81,964 research outputs found
Prior Indigenous Technological Species
One of the primary open questions of astrobiology is whether there is extant
or extinct life elsewhere the Solar System. Implicit in much of this work is
that we are looking for microbial or, at best, unintelligent life, even though
technological artifacts might be much easier to find. SETI work on searches for
alien artifacts in the Solar System typically presumes that such artifacts
would be of extrasolar origin, even though life is known to have existed in the
Solar System, on Earth, for eons. But if a prior technological, perhaps
spacefaring, species ever arose in the Solar System, it might have produced
artifacts or other technosignatures that have survived to present day, meaning
Solar System artifact SETI provides a potential path to resolving
astrobiology's question. Here, I discuss the origins and possible locations for
technosignatures of such a ,
which might have arisen on ancient Earth or another body, such as a
pre-greenhouse Venus or a wet Mars. In the case of Venus, the arrival of its
global greenhouse and potential resurfacing might have erased all evidence of
its existence on the Venusian surface. In the case of Earth, erosion and,
ultimately, plate tectonics may have erased most such evidence if the species
lived Gyr ago. Remaining indigenous technosignatures might be expected to be
extremely old, limiting the places they might still be found to beneath the
surfaces of Mars and the Moon, or in the outer Solar System.Comment: 11pp, no figures. Accepted for publication in the International
Journal of Astrobiology. v2: Added some important reference
Resettlement of young people leaving custody: Lessons from the literature
This literature review aims to set out the research and practice evidence about effective resettlement services for children and young adults and can be used to inform future policy and practice to ensure service delivery is evidence based. The findings of the review will help to steer the focus of Beyond Youth Custodyâs research over the duration of the programme and act as a baseline to assess how our understanding has advanced in terms of what works in facilitating the transition from youth custody to the community and beyond. In addition, the review highlights some examples of good practice, as well as the emerging key principles of effective resettlement provision
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