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PriceStats ® Vanishing Cultures Photography. Endangered Languages Project. Google Fights to Save 3,054 Languages. Will you be any worse off the moment humans cease to speak in Aragonese? How about Navajo or Ojibwa? Or Koro, a language only just discovered in a tiny corner of northeast India?

No, you probably wouldn't, not in that moment. But humanity would be. Science, art and culture would be. If, as the phrase goes, another language equals another soul, then some 3,054 souls — 50% of the world's total languages — are set to die out by 2100. If there is hope, it lies in the world's centers of information — such as Google. The site, launched early Thursday, features videos and an interactive map. You can hear the heartbreaking, beautiful sound of Koro being sung, or read 18th century manuscripts written in a nearly-dead Native American tongue. The idea is to unite a lot of smaller preservation efforts under the Google.org banner. Check out the project's video below, and let us know in the comments: how else can 21st century technology help save ancient languages?

Jake Porway: Want to Save the World? There's an App for That. Home | DataKind. Home. Data for Hawaii | data.hawaii.gov. Home | Global Pulse. Human Footprint Interactive. Geographers study the Earth and its physical features, inhabitants, and cultural phenomenon. They examine the physical and human characteristics of a region, ranging in scale from local to global, to explain an event or solve a problem. While many geographers have at least a bachelor’s degree in geography, many professionals, such as teachers, traffic consultants, and doctors, must also use geography in their jobs when examining specific challenges and solutions to issues. This geo-story introduces you to some of these folks who use geography. Each story point includes images, a short bio, and an interactive mapping tool that allows you to see the regions where these people work.

From Africa to Eastern Europe to Asia to the Caribbean, geography is an integral component to how these professionals approach their work. Cultural Diversity in the United States. Bill Gates on energy: Innovating to zero! Juan Enriquez: Using biology to rethink the energy challenge. Saul Griffith: High-altitude wind energy from kites! Debate: Does the world need nuclear energy? Donald Sadoway: The missing link to renewable energy. Amory Lovins: A 40-year plan for energy. Lisa Margonelli: The political chemistry of oil. RSA Animate - The Empathic Civilisation.

Re-thinking Progress: The Circular Economy. The Future by Eclectic Method on Devour. The top 10 causes of death. Of the 56.9 million deaths worldwide in 2016, more than half (54%) were due to the top 10 causes. Ischaemic heart disease and stroke are the world’s biggest killers, accounting for a combined 15.2 million deaths in 2016. These diseases have remained the leading causes of death globally in the last 15 years. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease claimed 3.0 million lives in 2016, while lung cancer (along with trachea and bronchus cancers) caused 1.7 million deaths.

Diabetes killed 1.6 million people in 2016, up from less than 1 million in 2000. Deaths due to dementias more than doubled between 2000 and 2016, making it the 5th leading cause of global deaths in 2016 compared to 14th in 2000. Lower respiratory infections remained the most deadly communicable disease, causing 3.0 million deaths worldwide in 2016. The death rate from diarrhoeal diseases decreased by almost 1 million between 2000 and 2016, but still caused 1.4 million deaths in 2016. Injuries claimed 4.9 million lives in 2016. Aiko Stevenson: A 4 Degrees Celsius Rise? World leaders will gather in Doha this week to discuss the fate of our planet whose future now hangs in the balance. According to the World Bank, global temperatures may rise by 4 degrees Celsius as early as 2060. This will usher in changes not seen since the last Ice Age.

"It is my hope that this report shocks us into action. It is a stark reminder that climate change affects everything. There is no certainty that adaptation to a 4 degrees Celsius world is even possible. And this magnitude of climate change -- human-induced -- is occurring over a century, not millennia. According to the World Bank, extreme weather will thus become the "new normal. " In this much hotter world, sea levels will rise by at least three feet. This stark warning by the World Bank is one of many that has been issued by a global body in recent weeks.

According to the IEA, both measures are desperately needed in order to stave off the worst effects of global warming.