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Fossilized Tracks Are From Oldest Slug Ever Found

Researchers reported Friday they have found signs of the oldest animal known in existence, a centimeter-long slug whose fossilized tracks in Uruguay are 585 million years old.

That would make the creature almost 30 million years older than any previous animals known to modern humans. The findings are described in the U.S. journal Science.

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Bangladesh's Hindu Women Fight for Divorce Rights

Unlike her Muslim compatriots, Tarulata Rani is unable to inherit anything from her family, cannot divorce and cannot claim maintenance from her absent husband -- all because she is a Bangladeshi Hindu.

Unlike Bangladeshi Muslims or Hindus in neighboring India and Nepal, Bangladeshi Hindu women can't divorce as the legal provisions do not exist and their marriages have not been allowed to be officially registered.

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UNESCO Urgently Lists Church of Nativity as World Heritage

The U.N. cultural body UNESCO overrode Israeli objections Friday to urgently grant world heritage status to a church in the Palestinian city of Bethlehem worshipped as the birthplace of Jesus.

UNESCO's 13-6 secret vote to add the Church of the Nativity and its pilgrimage route to the prestigious list was received with a round of rousing applause and a celebratory fist pump by the beaming head of the Palestinian delegation at the meeting in Russia's second city of Saint Petersburg.

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Britain Unveils Memorial to WWII Bomber Command

Britain's Queen Elizabeth II unveiled a memorial Thursday to the tens of thousands of airmen killed in the World War II bombardment of German cities.

The Bomber Command Memorial in central London's Green Park is dedicated to the 55,753 Royal Air Force crew who lost their lives in the conflict.

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2000 Old Pottery Found in China

Bits of the oldest known pottery, some 2,000 years older than previously found pieces, have been uncovered in China, researchers said in the U.S. journal Science on Thursday.

The fragments were believed to belong to a community of roving hunter-gatherers some 20,000 years ago and apparent scorch marks indicate they may have been used in cooking.

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Italy Finds Battleship Sunk in 1943 by German Warplane

An Italian battleship which sank during World War II off the coast of Sardinia after it was bombed by a German warplane has been found, Italy's navy said in a statement on Thursday.

"The battleship Roma was sunk on September 9, 1943, by a German plane, in an attack which killed 1,352 sailors. Only 622 people survived," it said.

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UNESCO Lists Mali's Timbuktu as Endangered World Heritage

The U.N. cultural organization UNESCO on Thursday listed the entire town of Timbuktu in the west African nation of Mali as endangered world heritage because of ongoing violence in the region.

UNESCO said the decision to place both the town and the nearby Tomb of Askia on its List of World Heritage in Danger "aims to raise cooperation and support for the sites threatened by the armed conflict in the region."

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Historic Stolen Atlas Returned to Sweden

A 415-year-old atlas stolen from Sweden's Royal Library more than a decade ago was recovered in the United States and has been returned to the Scandinavian country, officials said Wednesday.

The Cornelius van Wytfliet atlas, which contains 19 rare maps, vanished alongside 55 other books, a theft later attributed to the former head of the library's manuscript department, Anders Burius, who committed suicide in 2004.

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Nicosia, a Capital Straddling Two Cultures

"A few steps take you from one culture to another," said Vedia Izzet, a Turkish Cypriot, speaking of her daily trips between the Cypriot capital's Turkish-controlled north and Greek Cypriot south.

"It's like walking through a film between two parallel space-time dimensions, as if the film were punctured," she said of the divide in a country that assumes the European Union's rotating presidency on Sunday.

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Big Ben Tower to Be Renamed After Queen Elizabeth II

Britain's famous parliament clock tower is to be renamed Elizabeth Tower in honor of the queen's diamond jubilee, officials announced on Tuesday.

The change comes after dozens of lawmakers signed up to a campaign to change the name of the tower -- officially named the Clock Tower but commonly known as Big Ben -- in celebration of Queen Elizabeth II's 60th year on the throne.

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