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100 Nations Take Action To Save Oceans from Illegal Fishing and Plastic Pollution

One Ocean Summit in France-Youtube
One Ocean Summit in France/YouTube

Representatives from more than 100 countries arrived last week in France for a summit on protecting oceans from pollution, plastic, and overfishing.

The nation which birthed the most famous marine biologist in history (that’d be Jacques Cousteau) welcomed the One Ocean Summit, the highlight of which was a 43-nation agreement to create a treaty to regulate the high seas in a more sustainable way.

A deal is looking likely when the United Nations meet in in March, and President of the European Commission described one as “so close.”

Being beyond the territorial jurisdiction of any country, the laws of the high seas must be made and changed through international accords, and thereby suffer from the “tragedy of the commons” problem that occurs whenever something is removed from the profit-loss function of the market.

A largely European affair, the U.S. nevertheless said it would throw its weight behind any proposals to introduce an international deal on curbing plastic pollution.

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development joined the European Investment Bank and other state development banks to create a €4 billion fund for helping countries reduce their share of plastic pollution that ends up in the oceans.

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The summit in Brest also saw six more countries join the International Maritime Organization’s Cape Town agreement which sets safety standards for shipping vessels, while several EU nations said they would deploy their national navies to step up surveillance on illegal fishing vessels.

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Colombia and France also jointly announced a blue carbon financing program to help improve the restoration of coastal mangroves and other important ecosystems.

Speaking for the private sector, 22 shipping countries pledged to reduce underwater noise pollution, sulfur pollution, and greenhouse gas emissions above deck, while 18 ports also signed on to reduce emissions.

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Surviving 8,000-Mile Journey, Girl Finally Finds 6-Foot Boat Launched By Students

Courtesy of Cassie Stymiest, EducationalPassages.org
Courtesy of Cassie Stymiest, EducationalPassages.org

A student project focusing on learning about the oceans saw high schoolers launch a small boat filled with mementoes drifting across the Atlantic.

Lost at sea for 462 days, the vessel finally struck land in remote Norway, where a young sixth-grade boy got to share it with his classmates.

Back in the 2019-20 school year, Rye Junior High students in the classroom of science teacher Sheila Adams were told that they would be participating in an experiment with Educational Passages, a Maine-based nonprofit that teaches about oceans and their impact.

However, after pandemic restrictions forced the students into remote learning, Ms. Adams instructed them to design a piece of personalized artwork that could be scanned and copied and placed on top of of the six-foot boat complete with mast, hull, and keel.

The following school year, Adams was assigned to a different fifth grade class who were also scheduled to work with Educational Passages. Adams and executive director for EP Cassie Stymiest decided to merge the project between the two classes, and asked the new kids to load the cargo hold with small trinkets and decide what colors the boat would be painted.

Lost at sea

The boat, christened Rye Riptides was launched from Massachusetts’s shore in October of 2020, equipped with a GPS tracker that occasionally would log waypoints showing the kids where their boat was.

During hurricane season the GPS stopped responding for a time, before turning back on on August 18th, and again on September 30th, after which it didn’t transmit its location for four months.

“Honestly, I thought it would sink,” Solstice Reed from the sixth grade class admitted to Seacoast Online.

Then on January 30th, Stymiest got an update: Rye Riptides had made landfall somewhere on the small island of Smøla off the coast of Norway.

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“This is an educational project built by students in Rye, New Hampshire, U.S.A. Contact Educational Passages for more information and if you know anyone that can assist in a recovery to avoid damage to the vessel,” Stymiest wrote on a Norway Facebook group around the area in which the boat landed.

“It is an unscrewed vessel, like a message in a bottle, but we would like to recover it and have it brought to a nearby school to connect students.”

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Local news outlets picked up the story and published it. A local sixth grader, Karel Nuncic, saw the story and along with his dog and family, went out on their boat to find Rye Riptides.

While the cargo hold was intact, everything else was lost, including the mast, hull, keel, and rudder. The brightly covered boat was covered in gooseneck barnacles from its long voyage.

Nuncic’s sixth grade class are planning to write a letter in reply, since their English second language is quite good—Karel’s mom even recorded him reading the letter contained in the boat written by the Rye students. The classes are also scheduled to have a video call.

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“There’s a magical thing, there’s so much hope in it, you really just don’t know what’s going to happen. When you’re sending it out, you have no idea where it’s going to end up, how it’s going to get there, if it ends up (anywhere) at all,” Stymiest said. “But these kids, they put their hopes and dreams and wishes into it and I tend to think sometimes that helps.”

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Calorie Restriction is Key Factor in Enhancing Human Health, Say Yale Researchers

Decades of research has shown that limits on calorie intake by flies, worms, and mice can enhance life span in laboratory conditions. But whether such calorie restriction can do the same for humans had remained unclear.

Now a new study led by Yale researchers confirms the health benefits of moderate calorie restrictions in humans—and identifies a key protein that could be harnessed to extend health in humans.

The research was based on results from the Comprehensive Assessment of Long-term Effects of Reducing Intake of Energy (CALERIE) clinical trial, the first controlled study of calorie restriction in healthy humans. For the trial, researchers first established baseline calorie intake among more than 200 study participants. The researchers then asked a share of those participants to reduce their calorie intake by 14% while the rest continued to eat as usual, and analyzed the long-term health effects of calorie restriction over the next two years.

The overall aim of the clinical trial was to see if calorie restriction is as beneficial for humans as it is for lab animals, said Vishwa Deep Dixit, the Waldemar Von Zedtwitz Professor of Pathology, Immunobiology, and Comparative Medicine, and senior author of the study. And if it is, he said, researchers wanted to better understand what calorie restriction does to the body specifically that leads to improved health.

Since previous research has shown that calorie restriction in mice can increase infections, Dixit also wanted to determine how calorie restriction might be linked to inflammation and the immune response.

“Because we know that chronic low-grade inflammation in humans is a major trigger of many chronic diseases and, therefore, has a negative effect on life span,” said Dixit, who is also director of the Yale Center for Research on Aging. “Here we’re asking: What is calorie restriction doing to the immune and metabolic systems and if it is indeed beneficial, how can we harness the endogenous pathways that mimic its effects in humans?”

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Dixit and his team started by analyzing the thymus, a gland that sits above the heart and produces T cells, a type of white blood cell and an essential part of the immune system. The thymus ages at a faster rate than other organs. By the time healthy adults reach the age of 40, said Dixit, 70% of the thymus is already fatty and nonfunctional. And as it ages, the thymus produces fewer T cells. “As we get older, we begin to feel the absence of new T cells because the ones we have left aren’t great at fighting new pathogens,” said Dixit. “That’s one of the reasons why elderly people are at greater risk for illness.”

For the study, the research team used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to determine if there were functional differences between the thymus glands of those who were restricting calories and those who were not. They found that the thymus glands in participants with limited calorie intake had less fat and greater functional volume after two years of calorie restriction, meaning they were producing more T cells than they were at the start of the study. But participants who weren’t restricting their calories had no change in functional volume.

“The fact that this organ can be rejuvenated is, in my view, stunning because there is very little evidence of that happening in humans,” said Dixit. “That this is even possible is very exciting.”

With such a dramatic effect on the thymus, Dixit and his colleagues expected to also find effects on the immune cells that the thymus was producing, changes that might underlie the overall benefits of calorie restriction. But when they sequenced the genes in those cells, they found there were no changes in gene expression after two years of calorie restriction.

This observation required the researchers to take a closer look, which revealed a surprising finding: “It turns out that the action was really in the tissue microenvironment not the blood T cells,” Dixit said.

Dixit and his team had studied adipose tissue, or body fat, of participants undergoing calorie restriction at three time points: at the beginning of the study, after one year, and after two. Body fat is very important, Dixit said, because it hosts a robust immune system. There are several types of immune cells in fat, and when they are aberrantly activated, they become a source of inflammation, he explained.

“We found remarkable changes in the gene expression of adipose tissue after one year that were sustained through year two,” said Dixit. “This revealed some genes that were implicated in extending life in animals but also unique calorie restriction-mimicking targets that may improve metabolic and anti-inflammatory response in humans.”

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Recognizing this, the researchers then set out to see if any of the genes they identified in their analysis might be driving some of the beneficial effects of calorie restriction. They honed in on the gene for PLA2G7—or group VII A platelet activating factor acetylhydrolase —which was one of the genes significantly inhibited following calorie restriction. PLA2G7 is a protein produced by immune cells known as macrophages.

This change in PLA2G7 gene expression observed in participants who were limiting their calorie intake suggested the protein might be linked to the effects of calorie restriction. To better understand if PLA2G7 caused some of the effects observed with calorie restriction, the researchers also tracked what happened when the protein was reduced in mice in a laboratory experiment.

“We found that reducing PLA2G7 in mice yielded benefits that were similar to what we saw with calorie restriction in humans,” said Olga Spadaro, a former research scientist at the Yale School of Medicine and lead author of the study. Specifically, the thymus glands of these mice were functional for a longer time, the mice were protected from diet-induced weight gain, and they were protected from age-related inflammation.

These effects occurred because PLA2G7 targets a specific mechanism of inflammation called the NLRP3 inflammasome, researchers said. Lowering PLA2G7 protected aged mice from inflammation.

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“These findings demonstrate that PLA2G7 is one of the drivers of the effects of calorie restriction,” said Dixit. “Identifying these drivers helps us understand how the metabolic system and the immune system talk to each other, which can point us to potential targets that can improve immune function, reduce inflammation, and potentially even enhance healthy lifespan.”

For instance, it might be possible to manipulate PLA2G7 and get the benefits of calorie restriction without having to actually restrict calories, which can be harmful for some people, he said.

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“There’s so much debate about what type of diet is better—low carbohydrates or fat, increased protein, intermittent fasting, etc.—and I think time will tell which of these are important,” said Dixit. “But CALERIE is a very well-controlled study that shows a simple reduction in calories, and no specific diet, has a remarkable effect in terms of biology and shifting the immuno-metabolic state in a direction that’s protective of human health. So from a public health standpoint, I think it gives hope.”

This research is in Science journal.

Source: Yale University

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“When the future comes—no matter what comes with it—I’ll be smarter. I’ll be stronger.” – Ally Carter

prottoy hassan

Quote of the Day: “When the future comes—no matter what comes with it—I’ll be smarter. I’ll be stronger.” – Ally Carter

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New Study Busts the 7 ‘Dog Years’ Myth and Explores Data That Could Help Humans Live Longer

uppy koa at princeton released Camden Olson only for this story
Camden Olson

A new study into how long dogs live busts the myth that each of our years is seven for dogs—and could even help humans live longer.

A commonly-held belief is that dogs age seven times faster than us, so a one-year-old dog is like a seven-year-old child.

But large breeds age ten times quicker than us and some small dogs can be half of that.

Now scientists are studying the genomes of 10,000 dogs in a long-term study called the Dog Aging Project.

And they hope they will be able to see why ‘super centenarian’ dogs that live to 20 can survive so long and apply it to people.

Professor Joshua Akey, at Princeton University, said, “This is a very large, ambitious, wildly interdisciplinary project that has the potential to be a powerful resource for the broader scientific community.

“Personally, I find this project exciting because I think it will improve dog, and ultimately, human health.

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“We are sequencing the genomes of 10,000 dogs.

“This will be one of the largest genetics data sets ever produced for dogs, and it will be a powerful resource not only to understand the role of genetics in aging, but also to answer more fundamental questions about the evolutionary history and domestication of dogs.

“One part of the project that I am super excited about is a ‘super-centenarian’ study, comparing the DNA of exceptionally long-lived dogs to dogs that live to the average age for their breed.”

The researchers hope to identify specific biomarkers of canine aging.

Prof Akey added, “This is the first study of its kind in dogs and I think it’s a clever way of trying to find genetic differences that contribute to exceptional longevity.”

They anticipate that their findings will translate to human aging, for several reasons, dogs experience nearly every functional decline and disease of aging that people do; the extent of veterinary care parallels human healthcare in many ways, and our dogs share our lived environments, a major determinant of aging and one that cannot be replicated in any lab setting.

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Professor Daniel Promislow, at the University of Washington and principal investigator, said, “Given that dogs share the human environment and have a sophisticated health care system but are much shorter-lived than people, they offer a unique opportunity to identify the genetic, environmental, and lifestyle factors associated with healthy lifespan.”

The project has been outlined in the journal Nature.

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Scientists Discover How to Destroy Toxic PFAS – the ‘Forever Chemicals’

The media has dubbed them “forever chemicals,” but now scientists are putting their name to the test.

Perflourinated or polyfluorinated alkyl-substances (PFAS) are known to be nearly impossible to break apart, and tend to accumulate in groundwater sources, soils, and other places. Their health effects are known, as is a new method to destroy 99% of them in water sources.

Known as “supercritical water oxidation” (SWO), a paper recently published found the procedure could destroy 99% of of a wide variety of known and unknown PFAS contained in a water sample.

When water is heated to to 374°C (705.2°F) under pressures of 220 bar, it becomes not gas, nor liquid, but a state known as supercritical. Here, accelerated oxidation and other reactions cause the PFAS to dissolve into component elements, which can be more readily collected and disposed of.

In testing SWO, the EPA-backed researchers found that only 27% of the weight of the water sample’s fluorinated content came from the PNAS the scientists were targeting, suggesting a large portion belonged to forever chemicals not identified in the study. Such a finding lends huge credence to SWO as a cleaning method.

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“As a destructive technology, SCWO may be an alternative to incineration and could be a permanent solution for PFAS-laden wastewaters rather than disposal by injection into a deep well or landfilling,” the authors write in their paper.

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Discovering a way to destroy these chemicals is valuable because restricting their manufacturing and use would be difficult because they are prized for their ability to resist oil and water, and high temperatures—and because they are one of the principal components of fire-fighting technology.

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“Given that supercritical water oxidation systems are already commercially available, this may be a technology that could soon be deployed for significantly impacted sites or wastewaters,” lead author Max Krause told Scientific American. “We are currently evaluating air emissions to understand all of the pathways and to be certain we are destroying the PFAS.”

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Researchers Pioneered a Way to Use DNA From Elephant Tusks to Catch Poachers

eized_ivory_slated_for_destruction_in_the_crush._(10843354356) wikimedia commons cc license USFWS Mountain-Prairie
USFWS Mountain Prairie, CC license

Two men from the Democratic Republic of Congo were arrested on November 3 outside of Seattle, Washington, having been indicted on charges of trafficking after they were caught trying to smuggle 49 pounds of elephant ivory into the U.S.

The men owe their indictment and day in court to Samuel Wasser, a crack sleuth on the trail of the world’s major organized crime syndicates responsible for the trade in illegal wildlife parts like elephant ivory.

His 15-year production of a database containing familial relationships between poached animals like elephants is creating maps which authorities are using not only to make arrests of criminal henchmen, but identifying the geographical chokepoints organized crime is operating through.

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Taking DNA samples of a single elephant tusk isn’t likely to reveal anything that authorities, either rangers or detectives, might need to know to stop elephants being poached. Ivory is often mixed together in the scramble to smuggle it out of Africa, meaning that the right and left tusk of a single elephant could be separated by thousands of miles and hundreds of days.

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Directing the Center for Environmental Forensic Science at the University of Washington, Wasser has pioneered a method of connecting metaphorical red yarn between elephant ivory confiscated by authorities, and where in Africa it was taken from.

Now, when Wasser gets to take DNA samples from confiscating ivory, he can look for distant familial matches in his database to get a picture of where the animals and their family lived, and where they were smuggled to.

He can gather family IDs, their migration paths, national park locations, airports, shipping ports, transit countries, nationality of arrested suspects, smuggling methods, and more that can give him and wildlife authorities an idea of the patterns poachers, and their organized backers, are using.

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Recently, in 2019, a seizure of nine tons of ivory in Singapore allowed Wasser to enter dozens of individual genotypes into his database, which created a family tree of 40 familial matches. He can then look at where those familial matches came from, where they ended up, who was arrested in conjunction, and provide the authorities with leads to use in further busts, or evidence to beef up prosecution power.

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Astronomers Discover a New Type of Star Covered in Helium Burning Ashes

Artist's impression of a rare kind of stellar merger event between two white dwarf stars. Nicole Reindl Licence type Attribution (CC BY 4.0)
Artist’s impression of a rare kind of stellar merger event between two white dwarf stars/Nicole Reindl; CC license

A team of German astronomers, led by Professor Klaus Werner of the University of Tübingen, have discovered a strange new type of star covered in the by-product of helium burning. It is possible that the stars might have been formed by a rare stellar merger event.

While normal stars have surfaces composed of hydrogen and helium, the stars discovered by Werner and his colleagues have their surfaces covered with carbon and oxygen, the ashes of helium burning—an exotic composition for a star.

The situation becomes more puzzling as the new stars have temperatures and radii that indicate they are still burning helium in their cores—a property typically seen in more evolved stars than those observed by Werner and his team in this study.

Published alongside the work of Professor Werner and his team, a second paper from a group of astronomers from the University of La Plata and the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics offers a possible explanation for their formation.

“We believe the stars discovered by our German colleagues might have formed in a very rare kind of stellar merger event between two white dwarf stars,” says Dr Miller Bertolami of the Institute for Astrophysics of La Plata, lead author of the second paper. White dwarfs are the remnants of larger stars that have exhausted their nuclear fuel, and are typically very small and dense.

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Stellar mergers are known to happen between white dwarfs in close binary systems due to the shrinking of the orbit caused by the emission of gravitational waves. “Usually, white dwarf mergers do not lead to the formation of stars enriched in carbon and oxygen,” explains Miller Bertolami, “but we believe that, for binary systems formed with very specific masses, a carbon- and oxygen-rich white dwarf might be disrupted and end up on top of a helium-rich one, leading to the formation of these stars.”

Yet no current stellar evolutionary models can fully explain the newly discovered stars. The team need refined models in order to assess whether these mergers can actually happen.

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These models could not only help the team to better understand these stars, but could also provide a deeper insight into the late evolution of binary systems and how their stars exchange mass as they evolve. Until astronomers develop more refined models for the evolution of binary stars, the origin of the helium covered stars will be up for debate.

“Normally we expect stars with these surface compositions to have already finished burning helium in their cores, and to be on their way to becoming white dwarfs.

These new stars are a severe challenge to our understanding of stellar evolution.” explains Professor Werner.

This research was published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters

Source: Royal Astronomical Society

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“How fast you have forgotten your strength… You were born a winner, a warrior—one who defied the odds.” – Suzy Kassem

Quote of the Day: “How fast you have forgotten your strength… You were born a winner, a warrior—one who defied the odds.” – Suzy Kassem (Rise Up and Salute the Sun)

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Lifting Weights for Just Three Seconds a Day Helps Our Muscles Grow, According to Scientists

Andrea Piacquadio

People who say they don’t have time to exercise might have to rethink after scientists proved just three seconds a day lifting weights was enough to strengthen muscle.A new study by researchers in Australia and Japan found doing just one downward bicep curl a day using a heavy weight increases muscle strength by more than 11 percent.

Whole body workouts could be over in just 30 seconds if the findings hold up in other muscle groups, the scientists added.

For the study, 39 healthy university students were told to complete one muscle contraction a day ‘at maximum effort’ for just three seconds, five days a week for four weeks.

The students were split into groups who did three different types of bicep curl.

One group used their biceps to lower a weight down towards the floor, which fitness experts call an eccentric bicep curl.

Other participants lifted the weight up, called a concentric curl, or held it parallel to the ground, called an isometric contraction.

Another group of 13 students did no exercise at all.

Students who did the downward bicep curl saw their muscle strength grow by 11.5 per cent.

Participants who performed other types of curl also grew stronger, although their increase in muscle strength was smaller than for those who did a downward bicep curl.

The group of volunteers who did no exercise at all did not see any increase in their muscle strength.

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Professor Ken Nosaka from Edith Cowan University in Perth, Australia, who designed the study, said the results show people don’t need to spend vast amounts of time exercising to get stronger muscles.

Prof Nosaka added, “The study results suggest that a very small amount of exercise stimulus—even 60 seconds in four weeks—can increase muscle strength.

“Many people think you have to spend a lot of time exercising, but it’s not the case. Short, good quality exercise can still be good for your body and every muscle contraction counts.”

During the study, the researchers measured each group’s eccentric, isometric and concentric strength.

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Only the group of students who did the downward or eccentric curl saw an increase in their all three types of strength.

Participants who did concentric lifting saw some improvement in their isometric strength but no improvement elsewhere, while the isometric group only saw an increase in their eccentric strength.

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Prof Nosaka added, “The findings are exciting for promoting physical fitness and health, such as prevention of sarcopenia—a decrease in muscle mass and strength with ageing.

“We haven’t investigated other muscles yet, but if we find the three-second rule also applies to other muscles then you might be able to do a whole-body exercise in less than 30 seconds.

“Also, performing only one maximal contraction per day means you don’t get sore afterwards.”

The findings were published in the Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports.

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Ancient Shard of Bone Said to Be From St Valentine’s Finger On Display at Medieval Church

SWNS
SWNS

Couples have flocked to a medieval church to be blessed by a priest with an ancient shard of bone purported to be from the finger of St Valentine himself.

The fragment of bone has been displayed in a 10cm (4 inch) reliquary placed on the altar at St John the Baptist in central Coventry for Valentine’s Day.

The relic is believed to have been at the church for more than 180 years and even survived The Blitz when the English city faced heavy German air raids in 1940.

Loved-up couples visited the church over the weekend to be blessed by Father Dexter Bracey, the Rector of St John’s, with the unusual relic.

One visitor said, “I know some people might find it a bit bizarre but we don’t have many mysterious ancient relics in Coventry so we find it really fascinating.

“It might be slightly macabre rather than romantic but to be blessed in the presence of St Valentine himself can only be a good thing, right?”

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The story of how a piece of the 3rd-century Roman saint ended up in Coventry is typical of the church, which is renowned for a past shrouded in mystery.

SWNS

In the early 1830s, a catacomb in Rome said to contain St Valentine was excavated and the tiny basilica of Santa’s Maris in Cosmedin in Rome now houses his skull.

In 1838 the Roman Curia ordered the sending out of various body parts in packages to Roman churches all over the world.

Relics became symbols of prestige for churches and cities, and St John’s Church was a well-established and influential place of worship.

It was founded in 1344 following the death of Edward II by his widow Queen Isabella, and continued to have royal patronage.

At that time Coventry did not have a Roman Catholic church and St John’s appeared to be an active church, but within the strict discipline of the Church of England.

SWNS

Mike Polanyk, visitor liaison and communications officer, said, “Sadly existing records during the 19th century are scant—they were either burnt in a fire in 1861 or lost in the Great Flood of 1900.

MORE: A Valentine’s Day Message for the World: Love Never Fails

“We do know the 1906 renovation and subsequent additions to the fabric of St John’s reflected the influence of the Oxford movement and a ‘high church’ worship under rector Fr Robinson at the church—both before and during the First World War, so the relic could have been transferred to the church then.

“When the War Memorial Window was being constructed in 1921, we know of an instruction that says ‘the window is in keeping with the sacred artefacts on display there’… but it doesn’t say what.”

There was no firm mention of the relic in the church records until the 1930s when acclaimed architect Sir Ninian Comper redesigned the south-facing Saint John’s Chapel.

Mr Polanyk added, “He also gave the chapel an Oxford movement feel as well as a fetching tabernacle for the relic, which gained the admiration of Sir John Betjeman.

“Comper wanted a suitable resting place for the artefact, being impressed by the wax seal affixed to it with a stamp of authenticity.

“I find it interesting the relic and tabernacle survived the first Blitz in 1940, despite the damage to the rest of the chapel.”

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Watch a Daughter Surprise Her Deer–Loving Dying Mom With Visit from Bambi – Her Face Says It All

Lisa McDonald/Facebook Kindness Group
Lisa McDonald/Facebook Kindness Group

Lisa McDonald and her sister had been caring for their mother in palliative care for sometime, when they thought of a perfect way to bring a smile to her face.

McDonald thought that since her mom loves Bambi, wears Bambi T-shirts, has Bambi statues, and thinks deer are the most beautiful animals, what better way to cheer her up than bringing a real-life Bambi into the care home?

Lisa McDonald/Facebook Kindness Group

She posted a series of pictures and a video on The Kindness Pandemic Facebook group of the astonished look on her mother’s face when a fawn walked into the room, which sent a tear-jerking tremor through the group.

“Brought me to tears. What a special and touching moment. Absolutely beautiful people to drive all that way for your mum to experience something so magical before she passes,” one commenter wrote.

“This is so beautiful. She would have absolutely loved this so much. You can see it in her eyes how much joy it brought to her. Bless them, and bless you and your beautiful Mum,” another commented.

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After McDonald came up with the idea, she and her sister found a nearby couple, Chris and Simone, that owned a mobile petting zoo near their home in Melbourne.

They contacted them to see if they could come out with their deer fawn, which was coincidentally called Bambi.

Lisa McDonald/Facebook Kindness Group

“Mum deteriorated quickly today and Simone and Chris didn’t hesitate… they drove two and a half hours to bring Bambi to meet mum,” Lisa told the Daily Mail. “Out of pure love and kindness. I cannot thank them enough for what they have done for my mum and my family.”

(WATCH the video for this story below.)

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Bird Scientists Need Some Help Finding Species – They’re Turning to Birdwatchers

North Island Kōkako/Matt Binns, CC license
North Island Kōkako/Matt Binns, CC license

A metaphorical wanted poster has been pinned to the wall of the eBird app as conservationists hope birders can help find 10 majestic bird species lost to science.

Called The Search for Lost Birds, it’s a partnership between Re:wild, American Bird Conservation, BirdLife International, and the Cornell University Lab of Ornithology and their eBird app which has more than 700,000 users worldwide.

Re:wild used to be called the Global Wildlife Conservation, and created a much-publicized list of the “25 Most Wanted” lost species a few years ago. Building on successes that saw them find six of the 25 within just three years, including through expeditions to far-off Somalia, Vietnam, Madagascar, and the Indonesian island of North Moluccas—they are now launching “Top 10” lists for each animal group.

Some of these birds haven’t been seen for a decade, others for a century. They include species which vary in size from a finch to a falcon.

“During the past five years, since we launched the Search for Lost Species, our list of species that could be considered lost has grown to more than 2,000,” Barney Long, senior director for conservation strategies for Re:wild, said in a statement.

MORE: Biologists Identify First Animal That Uses the Complexity of Human Language: the Song Sparrow – LISTEN

“We never planned to look for all of them alone, but to encourage others to search and develop partnerships to help. Through this new partnership we’ll be able to get more targeted expeditions in the field. If we can find these lost birds, conservationists can better protect them from the threats they face.”

Good hunting

While none of those one billion eBird sightings contain these lost species, birding has been used reliably in citizen science projects before.

The top 10 most-wanted lost birds are currently:

  • Dusky tetraka, last documented in 1999 in Madagascar
  • South Island kōkako, last seen in 2007 in New Zealand
  • Jerdon’s courser, last seen in 2009 in India
  • Itwombe nightjar (or Prigogine’s nightjar), last seen in 1955 in Democratic Republic of Congo
  • Cuban kite, last seen in 2010 in Cuba
  • Negros fruit-dove, last seen in 1953 in the Philippines
  • Santa Marta sabrewing, last seen in 2010 in Colombia
  • Vilcabamba brush-finch, last seen in 1968 in Peru
  • Himalayan quail, last seen 1877 in India
  • Siau scops-owl, last seen in 1866 in Indonesia

The Search for Lost Birds partnership is launching an expedition to try and find the Siau scops-owl, after unconfirmed reports of a bird matching its descriptions were sighted. The Dusky tetraka will also be the subject of an expedition, while efforts to located the South Island kōkako have yielded 300 reports of its haunting call in recent months.

RELATED: Iconic Pink Flamingos Are Coming Back and Standing Tall in Florida

Playing on this natural instinct for sighting animals that birders have, and which makes Pokémon so popular with all age groups, has hidden benefits as well. An expedition to find the Sinu Parakeet in Colombia, part of the original 25 Most Wanted, yielded dozens of sightings of birds never seen before.

And two birdwatchers from an Indonesian birding club recorded a sighting last year of Asia’s longest missing bird, Borneo’s black-browed babbler. It’s this natural curiosity mixed with the scientific method at a $0 input that makes birdwatchers so valuable in the struggle to conserve bird species.

If a birdwatcher is heading out to India, Madagascar, or any other location on this list, keep the animal and habitat in mind, and a major contribution to science is possible.

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“Real love is a pilgrimage. It happens when there is no strategy, but it is very rare because most people are strategists.” – Anita Brookner

Quote of the Day: “Real love is a pilgrimage. It happens when there is no strategy, but it is very rare because most people are strategists.” – Anita Brookner

Photo: by Damien DUFOUR Photographie

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Chemists Discover New Way to Harness Clean Energy From Ammonia

A research team at the University of WisconsinMadison has identified a new way to convert ammonia to nitrogen gas through a process that could be a step toward ammonia replacing carbon-based fuels.

The discovery of this technique, which uses a metal catalyst and releases, rather than requires, energy has received a provisional patent from the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation.

“The world currently runs on a carbon fuel economy,” explains Christian Wallen, an author of the paper and a former postdoctoral researcher in the lab of UW–Madison chemist John Berry. “It’s not a great economy because we burn hydrocarbons, which release carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. We don’t have a way to close the loop for a true carbon cycle, where we could transform carbon dioxide back into a useful fuel.”

To move toward the United Nations’ goal for the world to become carbon-neutral by 2050, scientists must consider environmentally responsible ways to create energy from elements other than carbon, and the UW–Madison team is proposing a nitrogen energy economy based on interconversions of nitrogen and ammonia.

The scientists were excited to find that the addition of ammonia to a metal catalyst containing the platinum-like element ruthenium spontaneously produced nitrogen, which means that no added energy was required. Instead, this process can be harnessed to produce electricity, with protons and nitrogen gas as byproducts. In addition, the metal complex can be recycled through exposure to oxygen and used repeatedly, all a much cleaner process than using carbon-based fuels.

“We figured out that, not only are we making nitrogen, we are making it under conditions that are completely unprecedented,” says Berry, who is the Lester McNall Professor of Chemistry and focuses his research efforts on transition metal chemistry. “To be able to complete the ammonia-to-nitrogen reaction under ambient conditions — and get energy — is a pretty big deal.”

Ammonia has been burned as a fuel source for many years. During World War II, it was used in automobiles, and scientists today are considering ways to burn it in engines as a replacement for gasoline, particularly in the maritime industry. However, burning ammonia releases toxic nitrogen oxide gases.

The new reaction avoids those toxic byproducts. If the reaction were housed in a fuel cell where ammonia and ruthenium react at an electrode surface, it could cleanly produce electricity without the need for a catalytic converter.

“For a fuel cell, we want an electrical output, not input,” Wallen says. “We discovered chemical compounds that catalyze the conversion of ammonia to nitrogen at room temperature, without any applied voltage or added chemicals. This is the first process, as far as we know, to do that.”

“We have an established infrastructure for distribution of ammonia, which is already mass produced from nitrogen and hydrogen in the Haber-Bosch process,” says Michael Trenerry, a graduate student and author on the paper. “This technology could enable a carbon-free fuel economy, but it’s one half of the puzzle. One of the drawbacks of ammonia synthesis is that the hydrogen we use to make ammonia comes from natural gas and fossil fuels.”

This trend is changing, however, as ammonia producers attempt to produce “green” ammonia, in which the hydrogen atoms are supplied by carbon-neutral water electrolysis instead of the energy-intensive Haber-Bosch process.

As the ammonia synthesis challenges are met, according to Berry, there will be many benefits to using ammonia as a common energy source or fuel. It’s compressible, like propane, easy to transport and easy to store. Though some ammonia fuel cells already exist, they, unlike this new process, require added energy, for example, by first splitting ammonia into nitrogen and hydrogen.

The group’s next steps include figuring out how to engineer a fuel cell that takes advantage of the new discovery and considering environmentally friendly ways to create the needed starting materials.

“One of the next challenges I would like to think about is how to generate ammonia from water, instead of hydrogen gas,” Trenerry says. “The dream is to put in water, air and sunlight to create a fuel.”

This research is reported in Nature Chemistry journal.

Source: University of WisconsinMadison

Clean energy from ammonia: University discovery a step toward carbon-free economy

India’s Mass Tree Planting Success: Forest Cover Grows by Half-Million Acres in Two Years

Indians Planting Trees-Madhya-Pradesh-Government
Madhya Pradesh Government

A recent report from the Forest Survey of India (FSI) found that recent spurious tree planting activities have taken root in terms of the overall forest coverage in the nation.

The country’s forests have grown by 870 square square miles of forest cover—over half a million acres (2,261 square kilometers), over the last three years, and while that isn’t as big as a medium-sized American national park, the sum is part of an equation that includes deforestation.

A full quarter of the world’s second-most populous nation is covered in forest, which the FSI is focused on making qualitatively rich, not just quantitively.

The three Indian states showing the highest increases in forest cover are Andhra Pradesh with 250 square miles (647 square km), followed by Telangana with 242 square miles (632 square km), and Odisha with 207 square miles (537 square km).

Also compared with losses, mangrove forest coverage has increased by 17 square miles.

Showing results

During the last few years there have been some monumental tree planting efforts undertaken—sometimes in mere hours, by Indians. In 2016, Indians planted 50 million trees in a single day in the state of Uttar Pradesh, which broke a world record set by Pakistan by around 49 million.

A year later, volunteers in Madhya Pradesh planted 66 million trees, another world record.

And India’s love of tree planting is not all monumental efforts. For example in the village of Piplantri, Rajasthan, they combat the historical prejudice against daughters by planting 111 trees upon the birth of every baby girl.

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For a Man’s 80th Birthday, a Wrong is Made Right Six Decades Later

Macon Family, KTUU
Macon Family, KTUU

Billy Macon is a faithful husband, father, and grandfather. He ran his own business, wrote a book, and enjoys his hobbies. But for six decades there was always something which gnawed at the 80-year-old.

Though Macon graduated from West Anchorage High School in 1961, his diploma was given to him with a red stamp displaying a rude reminder that “this student met minimum state requirements,” and turning the diploma from a point of pride, into a point of pain.

In an interview with Alaska News, Macon’s wife said he never displayed the certificate in the house, but had it stowed it away in a plastic bag. It belittled his commitment to family and education. For as a senior, he was already married with a child and had a second on the way. He was working at the nearby Elmendorf Air Force base to support them, which required a one-hour walk, while finding time to study when he was able.

“I tried to do homework when I’d get home from school, but by the time I’d get to it a little bit, it was time to get on my walking track out to Elmendorf,” Macon said. “So I’d walk out to Elmendorf, work half the night and then walk all the way back.”

Macon’s granddaughter Tafena Timpson, after seeing what the red stamp had done and was continuing to do to her grandfather’s sense of pride, tried to contact the school district, but had no success.

MORE: 80-Year-old Man Reunited With Long Lost Siblings Thanks to His Litter Clean-up Dog on TV

Later, looking to do something nice for his 80th birthday, Timpson wrote a moving social media post hoping to capture the incredible value of a man which the state’s examiners had failed to notice.

LOOK: Sisters Recreate Adorable Photo – With Daughters Stepping into Roles That Dreamed of Motherhood

Sven Gustafson saw the post and decided to right the wrong. As principal of the same school that Macon had graduated from in 1961, he organized a special re-graduation ceremony, complete with a recital from the school choir and new diploma sans stamp.

“It’s unbelievable, it is unbelievable,” he said. His wife confirmed that he plans to hang this one on the wall.

(WATCH the video for this story below.)

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Stray Cats Saved a Restaurant During the Pandemic By Lounging On Miniature Models in the Window (LOOK)

@diorama_syokudou/Instagram

In classic Japanese horror films, megalithic monsters roam the countryside destroying everything in their path, however, at one Osaka restaurant nearly done in by the COVID-19 pandemic, it was a band of non-marauding “Catzillas” that stepped in to save the day.

Naoki Teraoka’s miniature-railway-themed restaurant was doing well until the pandemic struck. Like many others in the industry, as patronage dwindled, there wasn’t much he could do. Things got so bad the restauranteur was actually thinking of closing his doors—until an unlikely hero in the form of a stray kitten turned things around.

Even in the midst of financial turmoil, Teraoka didn’t have the heart to turn away the sickly kitten he’d noticed hanging around the restaurant. He and his family decided to adopt the baby cat they named Simba—only to realize Simba was part of a package deal.

Soon after they’d taken Simba in, another puss appeared at their window that turned out to be Simba’s mom. With a lack of customers and surplus food to spare, Teraoka started feeding the stray kitty. Then, during a particularly rainy spell, Momma Cat showed up with three kittens in tow. Teraoka decided to adopt them in as well.

“It was a financially difficult time for us, but we decided to help the cat family. Yes, we thought we were helping them, but they were the ones who helped us,” Teraoka told Bored Panda.

MORE: Lucky Cat Gets His Own ‘Mini SeaWorld’ After Owner Spends $2,400 Turning Fish Tank Into Underwater Peep Show – LOOK

The cats began making themselves at home amidst the restaurant’s perfectly scaled model train dioramas. Though diminutive in real life, the kitties towered over the miniature landscapes looking very much like something out of a movie that might easily be titled, “Attack of the 50-Foot Felines!”

@diorama_syokudou/Instagram

Amused by the whimsical tableaux they created, Teraoka began taking photos of the cats lounging and playing in their tiny locomotive world and posting the results to Instagram.

Not only did the photos become a sensation, but they also inspired Teraoka with an idea to reinvent the restaurant that turned out to be a real winner.

@diorama_syokudou/Instagram

While the model trains remained an attraction, Teraoka transformed the place into a cat sanctuary where patrons could interact with stray cats as they dined—and even adopt them! As customers began to flow in and popularity grew, he was able to expand his operations with a second-floor cat shelter and kitty hotel.

RELATED: Ginger Cat is Local Star for Stealing Hundreds of Toys and Presenting Them Sweetly to Neighbors

Teraoka tries to populate his establishment with felines that are most at risk. To date, he’s traveled as far as 200 miles to make a rescue, has been responsible for finding homes for more than 60 strays, and has taken dozens more off the streets.

@diorama_syokudou/Instagram

They say cats have nine lives. While Teraoka may have started out with the intention of saving one Simba’s, it’s a favor that’s since been returned in monster proportions and shows no signs of stopping anytime soon.

@diorama_syokudou/Instagram

Who says you can’t get “catisfaction” in this world?

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“We are each other’s harvest. We are each other’s business. We are each other’s magnitude and bond.” – Gwendolyn Brooks

Quote of the Day: “We are each other’s harvest. We are each other’s business. We are each other’s magnitude and bond.” – Gwendolyn Brooks

Photo: by Jannet Serhan

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quotes page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

 

Town Called Lover is Celebrating Valentine’s Day – Including a Couple Who Moved to be ‘The Lovers from Lover’

SWNS
SWNS

The ‘world’s most romantic village’ is celebrating Valentine’s Day—including a couple who moved there to be ‘the lovers from Lover’.

The small community of Lover in Wiltshire, England became popular with people who flocked there to post cards for February 14.

The main post office has closed, but a temporary one opens during the week of Valentine’s Day to keep the tradition alive.

Residents of the village formed the Lover Community Trust and in the past five years have stamped more than 8,000 cards and letters with ‘Sent from Lover’.

Supported by the Royal Mail, a team of volunteer cupids stamp cards with Lover’s special postmark before they are sent all around the world.

Residents of the pretty village also hang heart-shaped bunting, wreaths, and balloons on their garden fences and front doors.

MORE: A Valentine’s Day Message for the World: Love Never Fails

One local couple, 71-year-old Jill Stark and her 72-year-old husband Fred, moved to Lover after falling in love with a property located in the centre of the village.

SWNS

The pair were drawn in by the name of the village—and the idea of being the ‘lovers from Lover’.

Jill said, “We’ve been helping with the Lovers Community Trust since we moved here.

SWNS

“I can see the post office from my back window and it seems to be thriving with business which is so lovely to see.

RELATED: 6 Authentic Ways To Impress Your Partner on Valentine’s Day Without Going Broke

“The village has such an amazing vibe and there is a real feeling of togetherness about the place.

SWNS

“We felt that as soon as we arrived and every day since—we’re just so happy here.

Fred added, “The name Lover really stood out to us, and although the property itself and the village were hugely important, that name really helped us make a final decision.

“Being the ‘lovers from Lover’ just sounded too good of an opportunity to miss so we went for it.

SWNS

“The village is amazing and we feel lucky to have been residents here now for over 18 years.”

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