Two people have been killed after being caught in a large avalanche in northern Italy, the country’s mountain rescue service has said.
Three others were seriously injured and two people suffered minor injuries after the it swept through a busy high alpine slope.
The incident happened at an altitude of around 2,400 meters (7,874 feet) on the slopes of the 2,669-meter (8,757 feet) Hohe Ferse mountain (also known as Monte Tallone Grande) near the town of Ratschings, close to the border with Austria.
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A total of 25 skiers were caught in the avalanche in the South Tyrol region on Saturday morning.
The CNSAS rescue service has not specified if the remaining 18 people were trapped or rescued and what, if any, injuries they suffered. But, according to Italian news agency ANSA, most of them “were only grazed and not swallowed up by the mass of snow”.
The agency’s report said the avalanche had a “150m front and a length of several hundred metres”.
A major rescue operation was launched as six helicopters and around 80 rescue staff from CNSAS, the Alpine Association, police and firefighters, along with sniffer dogs, were sent to the scene.
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It was the latest in what European Avalanche Warning Services (EAWS) describes as an unusually high number of avalanches on the continent’s slopes this season.
A total of 127 people had died by 16 March, including 33 in Italy, 31 in France and 29 in Austria, compared to an annual average of 100, EAWS said.
In early February, a record 13 people died on Italian slopes in one week.
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Last month, two British skiers died in an avalanche in France.
The high number of deaths is down to an exceptionally unstable snowpack and the rush of skiers taking on off-piste slopes after recent heavy snowstorms, experts have said.
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Rising temperatures and stronger winds, seen as contributory factors, are the result of climate change, climate experts have argued.
The avalanche danger in the Ridanna Valley, where the latest avalanche occurred, is currently moderate.
A collision near Junction 8, Larkhall, caused traffic chaos on Sunday.
A man has been arrested following a crash between a vehicle and a horsebox on the a busy Scots motorway on Sunday morning.
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The crash happened on the M74 northbound near Junction 8, close to Larkhall, at around 10.50am, partially blocking the motorway in both directions, reports GlasgowLive.
Traffic Scotland confirmed queues were forming as of 1.30pm, with restrictions still in place northbound.
A Police Scotland spokesperson said: “Around 10.50am on Sunday, 22 March, 2026, we received a report of a crash involving a vehicle and horsebox on the M74. One driver has been arrested. Enquiries are ongoing.”
Traffic Scotland warned drivers to approach the area with caution, adding that while the northbound carriageway remains partially blocked, the southbound side is fully open.
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Villa spurned a glorious chance to double their lead when Watkins and Morgan Rogers exchanged passes in the box only for the left leg of Mads Hermansen to deny Watkins from 10 yards.
Paul Tierney awarded Villa a penalty on 27 minutes following a challenge by Konstantinos Mavropanos on Watkins in the box after both Rogers and McGinn failed to capitalise on the advantage played.
However, VAR Stuart Attwell sent Tierney to the pitch-side monitor and the referee overturned his original decision with it deemed Mavropanos had played the ball.
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Mavropanos came to West Ham’s rescue again moments later when he somehow managed to head Rogers’s point-blank volley off the line.
Villa eventually doubled their lead after the break as Hermansen could only parry Rogers’s shot into the path of Watkins, who slid to turn the ball home for his first goal at Villa Park since January.
This question of why some branches of the tree of life explode into thousands of species, while others remain small, has shaped evolutionary biology since Charles Darwin.
My colleague and I have published a new study of cactus flowers which may help explain the conundrum.
For more than a century, scientists have seen flowers that are specialised to a particular pollinator or environment as drivers of the evolution of new diversity. Our new research challenges that idea, which could change how scientists think about the forces that create biodiversity across the plant world.
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Many people think of plants as nice-looking greens. Essential for clean air, yes, but simple organisms. A step change in research is shaking up the way scientists think about plants: they are far more complex and more like us than you might imagine. This blossoming field of science is too delightful to do it justice in one or two stories. This article is part of a series, Plant Curious, exploring scientific studies that challenge the way you view plantlife.
The cactus family, exceptionally diverse and among the most threatened plant groups worldwide, offers a striking example of how some evolutionary lineages thrive while others struggle.
Cacti are icons of slow growth. A towering saguaro may take a decade to reach an inch tall and the psychedelic peyote takes decades to mature. Yet the cactus family is one of the fastest-evolving plant groups on Earth. Over the past 20 to 35 million years, around 1,850 cacti species have come into existence. Although this sounds slow, in geological time it is the blink of an eye. By comparison, about a quarter of the 415 other flowering plant families have five or fewer species. These plant families never branched rapidly like cacti did.
Deserts are often imagined as unchanging and unforgiving landscapes, yet they can be arenas of rapid evolutionary innovation.
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Scientists have linked the large number of cactus species with pollinator specialisation, where cactus flowers adapt to particular pollinators, such as bees, moths or hummingbirds. Another idea attributes the evolutionary success of cacti to the expansion of deserts over the last 30 million years, as much of the Americas became drier and more open.
Cacti seemed to fit this idea perfectly. Their flowers vary from small, understated blooms to large, night-opening blossoms. Some are pollinated by bees, others by hummingbirds, moths or bats.
Cactus flowers are fleeting and beautiful, often lasting only days, and are eagerly anticipated by devoted “plant parents”. Shorter flowers are typically linked to bee pollination, while longer, tubular forms have evolved repeatedly for bats, hummingbirds and moths.
However, my 2024 study which sampled many more species than previous studies, found that neither aridity nor pollination – the two main hypotheses for cactus diversity – was a strong explanation. This challenged a long-standing idea dating back to Darwin, who suggested that specialised flowers could promote the formation of new plant species.
My colleagues and I recently published the Cactus Ecological Database (CactEcoDB), which provides trait data and family trees for cacti, to help researchers understand their origins and future. When we analysed this data in a recent article in the journal Biology Letters, we found an unexpected pattern. We compiled flower length data for more than 750 cacti species, revealing an extraordinary range, from two millimetre blooms to flowers the size of a large dinner plate. This variation reflects adaptation to very different pollinators.
When we analysed the cactus family tree, we found that the speed at which flower size evolves drives the formation of new species, across both recent and deep evolutionary timescales. Natural selection does not seem to favour any particular flower size. Nevertheless it caused repeated bursts of rapid change across the cactus evolutionary tree towards different sizes.
What this means is simple but powerful. It is not the presence of a particular flower type or pollinator that drives cactus evolution. It is the speed at which the evolution of flower types occurs, regardless of the outcome. Species with smaller and larger flowers can quickly split into new species, as long as they changed quickly throughout their evolution.
Why this matters
This insight has implications for conservation. Our study suggests that a plant’s capacity for evolutionary change, important for surviving periods of environmental change and extinctions – like the one Earth is currently experiencing – matters more than any specific adaptation.
Protecting biodiversity is not just about saving the species we see today, but also about preserving the evolutionary potential that allows new species to arise. Some species may seem stable or unremarkable now, yet hold great future potential.
Nearly a third of cactus species are threatened with extinction. This is among the highest proportions for any plant group and we risk losing entire evolutionary lineages of cacti, not just species.
Protecting cacti, and nature more widely, means protecting an ongoing evolutionary process, one that allows life to thrive in some of the harshest environments on Earth.
MIDRAND, South Africa (AP) — Bryson DeChambeau won for the second straight week by saving par on the final hole for a 6-under 65 and blistering a 3-wood from a wet lie in the rough on the par-5 18th in a playoff to set up birdie and defeat Jon Rahm at LIV Golf South Africa on Sunday.
DeChambeau’s final start before the Masters brought out some of his best work in winning his fifth overall LIV title. He won last week in Singapore.
He did that to finish at 26-under 258 and join Rahm in the playoff.
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Returning to the par-5 18th, DeChambeau pulled his drive into the mud and muck left of the fairway on the rain-soaked course. He was given free relief and eventually allowed to place the golf ball. Keeping his feet stable, he ripped 3-wood onto the green to 12 feet.
Rahm from the fairway went into a bunker, blasted out to just beyond 12 feet and misread his birdie putt. That gave DeChambeau two putts for the win, and he left the eagle putt inches short.
DeChambeau is the third player with at least five LIV wins, joining Joaquin Niemann (seven) and Brooks Koepka (five), who is now back on the PGA Tour.
According to the Government website, malignant hypertension, a sudden rise in your blood pressure also known as accelerated hypertension, could land drivers with a £1,000 fine and prosecution if not reported to the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency (DVLA), according to the gov.uk website.
However, car and motorbike drivers have been reassured that they do not need to tell the DVLA if they have ‘generic’ high blood pressure.
You must stop driving if a doctor says you have malignant hypertension (a sudden rise in your blood pressure, also known as accelerated hypertension) and can only resume once a doctor confirms their condition is under control.
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The rules differ slightly for bus, coach, or lorry licence holders. They must inform the DVLA if they have high blood pressure, that is consistently above 180/100mmHg.
Similarly, if a doctor diagnoses these drivers with malignant hypertension, the DVLA must be informed.
Individuals can resume driving once a doctor verifies their condition is well-managed.
There are different forms you must fill in on the DVLA website depending on the type of high blood pressure you have.
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High blood pressure tends to be symptomless, making it hard to detect without regular monitoring.
The NHS reports this condition is “common” and more prevalent among older adults.
Risk factors include advanced age, family history of hypertension, certain ethnic backgrounds, an unhealthy, high-salt diet, being overweight, smoking, excessive alcohol consumption, and chronic stress.
According to the latest NHS health survey, in 2024, 30 per cent of adults had been diagnosed with hypertension which is approximately one in three individuals.
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Men are statistically more prone to hypertension, with a prevalence of 32 per cent compared to 27 per cent in women.
Untreated hypertension increased with age, with prevalence highest among those aged 75 and over (18 per cent).
For those with low blood pressure, there is no need to report to the DVLA unless the condition presents symptoms such as dizziness or fainting, which could impact driving ability.
A government spokesperson said: “You can be fined up to £1,000 if you do not tell DVLA about a medical condition that affects your driving. You may be prosecuted if you’re involved in an accident as a result.”
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Further details on when and how to report health conditions to the DVLA can be found at gov.uk/health-conditions-and-driving.
“At a time when institutions can be seen simply through a social or cultural lens, he understands that the Church’s role goes beyond this. It is not only part of the nation’s heritage, but a living expression of faith, rooted in prayer, compassion and a belief in grace and redemption.”
RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) — Israeli settlers rampaged through multiple Palestinian villages overnight Saturday and into Sunday, smashing cars, setting fires and wounding several men in the latest flare-up of violence in the occupied West Bank.
The official Palestinian news agency WAFA reported attacks in at least six communities on Sunday. The Palestinian Red Crescent Society said at least three Palestinians in the village of Jalud suffered head wounds from beatings and were hospitalized after confronting settlers, who were also reported injured.
The violence came as Israel’s government presses ahead with new settlements in the occupied West Bank. Attacks by settlers have intensified alongside a broader surge in violence since the Iran war started.
Israel’s military said it responded to Israeli civilians carrying out “arson against structures and property, as well as engaging in disturbances in the area,” but did not report any arrests or indicate whether investigations were opened.
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WAFA reported attacks in the villages of Silat al Dahr and Fandaqumiya, both near Jenin; in Jalud and Salfit, both south of Nablus; and in the agricultural regions Masafer Yatta and the Jordan Valley. Homes and cars were set ablaze, Palestinians were pepper-sprayed and at least five people were wounded in the overnight assaults, which took place during the Eid al-Fitr holiday marking the end of Ramadan, the agency said.
The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported 25 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli settlers and soldiers this year as of March 15. The Palestinian Authority has also documented a series of arson attacks, including on mosques, across the territory.
The rampage came one day after an 18-year-old settler was killed in a collision with a Palestinian vehicle in an area near two of the villages attacked. Police said they were investigating the settlers’ claims that the collision was deliberate.
When Lizzy Bennet, the witty sister in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice (1813), asks: “What are men to rocks and mountains?” she is thinking about ways of understanding self and world through the notion of the sublime.
The sublime was one of the key 18th-century philosophical ideas of Romanticism, balancing our physical insignificance next to something majestic like a mountain, with our imaginative capacity to conceptualise it. Lizzy is trying to get over her own and her sister Jane’s heartbreak by thinking beyond herself to the wider world of nature around her.
The philosopher Sianne Ngai claims that the notion of the sublime no longer holds any force. Instead, today’s culture replaces the idea with concepts that have a weaker emotional impact on us, such as the “zany”, the “cute” and the “interesting”.
Harvard University Press
For big hits, social media demands zany personalities and cute images. And to say something is “interesting” might actually indicate that you find the topic boring. In her book Our Aesthetic Categories, Ngai basically argues that 21st-century capitalist society has no time for the ecstatic experience of the sublime.
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Although the new BBC TV series The Other Bennet Sister – adapted from Janice Hadlow’s 2020 novel – is a development and continuation of Austen’s novel, the programme steers clear of the sublime and the beautiful and focuses especially on the “cute”.
The Other Bennet Sister starts where Pride and Prejudice also begins. The local grand house Netherfield Park is being let at last, causing much excitement over the identity of the new tenant and the potential opportunities for socialising they may provide.
Focusing on Mary Bennet, the mousy pedantic sister who remains unmarried at the end of Austen’s novel, the TV drama quickly dispatches with the plot of Pride and Prejudice in the first two episodes. Mary is left standing with her mother and father as the rest of her sisters get married.
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But Mr Bennet (Richard E. Grant) dies and the sisters’ cousin Mr Collins (Ryan Sampson) and his wife descend on Longbourn to claim the Bennet family home as their own. So Mary is sent to London to stay with her aunt and uncle, the kindly Gardiners in Gracechurch Street.
In London, Mary begins to to enjoy herself and have her own adventures, and crucially, find out who she is – if she’s not the witty one (Lizzy), the beautiful one (Jane), the good-humoured one (Kitty), or the lively one (Lydia). In this BBC incarnation, Mary is the cute, endearing one.
A different perspective
The first episode rewrites Austen’s novel from Mary’s perspective, with her cutting a lonely and drab figure next to the pastel couples of Lizzy and Jane, and Kitty and Lydia. Ruth Jones’s Mrs Bennet is transformed from a character beset by nerves to a woman with nerves of steel. She forbids Mary a cute romance with her optician, or from flirting with Mr Collins as the formidable matriarch has set her sights on him marrying Lizzy (who, of course, will not have the pompous bore).
The Other Bennet Sister makes Mary’s sisters seem distant and shallow, and focuses on her struggles with self-esteem in response to their lack of notice. Like Hill, the Bennet servant you can tell likes Mary best, you just want to give her a hug. In a neat twist, Hill is played by Lucy Briers, who played Mary herself in the BBC’s famous 1995 Pride and Prejudice series.
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In London, Mary starts to overcome her awkwardness and self-consciousness under the care of the Mr and Mrs Gardiner, played with verve by Richard Coyle and Indira Varma. She nervously begins a romance with Mr Tom Hayward (Dónal Finn) only to discover he is already engaged.
The show hints heavily that this engagement has faded in intensity like Sense and Sensibility’s Edward Ferrars with Lucy Steele, though Amy Baxter, played by Doctor Who’s Varada Sethu, is far nicer than the two-faced Lucy. By the end of the fifth episode, before she is called away to look after her ailing mother, Mary has found herself in a love triangle.
Throughout the series, Mary wonders just who she is. The audience, along with sensitive characters like Mrs Gardiner, already know: she is kind, funny, caring and thoughtful. In today’s parlance, she’s cute.
There is a sublime moment when Tom tries to cheer Mary up from one of her bouts of self-doubt. He arranges for Mr and Mrs Gardiner and Mary to enter a secret garden, where he reads Wordsworth’s poem Composed Upon Westminster Bridge:
Earth has not any thing to show more fair:
Dull would he be of soul who could pass by
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A sight so touching in its majesty:
This City now doth, like a garment, wear
The beauty of the morning; silent, bare,
Ships, towers, domes, theatres, and temples lie
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Open unto the fields, and to the sky;
All bright and glittering in the smokeless air.
Mary is moved to tears and it is clear to the audience, if not Mary or even Tom, that when he uses Wordsworth’s words to describe London, he is also describing Mary. Again, for the viewer, this is cute.
It’s clear The Other Bennet Sister is shaping up to be a classic reimagining of Pride and Prejudice, transforming the overlooked Mary Bennet into something and somebody else: as bright and glittering as the Thames in Wordsworth’s poem.
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This article features references to books that have been included for editorial reasons, and may contain links to bookshop.org; if you click on one of the links and go on to buy something, The Conversation UK may earn a commission.
The two best teams in English football renew their rivalry at Wembley, as Arsenal seek to end their six-year wait for a trophy and take the first step towards what could be a quadruple this season.
Arsenal are nine points clear of City in the Premier League title race and into the quarter-finals in the Champions League and the FA Cup.
Mikel Arteta hopes victory this afternoon can launch a new era of dominance for his side.
Mikel Arteta hopes Arsenal complete the first leg of an unprecedented quadruple
Bradley Collyer/PA Wire
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But Arsenal face a City side wounded after their Champions League exit in midweek and determined to wreck their quadruple bid.
Here’s everything you need to know ahead of the game…
Date, kick-off time and venue
Arsenal vs Man City is scheduled for 4.30pm GMT kick-off on Sunday, March 22, 2026.
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The match will take place at Wembley Stadium.
Where to watch Arsenal vs Man City
TV channel: In the UK, the game will be televised live on Sky Sports. Coverage starts at 3.30pm GMT on Sky Sports Football and then at 4.15pm on Sky Sports Main Event.
The Carabao Cup final will also be shown live and free to air on ITV1, with coverage beginning at 3.30pm GMT.
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Live stream: Sky Sports subscribers will be able to catch the contest live online via the Sky Go app.
Furthermore, the final will be broadcast live and free to air on the ITVX website and app.
Live blog: You can follow all the action on matchday via Standard Sport’s live blog, with expert analysis from Matt Verri at Wembley Stadium.
Arsenal vs Man City team news
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Kepa Arrizabalaga is set to start in goal for Arsenal ahead of David Raya.
Arteta has decided to keep faith with Kepa, who has started in every round of the competition so far.
Kepa Arrizabalaga is set to start for Arsenal
AFP via Getty Images
Arsenal are set to be boosted by the return of Jurrien Timber, while Martin Odegaard is also likely to be fit to return on the bench.
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As for City, James Trafford will start in goal ahead of Gianluigi Donnarumma.
Marc Guehi is ineligible after joining City after the January cut-off to play with them in the Carabao Cup.
Guardiola has confirmed Erling Haaland is fit to start after being taken off early against Real Madrid in midweek.
Arsenal vs Man City prediction
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A meeting in a final between the top two teams in the country points towards a fascinating tie as the winners could land a psychological blow in the Premier League title race.
Man City, particularly under Guardiola, are masters of this competition and no manager has lifted the Carabao Cup trophy more than the Spaniard.
That said, Arsenal have had City’s number in recent years and we think they will get the job done to finally end their six-year wait for some major silverware.
Head to head (h2h) history and results
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As mentioned above, City won the Carabao Cup final against Arsenal back in 2018. However, the Gunners did win the most recent fixture between the two sides at Wembley.
The match, which saw Sunderland claim a 90th minute winner over Newcastle United, came after Sunderland’s 1-0 victory at the Stadium of Light earlier this season, adding extra intensity to the long-running rivalry.
Sunderland supporters were marshalled by police officers as Sunderland fans arrive at St James’ Park for the Tyne-Wear derby between Newcastle United and Sunderland (Image: North News & Pictures Ltd)
There are plenty of videos all over social media today of fans from the rival sides ‘goading’ one another.
However, police have confirmed that in the main everyone in Newcastle city centre today for the football were co-operative.
However, police did make one arrest ahead of the kick-off.
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One arrest has been made following the Tyne-Wear derby today (Image: North News & Pictures Ltd)
Officers will remain in the city centre to monitor supporter behaviour and ensure public safety in the hours following the derby.
Sunderland supporters were given a hostile reception by Newcastle fans as they arrive at St James’ Park for the Tyne-Wear derby between Newcastle United and Sunderland (Image: North News & Pictures Ltd)
A spokesperson for Northumbria Police said: “We are aware of a number of videos circulating on social media in relation to Newcastle United and Sunderland supporters goading one another.
“In the main, everyone has co-operated and we are able to report that one arrest was made ahead of kick-off. We will continue to have an increased police presence in the city centre.”
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