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[/news/scott-morrison/index.html Scott Morrison] insists a [/news/coronavirus/index.html coronavirus] vaccine will not be rolled out to Australians unless it's safe enough for his own children.<br>The prime minister on Sunday night talked up Australia's deals worth $3.5billion to buy and produce millions of doses of four vaccines if they are approved by regulators.<br>'All the four vaccines we've invested in are proving to be on track and were looking to have them distributed in the first quarter of next year,' he told [ ]. <br>The Australian leader though said no vaccine would be distributed around Australia until authorities are 100 per cent certain it is safe for the public to use.<br>         A chemist is pictured at AstraZeneca's headquarters in Sydney on August 19.<br><br>Prime Minister Scott Morrison has insisted a coronavirus vaccine will not be rolled out to Australians unless it's completely safe<br>         The Australian leader said on Sunday night no vaccine would be distributed around Australia until authorities can be 100 per cent certain it is safe<br>'I want to assure Australians about the vaccines that are made available to them - they must be safe.<br>'There will be no compromises on safety and on health.<br>'That vaccine has to be good enough for my family to be good enough for everyone else and their families too.'<br>Mr Morrison previously said vulnerable and front line workers will be the first to receive the vaccine as soon as one is deemed to be safe. <br>  RELATED ARTICLES  [# Previous] [# 1] [# Next]    [/news/article-8997329/Scott-Morrison-supports-wine-industry-China-introduces-212-cent-tariff.html  Scott Morrison vows to help embattled farmers after China...] [/news/article-8996871/HomeBuilder-grants-extended-funding-boosted-900million.html  Homeowners offered FREE slice of $900million pot for home...]    <br><br><br><br>Share this article<br>Share<br><br><br>The first doses are expected to arrive on December 28, but a decision on approval by the Therapeutic Goods Administration will take until late January.<br>He earlier this week revealed Australians who refuse to get a vaccine could be forced to quarantine for two weeks when they enter the country unless they have a 'genuine medical reason' not to get the jab.<br>The prime minister previously said a vaccine, which is expected to roll out in March, will be optional but the government will find ways to encourage people to take it. <br>         Pictured: Vials reading 'COVID-19'.<br><br>Australians have been told they could be forced to quarantine for two weeks when they enter the country<br>Mr Morrison's comments came as the resumption of wild animal wet markets in Asia sparked a dire warning they could spark more pandemics across the globe.  <br>Covid-19 is believed to have originated and spread from animals to humans at a marketplace in Wuhan, in China's Hubei province<br>Environmental investigator Steven Galster went undercover in Bangkok's Chatuchak wildlife market in a 60 Minutes expose in March - claiming the filthy conditions had the potential to spark a 'second Wuhan'. <br>The covert footage showed cramped cages full of blue-tongued lizards, iguanas,  [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/blog/du-lich-bali-tuyet-voi-nhu-the-nao.html kynghidongduong.vn] monkeys, Australian cockatoos, African meerkats, ferrets, rare tortoises, porcupines, snakes and skunks, among others. <br>         Environmental investigator [http://de.pons.com/übersetzung?q=Steven%20Galster%27s&l=deen&in=&lf=en Steven Galster's] covert footage in March showed cramped cages full of blue-tongued lizards, iguanas, monkeys, cockatoos, African meerkats, ferrets, rare tortoises, porcupines, snakes, skunks and other animals<br>         Pictured: Bangkok's Chatuchak wildlife market has the potential to spark a 'second Wuhan', Mr Galster warned<br>On Sunday night, the anti-animal trafficking expert said the reopening of the market in the months since could spark another pandemic.  <br>'We need to ban the commercial trade of wild animals just the same way we banned slavery,' Mr Galster said.<br>'That's the point of history we're at right now - if we don't do that we're definitely going to have a pandemic and it could be much worse than this one.<br>'We were successful in closing it down but unfortunately they've re-opened.'   <br>Mr Galster has said in March animals lumped together in wet markets that are not normally in close contact in the wild are particularly vulnerable to viruses.<br>While being kept in squalid conditions at the markets, those viruses can leap to humans who handle them.  <br>            Environmental investigator and human rights campaigner Steven Galster believes Chatuchak illegla wildlife market in Bangkok is 'Wuhan in the making'<br>Mr Galster said he believed Chatuchak was a 'Wuhan in the making'.<br>'It's a prescription for disaster, all within this small, hot room ready to infect somebody,' he said.<br>Mr Galster said not just Chinese wildlife markets should be shut down, but also illegal trading hubs in Indonesia, Laos, Cambodia and Burma. <br>The virus is suspected to have crossed to humans from the pangolin - a type of scaly anteater - which is the most trafficked wild animal in the world.<br>        Alarming undercover footage revealed how overseas food markets are still selling 'high-risk' wildlife<br>'It's a wild animal that's been taken out of its natural environment,  [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/blog/du-lich-bali-tuyet-voi-nhu-the-nao.html du lịch ba li] consumed in some way, come into contact with people in an unnatural way,' Mr Galster said.<br>'I think the pangolin… whose only defence is to curl up into a ball, has decided that conservationists weren't doing enough, it struck back itself.<br>'I think this is mother nature's revenge.<br><br>We're not surprised. We've been working on this for years, and we're trying to warn people that this is global. <br>'There are sleeping time bombs across the region right now.'<br><div class="art-ins mol-factbox news" data-version="2" id="mol-b94ff660-322b-11eb-9ecd-4975d4506efe" website says vaccine won&apos;t be rolled out until he&apos;s sure it&apos;s safe
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[/news/china/index.html China] is sending a spaceship to the Moon later this month to collect the first samples of rock and dust to be returned to Earth in more than 40 years.<br>Chang'e-5 will have just a single lunar day to collect the material from a previously unexplored region of the near side of the Moon before returning to Earth.<br>The last time rock samples from the surface of the Moon were brought back to Earth was from the last Apollo mission that returned home in December 1972.<br>China is one of just three countries - including the USSR and the US - to have successfully made a soft landing on the surface of our nearest celestial neighbour.<br>The rocks will help scientists better date the last known volcanic activity on the surface of the Moon - thought to be anything from 1 billion to 3.5 billion years ago. <br>The spaceship will lift off from the Wenchang Satellite Launch Center on Hainan Island on November 24 on a Long March 5 rocket and land in the north of the Oceanus Procellarum - a vast lava plain on the lunar surface.<br>         Chang'e-5 will have just a single lunar day - 14 Earth days - to collect the material from a previously unexplored region of the near side of the Moon before returning <br>         The spaceship will lift off from the Wenchang Satellite Launch Center on Hainan Island on November 24 on a Long March 5 rocket and land in the north of the Oceanus Procellarum (dark region pictured) - a vast lava plain on the lunar surface<br>It was originally due to launch in 2017 but an engine failure in the launch rocket delayed the lift off - with it finally expected to happen this year.<br>The mission is designed to collect samples of dust and debris from a previously unexplored region of the near side of the Moon and return them to the Earth.<br>This will enable scientists to better study the formation of the Moon and better understand its age and the rocks and minerals on the lunar surface. <br>It is described as a 'grab and go' mission, featuring a lander, ascender,  [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/du-lich-trung-quoc-gia-re/ tour trung quoc] orbiter and returner as part of the Chang'e-5 spacecraft.<br>         In a complicated process the mission will see Chang'e-5 deploy a lander and  [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/du-lich-trung-quoc-gia-re/ tour trung quốc giá rẻ] ascender to the lunar surface, drill for rock samples, re-enter lunar orbit, rendezvous with a returner space ship that will come back to Earth and fall to the surface via a parachute with the rock samples<br>        The craft will land close to Mons Rumker, a 1,300 mile high volcanic complex within the vast lava plain known as the Oceanus Procellarum<br>After the craft enters the lunar orbit the lander and ascender will split off and descend to the surface - close to Mons Rumker, a 1,300 mile high volcanic complex.<br>This is in the northern region of the Oceanus Procellarum - a vast and very dark lava plain that is visible from Earth with the naked eye.<br>After touchdown the lander will drill up to six and  [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/du-lich-trung-quoc-gia-re/ kynghidongduong.vn] a half feet into the ground, extend a robotic arm and scoot up to 4lbs of material ready to come back to Earth. <br>It all has to be completed in a single lunar day - or about 14 Earth days to avoid any dangerous and damaging overnight temperatures that could harm equipment.<br>  RELATED ARTICLES  [# Previous] [# 1] [# Next]    [/sciencetech/article-8909935/NASA-reestablishes-contact-43-year-old-Voyager-2-11-6-BILLION-miles-Earth.html  NASA reestablishes contact with 43-year-old Voyager 2 which...] [/sciencetech/article-8909399/Astronomers-claim-Moons-long-lost-twin.html  Astronomers find the Moon's 'long-lost twin': Large rock...] [/sciencetech/article-8909049/All-seven-planets-visible-night-sky-week.html  Solar system puts on a show: All seven planets will be...] [/sciencetech/article-8906289/International-Space-Station-hails-two-decades-continuous-human-presence-low-Earth-orbit.html  International Space Station marks two decades of humans...]    <br><br><br><br>Share this article<br>Share<br>16 shares<br><br><br>According to Clive Neal, a geoscientists at the [http://search.about.com/?q=University University] of Notre Dame, speaking to Nature, 'anything could go wrong' including the lander toppling over, crash landings or samples escaping from the canister along the way.<br>Assuming the lander is able to hold on to the rock samples it enter the ascender, lift off into orbit then rendezvous with the [http://www.usatoday.com/search/returner%20vehicle/ returner vehicle] which will bring them home.<br>If it all goes well then sometime in early December the samples will parachute back to Earth towards the Siziwang Banner in Inner Mongolia for collection. <br>The Chnag'e-5 trip is the latest in a series of increasingly complex missions launched by the Chinese National Space Administration (CNSA) to the lunar surface.  <br>CNSA sent lunar orbiters in 2007 and 2010 named Chang'e-1 and 2 after the mythical Chinese Moon goddess - followed by Chang'e-3 in 2013 that landed a rover.<br>         China is only the third country to have made a soft landing on the surface of the Moon after the US (purple and turquoise) and the USSR (red).<br><br>If the sample mission goes ahead it will be the first samples from the lunar surface returned to Earth in over 40 years<br>Last year Chang'e-4 became the first to touch down on the surface of the far side of the Moon, cementing China's place in the lunar exploration history books.<br>The country hopes to have humans on the surface of the Moon by 2030 - about six years after NASA hopes to send the first woman and next man as part of the Artemis mission - that could eventually see European astronauts land on the surface. <br>Bringing rock samples back from the surface is a whole new level of complexity for the space agency, with only the USSR and US having previously done so.<br><div class="art-ins mol-factbox floatRHS sciencetech" data-version="2" id="mol-c024b4a0-2022-11eb-bbf6-6ba57437d4e7" website ROCKS will be scooped up from lunar surface by China this month

Revision as of 11:28, 30 December 2020

[/news/china/index.html China] is sending a spaceship to the Moon later this month to collect the first samples of rock and dust to be returned to Earth in more than 40 years.
Chang'e-5 will have just a single lunar day to collect the material from a previously unexplored region of the near side of the Moon before returning to Earth.
The last time rock samples from the surface of the Moon were brought back to Earth was from the last Apollo mission that returned home in December 1972.
China is one of just three countries - including the USSR and the US - to have successfully made a soft landing on the surface of our nearest celestial neighbour.
The rocks will help scientists better date the last known volcanic activity on the surface of the Moon - thought to be anything from 1 billion to 3.5 billion years ago. 
The spaceship will lift off from the Wenchang Satellite Launch Center on Hainan Island on November 24 on a Long March 5 rocket and land in the north of the Oceanus Procellarum - a vast lava plain on the lunar surface.
Chang'e-5 will have just a single lunar day - 14 Earth days - to collect the material from a previously unexplored region of the near side of the Moon before returning 
The spaceship will lift off from the Wenchang Satellite Launch Center on Hainan Island on November 24 on a Long March 5 rocket and land in the north of the Oceanus Procellarum (dark region pictured) - a vast lava plain on the lunar surface
It was originally due to launch in 2017 but an engine failure in the launch rocket delayed the lift off - with it finally expected to happen this year.
The mission is designed to collect samples of dust and debris from a previously unexplored region of the near side of the Moon and return them to the Earth.
This will enable scientists to better study the formation of the Moon and better understand its age and the rocks and minerals on the lunar surface. 
It is described as a 'grab and go' mission, featuring a lander, ascender, tour trung quoc orbiter and returner as part of the Chang'e-5 spacecraft.
In a complicated process the mission will see Chang'e-5 deploy a lander and tour trung quốc giá rẻ ascender to the lunar surface, drill for rock samples, re-enter lunar orbit, rendezvous with a returner space ship that will come back to Earth and fall to the surface via a parachute with the rock samples
The craft will land close to Mons Rumker, a 1,300 mile high volcanic complex within the vast lava plain known as the Oceanus Procellarum
After the craft enters the lunar orbit the lander and ascender will split off and descend to the surface - close to Mons Rumker, a 1,300 mile high volcanic complex.
This is in the northern region of the Oceanus Procellarum - a vast and very dark lava plain that is visible from Earth with the naked eye.
After touchdown the lander will drill up to six and kynghidongduong.vn a half feet into the ground, extend a robotic arm and scoot up to 4lbs of material ready to come back to Earth. 
It all has to be completed in a single lunar day - or about 14 Earth days to avoid any dangerous and damaging overnight temperatures that could harm equipment.
RELATED ARTICLES [# Previous] [# 1] [# Next] [/sciencetech/article-8909935/NASA-reestablishes-contact-43-year-old-Voyager-2-11-6-BILLION-miles-Earth.html NASA reestablishes contact with 43-year-old Voyager 2 which...] [/sciencetech/article-8909399/Astronomers-claim-Moons-long-lost-twin.html Astronomers find the Moon's 'long-lost twin': Large rock...] [/sciencetech/article-8909049/All-seven-planets-visible-night-sky-week.html Solar system puts on a show: All seven planets will be...] [/sciencetech/article-8906289/International-Space-Station-hails-two-decades-continuous-human-presence-low-Earth-orbit.html International Space Station marks two decades of humans...]



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According to Clive Neal, a geoscientists at the University of Notre Dame, speaking to Nature, 'anything could go wrong' including the lander toppling over, crash landings or samples escaping from the canister along the way.
Assuming the lander is able to hold on to the rock samples it enter the ascender, lift off into orbit then rendezvous with the returner vehicle which will bring them home.
If it all goes well then sometime in early December the samples will parachute back to Earth towards the Siziwang Banner in Inner Mongolia for collection. 
The Chnag'e-5 trip is the latest in a series of increasingly complex missions launched by the Chinese National Space Administration (CNSA) to the lunar surface.  
CNSA sent lunar orbiters in 2007 and 2010 named Chang'e-1 and 2 after the mythical Chinese Moon goddess - followed by Chang'e-3 in 2013 that landed a rover.
China is only the third country to have made a soft landing on the surface of the Moon after the US (purple and turquoise) and the USSR (red).

If the sample mission goes ahead it will be the first samples from the lunar surface returned to Earth in over 40 years
Last year Chang'e-4 became the first to touch down on the surface of the far side of the Moon, cementing China's place in the lunar exploration history books.
The country hopes to have humans on the surface of the Moon by 2030 - about six years after NASA hopes to send the first woman and next man as part of the Artemis mission - that could eventually see European astronauts land on the surface. 
Bringing rock samples back from the surface is a whole new level of complexity for the space agency, with only the USSR and US having previously done so.
<div class="art-ins mol-factbox floatRHS sciencetech" data-version="2" id="mol-c024b4a0-2022-11eb-bbf6-6ba57437d4e7" website ROCKS will be scooped up from lunar surface by China this month