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Dozens of Blue Whales Spotted in Antarctica For the First Time Since 1980s Whaling Ban

Photo by Michael L. Baird, CC

Before 60 years of whaling decimated their population, the South Georgia Island off the coast of Antarctica was a teeming feeding ground for humpback whales, blue whales, fin whales, and southern right whales.

Now, researchers at the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) have discovered that many of these whales have returned—some in large numbers—to South Georgia.

Since the international moratorium on whaling in 1982, decades of protection have allowed the critically endangered blue whale—the largest of these beasts and the largest animal ever to live—to bounce back considerably after losing 97% of the species.

In 2018, the research mission recorded only 1 sighting and several acoustic confirmations of blue whales—but this year’s voyage logged 36 sightings, totaling 55 individuals.

“For such a rare species (blue whale), this is an unprecedented number of sightings and suggests that South Georgia waters remain an important summer feeding ground for this rare and poorly known species,” reads a press release on the British Antarctic Survey website.

WATCH: Couple Buys Up Acres Around Indian Tiger Reserve For Reforesting So Big Cats Can Roam

The 2020 expedition also found evidence of around 20,000 humpback whales, and managed to satellite tag several rare southern right whales.

“After three years of surveys, we are thrilled to see so many whales visiting South Georgia to feed again,” says team leader Dr. Jennifer Jackson, a whale biologist at the BAS. “This is a place where both whaling and sealing were carried out extensively. It is clear that protection from whaling has worked.”

Speaking with The Independent, Jackson revealed that her team was “thrilled” at the sighting of so many blue whales, which also suggested there is still ample food available for these leviathans.

LOOK: Photographer Captures Incredible Moment Wild Orangutan Offers Hand to Man in Snake-Infested Waters

“Relative to many other oceans on the planet, the Southern Ocean is still relatively pristine, so it still has capacity to support large numbers of whales,” she said.

In a recent presentation to the World Economic Forum, economist Dr. Ralph Chiami and whale biologist Michael Fishbach presented an economic analysis on great whales as agents of climate-change prevention. They estimated that the life of each whale is worth around $2 million dollars because of the massive role they play as storehouses of carbon, due to the enormous amount of feces which feeds the proliferation of phytoplankton—the marine algae that breathe half of the oxygen into planet earth.

Photo by Michael L. Baird, CC

No whale is worth more to the public good than the blue, and these massive beasts take more than 33 tons of carbon with them down to Davy Jones’ locker when they die. While alive, their massive “fecal plumes” nourish entire communities of phytoplankton which suck up hundreds of billions of tons of CO2 every year.

RELATED: Hawaii’s State Bird Soars Back From Brink of Extinction After Only 30 Birds Left on Islands

The discovery during the BAS 2020 survey has prompted the call for a new assessment of Antarctic blue whale recovery to be conducted by the International Whaling Commission Scientific Committee next year in order to find out how well they are recovering from the whaling years.

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Survey Says Uplifting Other Women is Top Priority for 70% of American Females—International Women’s Day

According to a new survey, 63% of Americans believe there will always be gender discrimination in the US—but despite those experiences, 69% of women feel more empowered today than ever before.

The survey asked 2,000 Americans about their opinions on gender equality ahead of International Women’s Day. Of the 1,000 men surveyed, 72% agreed that women still face gender discrimination nearly every day.

Maybe that’s why seven in 10 women surveyed (70%) said that, for them, uplifting fellow women is a top priority.

Conducted by OnePoll on behalf of Vitamin Angels  the survey found that nearly three-quarters of respondents agreed that women’s empowerment is a critical aspect to achieving gender equality.

RELATED: Watch the Badass Footage of Africa’s First All-Female Anti-Poaching Team in Action

Where does that empowerment come from? A majority of the survey participants agreed that finding your passion in life was the biggest factor—and ‘feeling confident in yourself’ was critical.

Feeling empowerment may be as easy as eating healthier and getting some exercise, as eight in ten women reported that they feel more empowered when they feel healthy.

CHECK OUT: Watch Reaction When She Becomes First Female Chef in US to Receive 3 Michelin Stars

Respondents also shared where they receive their empowerment from, and 60% said their mother was their top inspiration.

WHAT ARE THE TOP EMPOWERING MOMENTS IN LIFE? Survey Says…

Finding your passion in life
Becoming a parent
Feeling confident in yourself
Inspiring others
Maintaining a healthy lifestyle
Taking care of your mental health
Getting a promotion
Learning acceptance and patience
Giving back to your community
Experiencing new cultures
Becoming a godparent/guardian
Traveling to new places

HERE ARE THE TOP GNN STORIES OF BADASS FEMALE EMPOWERMENT THIS YEAR:

  1. Surfing is Now One of the First Sports Requiring Equal Pay for Women – Lawmakers Are Following Suit
  2. Emma Watson Launches Hotline That Offers Free Legal Advice for Women Experiencing Workplace Harassment
  3. Simone Biles Breaks Record for Most World Medals Won By Any Gymnast, With New Move That Now Bears Her Name
  4. World’s First All-Female Spacewalk Makes History for NASA
  5. Landmark Ruling Finally Grants Women Equal Rights in the Indian Military
  6. A Woman Wins Most Prestigious Mathematics Award in the World For the First Time Ever
  7. After 4 Years Being Married to Herself, Read This Woman’s Inspiring Reflections on Committing to Self-Love
  8. Sabrina Ionescu Makes Basketball History–Just Hours After Speaking at the Funeral of Her Mentor Kobe Bryant
  9. Girls’ Soccer Team is Winning Hearts After They Stopped Championship Play to Help Opponent Fix Her Hijab in Privacy
  10. Watch ‘Superhero’ Woman Rescue Trapped Deer From Not One, But Two Different Fences in a Matter of Minutes

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Aldi Heaps Pressure On Supplier Packaging Being 100% Recyclable or Compostable Within Five Years

By Kristina D.C. Hoeppner, CC license

In a muscly demonstration of solidarity with the environment of the planet, the CEO of the Aldi grocery chain sent a strongly written letter to suppliers informing them that anyone looking to sell to Aldi must package their products in 100% recyclable, compostable, or reusable material by 2025.

This extends their corporate responsibility pledge of 2018 which vowed that all Aldi branded items must come in the same sustainable packaging by 2022.

CEO Giles Hurley says now that 2,700 tons of plastic and 3,700 tons of non-recyclable material had been saved already since 2018, but that “much more was needed,” adding that the move to sustainability is “non-negotiable,” and that buying decisions moving forward “will be based on our supply partners’ ability to lead and adapt in this area.”

The letter, continued, “Following receipt of this letter, your Aldi buying director will contact you directly to discuss what tangible actions you will take… (and) actively explore all opportunities to develop more innovative packaging solutions and deliver on our packaging commitments.”

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Aldi is further committing time and resources to tackling the unsustainability of grocery store packaging by preparing to join the ranks of grocery chains that offer a reuse and refill scheme that will allow customers to return to Aldi with containers previously purchased and refill them from dispensers.

Another area of Aldi operations that is getting a makeover is the plastic bag situation. Aldi already eliminated single-use plastic bags, with reusable produce bags offered in 250 stores, but they are now preparing to make the switch to this model across all 870 locations worldwide.

By Kristina D.C. Hoeppner, CC license

MORE: Goldman Sachs Unveils $750 Billion Plan For Investing in Climate Solutions, and Vows Never to Support Arctic Drilling

Continually pushing both his own operations and those of his suppliers, the letter stated that improved cardboard sleeves for packs of tuna cans were a “great start” but that: “We want to work with you to trial alternative materials, innovate new packaging solutions and crucially be open-minded to all options.

“I look forward to seeing the progress that we can achieve together, in this business-critical area,” Hurley concludes.

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“The most courageous act is to think for yourself. Aloud.” – Coco Chanel (Today is International Women’s Day)

Quote of the Day: “The most courageous act is to think for yourself. Aloud.” – Coco Chanel (today is International Women’s Day)

Photo: by Nicolas Picard (cropped) – public domain

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?

 

These are the 3 Most Promising Longevity Supplements From Scientific Research So Far

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Reprinted with permission from World At Large—a news website reporting on travel, politics, health, science, and current events.

Since the turn of the century the progress in the field of longevity has been remarkable. Researchers like Dr. David Sinclair, Dr. Rhonda Patrick, Dr. Eric Verdin, and others have catapulted the field from one that was secondary to other lifespan-focused fields like those dedicated to helping reduce cancer or diabetes, into one of the most exciting and interdisciplinary areas of study today.

So far, the ever-expanding research into longevity has yielded a shopping list of benefits—from limiting age-related decline in the eyes, to reducing all-cause mortality.

Along with research into simple lifestyle interventions like sleep, exercise, and sauna use, certain specific nutritional elements, notably a select few known as “NAD+ boosters,” are being looked at and now commercially sold, as a potentially effective treatment for a condition that’s very old but also very new: aging.

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NAD+ boosters, like nicotinamide riboside (NR), and nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN), as well as the compound resveratrol—produced in plants, notably red grapes, during periods of stress—can now all be purchased in supplement form commercially.

What might a longevity supplement do for you? We know it has shown a variety of benefits in scientific studies of both humans and rodents.

Nicotinamide riboside

Of all the NAD+ boosters—compounds which either convert directly into, or contribute in some way to the process of creating the nutritional element—nicotinamide riboside (NR) has been the most extensively studied, mostly in animals.

In one study, mice who were fed a diet high in both sugar and fat in order to quickly create obesity, gained less body fat and demonstrated increased insulin sensitivity when taking an orally-administered dose of NR.

MORE: Plant Compounds Used to Successfully Treat Alzheimer’s in Mice Now Shown to Prevent Other Effects of Aging

Mice receiving the same size dose of NR as the obesity study (400mg per kilo of bodyweight) were also found in another study to have reversed mitochondrial damage and increased mitochondrial biogenesis, the process through which mitochondria are created.

Finally, benefits to the brain from NR supplementation were also confirmed in rodents, including neurogenesis, synaptic plasticity, and reduced beta-amyloid build up in the brain, which is a strong indicator of Alzheimer’s risk.

“Whether taking nicotinamide riboside will have the same effects on delaying aging or improving mitochondrial function in humans as it does in animals is unknown,” writes longevity expert Dr. Rhonda Patrick on her blog. “However, when people with type 2 diabetes took a nicotinic acid derivative (an NAD+ precursor), they exhibited improvements in mitochondrial function in their skeletal muscle as well as increased NAD+ levels in their muscles.”

LOOK: Keep Your Eyes in Good Shape With These 4 Simple Ocular Stretches for Computer Users

Nicotinamide mononucleotide

While not studied as thoroughly as NR, nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) has also been shown to reduce some effects produced by aging.

In separate mouse studies, injections of 500mg per kilo of bodyweight were found to have beneficial effects in countering symptoms of obesity, particularly in improving insulin sensitivity and NAD+ levels in the liver and muscle, and also several markers of cardiovascular disease related to dysfunction of the heart.

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As we age, levels of NAD+ decrease in tissues over time, which experts believe is a key factor in age-related decline in the muscles, heart, brain, liver, and other organs.

Starting at 5 months of age, one mouse cohort was split into two groups and fed a diet that included 100 and 300 mg per kilo of bodyweight of NMN for 12 months respectively.

“The mice that were fed nicotinamide mononucleotide had improved skeletal muscle mitochondrial function, increased energy expenditure, increased bone density and decreased insulin resistance in a dose-dependent manner,” writes Rhonda. (Dose dependency refers to the amount of NMN consumed relating to the gravitas of the observed effect.)

For instance in the case of the mouse cohort, 100mg of NMN in the diet resulted in a 4% reduction in age-associated weight gain, while the 300mg group experienced a 9% reduction. Remarkably, it was also shown to increase or fortify energy metabolism, eye function, insulin sensitivity, while reducing age associated gene expression.

Resveratrol

Short of your bartender explaining to you why this or that particular bottle of red wine is good for your heart, resveratrol is only recently beginning to be explored as a potential longevity compound. It exists in the seeds, fruits, skins, leaves, stems, and other parts of a variety of plants, and is created during periods of stress on the plant.

This is why red wine is noted as having heart-healthy or antioxidant effects on the body. During the winemaking process, the stressed parts of the grape confer resveratrol into the beverage, however it’s likely negligible amounts.

In a study where healthy individuals were given a 6-week course of 40mg of resveratrol derived from the extract of a plant called Japanese knotweed, multiple anti-inflammatory effects were observed. Reductions in pro-inflammatory markers such as cytokines TNF-Alpha and IL-6, as well as the concentrations of oxidants were noted after the trial.

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IL-6 and TNF-Alpha contribute significantly to declines associated with aging, with TNF-Alpha being correlated with possibly every disease known to man.

The most significant way in which resveratrol acts to improve longevity is through sirtuin activation. World at Large reported in January: “Sirtuins use NAD+ to control the genes involved in some of the most critical systems in our biology including energy metabolism, circadian rhythms, autophagy, DNA repair, and cell survival…”

Sirtuins play a role in insulin release, lipid mobilization, stress responses, and lifespan modulation, and mimic many of the beneficial effects observed in calorie-restriction, another longevity-based field of research. Dr. Patrick explains on her website how caloric restriction has been widely-shown to increase healthspan and lifespan in organisms from bacteria to primates.

MORE: Managing Your Gut Bacteria Shown to Alleviate Anxiety, Says New Research

A study in Nature involving yeast showed that “resveratrol mimics calorie restriction by stimulating sirtuin-2, increasing DNA stability and extending lifespan by 70%.”

Taking resveratrol in supplement form must be done with a little more application than other supplements. Dr. Patrick has collected much of the resveratrol research on her website, including how the bioavailability of resveratrol was shown to be higher with a moderate fat breakfast than with a high fat breakfast and how resveratrol is safe in humans in doses as high as 5 grams.

Finally, in a conversation between Dr. Patrick and Harvard Professor of Genetics Dr. David Sinclair, the latter recommends the storing of resveratrol in a cold dark environment at all times.

Continue exploring this topic — Maybe You’ve Heard of NAD+: Here’s Why it’s Important and Why Everyone’s Talking About It

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In Just 2 Years, Lithuania Steals The Crown For Best European Recycler By Using an Expansive Return Program

The small country of Lithuania is making big strides towards creating a seamless circular economy where each and every water bottle and aluminum tuna can is recycled and turned into an identical successor.

And, in two years they already have a recycling rate for plastic packaging of 74%—the highest of any European country, and 44% higher than the EU average.

They also reached a milestone of 91.9% for all bottles and cans after the introduction of a deposit-refund scheme for plastic, aluminum, and glass food and beverage containers—and the program is remarkably simple.

When the consumer buys a product packaged in a returnable recyclable container, they pay a €0.10 tax which is held in trust until the consumer returns the packaging to a special reverse-vending machine, whereupon the ten cents is repaid.

Any store that chooses to sell grocery items in designated recyclable containers are provided with reverse vending machines to place either inside the store or outdoors. Consumers are paid in vouchers that can be redeemed in store as cash or credit toward their shopping bill, which brings additional foot traffic into stores.

LOOK: German Supermarket Saves Over 2,000 Tons of Food By Reselling Items Other Stores Won’t

The return rate for beverage containers reached a whopping 91.9% by the end of 2017.

USAD, the Lithuanian non-profit that designed the system, set a goal for a 55% return rate in 2016 but managed to reach 74.3% by the end of only one year—and people were mostly pleased with the system by the closing of 2017.

According to the European Union’s Circular Economy platform, 97% of the country’s consumers were satisfied with the deposit-return system, which has since collected over 2 billion returns and 56,000 tons of material since its deployment in 2016, a figure of mass equal to 6 Eiffel Towers.

File photo by Mr. Tin DC, CC

“We feel an obligation to take care of our country, society and nature. That is why we wanted to design a deposit return system that would work as well as possible for citizens, producers, importers and traders,” states Saulius Galadauskas, Chairman of USAD as well as Head of the Lithuanian Brewers Association.

“We can be proud of our deposit return system, which brings us closer to the Lithuania we want to see—a cleaner, more beautiful and more modern country.”

MORE: Revolutionary New Recycling Method for Plastic and Waste is Solving Two Problems With One Stream

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The World’s First Disposable Diaper Company That Collects The Dirty Ones For Composting

For environmentally-conscious parents, instead of throwing thousands of disposable diapers into the landfill every year, where they will take 500 years to biodegrade, a new company helps to clear your green conscience.

Just ship the baby’s dirty diapers off in the box, or use a local composter, then wash your hands of the whole situation. The first step is, you need to switch to the biodegradable diapers sold by a company called Dyper—and they even ship them to your house.

The manufacturer of responsibly-sourced bamboo diapers has teamed up with one of GNN’s favorite sustainable companies, TerraCycle. TerraCycle has been recycling and composting some of the world’s toughest items—and diapers was a natural target.

The unique recycling program aptly called “ReDyper” starts with a subscription, and includes boxes and bags that meet the United Nations Hazmat shipping specifications, as well as prepaid shipping labels to make the whole process as easy as possible.

“It’s got to be super convenient. It’s got to be, frankly, as close to convenient as possible relative to throwing it out,” TerraCycle CEO Tom Szaky, told Fast Company.

After they arrive at TerraCycle’s facilities, they go on to industrial composting facilities that TerraCycle partners with to be turned mostly into compost for things like the landscaping on highway median strips.

Unfortunately, as diaper companies compete with each other, supposed innovations like infused lotions, latex cores, or plastic fasteners (made from phthalates for greater flexibility and toughness) have greatly reduced the biodegradability of the modern diaper. Dyper makes theirs without any of these chemical agents, ensuring minimal environmental damage, more natural ingredients, and quickest composting time.

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“We talked to many moms that wish that they had that opportunity to compost, because they’re living in New York City in an apartment on the 24th floor and they have no option to do that,” said Taylor Shearer, content manager at Dyper.

Dyper.com says that each monthly subscription costs $68 for 260 diapers, and it includes free shipping to your door—and the company gives a 10% discount to members of the military. They will ship samples for $4 so you can check out the quality, but receive a credit if you end up buying.

Returning your used diapers for composting costs an additional $39, but includes all the boxes, bags, and labels. This is an add-on service because you might be able to find a composting facility or company near you, like those available in San Francisco, or you can do it yourself in the back field.

RELATED: Revolutionary New Recycling Method for Plastic and Waste is Solving Two Problems With One Stream

Because 3.5 million tons of diapers are tossed into the trash every year, any diaper recycling program is sorely needed—and welcome as a newborn baby.

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Bill Gates Has Just Invested in a Company That Grows Palm Oil in a Lab to Save the Rainforests

Attempting to put a permanent halt to the advance of palm oil cultivation and the destruction of tropical rainforest to accommodate it, a New York City-based startup called C16 Biosciences is producing oil with very similar chemical and functional properties to palm oil.

Palm oil is the world’s most-produced vegetable oil with a global yield of 75.7 million metric tons entering the market every year. It is found in everything from Cheezits, to ice cream to pizza dough, and even beauty products like shampoo and makeup.

Demand for the crop is projected to quadruple between now and 2050, which is why this new sustainable oil created from yeast cells undergoing fermentation, looks to be a crucial development.

“Our real mission is ending the need for deforestation that’s driven by the palm oil industry,” Shara Ticku, cofounder and CEO of C16 Biosciences told Fast Company. “We believe that it is totally unacceptable to be burning the planet to make a vegetable oil. It just doesn’t make any sense.”

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Breakthrough Energy Ventures, a fund established by Bill Gates and other investors to support technological and financial innovations that fight climate change, led a $20 million investment drive for C16 Biosciences, and the company expects to have their first products out in market soon—opting for a quick market entry servicing manufacturers who have a smaller demand for palm oil.

Ticku sees an opportunity for their faux palm oil to succeed in the beauty industry, where a demand for “clean beauty products” is growing and where the demand for palm oil by beauty brands is relatively small, compared to processed foods.

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The company uses a method similar to other fermentation processes like the one used to make beer.

They hope to target and replace all the palm oil that is currently linked to deforestation because of slash-and-burn cultivation of new acreage—about 3 million metric tons a year.

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“Do not overestimate the competition and underestimate yourself. You are better than you think.” – T. Harv Eker

Quote of the Day: “Do not overestimate the competition and underestimate yourself. You are better than you think.” – T. Harv Eker

Photo: by lensnmatter (cropped) – public domain

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?

 

Scientists Find Key to Delivering Turmeric Ingredient So It Can Be Absorbed to Treat Alzheimer’s and Herpes

For years, curry lovers have sworn by the anti-inflammatory properties of turmeric, but its active compound, curcumin, has long frustrated scientists hoping to validate these claims with clinical studies.

The failure of the body to easily absorb curcumin has been a thorn in the side of medical researchers seeking scientific proof that curcumin can successfully treat cancer, heart disease, Alzheimer’s, and many other chronic health conditions.

Now, an international team of researchers from the University of South Australia (UniSA), McMaster University in Canada and Texas A&M University has shown that curcumin can be delivered effectively into human cells via tiny nanoparticles.

Sanjay Garg, a professor of pharmaceutical science at UniSA, and his colleague Dr. Ankit Parikh are part of an international team that has developed a nano formulation which changes curcumin’s behavior to increase its oral bioavailability by 117%.

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The researchers have shown in animal experiments that nanoparticles containing curcumin not only prevents cognitive deterioration but also reverses the damage. This finding paves the way for clinical development trials for Alzheimer’s.

Co-author Professor Xin-Fu Zhou, a UniSA neuroscientist, says the new formulation offers a potential solution for Alzheimer’s disease.

“Curcumin is a compound that suppresses oxidative stress and inflammation, both key pathological factors for Alzheimer’s, and it also helps remove amyloid plaques, small fragments of protein that clump together in the brains of Alzheimer disease patients,” Zhou says.

MORE: World’s First Plaque-Identifying Toothpaste Significantly Reduces Inflammation Throughout the Body

The same delivery method is now being tested to show that curcumin can also prevent the spread of genital herpes.

“To treat genital herpes (HSV-2) you need a form of curcumin that is better absorbed, which is why it needs to be encapsulated in a nano formulation,” Professor Garg says.

“Curcumin can stop the genital herpes virus, it helps in reducing the inflammation and makes it less susceptible to HIV and other STIs,” added Garg.

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Women are biologically more vulnerable to genital herpes as bacterial and viral infections in the female genital tract (FGT) impair the mucosal barrier.

Curcumin, however, can minimize genital inflammation and control against HSV-2 infection, which would assist in the prevention of HIV infection in the FGT.

Their findings have been published in the International Journal of Molecular Sciences and Drug Delivery and Translational Research as part I and part II. All these papers can also be made available by contacting Professor Garg accordingly.

Reprinted from University of South Australia

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Man Recycles 150 Old Coolers into Makeshift Shelters for Feral Cats

Photo by Philip Rogich
Photo by Philip Rogich

One man from Utah has been protecting stray cats from the cold by recycling old coolers into makeshift shelters.

Philip Rogich first began his labor of love back in November as a means of providing some extra comfort to the feral felines around his home community of Ogden.

“They’re living creatures… To me, living creatures deserve to have their basic needs met,” Rogich told KSTU in the interview below. “I’m giving them a second chance, one way or another,” he said.

Photo by Philip Rogich

Using a 6-inch drill bit, Rogich crafts each “cat cooler” shelter by cutting out a hole in the side of the cooler. Once he lines the holes with strips of pipe insulation foam, he fills the cooler with straw for bedding.

Rogich told GNN this week that he managed to place 150 cat coolers around Riverdale and Ogden before he was forced to put his passion project on hold in order to move houses.

Not only that, dozens of social media users have started crafting similar shelters in their own home towns since he posted pictures of his cat coolers to his charity’s Facebook page.

(WATCH the interview below)

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Hundreds of Endangered Languages Are Being Preserved Thanks to This Guy and His Army of Volunteers

Out of the 7,000 languages that are spoken around the world, 500 of them are at risk of being forgotten and lost to the annals of history.

Thankfully, Daniel Bögre Udell has created an online library to preserve them all.

Udell is the co-founder of Wikitongues—a nonprofit dedicated to saving the world’s endangered languages from extinction.

More than 1,000 international volunteers contribute to the Wikitongue language library by interviewing people in their native languages.

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Some of the participants use their mother tongue to talk about their culture and language—others simply use their video interviews to talk about themselves; regardless of the topics, all of the video interviews are catalogued and documented through the Wikitongue website.

When Great Big Story interviewed Udell back in April, he said the organization’s volunteers had recorded more than 435 languages from 70 countries ranging from Aruan Malay to Finnish sign language—and that number is increasing every day.

(WATCH the video below) – Photo by Great Big Story

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As Millions of Dollars Are Raised for Nashville Tornado Victims, Gibson is Donating Guitars to Affected Musicians

Photo by Brittney Bremnes / Gibson

Since Nashville is notorious for being one of the most beloved music capitals of the US, Gibson Guitars is providing a special kind of relief for musicians who may have lost their instruments during this week’s series of devastating tornadoes.

Gibson Gives—the international guitar brand’s charitable foundation—is offering to replace any guitars that may have been lost or damaged during the storms.

“Our goal is to get a guitar back into the hands of anyone who has had their guitar damaged or destroyed in the recent Tennessee storm,” says Dendy Jarrett, executive director of Gibson Gives. “As a Nashville, Tennessee-based company, we are also engaging with our artists and other partners to provide support across many areas.”

The foundation has collectively donated more than $30 million worth of goods and services since their launch in 2002. In addition to installing music rooms in Nashville high schools, they have also donated guitars and supplies to music therapy programs for veterans suffering from PTSD.

RELATED: Kristen Bell is Using Her Instagram Page to Help Send Thousands of Gifts to Teachers in Need

Musicians looking to replace their guitars through the Gibson Gives Recovery Plan can email proof of loss or damage to [email protected]. Replacement guitars may be prototypes or refurbished guitars that will be selected at Gibson’s discretion.

Pop super star Taylor Swift—who is a Nashville native—is also contributing to tornado relief by asking her millions of fans to donate to the Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee’s tornado relief fund.

Although Swift did not disclose to her Instagram followers exactly how much money she herself had contributed to the fund, her publicist confirmed to NBC News that she had donated $1 million.

Taylor Swift’s Instagram story screenshot.

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“When it’s your time, you will walk right into your blessing.” – Germany Kent

Quote of the Day: “When it’s your time, you will walk right into your blessing.” – Germany Kent

Photo: by Luca-Upper – public domain

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?

 

Idaho Judge Says ‘NO’ to One Million Acres of Oil and Gas Extraction Leases So We Can Get Adequate Public Input

By Jeannie Stafford/USFWS

Idaho has for several years been very proactive in taking steps to protect sagebrush habitat for the sake of hundreds of species including the keystone of them all, the ostentatious greater sage-grouse. Now, a federal judge in that state has voided nearly one million acres of oil and gas leases on federal lands across 11 western states.

Chief Magistrate Ronald E. Bush noted that the period for public comment was too short during the lease application process, and it didn’t allow for adequate protestation time; describing it as “arbitrary and capricious”.

“Faster and easier lease sales, at the expense of public participation, is not enough,” wrote the judge, who reinstated a 30-day public forum-style comment period followed by an administrative protest period on all recent leases on public land.

In January 2018, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) issued a memorandum of instructions to streamline the leasing process by making common-sense adjustments to steer it away from over-regulation while maintaining standards of public health, environmental review, and public input.

“The court wasn’t fooled by the agency’s efforts to disguise its intention to provide greater influence to extractive energies—and the sage-grouse and 350 other sagebrush-dependent species will benefit from today’s win,” said Talasi Brooks, an attorney with Western Watersheds Project, one of the environmental groups which have supported the Idaho reversal.

RELATED: Couple Buys Up Acres Around Indian Tiger Reserve For Reforesting So Big Cats Can Roam

Under the recent rollback of protections for 9 million acres of western sagebrush habitat, departments like the Bureau of Land Management, Environmental Protection Agency, and the Interior have moved to allow states to take greater autonomy in energy and mineral production within their borders.

According to The Washington Post, this has involved making decisions that partly and sometimes entirely outflank citizen input in the case of the EPA, while the BLM has opened much shorter public comment periods and also established different methods of accepting public feedback, with some regional offices accepting only fax or in person protests rather than by email.

Greater Sage-Grouse by Jeannie Stafford/USFWS

The treeless meadows of sagebrush habitat characterize the American West, and the greater sage-grouse—which dances, struts, and fans its tail in an extraordinary mating ritual every spring—has become the poster child of this ecosystem. The bird’s population, once numbering 15 million, has been reduced to just 500,000 through habitat loss, drilling, and disease.

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Private-public partnerships in states like Idaho have intervened by slowing and even halting the decline of the charismatic bird, so much that the Near-Threatened species never had to be listed as Endangered under the law.

(WATCH the BBC’s amusing video—a dance party of the mating grouse…)

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Whales Feces Represent One of the Greatest Allies Against Climate Change—Even More Than Trees

Right whale - NOAA

Attention in the fight against climate change tends to be focused on gasoline and trees, but 75% of the planet’s surface is covered by ocean—and a natural process taking place underwater has excited scores of climate-conscious investors at the recent World Economic Forum who may want to help.

During the recent wildfires in the Amazon rainforest, journalists often portrayed trees as the “lungs of the world,” but that title most certainly belongs to phytoplankton, which alone refreshes nearly 50% of the atmospheric oxygen on planet earth—the value of four Amazons.

And, in the effort to stop the warming of the planet, our greatest allies could belong to the great blue species of whales—because of the tremendous amount of excrement left in their wake.

A new paper published by economist Dr. Ralph Chiami highlights the influence that whales, especially great blue whales—and their poo—have on climate change. It is all due to the predominance of whale fecal matter in the diets of the tiny ocean dwellers called phytoplankton.

The microscopic marine algae floats at the center of several marine food webs, and they provide food for a host of sea creatures including whales, while synergistically also requiring whale excrement to feed on. They also require carbon dioxide to survive, just like trees.

RELATED: Dutch Guy Famous for Cleaning Up Pacific Garbage Patch is Now Clearing the World’s Rivers Too

Whales, after deep-sea dives for krill and other food, return to the surface and release into the top ocean layer “fecal plumes” rich in nitrogen and iron. These plumes provide a key food source for phytoplankton which feed on non-organic nutrients like nitrates, phosphates, and sulfur.

Whales – A Public Good

Right whale – NOAA

In his paper, Dr. Chiami, an economist at the International Monetary Fund, suggests that since phytoplankton populations expand wherever whales are, a significant effort should be made to combat climate change by encouraging the growth and protection of whale populations.

“At a minimum, even a 1% increase in phytoplankton productivity thanks to whale activity would capture hundreds of millions of tons of additional CO2 a year, equivalent to the sudden appearance of 2 billion mature trees,” writes Chiami.

CHECK OUT: Humpback Whales Bounce Back From Near-Extinction—From Just 450, to Over 25,000

Abandoning the jargon of the scientist and replacing it with that of the economist, Chiami estimates that the financial value of a whale in terms of public good should be expressed in a clear dollar amount—so the value of a whale will serve as a better motivation to protect them.

Chiami calculated what a whale would be worth in terms of climate change by calculating the market price of carbon dioxide, the amount of carbon sequestered in their enormous bodies over their lifetime, and their economic effect on fishery enhancement and ecotourism. The figure is roughly $2 million per whale—with a total value of all the world’s whales at well over $1 trillion. Chiami continues his estimations by determining various ways of increasing whale well-being, before concluding that it would take 30 years to double the current worldwide whale stock.

MORE: Hawaii’s State Bird Soars Back From Brink of Extinction After Only 30 Birds Left on Islands

This value, according to Chiami, representing a mere fraction of the potential damage that 30 or 40 years of a warming climate would do to the world economies according to many estimations.

Interestingly, according to one report from the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland where Chiami and his biologist colleague Michael Fishbach from the Great Whale Conservancy presented their whale/climate strategy to a room completely empty of scientists—and instead packed with bankers and investment managers—the duo were mobbed with interested parties who agreed that the financial world could play a large role in helping to fund whale recovery efforts.

On top of the relatively small commercial whaling operations in countries like Norway, Iceland, and Japan, whales are threatened by marine noise pollution, ship strikes, and plastic pollution. However thanks to Chiami and the aptly-named Fishbach, funding for whale conservation could drastically rise in the coming years, as a few hard-nosed financial investors consider producing an influx of cash the size of which NGOs and nonprofits have only dreamed.

Be Sure And Share This Whale Of A Good News Tale With Your Friends On Social Media…

Engineer Makes a DIY Cell Phone With Rotary Dial So She Doesn’t Have to Use a Smartphone

A brilliant 34-year-old engineer has built her own mobile phone with a rotary dial—and she did it because she despises texting and over-complicated smartphones.

Justine Haupt has spent the last three years developing the old school device so that it can fit in her pocket, get better reception, and maintain a battery life of up to 30 hours.

When she wrote about the retro cell phone on her blog, the website crashed from the sheer number of visitors clamoring to admire the retro gadget.

LOOK: This New LED Lamp Has Helped 90% of Its Dyslexic Users to Read ‘Effortlessly’

Since Haupt has been inundated with requests from fellow smartphone haters begging for their own version of the phone, she is now offering DIY build-it-yourself kits to the public.

The astronomy instrumentation engineer from New York’s Brookhaven National Laboratory says she was was inspired to make the phone because she dislikes the culture and design of smartphones.

“I work in technology, but I don’t like the culture around smartphones,” says Haupt. “I don’t like the idea of being at someone’s beck and call every moment and I don’t need to have that level of access to the internet.

All photos by SWNS

“I’ve never texted, and building this phone was in part so that I would have a good excuse for not texting. Now I can hold up this phone and say, ‘No, I can’t text.’”

While Haupt did once buy a Samsung Galaxy smartphone for her mother and played around on it herself, she said she got rid of the device after a month.

“I thought I would give it a try but I lasted less than a month with it before I went back to my flip phone,” she recalled. “I’m an engineer, I love technology, but the phone is not the way I want to do it.”

She is also not a fan of the smartphone’s interface or touch screen. (WATCH the video at the bottom)

Numbers display on this screen – SWNS photo

“[It’s] absolutely horrible,” she added. “When you open an application and then you want it to go away but you don’t know if it is closed—that grates against the fiber of my being.”

Haupt’s appreciation of rotary dials inspired her project.

“I had had a flip phone for a long time and it can technically text so I wanted an even more dumbed down phone. I thought: ‘why not make a rotary dial phone?’” says the engineer. “I wanted it to fit in my pocket, be sleek, something I could actually use.

Haupt sourced a rotary dial from an old Trimline telephone, making sure the dial was small enough to fit on a phone which would slip into her pocket.

CHECK OUT: First Drone Project of Its Kind in Canada is Aiming to Plant 1 Billion Trees by 2028

“I was particular about getting one that could be as compact as possible.”

She then bought a cell phone radio development board from hardware company Adafruit in order to build a basic proof-of-concept prototype before designing her own circuitry.

Haupt used a 3D printer to create the cell phone case and she added speed dialing buttons so she could call her husband, David Van Popering, and her mother, Lorraine, at the click of a button.

SWNS photo

“If I want to call my husband, I can call him by pushing a single button,” says Haupt. “I can call people more quickly on this phone than on my old phone. In rare cases when I want to call a new number, I do use the rotary dial and it is a fun, tactile experience.”

WATCH: 14-Year-old Awarded $25,000 For Invention That Totally Eliminates Blind Spots in Your Car Using a Projector

Haupt also added a display to the phone so that she could see messages and missed calls.

“It’s actual e-paper, the same material that you find on Kindles. Those kinds of displays are cool and are under-utilized in technology.”

The phone takes an AT&T prepaid sim card which is compatible with the cell phone radio.

LOOK: People With Diabetes May One Day Be Monitoring Glucose With an Earring

“I never expected to go viral with this,” Haupt said. “I didn’t want to sell it at first but everyone was clamoring and I got so many emails from people begging to buy a phone, and (then) someone suggested I should make a kit.”

Customers can buy the kit, which includes the circuit board and the 3D printed parts, from her company Sky’s Edge for $170—although they will have to source their own rotary dial.

“Now I’m looking at making a more inclusive kit that will come with everything you need,” Haupt added.

(WATCH a demonstration in this SWNS video…)

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Woman Won $1,000 Weekly Lotto Payout—and Proved Money Can’t Buy Happiness By Giving It All Away

Editor’s Note: this evergreen story was originally published on GNN in July 2018, but we are reposting it this week for #ThrowbackThursday in hopes of introducing it to our new readers.

While it’s a common belief that money can’t buy happiness, Rachel Lapierre is proving otherwise by giving all of her money away.

The 56-year-old former beauty queen from Quebec won the Gagnant Lifetime Lottery in 2013, which means that she receives a $1,000 stipend every week—and she is going to keep receiving those payments for the rest of her life.

Instead of spending her fortune on lavish possessions, however, Lapierre uses all of her money on running a charity and helping the less fortunate.

“Money is money. When you’re born you don’t have anything,” Lapierre told BBC in the video below. “And when you go, you go with nothing but your memories. You go with what you did here in life.”

WATCHPowerball Winner’s Gives Amusingly Endearing Retelling of How and Why He Won $183 Million

Fame and money is not strange to Lapierre, either—as a young woman, Lapierre attended modeling school so she could enter the Miss Quebec beauty pageant. In 1982, at the age of 21, she won the pageant and toured the country.

When she left her modeling lifestyle behind her, she started volunteering with humanitarian organizations and working as a nurse so she could fulfill her desire to help people. Then, when she drew her winning numbers, she used the money to start her charity, Le Book Humanitaire. Though the organization also accepts donations, much of the funding has come out of Lapierre’s wallet.

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“We just try to promote good deeds. Good deeds can be so many things. It can be a bike, it can be food, it can be transport to go to the hospital. It can even be just listening to somebody on the phone because they are lonely,” Lapierre said to the news outlet.

“I think happiness comes from the heart. It’s nice to have a new home or car. It can be really fun—but you don’t need that to be happy,” she added.

(WATCH the emotional interview below)

Share This Inspiring Story Of Philanthropy With Your FriendsPhoto by BBC

Former Prisoners Use Skills Learned as Inmates to Help Firefighters Battle Blazes–And Give Jobs to Ex-Cons

Photo by All Around Forestry
Photo by All Around Forestry

Not only are these two former inmates helping to fight forest fires since gaining their freedom, they’re also proving to their peers that there is life after prison.

During their time at Central New Mexico Correctional Facility, Lawrence Jaramillo and Joshua Melendrez were just two of the inmates who participated in a state-run program that teaches inmates about firefighting and prevention.

The program, which taught the men life skills that they could use to reintegrate into society upon their release, often placed the men on the front lines of wildfire response teams in New Mexico.

The experience was profoundly moving for Melendrez and Jaramillo, and they would often dream of starting a business together once they were released. So, when they were finally freed from the correctional facility in July 2017 and January 2018 respectively, they launched their own forestry company.

RELATED: Inmates Are Earning Free College Degrees Behind Bars, And Their Recidivism Rate Plunges to 2%

Since they got a business license to operate All Around Forestry in November 2019, the dynamic duo has hired a crew of former inmates to join their company.

“There is life after prison, and that’s what I would like for them to take from this,” Jaramillo told ABC News.

Furthermore, their company has provided much-needed backup support to state firefighters battling blazes across ‘The Land of Enchantment’.

(WATCH the news coverage below)

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“Do not be afraid; our fate cannot be taken from us; it is a gift.” – Dante Alighieri

Quote of the Day: “Do not be afraid; our fate cannot be taken from us; it is a gift.” – Dante Alighieri

Photo: by Marina Vitale – public domain

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?