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World’s Largest Seagrass Restoration Project is a Virginia Success, Planting 600 Acres That Grow to Become 9,000

NOAA

In what started as an experiment and became the largest success of its kind, a seagrass restoration project in Southeast Virginia is demonstrating the resilience of marine ecosystems when they are given a chance to recover.

NOAA

A group of marine scientists and volunteers spread more than 70 million eelgrass seeds across a 200-hectare plot off the southern end of Virginia’s eastern shore. Led by the Virginia Institute of Marine Science and with help from The Nature Conservancy, the project has grown to over 3,600 hectares (8,896 acres), making it the largest seagrass restoration in the world.

For perspective, this landmark seagrass meadow project off the coast of Wales used 750,000 seeds to create a five-acre meadow.

Over the 20 years it took to create the mega 3,600-hectare ecosystem in Virginia, scientists have gotten to see the process from infancy to adulthood. They’ve been documenting every detail, every step of the way, so as to lay the foundations of knowledge for widespread seagrass restoration across the world. This is important because seagrass isn’t just a good home for fish; it can also help the planet.

While the Amazon rainforest is sometimes affectionately referred to as the ‘lungs of the world’, the combination of masses of rotting plant matter and poor soil conditions mean that its carbon storage potential is actually lower than other forest ecosystems—like the Taiga in Russia, for example.

In fact, greater than any terrestrial forests in their potential of absorbing CO2 and nitrogen from the atmosphere are coastal marine ecosystems like mangroves, kelp forest, salt marsh, and seagrass beds.

RELATED: These Floating Trashcans Are Being Deployed Around the World So They Can Suck Up Tons of Ocean Trash

According to WWF’s article 10 Reasons to Hope, seagrass can capture carbon 35 times faster than even tropical rainforests, but as it currently covers merely 0.2% of the seafloor, the potential to use more seagrass as a carbon offset is essentially unlimited.

Beauty and resiliency

At the inshore Virginia lagoons where the scientists have been working, there has been no seagrass since the 1930s when disease and a hurricane wiped them out.

Since the team has been sowing seagrass seeds, they’ve noticed surprising resiliency in the ecosystem. Though a marine heatwave destroyed several meadows in the course of their research, it took only three years for them to recover in plant life, showing their surprising resilience.

MORE: Undersea Robot Just Delivered 100,000 Heat-Resistant Baby Corals to the Great Barrier Reef

The resiliency is their (and our) great strength in a changing climate, as mature seagrass beds have been found to sequester 1.3 times more carbon and 2.2 times more nitrogen in their roots and the soil around them than young seagrass beds.

3,000 metric tons of carbon, the equivalent of the emissions of 653 cars driven for a year, and 600 metric tons of nitrogen were being sequestered every year by the project meadows at the 20-year mark.

There was form as well as function in the seagrass beds, as measured by water quality and animal life. “We witnessed a substantial decrease in mean turbidity levels during the summer months since the restoration was initiated within the meadow,” explained the study.

The loss of the eelgrass meadows was followed by an abandonment of the area by the brant goose, and commercial fishing ventures for bay scallops.

“In my first years here, there was no seagrass and there hadn’t been for decades,” said Karen McGlathery, a coastal ecologist at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville to Science News. “Today, as far as I can swim, I see lush meadows, rays, the occasional seahorse. It’s beautiful.”

Going forward, the steps that achieved this spectacular success could be replicated, the researchers say, in other areas of the country where lush seagrass ecosystems once flourished, such as Biscayne Bay in Florida.

“As the world settles into the era of the Anthropocene, and regulatory agencies worldwide seek to conserve and recover valuable ecosystem services, our study provides a positive example that successful marine restorations are possible on the scales that contribute directly to human well-being,” reads the study.

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“It addresses key deliverables for the United Nation’s Decade on Ecosystem Restoration (2021–2030) and the Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development, including recovery of a threatened marine habitat, conservation of biodiversity, provisioning of habitat, and sequestration of carbon.”

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Inflatable Floodgates in Venice Named After Moses Save the City for a Second Time

Consorzio Venezia Nuova

Venice, with its historic squares and buildings, quaint shops, and rows of old houses, was in grave danger last week when a 4.6-foot tide inched ever closer to its shores.

Consorzio Venezia Nuova

Such a tide would have flooded half the city, starting with the cultural treasure of St. Mark’s Square and its spectacular basilica, if not for the intervention of a controversial, long-delayed, but now operational inflatable flood defense system named after a certain biblical figure who famously helped move another source of pesky water.

Designed to stay at the bottom of the Venice lagoon until a flood is detected, “Mose,” an acronym that forms the Italian spelling of the man who parted the Red Sea, inflates to the surface, rapidly creating a yellow rubber wall, repelling the water, and protecting the city.

Operated from stations on the Lido, Malamocco, and Chioggia inlets, it isolates the Venice lagoon from flooding and has now been used twice in October alone, on the 3rd, and the 22nd as northern Italy has received a battering of rain.

Designed all the way back in 1984, and scheduled to come into operation in 2011, the Mose project has been hindered by corruption and cost overruns, forcing the architects behind it to reformat.

RELATED: Inspired By 6-Year-old’s Kindness, a 43-Foot Bridge is Donated to Flood-Affected Nebraska Town

Costing an estimated €6 billion, the project was moved into hyperdrive after last year when Venice experienced its worst floods since 1966, causing €1 billion ($1.175 billion) in estimated damages.

A rendering of the Moses floodgates

The project is imagined to be finished in 2021 when the historic city should be protected from floods up to ten feet high according to Smithsonian—an occurrence that may become more frequent due to rising sea levels.

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“Autumn leaves don’t fall, they fly. They take their time and wander on this their only chance to soar.” – Delia Owens

Quote of the Day: “Autumn leaves don’t fall, they fly. They take their time and wander on this their only chance to soar.” – Delia Owens

Photo: by Fred Russo

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

 

13-Year-old ‘Angel’ is Donating Thousands of Masks, Meals, and Clothing to Seattle’s Homeless–WATCH

K19 FOX

Liem Kaplan may only be 13 years old, but he’s already spent the past seven years of his life serving his community.

Since COVID-19 hit the Seattle area, he’s been applying his generous nature tenfold: getting more than 5,000 masks, as well as sanitizer, food, clothing, and shelter to others—whatever it takes to help those most in need stay protected from the virus. 

K19 FOX

The teen’s drive to do good for others comes from being supported in some challenges of his own: Liem was born with arms that are little different from most others. Adopted as an 11-month-old from Vietnam, his Washington family has been cheering him all the way in his altruistic endeavors, and he’s been hosting coat drives and other campaigns for vulnerable kids since the age of six.

RELATED: This 5th-Grader is Racing to Get 100k Meals to People in Need Before Thanksgiving

This hero isn’t about to stop helping others anytime soon. When Q13 FOX asked him how long he plans to keep showing up for others, he said, “Probably the rest of my life.”

As for those people Liem and his volunteer crew are helping? 62-year-old Tony recently found himself homeless for the first time. When Liem helped find a hotel for him to stay in, Tony only had one word to describe his new friend. He’s an “angel,” he stated.

If you’d like to help or donate to Liem’s Giving Hope Project, you can head to the website here. 

(WATCH this teenager’s remarkable story in the Q13 video below.) 

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On Its 75th Birthday UN Ratifies Treaty Which Bans Ownership, Creation, and Use of Nuclear Weapons For Signatories

Parts of this article have been reprinted with permission from World at Large news.

 

A treaty that bans the use, manufacturing, sale, and maintenance of nuclear weapons has just received the 50th ratification needed to make nuclear weapons for the affirming nations illegal under international law for the first time in history.

Among the ratifying nations are regional influencers including Nigeria, Thailand, South Africa, Mexico, Austria, and New Zealand.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called the treaty “a meaningful commitment towards the total elimination of nuclear weapons,” while the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) called it “historic.”

Honduras, the 50th ratifying nation, put pen to paper Saturday, on the 75th anniversary of the founding of the United Nations—the international governing body formed in the aftermath of World War II with the express purpose of promoting peace and stopping wars.

Entering into force on January 22nd, 2021 for an “unlimited duration,” the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons bans all stages and uses of nuclear weapons within any nation that has ratified the treaty and includes mechanisms that will allow these nations to hold each other accountable should a breach in the treaty be found.

Nuclear-armed states including the USA, Russia, China, Britain, and France have not signed the treaty.

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While those nations haven’t adopted the treaty, the fact that it has passed the drawing board and entered into international law signifies the resolve of those governments committed to the abolition of nuclear weapon.

Setsuko Thurlow, 88, one of the last survivors of the bombing of Hiroshima is and has been a strong campaigner for the treaty as the founder of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), which won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2017 for their efforts to establish the treaty that was launched in July that year.

MORE: It’s Unanimous: Every Country in the UN Signs Agreement to Protect Wildlife

Thurlow released a statement on her reaction when she first heard the final signatory had been found.

“When I learned that we reached our 50th ratification, I was not able to stand,” said Thurlow, who was just 13 when the United State dropped an atomic bomb on her city.

“I remained in my chair and put my head in my hands and I cried tears of joy. I have committed my life to the abolition of nuclear weapons. I have nothing but gratitude for all who have worked for the success of our treaty.”

Study Shows That Sleeping With a Weighted Blanket Can Reduce Insomnia

Kinga Cichewicz

Weighted blankets are a safe and effective intervention in the treatment of insomnia.

That’s according to Swedish researchers who found that insomnia patients do experience improved sleep and less daytime sleepiness when sleeping with a weighted blanket.

Kinga Cichewicz

Results of the randomized, controlled study show that participants using the weighted blanket for four weeks reported significantly reduced insomnia severity, better sleep maintenance, a higher daytime activity level, and reduced symptoms of fatigue, depression, and anxiety.

Participants in the weighted blanket group were almost 26 times more likely to experience a decrease of 50% or more in their insomnia severity compared with the control group, and they were nearly 20 times more likely to achieve remission of their insomnia. Positive results were maintained during a 12-month, open follow-up phase of the study.

“A suggested explanation for the calming and sleep-promoting effect is the pressure that the chain blanket applies on different points on the body, stimulating the sensation of touch and the sense of muscles and joints, similar to acupressure and massage,” said principle investigator Dr. Mats Alder, consultant psychiatrist in the department of clinical neuroscience at the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm.

“There is evidence suggesting that deep pressure stimulation increases parasympathetic arousal of the autonomic nervous system and at the same time reduces sympathetic arousal, which is considered to be the cause of the calming effect.”

RELATED: Having Trouble Sleeping? New Research Says a Dose of Saffron Can Help You Doze

The study, published in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine, involved 120 adults (68% women, 32% men) previously diagnosed with clinical insomnia and a co-occurring psychiatric disorder: major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, or generalized anxiety disorder. They had a mean age of about 40 years.

Participants were randomized to sleep for four weeks at home with either a chain-weighted blanket or a control blanket. Participants assigned to the weighted blanket group tried an 8-kilogram (about 17.6 pounds) chain blanket at the clinic.

Ten participants found it to be too heavy and received a 6-kilogram (about 13.2 pounds) blanket instead. Participants in the control group slept with a light plastic chain blanket of 1.5 kilograms (about 3.3 pounds). Change in insomnia severity, the primary outcome, was evaluated using the Insomnia Severity Index. Wrist actigraphy was used to estimate sleep and daytime activity levels.

Nearly 60% of weighted blanket users had a positive response with a decrease of 50% or more in their ISI score from the baseline to the four-week endpoint, compared with 5.4% of the control group. Remission, a score of seven or less on the ISI scale, was 42.2% in the weighted blanket group, compared with 3.6% in the control group.

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After the initial four-week study, all participants had the option to use the weighted blanket for a 12-month follow-up phase. They tested four different weighted blankets: two chain blankets (6 kilograms and 8 kilograms) and two ball blankets (6.5 kilograms and 7 kilograms).

After the test, and they were freely allowed to choose the blanket they preferred, with most selecting a heavier blanket, only one participant discontinued the study due to feelings of anxiety when using the blanket. Participants who switched from the control blanket to a weighted blanket experienced a similar effect as patients who used the weighted blanket initially. After 12 months, 92% of weighted blanket users were responders, and 78% were in remission.

“I was surprised by the large effect size on insomnia by the weighted blanket and pleased by the reduction of levels of both anxiety and depression,” said Adler.

RELATED: Having Trouble Sleeping? New Research Says a Dose of Saffron Can Help You Doze

In a related commentary, also published in JCSM, Dr. William McCall writes that the study results support the psychoanalytic “holding environment” theory, which states that touch is a basic need that provides calming and comfort.

McCall urges providers to consider the impact of sleeping surfaces and bedding on sleep quality, while calling for additional research into the effect of weighted blankets.

Reprinted from the American Academy of Sleep Medicine

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Mom Shares an ‘Optical IIlusion’ Photo of Her Son Standing Next to a Lion In The Zoo

SWNS
SWNS

A trick of the light can make a really big impact. Thanks to an optical illusion, a mom snapped a photo of her four-year-old boy apparently inside the enclosure of a big cat.

Little Noah Moore was mesmerized by a giant feline when his mother Shanice took him to Colchester Zoo in Essex, England last week.

28-year-old Shanice was snapping away, taking photos of her son as he gazed up excitedly at Bailey the lion lying against the glass. 

But it was only when Shanice and her partner Jake Moore were heading back home that she looked back at her photos… and saw Noah looking perilously close to Bailey in one of her pictures.

The image shows just Noah’s reflection in the glass of the enclosure, making it look like the youngster is standing inside, snuggled up against the lion’s bushy mane.

To make the photo even funnier, some picture-perfect words are written across the bottom of the glass: “We eat meat.”

Shanice said she had just intended to take a photo of Bailey the lion, and hadn’t even realized at the time that Noah was reflected in the image.

The mom, who is expecting her second child next month, said: “I just couldn’t believe it when I saw the picture. I shared it on Facebook after I spotted it, and had people asking me whether I had done any Photoshop on it. But I’m rubbish with technology—I don’t even think with Photoshop I could have done a better job than what I did.

“The zoo said it’s quite rare for that particular lion to come right up to the window like that. It was awesome.”

Shanice said that the moment was made extra-special because of how her autistic son reacted when he saw the lion.

SEE: This Epic Pirate Cat Has Spent Her Whole Life Sailing the Ocean

She said, “He’s quite severely autistic, and he’s non-verbal, so he’s never really engaged with any of the animals on the few occasions we’ve been to the zoo.

SWNS

“But on this occasion, it was the first time he’s been really engaged at the zoo.

“He was staring at the lion for ages, and because we’ve got a pet cat at home, he actually said ‘kitty-kat’, which was amazing and very emotional for me. I think the lions must be his new favorite animal.”

MORE: Boy Recreates Iconic Scene From Toy Story to Mark His First Day of School

Shanice said she has now had the photo framed. We hope it will remind her of a special time with Noah for a long time to come.

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Scientists Finally Research the Question of Whether Couples Really Do End Up Looking Alike

Ribeiro Simões

It may not be the question for the ages, but it’s certainly a question that’s been pondered for ages: Do couples really begin to resemble one another the longer they’re together?

Ribeiro Simões

A pioneering study conducted in 1987 by University of Michigan psychologist Robert Zajonc suggested that based on factors such as diet, lifestyle, and compatibility, spouses did begin to look alike over the course of time. However, since the comparative data was gathered from a small pool of human volunteers, it was highly subjective.

With that in mind, some researchers at Stanford University decided to put the matter to a more clinical test. “It is something people believe in and we were curious about it,” Ph.D. student Pin Pin Tea-makorn told The Guardian. “Our initial thought was if people’s faces do converge over time, we could look at what types of features they converge on.”

Working with her Stanford colleague, Michal Kosinski, Tea-makorn put together a photographic database that tracked 517 couples checking for evidence of progressive facial assimilation. Initial pictures taken within two years of the pairs getting hitched were compared with images from 20 to 69 years down the road.

Long story short: Using data culled from both human volunteers as well as a follow-up from state-of-the-art facial recognition software, the findings didn’t turn up any evidence of the face-shifting phenomenon.

While some long-term couples did resemble one another more than randomly paired duos, it was likely due to the fact they started out with similar features to begin with.

The explanation for this anomaly is generally attributed to what’s known as “the mere exposure effect,” or the preference for choosing things with which we are already comfortable.

CHECK OUT: This Romantic Husband and Wife Broke the Record for World’s Oldest Married Couple

It’s the same reason people so often resemble their dogs, and vice-versa—at least according to an article in Psychology Today from Stanley Coren Ph.D.

So, if you and your partner start to look suspiciously similar as time goes by, chances are, you only have yourselves to blame.

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“Have patience with yourself. Do not lose courage in considering your own imperfections, but instantly set about remedying them.” – Saint Francis de Sales

Quote of the Day: “Have patience with yourself. Do not lose courage in considering your own imperfections, but instantly set about remedying them.” – Saint Francis de Sales

Photo: by Elijah O’Donnell

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

 

This 5th-Grader is Racing to Get 100k Meals to People in Need Before Thanksgiving

Eagle Mountain-Saginaw ISD

There’s no arguing that the coronavirus pandemic has left the world reeling, but it’s also taught us some invaluable lessons about the nature of perseverance, the courage of conviction, and the gift of compassion.

Eagle Mountain-Saginaw ISD

Now, more than ever, people young and old are being inspired to make a positive difference in their communities. And few are more dedicated to giving back than North Texas 5th-grader Orion Jean.

This small but mighty public champion is on a mission. His goal: donating 100,000 meals to those in need by Thanksgiving.

“I’m asking everyone to join me in a race to kindness,” Jean told CNN. “This has been a rough year for everybody, and now it’s more important than ever to show support and love to anyone who needs it.”

Right now, people living everywhere from Tulsa, Oklahoma to Dallas, Texas can go to a drop-off point and donate a packed meal containing a bottle of water, a piece of fruit, a tuna pouch or applesauce cup, a granola bar, and—of course—a positive message.

Eagle Mountain-Saginaw ISD

The food drive isn’t Jean’s first philanthropic venture. Last summer, he took first place in the Think Kindness National Speech Contest. “The question,” he noted in his winning entry, “is how can kindness change a nation?”

The Chisholm Ridge Elementary schooler’s answer spoke to a simple human truth that struck a sympathetic chord in the hearts of the judges.

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“The difficult situations impacting our world has shown us that kindness is more important now than ever before,” he said. “We’ve heard about the families hurting from this pandemic; the communities suffering injustice, and the people being OVER virtual learning… We could really use a big hug right now. And that’s just it. Kindness is like spreading hugs around the world to those who need it and those who might not even know they need it.

“The acts could be something small, but in the end, make a big difference to the person receiving it.”

Jean used the $500 first-prize award to organize a follow-up project, the Race to 500 Toys Drive. After collecting hundreds of donations, the toys were distributed to grateful hospitalized kids in the Dallas area, but that was only the beginning.

For his current humanitarian outing, Jean has injected his “it’s better to give than to receive philosophy” with some true “Everything’s bigger in Texas” attitude. So far, he’s collected over 4,000 meal donations in the “Race to 100,000 Meals.”

Jean has taken on the mantle of role model with equal fervor. Turning on his 1,000-watt positive energy, he’s putting out a call to welcome everyone who wants to become part of his personal crusade to spread compassion around the world, hoping they’ll join him in the race to kindness.

MORE: 7-Year-old Boy Who Was Bullied Opens a Huge Food Pantry, Making His Life All About Positive Energy

“The best part? Everybody wins!”

(WATCH Orion’s perfect speech on kindness below.)

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70-Year-Old Veteran Battling Cancer Hailed as an ‘Angel’ After He Charged into Burning Home to Save Neighbors

Photo by KMOV

A 70-year-old Air Force veteran from Salem, Illinois is being hailed as a hero after he saved his neighbors from a house fire this week.

Photo by KMOV

Marshall Helm had been walking his granddaughter to the bus stop early in the morning when the bus driver drew his attention to the smoke and flames emanating from the house next door.

Helm ran over to the endangered home and threw open the garage door only to find flames climbing up one of the building walls. Despite how the Vietnam veteran has been battling cancer, he did not hesitate to charge past the flames and into the house so he could make sure his neighbors were safe.

Gary and Kathy Benjamin had been sleeping upstairs when they awoke to hear Helm shouting about the fire. Although they were confused by the commotion, they managed to run into the hallway and escape with Helm through the back door just as the flames were engulfing the garage door where he had come in only a minute before.

RELATED: Strangers Raise $84,000 for 94-year-old Street Vendor in Wheelchair After One Woman’s Act of Kindness Goes Viral

Thanks to Helm’s quick actions, the Benjamins suffered only minor smoke inhalation—and even though they lost their home in the fire, they are simply grateful to Helm for saving their lives.

“Lifesaver—lifesaver is all I can say,” Mr. Benjamin told KMOV. His wife added, “Hero, he’s our angel.”

If you would like to help the Benjamins recover from the fire, you can donate to the GoFundMe campaign launched by their son Nicholas.

(WATCH the news coverage below…)

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Scientists ‘Elated’ After Finding Massive Coral Reef—The First Reef to Be Discovered in 120 Years

Photo by Schmidt Ocean Institute

Scientists have discovered a massive detached coral reef that stands taller than the Empire State Building—and it is the first reef to be discovered in over 120 years.

Scaled rendering of the newly-discovered detached reef – Photo by Schmidt Ocean Institute

The Schmidt Ocean Institute made their groundbreaking discovery earlier this week when they found the natural structure in the Great Barrier Reef.

Measuring more than 500 meters high (1,600 feet) high—which is also taller than the Sydney Tower and the Petronas Twin Towers—the reef was discovered by Australian scientists aboard the institute’s research vessel Falkor, currently on a 12-month exploration of the ocean surrounding Australia.

The reef was first found on October 20th as a team of scientists led by Dr. Robin Beaman was conducting underwater mapping of the northern Great Barrier Reef seafloor. Several days later, the team conducted a dive using the Schmidt Ocean Institute’s underwater robot SuBastian to explore the new reef.

The dive was live-streamed, with the high-resolution footage viewed for the first time and broadcasted on the Schmidt Ocean Institute’s website and YouTube channel.

The base of the blade-like reef is 1.5 kilometers (1 mile) wide before rising to its shallowest depth of only 40 meters (130 feet) below the sea surface.

LOOK: Scientists ‘Blown Away’ By Discovery of Longest Animal Ever Recorded—And It’s Quite Beautiful

This newly discovered detached reef adds to the seven other tall detached reefs in the area, mapped since the late 1800s, including the reef at Raine Island—the world’s most important green sea turtle nesting area.

“This unexpected discovery affirms that we continue to find unknown structures and new species in our Ocean,” said Wendy Schmidt, co-founder of Schmidt Ocean Institute. “The state of our knowledge about what’s in the Ocean has long been so limited. Thanks to new technologies that work as our eyes, ears and hands in the deep ocean, we have the capacity to explore like never before. New oceanscapes are opening to us, revealing the ecosystems and diverse life forms that share the planet with us.”

“We are surprised and elated by what we have found,” said Dr. Beaman. “To not only 3D map the reef in detail, but also visually see this discovery with SuBastian is incredible. This has only been made possible by the commitment of Schmidt Ocean Institute to grant ship time to Australia’s scientists.”

Photo by Schmidt Ocean Institute

The discovery of this new coral reef adds to a year of underwater discoveries by the Schmidt Ocean Institute. In April, scientists discovered the longest recorded sea creature: a 45-meter-long siphonophore in Ningaloo Canyon, plus an additional 30 new species.

In August, scientists discovered five undescribed species of black coral and sponges and recorded Australia’s first observation of rare scorpionfish in the Coral Sea and Great Barrier Reef Marine Parks. And the year started with the discovery in February of deep sea coral gardens and graveyards in Bremer Canyon Marine Park.

“To find a new half-a-kilometer tall reef in the offshore Cape York area of the well-recognized Great Barrier Reef shows how mysterious the world is just beyond our coastline,” said Dr. Jyotika Virmani, executive director of Schmidt Ocean Institute. “This powerful combination of mapping data and underwater imagery will be used to understand this new reef and its role within the incredible Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area.”

MORE: Hawaii Group Sets Record For Largest Haul of Plastic Removed From The Great Pacific Garbage Patch

The Northern depths of the Great Barrier Reef voyage will continue until November 17th as part of Schmidt Ocean Institute’s broader year-long Australia campaign. The maps created will be available through AusSeabed, a national Australian seabed mapping program, and will also contribute to the Nippon Foundation GEBCO Seabed 2030 Project.

Reprinted from the Schmidt Ocean Institute

(WATCH the livestream discovery footage below…)

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Top Technologies That Older Americans Have Tried For First Time—And Enjoyed—During the Pandemic

As the COVID-19 outbreaks continue to transform our everyday lives, this new poll of American seniors shows that many older people have been forced to experiment with technology for the first time—and they are enjoying it more than they originally thought.

According to a survey of 2,000 Americans aged 65 and older, using Zoom (34%) and video chatting with their doctor (25%) topped the list of “firsts” for seniors during the pandemic.

It also revealed that 15% of respondents used a smartphone or tablet for the first time during this period.

Conducted by OnePoll on behalf of Medtronic, the study looked at adaptations that many seniors were forced to make over the past few months.

Seventy-nine percent of respondents tried telehealth for the first time during the pandemic to help them stay home and reduce their risk of contracting the novel coronavirus—and seniors who benefited from these services are now beginning to see the advantages of other high-tech remote health care options.

Fifty-eight percent said they plan to use these services in the future, if given the option, while 56% of respondents said they would prefer their doctor to have regular access to information about their heart and other conditions without the need for an in-person visit.

RELATED: Nigerian-Irish Teens Develop a Dementia App for Sufferers Coping With Lockdown–and It’s Won Awards

And a full 77% of respondents who are caregivers for someone with a heart condition, in particular, would prefer to have this option.

“The pandemic has revealed new possibilities for advanced health care technology that can adapt to our changing needs,” said Dr. Robert Kowal, Chief Medical Officer, Medtronic Cardiac Rhythm and Heart Failure.

“More people in their 70s and beyond are embracing lifesaving technologies like remote monitoring for their heart conditions,” he said. “They gain peace of mind without leaving home, and without risking exposure to COVID-19 through emergency room or hospital visits.”

The survey also revealed how the adoption of new tech practices, like telehealth, have helped seniors overcome the challenges of an uncertain time.

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Isolation, loneliness, and missing family (including grandchildren) were among the things that respondents identified as being the hardest part of the pandemic for them.

Yet 59% agreed the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic, and their ability to meet with family, have given them a sense of renewed commitment to maintaining their health.

The top telehealth services used by respondents during the pandemic included phone consults (33%), video visits (22%) and secure email (11%) with physicians or other health care providers.

MORE: This Doctor Broke The Law To Engineer a Better Nursing Home—And the Death Rate Plummeted

The overwhelming majority of respondents (89%) said they found their telehealth experience to be simple and intuitive—and 67% say that access to telehealth has given them greater peace of mind.

“As telehealth and remote monitoring devices evolve—becoming more intuitive, convenient and commonplace—I expect to see increasing rates of adoption among older patients from all walks of life,” added Kowal.

Be Sure And Share This Intriguing Survey With Your Senior Friends On Social Media…

These Emissions-Free Cargo Vehicles From Germany Could be the Future of Urban Delivery

Ono

A Berlin startup has developed a new electric delivery vehicle that can carry a carload of goods in a bicycle-sized package.

Ono

ONO is now selling the pioneer edition of its new “pedal-assisted transporter,” which they refer to as the PAT for short. Though perhaps it’s more accurate to call it a “cargo ebike delivery system,” as that is certainly what it’s for.

While a van can carry four times as many boxes as an ONO PAT, the delivery container that goes on the PAT can be loaded by hand at an ONO “delivery hub” and be waiting on caster wheels to easily roll onto the back of the bike when it’s time, a pairing that company officials say could reinvent urban logistics entirely.

Their argument is that in Europe’s typically narrow city streets, the advantages of an electric-powered bike with a cargo hold are many.

It can park on sidewalks, removing the need to look for parking in dense urban areas. It can use bike lanes to ease traffic congestion and prevent the need for stopping in the street, and it doesn’t require a driver’s license, insurance, or registration—all problems faced by regular delivery van drivers.

RELATED: This New German Car is Covered With Solar Panels and Charges As It Drives

Quick trips to and from ONO Hubs would allow operators and coordinators to make up for the small size of the ONO PAT.

Other features include an RFID chip-activated starter to prevent theft; there’s also an enclosed cabin for the driver to sit in, helping make the job that bit more comfortable for those making deliveries—especially during frigid winters.

Ono

Of course, the biggest advantage is that the vehicle is emission-free, with a fast-charging time and limited battery expenditure.

After undergoing stress tests to see how many PATs and Hubs would be needed to service a metropolitan area, ONO is establishing a presence in four German cities this fall, with five Hubs operating out of Berlin alone. The company’s 2025 goals are to service 60 cities, and hopefully more.

Similar, if slightly less sophisticated, cargo ebikes are being tested and can be seen on the streets of Manhattan—where UPS, DHL, and Amazon are all adding their own versions of the PAT to their respective delivery fleets, signifying that diminutive vehicles could be the way forward for urban logistics.

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“A library is a cross between an emergency exit, a life-raft and a festival—a cathedral of the mind; hospital of the soul; theme park of the imagination.” – Caitlin Moran

Quote of the Day: “A library is a cross between an emergency exit, a life-raft and a festival—a cathedral of the mind; hospital of the soul; theme park of the imagination.” – Caitlin Moran

Photo: by Clem Onojeghuo

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

 

For the First Time in its 51-Year History, Cracker Barrel Will Now Serve Alcohol in Restaurants

Cracker Barrel

What’s more fun than a barrel of monkeys? A pitcher of mimosas. At least, that’s the current thinking from the folks at Cracker Barrel, America’s “old country store” restaurant chain.

Cracker Barrel

Cracker Barrel is best known for its signature breakfasts featuring a host of Southern-style favorites including pancakes, biscuits, grits, eggs, and country ham, as well as family-style dinner entrees that boast enough servings to feed a small army.

But just recently, the 51-year-old franchise ventured into new waters by adding a limited number of more spirited adult beverages to its traditional menu.

Now, your brunch, dinner, or all-day breakfast dishes can be paired with beer, wine, or a mimosa cocktail (orange or strawberry, thank you).

After testing the concept at 100-plus locations, customer feedback was positively bubbling over with admiration.

“Our guests told us that offering beer and wine would reduce the veto vote—that is, those guests who would choose Cracker Barrel for a given dining occasion, but ultimately go elsewhere because they would like to have a beer or a glass of wine with their meal— especially during weekend dinner,” a Cracker Barrel spokesman told CNN.

There was simply no putting the cork back in the champagne bottle after that.

CHECK OUT: Customers Jump Up to Help Run Restaurant When Chef is Left Alone After Staff Emergency: ‘Beautiful to witness’

While grown-up drinks won’t be offered at every location, by the end of the fiscal year, 600 additional Cracker Barrel restaurants in Florida, Kentucky, and Tennessee will amend their already extensive menus with non-teetotaling drink options.

So the next time you order Uncle Herschel’s Favorite, you’ll be able to say “Cheers!” with a tasty blend of sparkling wine and O.J. (barrel of monkeys not included).

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World’s Biggest Wildlife Crossing Will Protect Animals From Drivers on the 101 in Los Angeles

Living Habitats LLC/National Wildlife Federation

Running through the second-largest city in the country, and possessing of the most notorious traffic patterns, the 101 freeway in Los Angeles County is about to get a green makeover with the largest wildlife crossing overpass on Earth.

Living Habitats LLC/National Wildlife Federation

LA County has a large mountain lion population, but the extensive development of the area and surrounding cities has created pockets of isolated habitat sliced up by immense roads like the 101, 110, and 405. This creates problems of not only the risk of lions attempting to cross the road and being killed by cars.

“We know from science what’s going on there, and it’s a little deeper than just that the animals are getting hit by cars,” Beth Pratt of the National Wildlife Federation, one of several partner organizations working on the project, explained to Fast Company. “They are becoming genetically isolated, because animals cannot move into the small islands of habitat that are created by our freeways.”

Living Habitats LLC/National Wildlife Federation

Facilitated in part by Save LA Cougars and the National Wildlife Federation, 2,700 mostly private donors have raised $15 million for the construction of a 165-foot crossing that will pass over the 101 in Liberty Canyon, the designs for which are in the final stages of completion.

RELATED: Nature Bridge Paves the Way For Mountain Lions’ Survival in California

The overpass will be covered in extra-dense trees and other vegetation, to make the crossing as silent and shaded as possible, so the lions will feel comfortable and secure in using it.

Between Thousand Oaks and Calabasas, where some of the wealthiest Hollywood celebs have their digs, the freeway will connect two areas of wildlife habitat, Malibu Creek State Park/Santa Monica Mountains and Palo Comado Canyon, and will hopefully create a corridor through which lions can travel freely and reach other areas of the mountains.

MORE: Green Overpass Will Let Wildlife Cross 6 Lanes of Highway

If fundraising continues, according to Save LA Cougars, a non-profit set up to support the project, ground will break on the overpass in 2021. That’s good news all round.

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One-Armed Drummer is Now ‘World’s Fastest’ Thanks to a New Limb That Makes Him Super Able

Big Think

With the help of an undying love for music and a special prosthetic limb, a young drummer was able return to his favorite instrument after losing an arm in an electrical accident.

Big Think

Not only did Jason Barnes lose his arm, but the ability (he thought) to play the drums after he was badly burned when a transformer exploded while he was working on it. Now though, not only he is back playing the drums, he’s setting world records for most drum hits in a minute, and pushing out the limits of what robotic prosthetics are capable of.

Known as the “Bionic Drummer,” Barnes’ story of recovery began when he strapped a drumstick to his cast and began laying down simple beats after cleaning the dust his kit had accumulated sitting in his garage.

After having some success, he built a custom prosthetic to play the drums, one which fit comfortably around his amputation and carried a special mount with springs that help the drumstick. The springs were tightened to a degree that allowed the drumstick to rock up and down in a similar way to a natural drummer’s grip technique.

Rick Allen, the one-armed drummer of Def Leppard, clawed his way back from his infamous car collision with the help of an electronically assisted drum kit. It would be a similar kind of invention that would aid Barnes in the recovery of his skills.

Becoming super-able

Eventually someone told Gil Weinberg, a veritable genius, chamber music composer, and professor in Georgia Tech’s School of Music where he founded the Center for Music Technology. Here he develops artificial creativity for robotics, robot musicians, and human augmentation.

RELATED: 10-Year-Old Girl Challenging Dave Grohl to Drum Battles Has Upped the Game–With an Original Song for Him

Weinberg gave Barnes a bionic drumming arm that allowed him to play 2,400 drum hits in a minute, a world record, all before they began a program to develop a robotic prosthetic he could control with his mind.

“I’m very excited about the idea of human augmentation; about bringing technology into the body, and allow people to explore things they couldn’t before,” said Gil, in a video interview about Jason Barnes’ story on Big Think.

Gil and his assistants would eventually team up to use ultrasound and electromyography, which allows electronics to respond to electric signals sent to musculature from the brain, to make a second prosthetic that even allowed him to play rudimentary tunes on the piano.

The technology is still new, and so Gil and his team at Georgia School of Music have to make the sensors sharper and more in tune to the signals Jason is sending into his arm to allow it to function better and faster.

MORE: Bionic Eye, As Sensitive as the Human Retina, May Give Sight to Millions

“I didn’t think I would be where I am now especially after my accident,” said Jason. “Little did I know that five, six years later we would be on the verge of developing some of the best technology for amputees, how could anyone foresee something like that?”

(WATCH Barnes in action in the Big Think video below.)

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Solar is Now the Cheapest Electricity in History and Just Met 100% of Demand in South Australia For First Time

PublicDomainPictures, CC license

South Australia has met 100% of its electricity demands with solar energy for the first time over the weekend—most of it coming not from solar farms but PV panels mounted on rooftops.

PublicDomainPictures, CC license

A combination of cloudless skies, low energy demand, and mild temperatures helped create conditions for 76% of circulating power to be generated by rooftop solar, with utility-scale solar farms making up the rest.

Both sources combined to make 1.37 gigawatts of available power, which would have generated 986 metric tons of CO2, and would normally require 1 million pounds of coal or around 100,000 gallons of gasoline.

In sunny Australia, rooftop solar power had already reached a record of 900 megawatts per hour of output for the first time ever only weeks before, a record that would be broken for 2.5 hours straight on Sunday when rooftop panels were cranking out 992 MWh.

Records were being set outside of South Australia’s bookkeepers as well, as, in a new report, the International Energy Agency (IEA) says solar is now the cheapest form of electricity for utility companies to build. At the same time, panel technology gets more efficient and prices for basic panels continue to fall, and investors are finding better and better financing deals.

RELATED: Downtown Sydney is Now Powered By 100% Renewable Energy Thanks to Historic Deal

That’s good news for South Australia, and for the continent as a whole, as energy reports suggest solar panel and battery installation will continue to expand there into 2021, removing the need for natural gas grid safeguards, and even allowing for some of the excesses to be sent up to the state of Victoria.

Solar will grow exponentially

The future of solar energy is bright; of wind, breezy; of biofuels, smelling good—and in the IEA’s annual energy outlook, it is described as such after they ran scenarios whereby stated policies of various states around the globe are fulfilled and calculated to what that would mean for the energy sector.

According to their analysis, global solar growth will amount to 13% each year, and while capital costs have slightly gone up after years of declining, other market conditions will push production and investment to new highs while 275GWh of global coal will be heading in the opposite direction by 2025.

“Global solar PV deployment exceeds pre-crisis (COVID) levels by 2021 and sets new records each year after 2022 thanks to widely available resources, declining costs, and policy support in over 130 countries,” reads the executive summary of the report.

It adds that renewables will overtake coal as the primary means of electricity generation worldwide by 2025, noting that according to their objectives and current trajectory, China will have expanded renewables by 1500 terawatts per hour by 2030, more than the electricity demand of the entire nations of Germany, France, and Italy last year.

The financial markets are not blind to this. Investment firms like Blackrock are taking a new climate-related approach to investment strategies, with their CEO Larry Fink writing letters to all the major CEOs whose money Blackrock manages that they will examine sustainable business practices of any company they plan to invest in.

MORE: Scorched Australia is Getting Power Back Thanks to New Solar Grids Funded by Philanthropist Couple

The records South Australia are setting are the signals of a global trend that will affect all markets and all energy companies, and are likely only the falling of a few stones that starts an avalanche in the mountains.

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Preemie Born the Size of a Superman Doll Now Poses For Photos at Every Birthday With His Sidekick

At 4 weeks old, and 1 year old – SWNS

A premature baby the size of a Superman action figure has made a miraculous recovery—and now celebrates every milestone with his sidekick by his side.

At 4 weeks old, and 1 year old – SWNS

Logan Ray was born at 23 weeks gestation, weighing just 1.5 pounds, the same height as a tiny 12 inch Superman figure.

Doctors told his parents to prepare for the worst, but just like his new hero toy, little Logan was a fighter.

And with each miracle week that passed, the preemie grew and grew until, after 105 days at Randall Children’s Hospital in Portland, Oregon, he got to go home.

His mom Val, 34, now takes photos of the boy with the same Superman doll every year to remind everyone how far he’s come.

“He is a little superhero himself. Even when he was just a pound-and-a-half in weight. I called him my little ‘tough guy’.”

RELATED: Micro-Preemie Proved Doctors Wrong and is Now Paying It Forward by Knitting Hats for Other Preemies

SWNS

Still to this day, the doctor will message Val on Facebook, asking how the little ‘tough guy’ is doing.

After the birth nurses suggest photographing him with something next to him that would show his size, so Val asked her husband Rob to go get something.

“I told him to pick out something that he thought would be appropriate like a doll that we could disinfect and put inside the incubator.

“He called me and said what about a Superman? I thought it was perfect!”

ADORABLE: Hospital Knits ‘Mr. Rogers’ Sweaters for All the Newborns in Honor of World Kindness Day

Logan on his 3rd birthday – SWNS

During the pregnancy, Val was diagnosed with an incompetent cervix, a medical condition where the cervix shortens and opens prematurely, often causing women to miscarry.

Val said: “The doctors basically told Rob and I that they were going to send us home to miscarry.

“Both Rob and I looked at the doctor and said ‘we’re not going anywhere, whether we have him tomorrow or have him four months from now, we’re staying in the hospital’.

Proud husband Rob said, “She laid upside down basically with her head lower than her feet for 20 days without getting out of the bed to do anything.”

“To be honest, she’s incredible—she didn’t complain at all.”

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After the birth, little Logan was flown to the hospital with multiple serious complications.

Against the odds, he pulled through and went home to his family after 105 long days in hospital to celebrate his first Christmas at home in Bend, Oregon.

4th birthday – SWNS

Four years later, Logan is a healthy and happy little boy with no health problems and still has his Superman sidekick with him to celebrate every birthday together.

“He’s just an incredible little boy. A lot of these babies born at 23 weeks have tons of health problems but Logan…he’s a smart little kid, my little boy, he really is.”

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