Home Knowledge Base Nanjing

Nanjing

No mentions found

This entity hasn't been tracked yet, or Iris is still building its knowledge base.

Related Articles from SNS

Photos of the Week: Kite Chase, River Float, Night Harvest

Jeff Chiu / APElena Ostergren shows her voting sticker to her dog Olaf at Club Fugazi during the California primary election on June 2, 2026, in San Francisco. Yang Bo / China News Service / VCG / GettyWorkers repair a peacock-shaped topiary at Gulou Square on June 4, 2026, in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, China. Artur Widak / NurPhoto / GettyA wild rhesus macaque sits upright on a wooden fence overlooking a dramatic landscape of sandstone pillars in the Yuanjiajie Scenic Area in Zhangjiajie...

The Atlantic 4d ago

China begins large-scale delivery of gallium chips for space-ground 6G network

China has delivered 5 million gallium nitride semiconductors to power smart terminals for a space‑air‑ground integrated 6G network – the first time the cutting-edge chips have been mass-produced and put into commercial use. According to an article in state media, the breakthrough chip was developed by the US-sanctioned No 55 Research Institute of China Electronics Technology Group Corporation (CETC) and its subsidiary, Nanjing Guobo Electronics. China is the world’s largest holder and...

South China Morning Post 1d ago

Study reveals north–south differences in water isotopes across North America during the last deglaciation

Study reveals north–south differences in water isotopes across North America during the last deglaciation Stephanie Baum Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor The last deglaciation (between 11,000 and 20,000 years ago) was a period of dramatic natural warming on Earth. During this time, North America experienced the most extensive ice-sheet melting on the planet, which profoundly reshaped its climate and water cycle. But when scientists look at oxygen isotopes in stalagmites—a key...

Phys.org 1d ago

The gaokao effect: how China’s rigorous exam influences aspirations and social mobility

The gaokao effect: how China’s rigorous exam influences aspirations and social mobility To ensure fairness, teachers responsible for developing exam questions reportedly confined in secure facilities for about a month In the second and final instalment of a two-part series on China’s pivotal national college entrance examination, or gaokao, the SCMP explores the evolution of the country’s contemporary examination system and its ongoing influence on societal and familial expectations. This...

South China Morning Post 1d ago

Japan museum under fire for ‘rewriting history’ with Nanking ‘incident’ label

Japan museum under fire for ‘rewriting history’ with Nanking ‘incident’ label Conservatives force the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum to drop the word massacre, a move critics say downplays Japan’s wartime aggression The Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum, which previously resisted revisionist attempts, appeared to have capitulated to a civic group’s pressure campaign, following Thursday’s release of proposed exhibit changes by its operations council. Other amendments announced by the museum, opened in...

South China Morning Post 2d ago

Attribution constraints reveal stronger future intensification of the upper‑level Hadley circulation

Attribution constraints reveal stronger future intensification of the upper‑level Hadley circulation Gaby Clark Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor The Hadley circulation, a key atmospheric conveyor belt transporting heat and moisture from the tropics to the subtropics, directly influences subtropical aridity, the positions of tropical rainfall belts, and extreme weather risks. However, climate models have long shown inconsistencies in simulating its upper-level intensity...

Phys.org 6d ago

What a US lawyer’s diaries show about prosecuting Japanese atrocities of Nanking massacre

What a US lawyer’s diaries show about prosecuting Japanese atrocities of Nanking massacre Disclosure came ahead of Donald Trump’s high-stakes visit to China and amid Japan’s recent attempts to erode lessons of post-WWII tribunal A US prosecutor’s newly revealed diaries from World War II have laid bare the gruelling effort to document Japanese wartime atrocities in China and the unlikely bond forged between him and the people he helped. The diaries belonged to David Nelson Sutton, an American...

South China Morning Post 10h ago

China woman dances with eye patch and mask after losing partial jaw, vision in one eye to cancer

China woman dances with eye patch and mask after losing partial jaw, vision in one eye to cancer Brave dancer with a dream who was brought up by a single mother overcomes falls and pain, takes to stage with determination A 24-year-old Chinese woman keeps managing to shine on stage despite wearing a patch and a mask after she lost an eye and her left upper jaw to cancer. Han Yifei, from eastern China’s Jiangsu province, has moved many people online and garnered over 7,000 followers on a...

South China Morning Post 5d ago

Half the world's reservoirs could be clogged up with dirt by 2060

Over half of the planet’s freshwater reservoirs will be “functionally dead” by 2060 due to sediment build-up, a study has predicted. Dams block silt, sand and gravel from flowing downstream, so over time this material accumulates in reservoirs, shrinking the space for water. The trapping of sediment can also compromise dam safety and have damaging impacts on downstream ecosystems.

New Scientist 1d ago

Top Chinese map-making scientist detained in anti-corruption sweep

Top Chinese map-making scientist detained in anti-corruption sweep Zhou Chenghu, a cartographer with a business empire in geographic information and low-altitude economy, probed by anti-graft authorities In late May, the Economic Observer, a weekly Chinese newspaper, cited “informed sources” and said the 62-year-old CAS academician had been taken away by disciplinary inspectors from the lobby of his research institute building in late April. His personal details have since been removed from...

South China Morning Post 7d ago