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le on 
an adjacent parking garage roof, one of the officials said.Officers from 
multiple agencies bent down to check on Hernandez before moving on, officials 
said.Police broadcast over their radios that Ciancia was in custody at 9:25 
a.m., five minutes after Hernandez was shot in the chest. That's when 
a nearly 26-year veteran Los Angeles police officer checked on Hernandez 
several times, repeatedly telling officers who came by from various agencies 
"he's dead," according to one of the law enforcement officials.It's unclear 
whether the officer was qualified to determine Hernandez was dead. No officers 
rendered first aid on scene, according to surveillance video reviewed by 
the officials. Finally, airport police put Hernandez in a wheelchair and 
ran him to an ambulance.Trauma surgeon David Plurad said Hernandez had no 
signs of life when he arrived at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center. Doctors worked 
for about an hour to revive him despite significant blood loss."When somebody 
is shot and they're bleeding to death, lifesaving skills need to be 
implemented immediately, in a couple minutes, and they're very simple, pressure 
dressings, tourniquets, adequate bandages to stop the bleeding," said Dr. 
Lawrence E. Heiskell, an emergency physician for 27 years and a reserve 
police officer for 24 years who founded the state and federally approved 
International School of Tactical Medicine.Responding to a situation with 
a shooter on the loose has changed sin
Where did all the water go?Billions of years ago when the Red 
Planet was young, it likely had a thick atmosphere that was warm 
enough to support oceans of liquid water, a critical ingredient for life, 
NASA believes. Mars today is a barren desert however -- so what 
happened?NASA aims to solve a piece of that puzzle with the launch 
of the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) mission, which is 
set to blast off from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station's Complex 41 
on Monday, Nov. 18 at 1:28 p.m.The newest Mars explorer will study 
the thinning of the planet's atmosphere and the disappearance of surface 
water over time to possibly explain the discrepancy between then and now.There 
are currently several competing theories to explain how Mars was stripped 
of its thick atmosphere some 4 billion years ago, the space agency 
said."The leading theory is that Mars lost its intrinsic magnetic field 
that was protecting the atmosphere from direct erosion by the impact of 
the solar wind," said Joseph Grebowsky of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center 
in Greenbelt, Md.The solar wind is a thin stream of electrically charged 
particles or plasma blowing continuously from the sun into space at about 
a million miles per hour."Studies of the remnant magnetic field distributions 
measured by NASA's Mars Global Surveyor mission set the disappearance of 
the planet's convection-produced global magnetic field at about 3.7 billion 
years ago, leaving the Red Planet


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