MARI

Apr 19 2026POLITICS

Strait Tension: U. S. and Iran Trade Blame Over Ship Incidents

The Strait of Hormuz, a key waterway for global oil traffic, is stuck in a standoff. Both sides have accused each other of breaking a cease‑fire that was meant to keep ships safe. The U. S. claims Iran fired on vessels, while Iran says the American blockade is a war crime. A U. S. president p

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Apr 19 2026ENVIRONMENT

LECA Trash on Portugal’s Coast: A Hidden Problem

A new study shows that lightweight expanded clay aggregates, a common building material, are flooding Portugal’s beaches. Researchers walked along 50‑meter stretches of shore at eight different spots around Aveiro, from open ocean dunes to sheltered lagoon edges and a busy port channel. At eve

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Apr 19 2026SPORTS

Will the Mariners turn things around or keep digging themselves deeper?

The Seattle Mariners have started the season poorly with a rough 8-13 record, and fans are growing restless. A recent home loss to Texas revealed more than just weak hitting — it showed a team lacking intensity and urgency. After coming close to a championship last year, the club seems stuck in a st

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Apr 18 2026HEALTH

Husband’s Too‑Open Talk About Wife’s Health

A woman married for 26 years feels her husband’s chatter about personal matters has become a source of embarrassment. He is friendly and shares everything with everyone, but he does not respect her wish to keep medical details private. The wife had a cancer scare and surgery, choosing to tell her ad

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Apr 18 2026POLITICS

Ukraine Offers Middle East a Playbook for Sea Safety

Ukraine’s president recently pitched an idea at a global video meeting: teaming up to keep ships safe in the Strait of Hormuz. The strait is a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman that sees a huge chunk of the world’s oil pass through. He argued that how countries handle Hormuz now could set a patt

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Apr 18 2026BUSINESS

India’s New Maritime Bank Gears Up for Big Fundraising Push

A government-backed lender focused on India’s waterways is making major moves to grow its lending power. The company, which specializes in financing ports, shipyards, and inland water routes, plans to raise about $1 billion by 2027. Instead of relying only on traditional loans, it will tap into the

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Apr 15 2026ENVIRONMENT

Building safer materials from volcanic ash

Scientists found that ash from Spain’s 2021 Tajogaite volcano could help make greener building materials. They mixed it with strong alkaline solutions and tested how it behaves in water. The tests showed some metals like molybdenum (Mo) leak out more than allowed for safe landfills. Other experimen

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Apr 10 2026BUSINESS

Panama’s Leader Tries to Fix Shipping Disputes with China

Panama’s president, Jose Raul Mulino, visited the Balboa port last week to ease concerns about rising tensions with China. Just days earlier, Panama’s foreign minister had accused China of unfairly increasing inspections on ships flying the Panamanian flag. Mulino insisted the country doesn’t want c

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Apr 08 2026POLITICS

Ukraine's War Lessons Spread to Asia

Countries in Asia are taking notice of Ukraine’s maritime defense strategies, which were shaped by years of war. After Russia’s invasion, Ukraine found creative ways to protect its Black Sea ports without a large navy. Instead of traditional warships, it used smaller, low-cost tools like robotic boa

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Apr 06 2026TECHNOLOGY

How Submarines Find Their Way Without GPS

On land, GPS helps cars and phones pinpoint their location in seconds. But underwater, these signals vanish almost instantly. Saltwater blocks satellite waves because seawater conducts electricity, absorbing the radio frequencies GPS relies on. Even advanced systems like GLONASS and BeiDou face the

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