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Strike by French air traffic controllers disrupts summer travel
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Liverpool football star Diogo Jota dies in car crash in Spain: police
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Japan plans 'world first' deep-sea mineral extraction
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Thailand gets third leader this week as new cabinet sworn in
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US House sets make-or-break final vote on Trump tax bill
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Top China official says US defence chief 'inciting conflict'
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Wales look to end 17-game losing streak with 'massive' Japan win
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Chinese carrier Shandong moors in Hong Kong on 'great power' visit
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Wounded Wales looking for 'massive' win over Japan
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Japan PM sweats for majority in upper house election
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'Happy suffering': the Brazilian gold rush that spawned iconic pictures
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Australian man dies from 'extremely rare' bat bite virus
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Free-scoring Lions can be beaten insists Waratahs coach McKellar
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4 dead, 30 missing after ferry sinks on way to Indonesia's Bali
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Facing climate change, Swiss trees get mist before they're missed
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Australian man dies from bat bite
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US-Vietnam trade deal sows new China uncertainty
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India Hindu pilgrimage begins in contested Kashmir
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Jones places faith in Japan youth movement to sink Wales
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All Black wing Ioane warns 'dangerous' France are no B-team
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'Significant declines' in some species after deep-sea mining: research
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Indonesia free meal plan stunted by delays, protests, poisonings
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Russell heads into home British GP haunted by Verstappen rumours
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Djokovic wary of Evans threat, Krejcikova worships at 'temple of tennis'
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Drought-hit Morocco turns to desalination to save vegetable bounty
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Steve Smith back for second West Indies Test after dislocated finger
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Asian stocks mixed as traders shrug at US-Vietnam trade deal
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Holland completes All Blacks 'great story' to debut against France
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China, EU should not 'seek confrontation': FM Wang
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'Big Comrade': Former defence chief takes reins as Thai PM
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4 dead, 38 missing after ferry sinks on way to Indonesia's Bali
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Thailand set for another acting PM after cabinet reshuffle
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In US capital, Trump tariffs bite into restaurant profits
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Sean Combs: music pioneer, entrepreneur -- and convicted felon
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In California, fear of racial profiling grips Latino communities
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Home-grown players delight Wimbledon fans on hunt for 'new Andy Murray'
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Third-ever confirmed interstellar object blazing through Solar System
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Joao Pedro arrival boosts Chelsea ahead of Palmeiras Club World Cup test
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Lions start to roar in ominous Wallabies warning
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Kellaway, Tupou headline Waratahs team to face Lions
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Four All Blacks debutants to face France in first Test
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Helium One Global Ltd Announces Appointment of New Non-Executive Director
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Ukraine scrambling for clarity as US downplays halt to arms shipments
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Peru clinic that leaked Shakira medical record given hefty fine
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UK's Starmer backs finance minister after tears in parliament
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Trump tax bill stalled by Republican rebellion in Congress
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US stocks back at records as oil prices rally
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Norway battle back to beat Swiss hosts in Euro 2025 opener
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Netanyahu vows to uproot Hamas as ceasefire proposals are discussed
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Tarvet won't turn pro yet, despite pushing Alcaraz at Wimbledon

World's first wooden satellite built by Japan researchers
The world's first wooden satellite has been built by Japanese researchers who said their tiny cuboid craft will be blasted off on a SpaceX rocket in September.
Each side of the experimental satellite developed by scientists at Kyoto University and logging company Sumitomo Forestry measures just 10 centimetres (four inches).
The creators expect the wooden material will burn up completely when the device re-enters the atmosphere -- potentially providing a way to avoid the generation of metal particles when a retired satellite returns to Earth.
These metal particles could have a negative impact on the environment and telecommunications, the developers said as they announced the satellite's completion on Tuesday.
"Satellites that are not made of metal should become mainstream," Takao Doi, an astronaut and special professor at Kyoto University, told a press conference.
The developers plan to hand the satellite, made from magnolia wood and named LignoSat, to space agency JAXA next week.
It will be sent into space on a SpaceX rocket from the Kennedy Space Center in September, bound for the International Space Station (ISS), they said.
From there, the satellite will be released from the Japanese ISS experiment module to test its strength and durability.
"Data will be sent from the satellite to researchers who can check for signs of strain and whether the satellite can withstand huge changes in temperature," a Sumitomo Forestry spokeswoman told AFP on Wednesday.
Also on Tuesday, a rocket carrying a separate sophisticated satellite -- a collaboration between the European Space Agency (ESA) and JAXA -- blasted off from California on a mission to investigate what role clouds could play in the fight against climate change.
The EarthCARE satellite will orbit nearly 400 kilometres (250 miles) above Earth for three years.
P.M.Smith--AMWN