China has been dumping tons of sand into the ocean for 12 years. And now we are seeing islands emerging in the middle of nowhere

It has been more than a decade since China began a striking strategy of territorial expansion: throwing tons of sand into the South China Sea. This is not unique to China and, in fact, Japan thus built an airport that soon it will be an underwater airportbut China is doing it massively and with one objective: to claim what is its own. And seeing how they raise these artificial islands is… hypnotic. Context. The end of 2013 marked a turning point in China: the country started to massively fill in seven of the reefs of the Nansha and Xisha archipelagos (Spratly and Paracels, respectively). In record time between December of that year and June 2015, China carried out the first phase of the operation: the filling phase. From 2015 onwards, they have dedicated themselves to consolidate that territory through the construction of infrastructure such as landing strips, hangars, ports, radars and support structures. According to the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission, between December 2015 and October 2015, China had built artificially about 12 km² of land on the Nansha reefs. While the United States said it with concern, the Chinese media confirmed the information with pride. Before and then How they do it. They did not use overly complex methods to do so. On the one hand, they cut the coral bottom and pumped sediments to shallow areas. The earth was deposited as fill to later build dikes and retaining walls around the reef. The next step was to deposit more fill and, finally, large steamrollers and shovels were compacting that earth to give consistency to the whole. The last thing was to create paving, landing strips, roads and other infrastructure. The result is more than 12 km², and put in context they represent “17 times more land claimed in 20 months than all the other international claimants have achieved during the last 40 years.” In action. Seeing the satellite photos that show the before and after, something easy to do using the history function of Google Earth, is interesting, but seeing a timelapse of how one of these new territories has been built is, as I said, something hypnotic. An example, the following video ‘tweet‘ (if you can’t see it, click on it): Narrative. What motivation does China have for such a deployment of resources and money? It depends who you ask. On the one hand, the Chinese government has defended that the creation of these islands serves the support in rescue missions on the high seasalso to fishing, scientific research, navigation support points thanks to these radars and the collection of data for its meteorological service. Finally, it also serves for defense if necessary. The neighbors are not convinced by the explanation and, in fact, think that it is a strategy that responds to a single interest: claiming territories that China considers its property. The Ministry of Defense of Japan assures that these infrastructures allow a permanent Chinese presence in waters that do not belong to it, with offensive capacity in practically the entire South China Sea. Military. Recent reports, such as the one from CSIS in 2025, underlines that China’s recent near-perennial activity in the South China Sea has only been possible thanks to that decade-old construction work. Western analyzes they point that the runways for aircraft are prepared for combat aircraft and land transport, as well as the presence of ports for warships, underground facilities and even missile platforms. The tension is evident because Beijing claims sovereignty over territories that its neighbors deny. Those neighbors are Vietnam, Taiwan, Japan or the Philippines. And Vietnam, in fact, is doing the same thing as China in 2013: throwing land into the sea. Their progress has also been considerable in a short time in an area that has become a real hotbed. The ecological impact. But beyond the intentions of each other, something undeniable that cannot be hidden under any narrative is the environmental damage that these artificial islands cause to their surroundings. In some articles it has been indicated that this ‘island’ desire has caused the loss of some 12 to 18 km² of reef, damaging some of the best preserved reefs in the region directly, but also affecting distant systems due to the ‘clouds’ of sediment formed during the dumping of sediments. Chinese scientific articles have also shown that these practices eliminate completely the ecosystem of the occupied area and negatively affects currents and sediment patterns, causing the aforementioned degradation of neighboring areas. However, the State Oceanic Administration of China defend that all projects were thoroughly evaluated and do not harm corals. The fault of it? Global trends such as sea acidification or climate change. Images | Ma Wukong In Xataka | China is building something that looks like an oil well. It is actually a nuclear bunker with a command center

A spherical robot incapable of dumping

In a Texas laboratory, a team of engineers has materialized a concept that NASA investigated to Explore the craters of the moon: A ball -shaped robot incapable of dumping. Roboball In his stage in NASA, mechanical engineer Robert Ambrose made several of his inventions come true: the Robonaut 2 humanoid robot or the Robotic robotic glove. But he failed to move forward a concept he had developed for the space agency in 2003. The premise was simple: create a robot that could not pour. His idea was a perfect sphere capable of accessing places where wheels and legs were a risk. Roboball did not see the light until, two decades later, Ambrose guarded the students Rishi Jangale and Derek Pravecek For your doctorate at the University of Texas A&M. A pendulum in an airbag. Roboball’s secret is not its spherical and soft housing, made of the same materials as an airbag, but the propulsion system inside. Composed of a pendulum and some engines, Roboball Rued in the desired direction by oscillating the pendulum to transfer impulse to the sphere. One of the most innovative characteristics of the robot sphere is its ability to inflate and deflate, which allows you to alter your traction to adapt to different surfaces. In the tests of the researchers, Roboball has proven to be able to move through grass, gravel, sand and even water, reaching speeds of up to 32 km/h. Taking up is never a problem because it does not have a “right side.” There are two prototypes. Roboball II has a diameter of 61 centimeters and is the laboratory version, used to adjust control algorithms and monitor the power of subsystems. Roboball III has an imposing diameter of 183 cm and is the commercial version, designed to carry useful loads such as sensors, cameras and sampling tools. The jump from one to another has not been easy. As there is no literature on spherical robots of this size, the team faces new challenges every day. In Pravecek’s words: “If an engine fails or a sensor disconnects, you can’t simply open a panel. You have to disassemble the entire robot and rebuild it. It’s like an open heart surgery in a rolling ball.” From the moon to earth. Despite the obstacles, Roboball’s performance is surprising, and his long -term objectives are ambitious. The team hopes that it can be deployed in a lunar landing module to explore the steep walls of cratersa place where “nothing would roll better than a ball,” says Ambrose. But its potential is not limited to space. The team is also exploring land applications, especially in search and rescue missions. “Imagine a swarm of these balls deployed after a hurricane,” says Jangale. “They could map flooded areas, find survivors and bring essential data, all without risking human lives.” Image | Texas A&M University In Xataka | The United States has returned to the moon after 50 years with a fleet of “low cost” ships. It is being chaotic

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