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BUSINESS8 Saturday, February 18, 2017
© GRAPHIC NEWSSources: PTI, The Hindu, University of Leeds, ESA’s SEOM Programme Pictures: Associated Press, European Space Agency
Amid speculation Nepal’s deadly 2015 earthquake might have caused Mount Everestto shrink, India is dispatching an expedition to the summit to confirm whetherthe world’s highest mountain is indeed still 8,848 metres above sea level
Swarna Subba Rao:India’s Surveyor Generalis sending an expeditionto Mount Everest toremeasure it. Expeditionis estimated to cost$800,000 for a team of30-plus people toascend mountain
Interferogram over Kathmandu:Generated from two Sentinel-1A scans onApril 17 and April 29 – before and afterearthquake. Rainbow-coloured areasrepresent ground movement between scans.Each “fringe” of colour representsabout 3cm of deformation. Image indicatesvertical movement of up to 9m, with 3mof lateral movement in Kathmandu
Kathmandu
Apr 25, 2015:Epicentre of7.8-magnitudequake
N E P A L
I N D I A
60 miles100km
C H I N A
MountEverest
Lhotse
R o n g b u k G l a c i e r
East Rongbuk Glacier
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R o n g b u k G l a c i e r
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1953 BaseCamp(5,364m)
Present-dayBaseCamp(5,364m)
Present-dayBaseCamp(5,364m)
KhumbuGacier
KhumbuGacier
NorthFaceNorthFace
East Face
East Face
NorthCol
NorthCol
SouthCol
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oulo
ir
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CHINACHINA NEPALNEPAL
1856: IndiansurveyorRadhanathSikdar usestriangulation toestablish world’s highest peakat 8,839.2m
INDIA1955: Indiansurvey uses theodolites toset official heightas 8,848m
1975: Chineseexpedition findsheight is 8,848.13m
2005: Chinese expeditionplaces beacon at peak.After thickness of ice andsnow is discounted,height is calculated at8,844.43m
1999: U.S.Everest-Millenniumteam anchors GPSunit to peak – heightrevised to 8,850m
Apr 29, 2015: Data fromEurope’s Sentinel-1A
radar satellite suggestsEverest’s height fell by 2.8 centimetres
1953 route ofEdmund Hillary
and TenzingNorgay (below)
© GRAPHIC NEWS
Geologists claim that a huge landmass almost entirely submerged inthe southwest Pacific, is distinct enough to constitute a separate
continent. At five million square kilometres, Zealandiawould be the world’s smallest continent
Bruce Luyendyk Geophysicist coinedterm Zealandia in 1995,when it was thought tomeet three of the four thresholdsrequired for continent statusNew study using satellitetechnology and gravity mapsof sea floor revealed Zealandiais large unified area, fulfillingall four requirements
SOUTHAMERICA
AFRICAASIA
NORTHAMERICA
ANTARCTICA
AUSTRALIA
EUROPE
ZEALANDIA
High elevation relative tosurrounding area
C R I T E R I A
Distinctive geologyCrust thicker compared with
surrounding ocean floor
Continental crust limitsActive plate boundary
Well-defined area
Measures 4.9 million sq km,about two thirds of Australia
Z E A L A N D I A
94% of area is underwaterBelieved to have broken away
from ancient supercontinentGondwana and sank between60 and 85 million years ago
500km310 miles
AUSTRALIANPLATE
AUSTRALIANPLATE
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PACIFICPLATE
ZE
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AL
AN
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AU
STR
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VanuatuVanuatu
FijiFijiNewCaledoniaNewCaledonia
NewZealand
NewZealand
Source: GSA Today Picture: LinkedIn
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Seoul
Starting off as a humble grocery store 79 years ago,
South Korean giant Samsung has a checkered history, with its founder, his son and grandson all having run-ins with the law.
T h e s p r a w l i n g conglomerate now so dominates South Korea that citizens joke they live in the “Republic of Samsung”. But three generations of the Lee family have faced charges including tax evasion and bribing government officials.
The heir to the business, Lee Jae-Yong, was arrested Friday as part of a probe into corruption and influence-peddling that caused President Park Geun-Hye to be impeached, in a body blow to the firm’s reputation.
The Samsung Electronics vice chairman is accused of paying nearly $40 million in bribes to Park’s secret confidante to secure policy favours.
Both his father and grandfather were also linked to tax evasion but were never physically detained, creating a widespread perception that the family operates above the rule of law.
Samsung -- which means “three stars” in Korean -- started out as a grocery store in the southeastern city of Daegu in 1938 when Lee Byung-Chull moved away from his large landowning family in nearby southern Uiryeong county.
It grew fast, expanding to Seoul in 1947, before Byung-Chull branched out into fertiliser, textiles, insurance and electronics in the 1960s.
However scandal quickly engulfed Byung-Chull when the company’s fertiliser unit was caught smuggling artificial sweetener amid allegations he had planned to share the proceeds with corrupt politicians.
He avoided imprisonment in return for “donating” the fertiliser unit to the state, but his second-born served six months in prison.
Legal turmoilByung-Chull’s third son Lee Kun-Hee, who inherited the business after his oldest son fell out of favour, was also engulfed in legal turmoil.
Along with many other business tycoons of the era, Kun-Hee was charged with bribing then-President Roh Tae-Woo and given a two-year suspended sentence in 1996.
Almost a decade later in the mid 2000s, Kun-Hee was questioned by prosecutors after audio tapes of Samsung executives discussing ways to bribe politicians and state prosecutors were leaked to the press.
S a m s u n g issued a public a p o l o g y and made a donation of 800 billion won ($700 million) to charity.
But just two years later Kun-Hee found himself in hot water once again when a former S a m s u n g l a w y e r claimed he had bribed government officials on K u n - H e e ’ s orders and his private bank account had been used to hide the company’s billion-dollar slush fund.
A special law was enacted in 2007 to investigate Samsung, Kun-Hee and his only son Jae-Yong.
Jae-Yong was questioned over allegations that a Samsung subsidiary issued stocks at cut-price rates to help him inherit control of the group but he was not formally charged.
However his father was
indicted for tax evasion and other charges. In 2008, Kun-Hee announced his resignation, vowing to reform the group and improve transparency.
Kun-Hee was sentenced to three years in prison, suspended for five years. But a y e a r later, he was
pardoned.
with the law
Samsung’srun-ins
Lee Jae-Yong