

A ball is seen suspended.
The Trionda soccer ball prepares for the wind tunnel. Goff/Hong/Liu/Asai

We found that the Trionda is effectively rougher than those predecessors.

Trionda reaches its drag crisis at a lower speed, at about 27 mph (43 kph). That is below the roughly 31-40 mph (50-65 kph) range for Al Rihla, Telstar 18 and Brazuca, and far below Jabulani’s roughly 49-60 mph (79-97 kph) range, depending on orientation.

Why does all that matter? Because a ball can feel ordinary off the boot and still behave differently in flight. When the drag crisis occurs in the middle of game-relevant speeds, small changes in launch speed, orientation or spin can shift the ball from one aerodynamic regime to another.

That was Jabulani’s problem. Once kicked with little spin, it had a tendency to slow down too much as it passed through its critical-speed range.

Trionda does not look like that kind of ball. It has a more steady and consistent drag coefficient in the range of speeds associated with corner kicks and free kicks.

But there is a trade-off. Our measurements also showed that once Trionda enters the higher-speed, turbulent-flow regime, its drag coefficients are somewhat larger than those of Brazuca, Telstar 18 and Al Rihla.

In plain language, that suggests a hard-hit long ball may lose a little range.

In our simulations, the difference is not huge. But it is large enough that players may notice long kicks coming up a few meters short.

It is also important to note that we tested a nonspinning ball. As such, our results do not provide a prediction of every pass, clearance or free kick fans will see this summer. Balls in flight often spin due to off-center kicks. That, along with altitude, humidity, temperature and air pressure all influence how a ball flies through the air once kicked.

A ball mounted on a rod.
Close-up of the Trionda ball during wind tunnel testing. Goff/Hong/Liu/Asai

The big test yet to come

Fewer panels and more texturing aren’t the only differences with the new ball.

Trionda also carries technology that has little to do with its flight and a great deal to do with officiating. Like Al Rihla, Trionda includes “connected-ball technology” that lets computers know when the ball is kicked, helping with offside decisions.

But the architecture has changed. In 2022, the measurement unit was suspended at the center of the ball. With Trionda, it sits in a specially created layer inside one panel, with counterbalancing weights in the other three panels. The chip sends data to the video assistant referee, or VAR, system and the tournament’s semi-automated offside system.

That tweak will help referees, but will the new ball in general help or hinder players?

The evidence from our tests suggests that the ball won’t be behaving in a way that leads to baffling and erratic flight.

But the more intriguing possibilities are subtler and outside the scope of our tests. Will the grooves on Trionda help players generate more backspin on the ball, generating more lift and possibly offsetting Trionda’s somewhat larger high-speed drag coefficient?

That is why I keep studying World Cup balls both in the lab and through their behavior in play. Every four years, a new design offers a fresh way to watch physics enter the game, not in theory, but in the movement of an object in which every player on the soccer field must place their trust.The Conversation

John Eric Goff, Visiting Assistant Professor, Physics, University of Puget Sound

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Stardust trapped in Antarctic ice reveals tens of thousands of years of Solar System’s past

Alfred-Wegener-Institute/Esther Horvath
Dominik Koll, Australian National University

When you think of outer space, you’re likely picturing stars, planets and moons. But much of space is filled with clouds of gas, plasma and stardust – known as interstellar clouds.

In the local parts of our galaxy alone there’s a complex of roughly 15 individual interstellar clouds. The Solar System is currently traversing one of them, aptly named the Local Interstellar Cloud. The origin and history of these clouds are believed to be tightly connected to the birth and death of stars. But we can see their imprints right here on Earth, in a place you might not expect – Antarctic ice.

My colleagues and I have been studying stardust trapped in old Antarctic snow and ice to trace the history of our solar neighbourhood, including the Solar System itself.

In a new study published in Physical Review Letters, we found a subtle clue that reveals our Solar System’s movement through the local interstellar environment over the past 80,000 years.

Looking down to see the sky

Astronomy usually looks outward. Telescopes collect light from distant stars and galaxies, allowing us to observe events across vast stretches of space and time. From these observations, we infer how stars live and die, how elements are formed, and how the universe evolves.

Our approach turns that idea on its head.

Instead of observing the light coming to us, we study the debris of exploding stars right here on Earth. As cosmic furnaces, stars forge many elements in their cores, from carbon and oxygen to calcium and iron. This includes rare isotopes (variants of chemical elements) such as iron-60.

When massive stars explode into supernovae at the end of their life, these elements are ejected into space and become interstellar dust.

Tiny grains of this dust then drift through the galaxy and occasionally find their way to Earth’s surface. Radioactive iron-60, a fingerprint of stellar explosions, is embedded within these grains. By searching for these atoms in geological archives on Earth, we can probe astrophysical events like supernovae long after their light has faded.

This is why Antarctica is so valuable. Its snow accumulates slowly and remains largely undisturbed, forming a layered record that stretches back tens of thousands of years. Each layer captures a snapshot of the material that was present in our cosmic neighbourhood at the time.

Finding stardust in Antarctic ice

When we studied 500kg of recent snow in Antarctica, we unexpectedly found this rare radioactive isotope. Where did it come from? There was no recent near-Earth supernova.

But our solar neighbourhood is filled with 15 clouds, with the Solar System currently traversing at least one of them. Is the stardust waiting in the clouds to be picked up by Earth? If yes, then the amount of stardust Earth collects should be related to their structure: the denser the clouds, the more iron-60 they contain. This was our educated guess in 2019.

Soon, other explanations were brought forward. Millions of years ago Earth received large showers of iron-60 from massive supernovae. Is the iron-60 in Antarctic snow the last remnant or an echo of this signal? A rain that became a drizzle?

To find out, we analysed a 300kg section of Antarctic ice, dating from 40,000 to 80,000 years ago. The process is painstaking. The ice needs to be melted and chemically treated to isolate tiny amounts of iron, including the iron-60 from the stardust.

Then, using the sensitive atom counting technique of accelerator mass spectrometry at the Heavy-Ion Accelerator Facility at Australian National University, we counted individual atoms of iron-60.

The expectation was straightforward: based on previous measurements from surface snow of Antarctica and several thousand-year-old ocean sediments, we anticipated a certain steady level of iron-60 deposition.

Instead, we found less. Not zero, but noticeably lower than expected.

This result suggests that less interstellar dust was reaching Earth during that period. This is a remarkable change on a comparatively short astrophysical timescale and does not fit the long timescales of the iron-60 deposits that landed here millions of years ago. Instead, we needed to look for a smaller, more local source for the isotope.

The Orion Molecular Cloud Complex is a type of interstellar cloud. NASA/JPL-Caltech

A fitting story

Naturally, astronomers are also quite interested in the clouds around the Solar System. Last year, a study reconstructing the history of the clouds arrived at the conclusion that they most likely originated in a stellar explosion. Furthermore, they found the Solar System has been traversing the Local Interstellar Cloud from sometime between 40,000 and 124,000 years ago.

If that’s correct, we would expect that the amount of iron-60 collected on Earth should have changed sometime in the same time period – between 40,000 and 124,000 years ago.

This is exactly what our results showed in Antarctica.

The story doesn’t fit perfectly, though. If these clouds did originate directly from an exploding star, we would expect way more iron-60 than we actually see in Antarctic ice.

Nevertheless, these clouds are imprinted in Earth’s geological record. If we look deeper and analyse even older ice, we might soon unravel the mystery of these local interstellar clouds, revealing their full history and uncertain origins.The Conversation

Dominik Koll, Honorary Lecturer, Nuclear Physics, Australian National University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

More and more websites want proof you’re human. Blame the bots

Ars Electronica, CC BY-NC
Yang Xiang, Swinburne University of Technology

You’re trying to book concert tickets before they sell out. You click the link and before you can make the payment, you’re asked to identify traffic lights, bicycles or blurry crosswalks in a grid of tiny images.

Again.

For many people, this has become a routine part of life. Logging into financial apps, shopping online or creating accounts increasingly involves “proving you are human”.

These systems are known as CAPTCHA. Why are they everywhere?

The short answer is that websites are fighting a rapidly escalating war against bots: automated software that imitate human behaviour online. And thanks to advances in artificial intelligence (AI), those bots are becoming even smarter, cheaper and harder to detect than ever before.

Why websites need proof you are human

Huge amounts of online traffic now come from automated systems. Some are helpful, such as search engine crawlers indexing pages for Google search.

Others are far less welcome, and may involve phishing, spam, fake accounts, passwords violation, misinformation, and distributed denial of service attacks overloading web servers. In some areas, AI agents now generate automated online traffic that exceeds human traffic altogether. Modern AI systems can generate convincing text, imitate browsing patterns and even solve some CAPTCHA puzzles.

At the same time, companies are increasingly worried about bots scraping online content to train AI systems.

As a result, more websites are adding verification systems simply to keep abuse under control.

A text box with black and white distorted text.
An example of early CAPTCHA systems that relied on distorted text. Dave Gray/Flickr, CC BY-NC

How CAPTCHA actually works

CAPTCHA stands for “Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart”. The original idea was simple: give users a task humans find easy, but computers find difficult.

Early CAPTCHA systems often involved distorted text. Later versions switched to image-recognition tasks such as selecting all the squares containing traffic lights or bicycles. Google’s reCAPTCHA became one of the best-known examples. Earlier versions even helped digitise books and improve street-view image recognition while users solved puzzles.

But computer vision has improved rapidly in recent years. Advances in AI mean bots can now solve many traditional CAPTCHA challenges surprisingly well. Researchers have repeatedly shown that modern AI systems can bypass some CAPTCHA systems with high success rates.

That is why today’s CAPTCHA systems rely less on puzzles and more on behavioural analysis.

When users click the CAPTCHA link, the system analyses many background signals, such as mouse movements, typing speed, IP addresses, device information, and interaction timing that reflect human behaviours. Humans tend to behave in inconsistent ways. Bots are usually more predictable.

If the system is sufficiently confident you are human, you may never see an image puzzle at all. But if something appears suspicious, the system may trigger harder tests.

A small tick box next to the words 'Verify you are human'.
Today’s CAPTCHA systems rely less on puzzles and more on behavioural analysis. The Conversation

Moving beyond traditional CAPTCHA puzzles

While some bots now use AI capable of solving image-recognition tasks, others simply outsource CAPTCHA solving to cheap human labour services, where real people complete challenges for a small payment. This has turned CAPTCHA into an ongoing arms race. That may explain why CAPTCHA tests often feel harder and more frustrating than they used to.

As AI continues to improve, websites will likely move beyond traditional CAPTCHA puzzles. Future systems may increasingly rely on behavioural biometrics, such as typing rhythm or scrolling style, device verification systems, invisible background risk scoring, and AI systems designed to detect other AI systems.

In many cases, users may no longer even notice the verification process happening.

CAPTCHA tests may seem like a minor annoyance, but they reflect a much larger paradigm shift online. For decades, websites largely assumed visitors were human. Increasingly, that assumption no longer holds. As AI-generated traffic continues to grow, proving we are human online may become an even more common part of everyday life.The Conversation

Yang Xiang, Professor, Computer Science, Swinburne University of Technology

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Guide to the classics: ‘all for one, and one for all’ – the enduring appeal of The Three Musketeers

Illustration from an 1894 edition of The Three Musketeers. Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
Darius von Guttner Sporzynski, Australian Catholic University

Few phrases in literature have travelled as widely as “all for one, and one for all”. It has come to signify loyalty, courage and a form of friendship that appears to transcend circumstance.

First published in 1844 in serial form, The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas (1802–1870) quickly established itself as one of the most compelling adventure narratives of the 19th century. Dumas was among the most prolific and widely read writers of his age, working across drama, journalism, travel writing and historical fiction on an extraordinary scale.

His major novels, including The Count of Monte Cristo (1844–46) and the cycle of novels featuring the young adventurer Gascon d’Artagnan, incorporating The Three Musketeers, Twenty Years After (1845) and The Vicomte of Bragelonne (1847-50), were shaped by serial publication, which demanded pace, suspense and strong character differentiation.

At the same time, as lesser-known works such as Isaac Laquedem (1852–1553) suggest, Dumas conceived of his writing not only as popular entertainment, but as ambitious historical narrative on an epic scale.

This dual orientation, to mass readership and large-scale historical imagination, helps explain the structure of The Three Musketeers, where vivid character types, rapid plotting, and historical setting combine to produce a narrative that is at once accessible and enduring.

History and narrative

Recent developments have returned attention to the historical figure behind the story. In March 2026, archaeologists in Maastricht uncovered remains believed to belong to Charles de Batz de Castelmore (c.1611–1673), also known as d’Artagnan, reportedly killed during the siege of the city during the Franco-Dutch War.

Scientific confirmation remains pending. Yet the discovery matters less for what it proves than for what it reveals: the persistent overlap between history and narrative. Dumas’s novel has long occupied that space, drawing authority from the 17th century, while reshaping it for 19th-century readers.

Set in France during the reign of Louis XIII (r.1610–1643) and shaped by the political reach of Cardinal Richelieu (in office 1624–1642), The Three Musketeers brings together court intrigue, ambition and honour in a tightly constructed narrative world.

Portrait of Cardinal Richelieu – Philippe de Champaigne (1642). Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

From the outset, Dumas signals that he is not writing history in a strict sense. Drawing on supposed memoirs and anecdotal fragments, he constructs a world defined by rivalry, violence and performance.

This is not a flaw but a method. The novel’s enduring appeal rests not on historical accuracy, but its capacity to distil and dramatise ideals: comradeship, honour and masculine identity. These are not stable conditions; they are values under pressure, shaped by the political culture of early modern France.

The narrative begins with the arrival in Paris of the young d’Artagnan, a provincial outsider seeking advancement in the royal service. His ambition reflects the social mobility of the period, even within a hierarchical society.

Through a chain of misunderstandings, he offends Athos, Porthos and Aramis, arranging to duel each in turn. Yet this ritualised violence, rooted in the honour culture of the 17th century, produces an unexpected outcome. When confronted by the guards of Richelieu, the four men fight together and emerge as allies. Conflict becomes the basis of solidarity.

From this moment, the personal and the political become inseparable. The narrative draws in the court of Anne of Austria, queen consort of France from 1615, and her connection with the English courtier George Villiers (1592–1628), whose influence in Anglo-French relations shaped the politics of the 1620s.

The result is a world structured by secrecy, surveillance and manipulation. Episodes such as the quarrel at Meung, when d'Artagnan is affronted by a man who mocks his shabby horse, or the Musketeers’ recovery of the queen’s diamonds are set against the backdrop of wider tensions, including the lead-up to the Siege of La Rochelle (1627–28).

Chance and calculation operate together, but always within a defined political order.

Louis XIII, Anne of Austria and their son Louis XIV, flanked by Cardinal Richelieu and the Duchesse de Chevreuse (17th century). Circle of Philippe de Champaigne, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Models of masculinity

At the centre of the novel stand four figures whose differences are as important as their unity. Their bond, expressed in their famous motto, does not arise from likeness but from contrast. Each represents a distinct model of masculinity shaped by the social and political expectations of the early 17th century.

Athos embodies restraint and authority. Marked by a concealed past, he reflects an older aristocratic code rooted in lineage and honour. His authority derives from self-control rather than display, recalling a model of noble identity already under strain in the 1620s.

Porthos operates through display. His concern with wealth, clothing and reputation reflects a world in which status must be asserted as well as inherited. His performative masculinity reveals the instability of rank in a society where appearance and recognition are closely linked.

Aramis is divided between religious vocation and worldly ambition. His career reflects the continuing entanglement of church and state in 17th-century France. His duplicity mirrors a political culture in which allegiance is rarely singular.

D’Artagnan is the outsider navigating this system. As a provincial noble of limited means, he represents a form of social mobility tied to service and merit. His success depends on his ability to read and adapt to a changing political environment.

These four men do not form a natural unity. Their friendship is constructed through duels, shared risks and mutual dependence. It is sustained by adherence to a code of honour rooted in the practices of their time. Their bond is contingent and historically grounded.

The motto “all for one, and one for all” should be read in this light. It expresses an aspiration rather than a condition. The bond it describes must be enacted within a culture that constantly tests it.

Duelling culture provides the mechanism for this enactment. Violence is not an anomaly, but a recognised part of aristocratic life in 17th-century France. Honour is defended publicly; identity is secured through action. The transformation of rivalry into solidarity is not accidental, but structural.

This model of comradeship rests on three elements: loyalty, risk and shared violence. Each reinforces the others. Trust is established through danger, and collective identity overrides individual interest when required. Friendship becomes a practice rather than a feeling.

Alexandre Dumas (1855). Public domain

Such a model differs sharply from modern conceptions of friendship. Where contemporary ideals emphasise choice and emotional affinity, Dumas presents a form of association shaped by obligation and discipline. It reflects the conditions of its historical setting.

Politics in the novel follows the same pattern. It is performative rather than transparent. Power operates through networks, intermediaries and controlled displays of loyalty. Richelieu’s authority rests as much on information and influence as on formal position.

Within this system, allegiance is unstable. The Musketeers serve the king, yet act with a degree of autonomy that reflects the fluidity of early modern political structures. Intrigue becomes the normal mode of engagement.

Loyalty, honour and friendship

Women play a decisive role in this political world. Anne of Austria’s position is both central and precarious, shaped by dynastic politics and international alliances. D'Artagnan’s love interest Madame Bonacieux, though socially modest, becomes a conduit for political action.

Their roles show that power extends beyond formal institutions. Through these figures, Dumas demonstrates how private relationships shape public outcomes. Emotional ties become political forces. The distinction between personal and political collapses, reflecting the realities of court society.

The novel’s continued relevance lies in this clarity. Its themes remain legible because they are historically grounded, yet structurally recognisable. Loyalty is tested, honour is contested, and friendship becomes a form of identity.

The cultural afterlife of The Three Musketeers reflects this. Across numerous adaptations, the figures of d’Artagnan and the Musketeers remain recognisable because they embody enduring patterns of association rather than fixed historical realities.

Léon Bary, Eugene Pallette, Douglas Fairbanks and George Siegmann in the 1921 film adaptation of The Three Musketeers. Public domain.

The appeal lies in precision rather than simplicity. The moral framework is clear, even when outcomes are uncertain. The narrative’s pace conceals a consistent structure grounded in historical context.

“All for one, and one for all” endures because it articulates a solution to a persistent problem: how to sustain unity in a world defined by competition and mistrust.

The novel does not resolve this tension. Instead, it stages it within the political and social conditions of 17th-century France. The Musketeers’ bond is fragile, shaped by ambition, pride and circumstance. But it holds because it is continually reinforced.

In this sense, The Three Musketeers offers not a record of the past but a historically grounded model of association. It suggests solidarity is possible, but only under conditions of risk and mutual obligation.

That is why the motto persists. It names an ideal that is difficult to realise, yet difficult to abandon. Amid strained alliances and shifting loyalties of our own time, it reads less as nostalgia than as a challenge: not what such unity once meant, but whether it can still be sustained.The Conversation

Darius von Guttner Sporzynski, Professor of History, Australian Catholic University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Conspiracy theories: do 300,000 Kiwis really believe Canada is building an army of mutant super‑raccoons?

Enn Li Photography/Getty Images
John Kerr, University of Otago; Mathew Marques, La Trobe University, and Matt Williams, Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa – Massey University

Four percent of Americans – roughly 12 million people – believe that “lizard people” secretly control the Earth. At least, that was the finding of an infamous 2013 public opinion survey.

Do so many people really believe such outlandish claims? Or do results like these partly reflect people giving silly answers or deliberately skewing surveys for fun?

US psychiatrist Alexander Scott believes the latter plays a significant role.

Using the survey as an example, he coined the term “the Lizardman constant” to describe the idea that a certain amount of noise and trolling will always exist in surveys about unusual beliefs.

As Scott warned: “Any possible source of noise – jokesters, cognitive biases, or deliberate misbehaviour – can easily overwhelm the signal.”

As researchers who study uncommon beliefs such as conspiracy theories, we wanted to investigate how this kind of cheeky trolling can muddy the waters.

Trolls and true believers

Building on earlier Australian research, we surveyed New Zealanders to test how common dishonest or joking responses were in conspiracy theory surveys.

We did this in two ways. First, we directly asked people a yes/no question at the end of the survey:

“Did you respond insincerely at any earlier point in this survey? In other words, did you give any responses that were actually just joking, trolling, or otherwise not indicating what you really think?”

Second, we included in the survey a “conspiracy theory” so ridiculous we could assume most, if not all, people who said they believed it were taking the mickey.

We asked them if they believed:

The Canadian Armed Forces have been secretly developing an elite army of genetically engineered, super intelligent, giant raccoons to invade nearby countries.

In our representative online sample of 810 New Zealanders, 8.3% of respondents confessed to being insincere in the survey.

Another 7.2% said they thought the Canadian raccoon army theory was probably or definitely true. That proportion – similar to findings from Australia – would equate to more than 300,000 adult New Zealanders.

To complicate things slightly, there was some overlap between those admitting to insincere answers and those claiming to believe the raccoon conspiracy. Combined, 13.3% of respondents fell into one or both groups – roughly one in eight people not appearing to take the survey seriously.

Importantly, these respondents were also much more likely to endorse other conspiracy theories, inflating estimates of how widespread those beliefs really are.

For instance, 6.5% of the full sample endorsed the claim that governments around the world are covering up the fact that 5G mobile networks spread coronavirus.

But once we removed the insincere responders, that figure dropped by more than half to 2.7%.

Across 13 different conspiracy theories, the estimated proportion of believers fell substantially once those respondents were excluded.



Another interesting insight from our study was that people endorsing contradictory conspiracy theories were much more likely to show signs of responding insincerely.

Previous studies have found some people appear to believe conspiracy theories that directly contradict each other. In our survey, for example, some participants agreed both that COVID-19 is a myth and that governments are covering up the fact that 5G networks spread the virus.

But nearly three-quarters of those respondents also showed signs of joking or dishonest answers.

This suggests genuinely believing contradictory conspiracy theories may be less common than previously thought.

Not every conspiracy believer is joking

Our findings add further weight to the idea that surveys may overestimate how many people truly believe some conspiracy theories – thanks, in part, to trolls.

But does that mean all conspiracy theory research is bunk?

Fortunately not. Most research in this area is not focused on counting conspiracy believers, but on understanding why people hold these beliefs and what effects they can have.

We tested several well-established findings from earlier conspiracy theory research to see whether they still held up once insincere respondents were removed from the data.

For example, previous studies have found that people who endorse conspiracy theories are more likely to see the world as a dangerous and threatening place.

We found the same pattern. In fact, removing insincere respondents made little difference to the broader relationships identified in earlier research.

Nevertheless, we recommend that future surveys include ways to gauge whether respondents are answering sincerely and account for this in the analysis. At the very least, researchers should acknowledge that trolls and joking responses can distort their results.

While our research suggests some people are taking the mickey in surveys, it also shows a significant minority genuinely appear to believe some of these claims.

In some cases – such as believing authorities are covering up the fact that the Earth is flat – this may be relatively harmless. But other conspiracy beliefs can lead to real-world harm.

Good-quality research is essential for understanding how sincere believers end up down these rabbit holes, and how those beliefs influence real-world behaviour.

Research into why people embrace conspiracy theories – and the real-world consequences of those beliefs – remains important.

But when surveys suggest millions may believe in lizard overlords or genetically engineered raccoon armies, it is also worth remembering the “Lizardman constant”: some respondents may simply be having us on.


The authors acknowledge the contributions of Rob Ross, Mathew Ling and Stephen Hill to this article.The Conversation


John Kerr, Senior Research Fellow, Department of Public Health, University of Otago; Mathew Marques, Senior Lecturer in Social Psychology, La Trobe University, and Matt Williams, Associate Professor in Psychology, Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa – Massey University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Why was an Egyptian mummy stuffed with a fragment of Homer’s Iliad?

Achilles Lamenting the Death of Patroclus by Gavin Hamilton (1760-1763). National Galleries of Scotland Collection
Stephan Blum, University of Tübingen and Stefan Baumann, KU Leuven

Archaeologists have found something unexpected inside a 1,600-year-old Roman-era Egyptian mummy: a fragment of Homer’s Iliad. It wasn’t placed beside the body, but inside the mummy’s abdomen. But the real surprise isn’t just where the fragment was found. It’s how it got there. To understand, we must go back – to the Iliad itself, and to what it became in the Roman world.

In The Iliad, a poem shaped in the 8th century BC and attributed to Homer, the Trojan war does not end in triumph or renewal. It ends in devastation. The poem closes at the edge of collapse, with Troy reduced to a landscape of heroic ruin. And yet, this is not where the story ends.

According to later Roman tradition, one Trojan escaped. Aeneas – son of Anchises and the goddess Aphrodite – fled the burning city carrying his father on his shoulders and the household gods in his hands. He moved west, across the Mediterranean, towards Italy, where he became the ancestor of Rome.

This continuation did not come from the Iliad itself. It was shaped centuries later, most famously in Virgil’s Aeneid. But it changed the meaning of the Trojan war entirely. The past, in other words, was actively reorganised – through stories that could be reworked, extended and connected across time and space.

Painting by Pompeo Batoni (1753), depicting Aeneas fleeing the burning city of Troy with his father Anchises and the household gods, as the fall of Troy is recast as the beginning of a journey toward the foundation of Rome.
Painting by Pompeo Batoni (1753), depicting Aeneas fleeing the burning city of Troy with his father Anchises and the household gods, as the fall of Troy is recast as the beginning of a journey toward the foundation of Rome. Galleria Sabauda

Turning defeat into origin

For Roman audiences, the Trojan war was more than a distant Greek legend. It became a way of thinking about origins, identity and power.

Claiming descent from Troy was more than a matter of tracing a lineage. It required constant cultural work – through storytelling, education and shared knowledge. The Iliad provided the raw material: characters, events and genealogies that could be reshaped and redeployed across generations.

Across the Roman Empire, educated elites learned Homer as part of their schooling. They quoted him in speeches, analysed him in classrooms and used him to signal cultural authority. To know the Iliad was to speak a language that others across the empire understood.

A senator in Rome, a teacher in Asia Minor or a student in Egypt could all draw on the same stories. The poem created a shared frame of reference – one that allowed very different people to situate themselves within a common past.

Plan of the late bronze age citadel of Troy
Plan of the late bronze age citadel of Troy (c. 1300–1109BC) shown in red, with Roman-period structures in blue, integrated into the ancient fortification in such a way that the surviving walls functioned as a theatrical backdrop of ‘authentic antiquity’, transforming archaeological depth into a deliberately scenographic experience. University of Tübingen, CC BY-SA

In the Roman imperial period, the site of ancient Troy – located in modern-day Turkey – became a destination. Emperors invested in its development, tying it directly to Rome’s claimed Trojan origins. Under Emperor Augustus, Troy was folded into the political language of empire. And under Emperor Hadrian, it became part of a wider culture of travel, memory and heritage.

A visitor to Troy in the 2nd century AD would have arrived at a curated landscape. There were baths, places to stay and spaces for performance. A small theatre – the Odeion – was built directly into the ancient citadel, so that the remains of the bronze age city, understood as the setting of the legendary battles around Troy, formed a dramatic backdrop.

Visitors could walk through what was presented as the setting of Homeric epic, experiencing the Trojan war as something anchored in the ground beneath their feet.

From Troy to Egypt

Across the Roman Empire, the Iliad circulated as a living text: copied, taught and read. Egypt, one of Rome’s most important provinces, was no exception. Yet here, Homer circulated within a cultural landscape that differed in important ways from the Greek literary world in which the poem had first taken shape.

For Roman observers, Egypt often appeared as a place where antiquity was materially preserved as well as remembered – through temples, monuments and practices that emphasised continuity with the past. At the same time, it was a deeply hybrid society, where Egyptian, Greek and Roman traditions interacted in complex ways.

Homer was among the most widely copied authors in Roman Egypt – read and taught as a marker of education and cultural belonging and deeply embedded in everyday literary culture.

A small covered Roman theatre
The Odeion of Troy, a small covered theatre inserted into the fabric of the ancient citadel and constructed in the early 2nd century AD, exemplifies the Roman reconfiguration of the site’s urban and cultural landscape. University of Tübingen, CC BY-SA

The Homeric version of the Trojan War was particularly prominent among the Greek-speaking elite, especially in urban centres such as Oxyrhynchus, where the mummy was found. Other versions of the story – which placed greater emphasis on Paris and Helen’s stay in Egypt, as reported by Herodotus based on accounts from Egyptian priests – were probably more widespread among the broader Egyptian population.

The initial media coverage of the discovery of the fragment inside the Egyptian mummy suggested the text was deliberately chosen to accompany the deceased. As a personally meaningful object, perhaps reflecting their education or cultural identity.

The most telling explanation, however, may be the most straightforward. Discarded or damaged papyri could be reused as inexpensive material. The fragment may therefore have functioned as stuffing – bundled together and inserted into the body cavity without particular regard for its literary content.

The very fact that a scrap of the Iliad could end up as disposable filling, however, speaks to how deeply Homer had penetrated everyday life in Roman Egypt.

A text in motion

To make sense of the past in the Roman world meant moving between story and monument, between genealogy and deep time. Each perspective made the others more intelligible.

The Iliad helped create a world in which different pasts could be connected, compared and reshaped. By linking stories, places and traditions across the Mediterranean, the Roman world turned the past into a flexible resource – one that could generate identity, authority and belonging in shifting contexts.

This is why the Iliad mattered: it circulated across many different settings. It shaped elite education, but it was also part of everyday reading culture. At Troy, it helped transform the city into a place of cultural memory. The text itself also had a long material afterlife, surviving not only as an authoritative story, but through manuscripts and writing materials that were copied, passed on – or even reused for entirely different purposes.

Its most enduring insight is therefore this: the past is not something simply preserved, but something continuously made and remade – through the stories, practices and materials that carry it across time.

This article features references to books that have been included for editorial reasons, and may contain links to bookshop.org. If you click on one of the links and go on to buy something, The Conversation UK may earn a commission.The Conversation

Stephan Blum, Research Associate, Institute for Prehistory and Early History and Medieval Archaeology, University of Tübingen and Stefan Baumann, Assistant Professor of Egyptology, KU Leuven

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

What it would have been like to experience the dinosaur‑killing asteroid armageddon: a blow‑by‑blow account

serpeblu/Shutterstock
Michael J. Benton, University of Bristol and Monica Grady, The Open University

A great Tyrannosaurus rex strides through the conifer trees of her territory, sniffing the air. She picks up the scent from the carcass of a dead horned dinosaur, Triceratops, that she was feeding on yesterday. She walks over and strips off some more shreds of meat, but the smell is foul even for her.

She goes down to the lake to drink and small crocodiles and turtles scuttle into the water. But she hardly sees them. Of more interest is an armoured dinosaur, Ankylosaurus, lurking nearby. However, she knows this dinosaur won’t be an easy kill and she isn’t desperate enough for food to risk a fight. Little does she know there are bigger dangers ahead. She looks up and sees a bright light racing downwards accompanied by faint crackling and sizzling noises.

Our T. rex has excellent hearing for low frequency sounds and she is disturbed by the vibrations she can feel. But her upset only lasts for a moment. In a flash, she has been burnt to a crisp and her world changed forever.

This all happened 66 million years ago, when a huge asteroid famously hit the Earth in the area of what is now the Caribbean. At the end of the Cretaceous period, sea levels were 100–200 metres higher than today, so the shores of the Caribbean lay far inland over eastern Mexico and the southern United States. The impact happened entirely within these waters.

The event triggered instant changes to our planet and its atmosphere and led to the extinction of the dinosaurs and about half Earth’s other species. But what would it have been like to experience such a gargantuan impact? What would you have seen, heard or smelled? And how would you have died – or survived?


The Insights section is committed to high-quality longform journalism. Our editors work with academics from many different backgrounds who are tackling a wide range of societal and scientific challenges.


As experts on meteoritics and palaeontology, respectively, we’ve created a detailed timeline, based on decades of research, to take you right there. So let’s start by travelling back in time to the very last day of the Cretaceous.

T-minus one day

All is calm and the Cretaceous day proceeds as usual. In what will soon be ground zero, it is pleasantly warm, about 26°C, and wet. It often is. For about a week, the asteroid has been visible only at night. Because the giant rock is heading straight towards Earth, it looks like a motionless star. There is no dramatic tail; this is a rocky asteroid rather than a comet.

Illustration of dinosaurs walking in a valley.
There was little warning the day before. Orla/Shutterstock

In the last 24 hours, the light becomes visible during the daytime. But it still looks like a star or planet, getting brighter in the final few hours before impact.

T equals 0: the impact

If you were close by, you would first have experienced a brief light and sound show. Minutes to seconds before the impact, you’d have seen the bright fireball, and its accompanying crackling or fizzing noises. This sizzling sound is a result of the photo-acoustic effect: the intense light of the fireball warms the ground, which then heats the air above it, causing pressure waves, or sound.

Next, a deafening sonic boom, which occurs because the asteroid is travelling faster than the speed of sound. But the asteroid is so huge, perhaps 10km in diameter, that it almost certainly hits the ground before any living creature near the impact zone has time to run for cover.

The asteroid’s enormous energy forms a crater through a series of processes that together take only a few seconds. As the asteroid collides with the surface, its kinetic (movement) energy is instantly transferred to the surface as a combination of kinetic, thermal (heat) and seismic energy (released during earthquakes). This results in a series of shock waves that heat and compress both the asteroid and its target.

As the shock waves propagate, rocks fracture, break up and are ejected, producing a bowl-shaped depression, or transient cavity, about ten seconds after impact. The heat and compression also melt and vaporise large volumes of material, including the asteroid itself, releasing a fountain of incandescent vapour (its temperature is more than 10,000 K, or 9726.85°C).

Over the next few seconds, the cavity increases in size to many times the diameter of the original asteroid. Simulations suggest that around 20 seconds after impact, the transient cavity is at least 30km deep – deeper than the deepest depth currently known on Earth, the 11km Challenger Deep valley, part of the Pacific Ocean’s Marianas Trench. The rim of the crater is over 20km high – more than twice the height of 8,900m Mount Everest.

But this enormous feature lasts for less than a minute before it starts to collapse. Within three minutes of the impact, the centre of the crater has rebounded to form a peak several kilometres high. The peak only lasts about two minutes before collapsing back into the crater.

Whether a dinosaur or a dung beetle, if you were near the transient cavity you would have been incinerated instantly by the blast. But even if you were up to 2,000km from the epicentre, you’d likely have been killed quickly by the thermal radiation and supersonic winds now spreading out from the impact site.

T-plus 5 minutes

Five minutes after the impact, the winds have “eased” to those of a category 5 hurricane, flattening everything within about 1,500km of the impact. Destroying everything, that is, which has not already been burnt. Atmospheric temperatures in the region rise to over 500K (226.85°C). This would feel like being inside an oven – causing burns, heatstroke and death. Wood and plant matter ignite, creating fires everywhere.

Because the asteroid struck the sea, the atmosphere is also filled with super-heated steam, making the hurricane-force winds even deadlier.

Next come the tidal waves, triggered by the vast quantities of displaced rock and water. These 100-metre megatsunamis first strike the shores of what is now the Gulf of Mexico, engulfing the land before depositing huge amounts of debris as they retreat.

Image of a tsunami wave.
Tsunamis waves were over 100 metres high. FOTOKITA/Shutterstock

By now, the crater has almost reached its final dimensions – 180km across and 20km deep. But making an enormous hole in the ground isn’t the only outcome of the impact. All the rock and vapour displaced during the collision has to go somewhere. Several locations in Northern America show that metre-sized blocks of debris from the impact were thrown distances of hundreds of kilometres.

So if you were 2,000km to 3,000km from the epicentre and survived the first few seconds, you’d most likely die from overheating, earthquakes, hurricanes, fires, tsunami-driven floods or being hit by impact melt.

But what is happening much further away? In the first five minutes after impact, dinosaurs roaming the Cretaceous forests of what are now China or New Zealand are so far undisturbed.

But it won’t be long before that changes.

T-plus one hour

Shockwaves on land and sea are only minor inconveniences compared with the fire that is still radiating down from the sky. Some of the impact energy has been transferred into the atmosphere, heating the air and dust to incandescence.

Angry firestorm texture background in full HD ratio
Big fires everywhere. fluke samed/Shutterstock

An hour after impact, a belt of dust has circled the globe. Deposits of solidified molten droplets (impact spherules) and mineral grains have been found in numerous locations from New Zealand in the south to Denmark in the north. In these locations, you would not have been aware of the tsunamis around the Americas or the wildfires, but the skies would certainly have begun to darken.

T-plus one day

By now, huge tsunamis are moving east across the Atlantic and west across the Pacific, entering the Indian Ocean from both sides.

They are still around 50m high – causing death and destruction across many coasts around the world. By comparison, the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami reached heights of up to 30 metres. Tsunamis kill fishes and marine life that are washed high on the shore and then dumped, just as they kill coastal trees and drown land animals. But the tsunamis gradually fade away and probably don’t wipe out any entire species – at least on their own.

The hurricane force winds have also died down, but tropical storm strength winds are whipping up debris and causing further chaos and destruction across the tsunami-affected areas. The burning sky is also triggering wildfires across the globe – which, in turn, carry ever more soot into the atmosphere. The sooty signature of these wildfires has been found deposited as carbon particles in sediments from the K-Pg boundary – a 66-million-year-old thin clay layer.

Further away, in what is modern Europe and Asia, the skies continue to fill up with dust and soot, as they do everywhere. Temperatures start to drop as sunlight is blocked. Trees and plants in general, including phytoplankton, close down as if for winter, unable to photosynthesise. Any animals that rely on warm conditions ultimately hunker down and die.

T-plus one week

It’s getting darker and darker. Simulations of solar radiation reaching the Earth’s surface following the impact indicate that, after about a week, the solar flux (the amount of heat and light per a certain area) is just one thousandth of that prior to the impact. This is caused by particles of dust and soot in the atmosphere.

The continued decrease in light levels is accompanied by a global drop in surface temperatures of at least 5°C. This means that most of the dinosaurs and other large flying and swimming reptiles probably die from freezing within the course of this first week (smaller reptiles with slower metabolisms or more flexible diets could survive longer). Cooling temperatures and cloud cover also lead to rain. But not just any rain. Storms of acid rain fall across the Earth.

Two separate mechanisms generate acid rain. The first is down to the geology of the impact region. The asteroid happened to hit an area of sediments rich in sulphur, which vaporised and caused sulphur oxides (acidic and pungent gas compounds composed of sulphur and oxygen) to be part of the plume of plasma blasted into the atmosphere. Second, the energy of the collision was sufficient to turn nitrogen and oxygen into nitrogen oxides – highly reactive gases that can form smog.

The dropping temperature ultimately allows water vapour to condense into drops, and the sulphur and nitrogen oxides dissolve to form sulphuric and nitric acids. This is sufficient to generate a rapid drop in pH. Early models suggest that the pH of the rain might be as low as 1 – the same acidity as battery acid.

At this point, Earth is not a great place to be. Rotting vegetation, choking smoke and sulphur aerosols combine to make the planet stink. Plants and animals on land and in shallow seas that have survived the darkness and cold succumb to the corrosive acid rain and ocean acidification. Acid rain also kills trees by leaching nutrients such as calcium, magnesium and potassium from the soil. Shallow marine shellfish, crustaceans and corals also die as acid seawater destroys their skeletons.

T-plus one year

Winds die down, wildfires are extinguished and the oceans are once again calm. It might appear that the asteroid collision is just a scar on the ocean floor. But its effects are still destructive. The atmosphere is still filled with dust and the Sun hasn’t shone for a year. Temperatures have continued to drop, with the average surface temperature now 15°C lower than before the impact. Winter has come.

Any dinosaurs or marine reptiles that survived the first week of freezing conditions would have died very soon after. A year after the impact, only rotted skeletons of these behemoths remain. Here and there, smaller animals like mammals the size of rats and insects would be nestling in crevices, barely surviving on their reserves and decaying plants.

Indeed, it has not been a good year for life on Earth: over 50% of plants have died out because of the cold and lack of sunlight. And similar losses have occurred among terrestrial animals and species in the acidified, shallow sea waters.

Shot of pyritized ammonite fossil, capturing metallic shine and intricate prehistoric shell structure.
Ammonites soon die out. Domenichini Giuliano/Shutterstock

While most plant groups and many of the modern groups of insects, fishes, reptiles, birds and mammals recover reasonably rapidly, things don’t look great for other species. Dinosaurs and pterosaurs living on land are extinct, as are many marine reptiles, ammonites, belemnites and rudist bivalves in the oceans. Ammonites and belemnites are high in their food chains, and so suffer not only from the cold and acidification but also from the loss of abundant food resources, such as smaller marine organisms.

T-plus ten years

The Earth is still in the grip of a fierce winter. Although most of the sulphur has rained out of the atmosphere, dust and soot particles remain. The average surface temperature is still about 5°C lower than before the impact. The main oceans have not frozen, but inland lakes and rivers around the world are iced over.

Clearly, there were no humans about at this time – there weren’t even any larger mammals. But given the only species that survived were those that could burrow or live below water, it is unlikely that you could have survived this long.

Surviving plant and animal groups such as turtles, smaller crocodiles, lizards, snakes, some ground-dwelling birds and small mammals repopulate the Earth at this point. But they are forced back to limited areas of relative safety a long way from the impact site. These areas are now receiving sufficient sunlight for plants and phytoplankton to photosynthesise again. As leaves and seeds provide the basis for the food chains on land and in the sea, life begins to rebuild.

Eventually, life returns to the devastated landscapes, but ecosystems are very different and the dinosaurs are no more.

T-plus 66 million years

Today, 66 million years after the impact, the scars of the collision are hidden within geological strata – and scientists have started deciphering them. It was in 1980 that researchers first reported evidence of the impact. In their classic paper, Luis Alvarez, a Nobel-prize-winning physicist, and co-authors, described a sudden enrichment in the element iridium in a specific clay layer in Denmark and in Italy.

Iridium is rare in surface rocks because most of it was sequestered in Earth’s core when the planet first formed. However, iridium is found in meteorites, and Alvarez and colleagues inferred that the rate of accumulation of the metal in the sediments was so high that it could only have been produced by impact of a gigantic meteorite.

Because the scientists had only observed the iridium spike in two locations, the impact hypothesis was rejected by many scientists at the time. However, through the 1980s, iridium spikes were identified in clay layers at more and more locations – in muds laid down on land, in lakes, in the sea.

Support for an impact hypothesis strengthened when a crater of the correct age was found in 1991. The crater is buried beneath younger rocks, but clearly visible in geophysical surveys, lying half on land in the Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico, and half offshore. Since 1990, evidence for the impact has increased, not least when scientists discovered that there was indeed a sharp cooling event at the end of the Cretaceous.

Possible T-Rex track near Anasazi at Philmont in 2022.
Possible T rex footprint from New Mexico. Wikipedia, CC BY-SA

In total, it is estimated that half the species of plants and animals alive at the end of the Cretaceous disappeared. It was once thought that surviving groups such as many plants, insects, molluscs, lizards, birds and mammals somehow escaped unscathed. But detailed study shows that this is not the case – they were all hit hard.

But, by chance or luck, enough individuals and species were able to survive the cold and absence of food, or were in parts of the world where the effects were less extreme. As the world returned to normal, they had the opportunity to expand rapidly into their old niches, but also to occupy the space vacated by extinct groups. In fact, one important consequence of the extinction of the dinosaurs, apex predators in their heyday, was the successful spread and evolution of mammals.

When Alvarez and colleagues first described the drop in temperature following the impact, they called it a “nuclear winter”, reflecting the political climate of the early 1980s. Now we might be more inclined to describe the effects as a global climate change – similar events are currently resulting from increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere (flooding, temperature fluctuations).

It is salutary to think that without the asteroid collision, primates might never have reached the level we are at today. But it is equally salutary to consider that modern humans are causing some of the same changes to the atmosphere that ultimately killed our reptilian forbears and may one day also lead to our own demise.


For you: more from our Insights series:

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Michael J. Benton, Professor of Vertebrate Palaeontology, University of Bristol and Monica Grady, Professor of Planetary and Space Sciences, The Open University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 The Project Gutenberg Library of Australiana

Australian writers, works about Australia and works which may be of interest to Australians.This Australiana page boasts many ebooks by Australian writers, or books about Australia. There is a diverse range; from the journals of the land and sea explorers; to the early accounts of white settlement in Australia; to the fiction of 'Banjo' Paterson, Henry Lawson and many other Australian writers.

The list of titles form part of the huge collection of ebooks freely downloadable from Project Gutenberg Australia. Follow the links to read more about the authors and titles and to read and/or download the ebooks. 

Profile: Ingleside Riders Group

Ingleside Riders Group Inc. (IRG) is a not for profit incorporated association and is run solely by volunteers. It was formed in 2003 and provides a facility known as “Ingleside Equestrian Park” which is approximately 9 acres of land between Wattle St and McLean St, Ingleside. IRG has a licence agreement with the Minister of Education to use this land. This facility is very valuable as it is the only designated area solely for equestrian use in the Pittwater District.  IRG promotes equal rights and the respect of one another and our list of rules that all members must sign reflect this.

Cyberbullying

Research shows that one in five Australian children aged 8 to 17 has been the target of cyberbullying in the past year. The Office of the Children’s eSafety Commissioner can help you make a complaint, find someone to talk to and provide advice and strategies for dealing with these issues.

Make a Complaint 

The Enhancing Online Safety for Children Act 2015 gives the power to provide assistance in relation to serious cyberbullying material. That is, material that is directed at a particular child with the intention to seriously embarrass, harass, threaten or humiliate.

IMPORTANT INFORMATION 

Before you make a complaint you need to have:

  • copies of the cyberbullying material to upload (eg screenshots or photos)
  • reported the material to the social media service (if possible) at least 48 hours ago
  • at hand as much information as possible about where the material is located
  • 15-20 minutes to complete the form

Visit: esafety.gov.au/complaints-and-reporting/cyberbullying

Our mission

The Office of the Children’s eSafety Commissioner is Australia's leader in online safety. The Office is committed to helping young people have safe, positive experiences online and encouraging behavioural change, where a generation of Australian children act responsibly online—just as they would offline.

We provide online safety education for Australian children and young people, a complaints service for young Australians who experience serious cyberbullying, and address illegal online content through the Online Content Scheme.

Our goal is to empower all Australians to explore the online world—safely.

Visit: esafety.gov.au/about-the-office 

The Green Team

Profile
This Youth-run, volunteer-based environment initiative has been attracting high praise from the founders of Living Ocean as much as other local environment groups recently. 
Creating Beach Cleans events, starting their own, sustainability days - ‘action speaks louder than words’ ethos is at the core of this group. 

National Training Complaints Hotline – 13 38 73

The National Training Complaints Hotline is accessible on 13 38 73 (Monday to Friday from 8am to 6pm nationally) or via email at skilling@education.gov.au.

Sync Your Breathing with this - to help you Relax

Send In Your Stuff

Pittwater Online News is not only For and About you, it is also BY you.  
We will not publish swearing or the gossip about others. BUT: If you have a poem, story or something you want to see addressed, let us know or send to: pittwateronlinenews@live.com.au

All Are Welcome, All Belong!

Youth Source: Northern Sydney Region

A directory of services and resources relevant to young people and those who work, play and live alongside them.

The YouthSource directory has listings from the following types of service providers: Aboriginal, Accommodation, Alcohol & Other Drugs, Community Service, Counselling, Disability, Education & Training, Emergency Information, Employment, Financial, Gambling,  General Health & Wellbeing, Government Agency, Hospital & GP, Legal & Justice, Library, Mental Health, Multicultural, Nutrition & Eating Disorders, Parenting, Relationships, Sexual Health, University, Youth Centre

Driver Knowledge Test (DKT) Practice run Online

Did you know you can do a practice run of the DKT online on the RMS site? - check out the base of this page, and the rest on the webpage, it's loaded with information for you!

The DKT Practice test is designed to help you become familiar with the test, and decide if you’re ready to attempt the test for real.  Experienced drivers can also take the practice test to check their knowledge of the road rules. Unlike the real test, the practice DKT allows you to finish all 45 questions, regardless of how many you get wrong. At the end of the practice test, you’ll be advised whether you passed or failed.

NCYLC is a community legal centre dedicated to providing advice to children and young people. NCYLC has developed a Cyber Project called Lawmail, which allows young people to easily access free legal advice from anywhere in Australia, at any time.

NCYLC was set up to ensure children’s rights are not marginalised or ignored. NCYLC helps children across Australia with their problems, including abuse and neglect. The AGD, UNSW, KWM, Telstra and ASIC collaborate by providing financial, in-kind and/or pro bono volunteer resources to NCYLC to operate Lawmail and/or Lawstuff.

Fined Out: Practical guide for people having problems with fines

Legal Aid NSW has just published an updated version of its 'Fined Out' booklet, produced in collaboration with Inner City Legal Centre and Redfern Legal Centre.

Fined Out is a practical guide to the NSW fines system. It provides information about how to deal with fines and contact information for services that can help people with their fines.

A fine is a financial penalty for breaking the law. The Fines Act 1996 (NSW) and Regulations sets out the rules about fines.

The 5th edition of 'Fined Out' includes information on the different types of fines and chapters on the various options to deal with fines at different stages of the fine lifecycle, including court options and pathways to seek a review, a 50% reduction, a write-off, plan, or a Work and Development Order (WDO).

The resource features links to self-help legal tools for people with NSW fines, traffic offence fines and court attendance notices (CANs) and also explains the role of Revenue NSW in administering and enforcing fines.

Other sections of the booklet include information specific to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, young people and driving offences, as well as a series of template letters to assist people to self-advocate.

Hard copies will soon be available to be ordered online through the Publications tab on the Legal Aid NSW website.

Hard copies will also be made available in all public and prison libraries throughout NSW.

Read the resource online, or download the PDF.

Profile Bayview Yacht Racing Association (BYRA)
1842 Pittwater Rd, Bayview
Website: www.byra.org.au

BYRA has a passion for sharing the great waters of Pittwater and a love of sailing with everyone aged 8 to 80 or over!

 headspace Brookvale

headspace Brookvale provides services to young people aged 12-25. If you are a young person looking for health advice, support and/or information,headspace Brookvale can help you with:

• Mental health • Physical/sexual health • Alcohol and other drug services • Education and employment services

If you ever feel that you are:

• Alone and confused • Down, depressed or anxious • Worried about your use of alcohol and/or other drugs • Not coping at home, school or work • Being bullied, hurt or harassed • Wanting to hurt yourself • Concerned about your sexual health • Struggling with housing or accommodation • Having relationship problems • Finding it hard to get a job

Or if you just need someone to talk to… headspace Brookvale can help! The best part is our service is free, confidential and youth friendly.

headspace Brookvale is open from Monday to Friday 9:00am-5:30pm so if you want to talk or make an appointment give us a call on (02) 9937 6500. If you're not feeling up to contacting us yourself, feel free to ask your family, friend, teacher, doctor or someone close to you to make a referral on your behalf.

When you first come to headspace Brookvale you will be greeted by one of our friendly staff. You will then talk with a member of our headspace Brookvale Youth Access Team. The headspace Brookvale Youth Access Team consists of three workers, who will work with you around whatever problems you are facing. Depending on what's happening for you, you may meet with your Youth Access Worker a number of times or you may be referred on to a more appropriate service provider.

A number of service providers are operating out of headspace Brookvale including Psychologists, Drug & Alcohol Workers, Sexual Health Workers, Employment Services and more! If we can't find a service operating withinheadspace Brookvale that best suits you, the Youth Access Team can also refer you to other services in the Sydney area.

eheadspace provides online and telephone support for young people aged 12-25. It is a confidential, free, secure space where you can chat, email or talk on the phone to qualified youth mental health professionals.

Click here to go to eheadspace

For urgent mental health assistance or if you are in a crisis please call the Northern Sydney 24 hour Mental Health Access Line on 1800 011 511

Need Help Right NOW??

kids help line: 1800 55 1800 - www.kidshelpline.com.au

lifeline australia - 13 11 14 - www.lifeline.org.au

headspace Brookvale is located at Level 2 Brookvale House, 1A Cross Street Brookvale NSW 2100 (Old Medical Centre at Warringah Mall). We are nearby Brookvale Westfield's bus stop on Pittwater road, and have plenty of parking under the building opposite Bunnings. More at: www.headspace.org.au/headspace-centres/headspace-brookvale

Profile: Avalon Soccer Club
Avalon Soccer Club is an amateur club situated at the northern end of Sydney’s Northern Beaches. As a club we pride ourselves on our friendly, family club environment. The club is comprised of over a thousand players aged from 5 to 70 who enjoy playing the beautiful game at a variety of levels and is entirely run by a group of dedicated volunteers. 
Profile: Pittwater Baseball Club

Their Mission: Share a community spirit through the joy of our children engaging in baseball.

Year 13

Year13 is an online resource for post school options that specialises in providing information and services on Apprenticeships, Gap Year Programs, Job Vacancies, Studying, Money Advice, Internships and the fun of life after school. Partnering with leading companies across Australia Year13 helps facilitate positive choices for young Australians when finishing school.

Kids Helpline

If you’re aged 5-25 the Kids Helpline provides free and confidential online and phone counselling 24 hours a day, seven days a week on 1800 55 1800. You can chat with us about anything… What’s going on at home, stuff with friends. Something at school or feeling sad, angry or worried. You don’t have to tell us your name if you don’t want to.

You can Webchat, email or phone. Always remember - Everyone deserves to be safe and happy. You’re important and we are here to help you. Visit: https://kidshelpline.com.au/kids/