21/01/2016 Newsround


21/01/2016

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Leah here with Thursday's Newsround - coming up.

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And Tim Peake explains how to go to the loo in space.

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In the past few months here on Newsround, we've been

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reporting on the problems in the UK steel industry.

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Many companies have been saying they can't afford to keep making

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steel here and some factories have had to close, with many people

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This week another company has said they need to make big job cuts.

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Ayshah's been in one steel making town in Wales to find out what this

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means for on the people living there.

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Ireland Port Talbot in south Wales, and people are worried here -- I am

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in. 750 people have lost their jobs, and that has a big impact on

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everyone here. Steel is something used in cans for your food, in

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buildings, and even used in cars. It's a really useful material. I

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went to a local school to find out what they think about what is

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happening. If it closed it would be guttering. It is a huge part of

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Wales. We're used to what it is now. A lot of people would have to move

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because they have qualifications for that job. We lose our community. My

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family live here. Might dad and uncle lived there and my great

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grandad used to work there. My father and great grand further all

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work there. If their job goes, there will be less money. It is a good

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place to work when you're starting your career in engineering. If the

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economy goes down in Wales, because of China making cheapest steel, we

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would be a country that makes nothing. It is bad for the people

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who work there, but they have to do it because if they keep paying these

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people, and they're not selling any steel, they are losing money. We

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have a cafe in Port Talbot, and it has been passed down generations. We

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live there now. If the steelworks where to go, it would be a major

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thing. We would lose most of our customers, and most of the customers

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are people from the steelworks, and it is not just our cafe, it would be

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all the businesses in Port Talbot. It will decrease and everything.

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Scientists in America think they may have discovered a new planet

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This is what they think it might look like.

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They think it's ten times bigger than Earth and orbiting billions

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It's the question astronauts get asked the most -

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Now British astronaut Tim Peake has explained all.

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It really is quite simple. Here is a tube you we in, take the tap off.

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For number two, the airflow does the same thing. Simple as that.

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They stalked the earth around 100 million years ago and scientists

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are constantly uncovering dinosaur fossils.

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But it's thought Sir David Attenborough has uncovered

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the world's biggest dinosaur for his latest documentary,

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and he's told Newsround he believes there's a very small chance

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the prehistoric beasts could be brought back from extinction.

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A science experiment gone horribly wrong. Jurassic World showing

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Hollywood's take on engineering dinosaurs, but could this

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blockbuster be a reality? David Attenborough, who was part visibly

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of attain that uncovered the biggest dinosaur on earth, believes anything

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is possible. Is there a possibility scientist could bring back dinosaurs

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from extinction? It is just conceivably possible that scientists

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could discover a way to do so, and if they did come it would be very,

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very expensive to do. He believes the money would be better spent

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looking after animals around today, plus there would be no space for

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them. Where would you put him? We have enough problems with keeping

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elephants live, so where would you put a dinosaur that is ten times

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bigger than an elephant? While there is no plans for a dinosaur world any

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time soon, David Ashburton made a surprising discovery in Argentina.

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-- David Attenborough. They found over 200 separate bones. They come

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from seven different individual animals, so it isn't 200 bones of

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the same dinosaur, but it is a considerable number. We can be sure

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what the animal lookalike. First David Attenborough discovering bones

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is exciting for him, and he believes there is so much more out there to

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find. There is more from Sir David Attenborough on our website, but we

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are back this afternoon at 4:20pm. Goodbye.

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