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How Japanese Fish Printing Grew from Documenting Day’s Catch to Acclaimed Artform

Gyotaku, or fish prints, drying on a line - credit, Science History Institute, photograph by Conrad Erb CC 3.0. via Wikimedia
Gyotaku, or fish prints, drying on a line – credit, Science History Institute, photograph by Conrad Erb CC 3.0. via Wikimedia

From its humble origins as a method of documenting noteworthy catches, for sale or for record setting, the art of fish printing, or “gyotaku” has rapidly become an international fine art phenomenon.

As Japanese as a Geisha cutting a sushi roll with a samurai sword, gyotaku is infused with all the lovely idiosyncrasies of the country—from its famous appreciation for fish, to its extreme demands of discipline and attention.

Gyotaku can be traced back to the 19th century when fishermen would smear a fish with sumi ink and press it onto washi paper to create a print of the fish. Unable to do anything half-heartedly, the Japanese fishermen gradually learned the tricks of how to make the best prints, and eventually switched from monochrome to color paints.

Since then the practice has developed into a true artform, with methods, schools, and techniques for drying and preparing the fish.

Preparation is key since a fish comes with all kinds of slime and liquid that could ruin the delicate rice paper typical of gyotaku prints. The slime has to be removed and various openings plugged to prevent water from leaking out.

Two chief methods exist: the first is known as direct gyotaku and involves only straightforward steps of drying the fish, layering on the ink or paint, and rubbing it with washi paper. The image appears in reverse.

– credit, courtesy of Elena Di Capita

The indirect method sees either paper or cloth placed over the fish and secured with rice paste to a board. This allows the artist to create a work that isn’t in reverse.

Both methods permit the fish to be eaten, and in both too the eye must be painted after, since no pigment will stick to fish’s eye. Additional innovations have seen a variety of different coloring techniques that reflect the iridescence of a fish’s scales or the density of the animal’s skin pigments during various life stages.

Japan Times spoke with the grandson of a renowned gyotaku master, Keisuke Matsunaga, who said that pigment application is a race against time and must be completed in about 30 minutes before renewed moisture from the fish begins to degrade it.

One consistent theme is that there can be nothing but the eye added afterwards. Any touch ups push the artform from printing towards painting.

Gyotaku has spread far beyond the shores of the home islands, developing in Australia, Italy, America, Hawaii, Brazil, and elsewhere.

Elena Di Capita in her studio – credit, supplied courtesy of the artist

In Italy’s seaward region of Liguria, Elena Di Capita, has expanded the horizons of gyotaku in Europe, and in fact “is the artist that brought it to Italy,” she tells GNN.

Her work is focused mainly on schools of anchovies, the most important fish in her home region. She deviates from the traditional gyotaku by mixing different biological environments and by creating huge compositions with a highly dynamic look.

A bycatch composition – credit, courtesy of Elena Di Capita

Additionally, she explains she works with bycatch, a term to describe fish caught incidentally in the pursuit of gamefish. In effect, these animals “died for nothing” and so by creating metaphorical geographies through gyotaku, she gives the fish a new meaning and a tribute to their accidental loss.

“My work with them is about giving them dignity. It’s a way to celebrate life,” she told the Times.

In the US, gyotaku is not uncommon to find in aquariums or in elementary school classrooms. Gyotaku in its most rudimentary form is something children can do and do fairly well.

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Ecosystem of Pansies Thrives on Soil Contaminated by Lead Mining–Turning it into Clean Organic Compounds

Spring Sandwort, a metallophyte - credit, Douglal, CC 4.0. via Wikimedia
Spring Sandwort, a metallophyte – credit, Douglal, CC 4.0. via Wikimedia

For areas contaminated by lead and zinc mining across Europe, a class of plants known as “metallophytes” are helping enrich nature while diminishing pollution.

The Guardian reported on this kind of ecological double speak, where wildflowers seemingly grow in healthy abundance on semi-mountainous landscapes in the north of the UK, a place that has seen lead and zinc mining since Roman times.

Calaminarian grassland is a rare biome that exists where topsoil has been eroded away by water and wind enough for plants to touch the tips of zinc, lead, or cadmium deposits; calamine being an old European name for zinc.

Chief among the plants that thrive on the continent is the Viola calaminaria, or the zinc violet, a rare yellow flower that blooms in metal-rich soils. In the UK, it’s the mountain pansy, and its almost never a natural phenomenon.

Covering just 450 hectares (1,100 acres) these grasslands are especially found in areas like Durham, the North Pennines, and Cumbira. Here, most of the UK’s lead and zinc mines were closed over 100 years ago, but their presence on the landscape is clear thanks to the pansies, spring sandwort, and Alpine penny-cress, a group collectively known as metallophytes.

Next to them can be found sea thrift, bladder campion, and kidney vetch, writes the Guardian’s Mark Hillsdon, hardy species that are tolerant in a variety of intolerable landscapes.

Today, mining companies in the West undergo rigorous environmental reviews and permiting processes, and their land reclamation and environmental remediation work is budgeted in from the earliest feasibility studies.

In the 19th century, nothing of the sort was required, and often miners would dam and then unleash rivers onto mining areas to strip away soil and reveal the metal deposits. That contaminated dirt would accumulate in big “spoil piles” which have overtime been covered by a layer of humus and turned into the calaminarian grasslands.

English county authorities are at pains to decide what to do with these curious places: their existence is predicated on one or many neurotoxic pollutants, but the plants’ ability to take up the toxic heavy metal, and weave it into complex organic molecules in their roots which renders them nontoxic is not only saving millions of dollars in remediation work, but going on while the area is enriched from the food web diversity they help anchor.

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On the other hand, Durham and Cumbria are keen to reduce levels of zinc, cadmium, and lead in wild rivers and streams, and environmental authorities are aware that this will diminish these unique and almost precious microhabitats.

Even still, there may be a calaminarian boom before the habitat goes bust. In county Durham, the government’s Water and Abandoned Metal Mines (WAMM) program is establishing calaminarian grasslands by hands on identified mine spoil piles along the River Tees.

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Planted by the thousand around the spoil piles’ perimeters, they stop heavy metals from leaching out into the river and surrounding soils.

GNN has reported before on fungal solutions to cleaning up pollution from mining and industry, but never vegetation.

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No Vaccine No Problem: Papua New Guinea Malaria Deaths Fall by 92%

Malaria hospital in Tanzania - credit Olympia Wereko-Brobby, SMS for Life
Malaria hospital in Tanzania – credit Olympia Wereko-Brobby, SMS for Life

Using only current methods of prevention, testing, and treatment, Papua New Guinea has reduced the rate of malaria deaths from 13 per 100,000 inhabitants to just 1.

PNG is responsible for some 90% of all malaria cases in the Western Pacific region.

Lucy Dally, the country’s malaria coordinator, presented this incredible drop in the fatality rate at the Morobe Health Authority 2025 Review Meeting last week.

By 2023, the country’s total case count reached its highest since 2012 at 913,701, but has since begun to fall in line with a new expanded rapid diagnostics test and Artemesinin Combination Therapies program.

It’s been a long road for PNG and the authority. In 2000, 700 people a year died of malaria. Last year, that number fell to 148, with only 66 malaria deaths being recorded in Morobe, the most-populous province.

“The decrease in malaria-related deaths is due to different parties working together,” said Dally. “The surveillance team picks up information and informs the malaria team, who then takes action.”

The country’s national strategy aims to reduce malaria cases by 63% and deaths by 95% while seeing 95% of residents sleeping under insecticide-treated nets. This year, provincial health teams distributed nets, medicines, and test kits to 60 different health centers around the country.

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3 Teens Win Global Earth Prize for Inventing Tamarind Powder That Easily Removes Microplastics

The winners with their Plas-Stick invention, Avyana Mehta, Ariana Agarwal, Vivaan Chhawchharia, and their teacher Minal Jain - credit, the Earth Prize, released
The winners with their Plas-Stick invention, Avyana Mehta, Ariana Agarwal, Vivaan Chhawchharia, and their teacher Minal Jain – credit, the Earth Prize, released

In mid-May, GNN reported that 3 teens from India had won a major continental science prize for their brilliant use of an ingredient in Indian cuisine as the basis for a microplastic filter.

Now, from Geneva comes the announcement that 16-year-olds Vivaan Chhawchharia, Ariana Agarwal, and Avyana Mehta, have claimed the Global Earth Prize in addition to the Asian one, as voted by 23,000 experts from dozens of countries around the world.

“Being named the Global Winners of The Earth Prize is incredibly special for all of us, especially as the first team from India to receive this recognition,” the trio said in a statement.

“What started as an idea between students has now been recognised among thousands of projects from around the world, which feels both surreal and deeply motivating.

Their grand prize-winning invention is called Plas-Stick, and used powdered tamarind seed as the base for an all-natural microplastic clumping agent. After a short agitation period, the clumped microplastic-tamarind mass can be removed with nothing more than a magnet.

Notably, Plas-Stick is the first-ever Global Winner of The Earth Prize from India.

Designed for use in shared water containers, the biodegradable powder binds invisible plastic particles into visible clumps that can then be easily removed with a handheld magnet, offering a simple and low-cost alternative to complex filtration systems.

The idea was sparked by the team’s studies in environmental science and a visit to a rural community, where they observed how drinking water is often stored in shared containers without access to advanced filtration systems.

Globally, over 2.2 billion people lack safely managed drinking water infrastructure, increasing reliance on stored water that may contain microplastics. Microplastics may be the most significant environmental and human health contaminant on Earth. Particles ranging in size from the 1/1 to 1/1,000th the width of human hair have been found virtually everywhere anyone has thought to look for them, including on the summit of Everest and the bottom of the Marianna Trench.

MORE INSPIRING PERFORMANCES: Teacher Wins $1M Prize for Turning India’s Slums Into Hundreds of Open-Air Classrooms

They have been recorded in worryingly high quantities in every human organ and tissue, including the brain and even placenta. Though the full gamut of toxic damage related to microplastic exposure isn’t fully known, what’s certain is that they act as strong endocrine disrupters.

Determined to create a solution that is both effective and accessible, Chhawchharia, Agarwal, and Mehta developed a system that requires no electricity or complex infrastructure. It in fact requires only a crop that’s already used widely in South Asian cuisine, which is both cultivated and thrives in the wild.

COMBATTING MICROPLASTICS: Seeds from ‘Miracle Tree’ Can Filter More Than 98% of Microplastics from Tap Water

“Plas-Stick was designed to be simple, affordable and accessible, and this support allows us to take it beyond pilot schools and scale it to many more communities that need it most!”

Now following their Global Winner recognition, the team plans to scale the solution through decentralised production hubs and expand to rural communities across India, making safer drinking water more accessible across rural Indian communities and beyond.

The Earth Prize is run by The Earth Foundation, a non-profit based in Geneva, Switzerland, founded during the School Strike for Climate in 2019. At a time when climate anxiety affects a majority of young people—59% reporting they are very or extremely worried about the environment—the Prize provides a pathway from concern to action, equipping students with the tools to develop tangible, real-world solutions.

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“No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted.” – Aesop

Quote of the Day: “No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted.” – Aesop

Photo by: Henry Burrows

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

Credit: Henry Burrows

Good News in History, June 1

100 years ago today, the great American television personality Andy Griffith was born in North Carolina. He is fondly remembered today for 9-year productions The Andy Griffith Show, and as the folksy defense attorney Ben Matlock in Matlock. He was also a Tony Award nominee on two separate occasions, and the star of Elia Kazan’s A Face in the Crowd, which “stunned” moviegoers with his then-unknown talent. READ more about this great southern actor… (1926)

Grieving Mother Finds 3-Carat Gem at Crater of Diamonds State Park After Son and Father Die

Keshia Smith with her diamond – Crater of Diamonds State Park on Facebook
Keshia Smith with her diamond – Crater of Diamonds State Park on Facebook

A grieving mother discovered a 3.09-carat white gem at Crater of Diamonds State Park, catching a wave of emotional release and hope following a year of personal loss.

Keshia Smith planned the trip to Arkansas a year ago, joining her boyfriend and brother on the journey from Pennsylvania.

Little did she know she’d be healing from the loss of her son six months ago and would have just buried her father the week before departing.

“I really needed this,” she told KAIT-TV. “I just can’t believe it actually happened!”

While digging in the dirt, she spotted a heart-shaped shiny stone—a stunning white diamond—and park officials said her discovery was “meant to be.”

“To me it looks like a heart. That’s the first thing I saw when I found it.”

She named it the Za’Novia Liberty Diamond, honoring her grandchildren and the significance of America’s 250th year.

Crater of Diamonds State Park on Facebook

“Moments like this remind us why Crater of Diamonds State Park is such a special place,” Park officials wrote on its Facebook page.

Some Facebook commenters claimed it was a fake find, because it looked so polished. The confusion stems from a basic misunderstanding of how diamonds from the Arkansas State Park naturally look when they come out of the ground.

Despite online skepticism, diamonds from the Arkansas volcanic pipe naturally feature smooth, rounded edges and a distinctively high, metallic-like surface shine. Their “adamantine luster” refers to the stone’s inherent ability to reflect light intensely before it is ever touched by human tools.

And, because diamonds are completely non-porous and do not stick to surrounding clay or dirt, they often emerge from the soil looking perfectly clean, flat, and glass-like.

The general public is used to seeing rough quartz or diamonds from deep-shaft African commercial mines, which often look like frosted, milky shards of ice. Park staff verified the gem at the Diamond Discovery Center, confirming its natural authenticity and its weight of exactly 3.09 carats.

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The lucky find on April 22 was the second-largest rock pulled out this year at the southern US site.

INVITE FRIENDS TO GO GEM HUNTING After You Share This on Social Media…

Britain’s First Furniture Orchard Grows Chairs Right on the Trees (WATCH)

Gavin Munro grows chairs for Full Grown (SWNS)
Gavin Munro grows chairs for Full Grown (SWNS)

A British couple has spent 20 years perfecting the practice of sculpting trees to grow into the shapes of ready-made seats designed with living branches.

Alice and Gavin Munro began creating the ‘furniture orchard’ on a two-acre English farm in 2006, but the harvesting typically takes between 6-9 years per chair.

The process involves pruning young tree branches as they grow over a special metal frame to form the shape.

Each item is dried for a year after being chopped, and are then sold to customers as artworks valued at tens of thousands of dollars.

The couple now wants to launch a program to help others grow their own. Not just chairs and benches, but lamps and tables, too.

“Since we started we’ve used all sorts of different types of trees,” said Gavin, who calls his business called Full Grown.

“Primarily we’ve shown pieces from willow, but we’ve tried apple, cherry, oak, ash, beech and hawthorn.”

Chair grown on a tree by Gavin Munro / Full Grown (SWNS)

His first experiments were growing the chairs upright, but they soon realized it would work better if they grew upside down. They’ve also moved on from the plastic mold around which the branches would grow. Now they use metal. (Watch the video below…)

Gavin came up with the ground-breaking idea while he was hospitalized as a child with a rare congenital condition that causes an abnormal fusion of two or more neck vertebrae. During months when he underwent several operations to straighten his spine, he had the idea while viewing the scenery from his hospital bed.

Gavin went on to study art and furniture design, before setting up his furniture business in 2006.

Gavin Munro creation by Full Grown (SWNS photo)

“This has all been my husband’s idea,” Alice told SWNS news. “He got the time to observe the woodland over many months and observe the creatures. His parents also had some overgrown bonsai and the silhouette looked like a throne.

“Then he was in California collecting driftwood on the beach—and he saw some sticks laid out together in what looked like a table. He thought, ‘how hard would it be to grow into that shape’.”

Gavin wanted to create useful, beautiful objects, and collaborate with nature, so he started to grow some chairs in a corner of a friend’s farm in 2006—and they still rent the orchard from them in Derbyshire, to this day.

“You’re basically taking a piece of bark from one branch and bringing them together, so they grow together.

“It’s absolutely bizarre to do. It’s like bonsai meets 3D printing.

“We use a frame, it’s sort of a long oblong nearly so it can stick and shape properly. When it’s been coppiced with the water shoots coming out there are specific times of the growth where it’s easier to bend.

“You’re effectively tying the branch to the frame with these garden ties.”

Upside down chair growing from tree by Gavin Munro / Full Grown (SWNS)

“We’ve tried growing a few different items of furniture, but we’re focusing on chairs—and a bench design which seems considerably easier.

“We experiment to help figure out how each species reacts to what we want to do.

“It might take another two decades to work out how to best share this knowledge.

The couple are now also setting up the Full Grown Academy to pass down the skills in the hope that more people will carry on the process.

They are selling the chairs as artworks which are “priced accordingly” and gallery owner Sarah Myerscough says they can be worth around £75,000 (nearly $100,000).

Alice and Gavin Munro began creating the ‘furniture orchard’ – SWNS

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A bronze cast of one of their chairs appeared at this month’s Chelsea Flower Show in the UK, while several other chairs have been displayed in galleries worldwide.

“We’re quite lucky that the prototypes and failures are being seen as art,” Gavin mused.

“They cost too much at the moment to mass produce. Out of the few hundred we started, we’re going to be lucky to have a dozen new chairs over the 20 years of labor.”

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“Growing your own in your garden is the most accessible way of doing it at the moment—and lots of people have been wanting to do this in their own gardens, so that’s our next level.

“We’ve got six chairs out there in the world that are sittable, and there’s a handful more still growing and drying in the workshop.”

Their aim is to have an orchard like this in every town, but that may be a dream needing many more green thumbs.

SHARE THE FABULOUS IDEA With Nature-Lovers on Social Media…

Incredibly Rare Bongos Caught on Trail Cam in Area They Were Thought to be Extinct

Trail cam shows young female African antelope returned to Maasai Mau © Chester Zoo / Mountain Bongo Project
Trail cam shows young female African antelope returned to Maasai Mau © Chester Zoo / Mountain Bongo Project

It’s World Bongo Day today, and scientists dedicated to their survival have shared new field camera images that prove these magnificent animals have reappeared in a region where they were thought to be extinct.

For more than half a decade, conservationists feared the wild mountain bongo population, detected in four isolated areas eight years ago, had shrunk to a tiny range in the Aberdare mountains in Kenya.

Now trail cam photographs show bongos exploring a remnant forest fragment in Maasai Mau, roughly 200 kilometers from the Aberdares population.

“The excitement in camp was unbelievable when we first looked through the photos,” said Oscar Dyer, Director of Operations for the Mountain Bongo Project (MBP).

“Seeing a bongo here again is incredibly exciting—and it reinforces our determination to continue searching, protecting this forest, and finding evidence of more bongos in the area.”

The image is the result of years of hard work by MBP rangers on the ground in one of Kenya’s most inaccessible forests, and comes at a key moment in bongo conversation.

A hi-tech AI survey carried out last year by England’s Chester Zoo, with the support of Kenyan wildlife officials, estimated only 28 bongos in the Aberdares stronghold, but MBP confirmed there could be 40 individuals—and the appearance of the Maasai Mau bongo brings renewed hope for the species.

Trail cam shows young male African antelope returned to Maasai Mau © Chester Zoo / Mountain Bongo Project

The mature male captured by the cameras was likely first identified back in 2018 by Chester Zoo’s Dr. Tommaso Sandri, a MBP Advisory Council member who suggested that if it has remained hidden for years then other bongos may also still be in the area.

That hope was borne out when cameras returned more images.

Markings analysis has now confirmed these show an additional young male and a young female have appeared in the region.

“This is huge news,” he said. “Unlike Aberdares, Maasai Mau is not a national park, and the reappearance of bongo may focus organizations on increasing broader protections.”

Bongos are the largest forest antelope in Africa, but their extreme rarity and shyness make them difficult to track, so it’s a testament to the persistence of the MBP rangers who are Maasai people that work in difficult and isolated conditions to monitor and protect it using their long-held knowledge about the local ecosystem.

Trail cam attached to tree catches rare African antelope in Maasai Mau – © MBP

Fortunately, there are about 900 bongos in zoos and sanctuaries like the one operated by the Mount Kenya Wildlife Conservancy (MKWC). The recent translocation of four European-born males from zoos will help preserve vital genetic diversity for the species in the Kenya sanctuary population.

“The Mau population represents a significant genetic pool for mountain bongos and it is therefore vital for long-term conservation,” said Robert Aruho, who heads the MKWC.

Reinforcement from bongos cared for by organizations like Chester Zoo and MKWC could provide a way forward, boosting the population to sustainable levels. Meanwhile, MBP continues to protect the bongos still roaming in the wild.

HELP HAD ARRIVED: Emotional Officials Watch 17 Endangered Mountain Bongos Arrive in Kenya for Reintroduction

Credits: Petr Topič / Safari Park Dvůr Králové

“The mountain bongo is not beyond saving, but it does need us to act together,” said MBP’s Director of Operations Oscar Dyer.

“Collaboration between organizations like MBP, Chester Zoo, and our partners brings hope and is turning knowledge, protection, and persistence into real impact on the ground. With sustained support, we can ensure wild bongos continue to live in Kenya’s forests.”

Historically, bongos were affected by game hunting and collectors, but they are still affected by habitat destruction as a result of logging or farming.

They prefer areas with rich volcanic soil and a good water supply—the same type of land that is in demand for agriculture.

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“Their presence makes the forest more magical,” added Dr. Sandri, “and the world would be poorer for their loss.”

Celebrate World Bongo Day by donating to the Mountain Bongo Project, here.

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“It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men.” – Frederick Douglass

By Michela Serventi

Quote of the Day: “It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men.” – Frederick Douglass

Photo by: Michela Serventi

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

By Michela Serventi

Good News in History, May 31

Elephants at Kruger National Park.

100 years ago today, Kruger National Park was established in Limpopo and Mpumalanga in northeastern South Africa. One of the largest game reserves on the continent, it is more than twice the size of Yellowstone, at 7,576 square miles (19,623 square kilometers). Part of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park, it crosses over the border with Mozambique and Zimbabwe, forming a protected area bigger than Belgium where animals have room to roam to their heart’s content. READ more about South Africa’s wildest corner… (1926)

Batteries That Use Sodium Instead of Lithium Could Be Low-Cost Rival to Tesla’s

Sodium-ion batteries provide large-scale energy storage – CREDIT: Datang power company / HiNa Battery
Sodium-ion batteries providing large-scale energy storage in China – CREDIT: Datang power company / HiNa Battery

A new study shows that a low-cost sodium-ion battery currently used in cars and large-scale energy storage systems in China matches most performance parameters and production quality found in Tesla’s lithium-ion batteries.

Since sodium is much more abundant and widely available than lithium, using it for batteries could cut raw material costs for manufacturers and reduce supply chain risks that surround critical minerals.

Conducted by a German university, the research published on May 28 in the Cell Press journal Physical Science, looked at the battery designed by Hina, a spin-off company of the Chinese Academy of Sciences that has partnered with automakers like JAC to provide EV batteries.

It shows that “once the sodium-ion (or Na-ion) battery is tweaked to charge more effectively at low temperatures and function better at high energy densities, it could provide a cost-effective alternative for future electric vehicle batteries”.

“The combination of good uniformity, high power capability, and strong low‑temperature performance makes these cells attractive for stationary storage, grid services, and shorter‑range or commercial vehicles where potential lower cost and resource availability matter more than maximum driving range,” said Moritz Schütte, a battery researcher at RWTH Aachen University in Germany.

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EDITOR’S NOTE: The following unedited text is taken from the Cell Press media release:

To assess how HiNa batteries compare to more advanced Tesla batteries, Schütte’s team used a non-destructive technique called impedance spectroscopy to measure the uniformity of 120 sodium-ion battery cells. Next, to map out the power and energy performances of individual cells under real-life conditions, the team tested the batteries at varying currents and at temperatures from −20 °C to 45 °C. They also used X-rays to see the battery’s internal structure, then opened up the cells to measure their electrode dimensions, compositions, and microstructures.

They found that the battery uses a tabless (design), a double-aluminum current collector design that reduces resistance and ensures a uniform temperature distribution—and also mirrors the current design of Tesla batteries.

“We were positively surprised by how uniform the cells are,” says Schütte.

However, the sodium-ion battery has some limitations when it comes to energy density and charging at low temperatures. “The high‑power performance was better than one might expect from an early commercial sodium‑ion product,” says Schütte.

“For applications that require frequent charging at low ambient temperatures, appropriate thermal management or operating strategies will be important because low-temperature charging remains a clear weakness.”

The researchers also found unexpectedly high, unevenly distributed levels of copper in certain cathode regions of the battery, which “raises interesting questions about its role in performance and aging,” said Schütte.

“It will be exciting to see future sodium-ion technologies that are free of nickel and copper, as well, while achieving competitive energy density.”

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Sodium-ion batteries also perform well under load at low temperatures, making them an appealing option for both stationary power storage and mobile applications in cold climates.

“However, today’s commercial sodium-ion cells generally have lower energy density than the best lithium-ion cells, and the technology is less mature overall,” said Schütte.

Next, the authors plan to better understand and improve upon the battery’s charging capabilities at low temperatures so that they can charge more safely and efficiently below 0°C. Further research should also focus on optimizing the materials used to make sodium-ion batteries, added Schütte.

“Advances in hard‑carbon anodes and electrolyte formulations may be especially promising,” he said.

This work was supported by Germany’s Federal Ministry of Research, Technology, and Space and the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy.

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Louisville Restaurant Donates 100% of Profits–Over $100K in its First Year to Local Nonprofits

Noah’s Kitchen owner Adam Ursprung
Noah’s Kitchen owner Adam Ursprung

A purpose-driven restaurant located outside Louisville, Kentucky, just surpassed $100,000 in donations to local and national organizations since the owner pledged to give all his profits to charity.

Established one year ago to serve something greater, Noah’s Kitchen donates 100% of its profits to support community initiatives, nonprofits, and ministries.

Since opening in Brownsboro Crossing, every meal served has directly contributed to meaningful impact, transforming everyday dining into an opportunity to give back.

“This milestone isn’t just ours—it belongs to our community,” said Adam Ursprung, the founder of Noah’s Kitchen.

“Every guest who walks through our doors is part of something bigger,” said Adam, who for years has owned a Steak and Shake restaurant down the road.

In church one Sunday he “felt God calling him to serve more than just meals”.

Today, the satisfaction of doing things for others is what is most fulfilling.

Noah’s Kitchen

“It’s bringing me more happiness and peace than I ever dreamed of.”

Proceeds from preparing plates of their ‘elevated comfort food’ have supported groups like Hope Rescued (which received $44,907), Camberwell Grief Sanctuary ($12,620), The Prisoner’s Hope ($9,340), and Sunrise Children’s Services ($8,044)—as well as numerous nonprofits that each got between $1,000-4,000.

As Noah’s Kitchen approaches its one-year anniversary on June 18, the team looks forward to celebrating their milestone with the community they’ve impacted through their 501c-3 charitable restaurant located at 9850 Von Allmen Ct. on the city’s East End.

Social media ad for Noah’s Kitchen

“When I stopped clinging to my money and I started giving it away, my heart grew exponentially,” said Adam in an interview with WDRB-News.

“We have to pay our rent, and pay our employees, but once we get that covered—and all of our expenses—any profit goes to the organizations we support.”

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Gumbo Cook Worried About Regular Customer’s No-Shows Goes to His Home and Saves His Life

One year ago, he called his goals ‘God-sized’. Now that he’s proven the restaurant’s concept can work financially, he believes Noah’s Kitchen will become a household word.

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Owls Found Thriving in Abandoned Coal Mine as Wildlife Reclaims Industrial Heritage Site

Chatterley Whitfield mine in Staffordshire, England reclaimed by roses and owls – Photos by Andrew Mason via SWNS
Chatterley Whitfield mine in Staffordshire, England reclaimed by roses and owls – Photos by Andrew Mason via SWNS

New photos show owls and wildlife reclaiming an abandoned coal mine 50 years after it closed.

The Chatterley Whitfield mine in Staffordshire, England, last produced coal in 1976.

Now, a half-century later, the son of a coal miner who worked there has returned to document nature’s return.

The buildings and towers, including the iconic pit head wheels used to lower miners into the ground, remain standing.

But a closer look reveals wildflowers and several species of owls making the site their home.

Photographer Andrew Mason, whose father John worked there in the 1960s, captured stunning images of barn owls and short-eared owls living in the derelict buildings.

Andrew Mason via SWNS

“The colliery is a living example of rewilding. You can literally see nature taking it back from the industrialized world.

Short-eared owl – by Andrew Mason / SWNS

“There are barn owls living in the high buildings which are great as look-out posts to spot prey.”

With the permission of Stoke-on-Trent’s City Council, which is responsible for the property, Andrew set up a blind in the former colliery from which to observe unnoticed.

The site has 15 listed buildings and was included on Historic England’s ‘heritage register’.

Andrew hopes to soon set up trail cameras to pick up badgers and foxes which are also known to be living in the abandoned mine.

“One of the strangest things I saw was wild strawberries growing on old bits of coal slag heap.

“It was quite fascinating to see how nature was taking over.”

Andrew Mason / SWNS

One panoramic image shows a single barn owl flying past headgear with the mine’s rusting towers in the background.

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Andrew Mason / SWNS

“There really is a strange beauty in the juxtaposition of the ghostly white owl of the night flying amongst these old industrial buildings that are still standing,” he mused about the photo you saw near the top.

Chatterley Whitfield was the biggest coal mine in the area and the first in the UK to produce a million tons of coal in a year.

After officially closing on March 25, 1977, it re-opened two years later as a mining museum.

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The site attracted tens of thousands of visitors a year but it eventually closed for good in 1993.

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Your Weekly Horoscope – ‘Free Will Astrology’ by Rob Brezsny

Our partner Rob Brezsny, whose latest book is Astrology Is Real: Revelations from My Life as an Oracle, provides his weekly wisdom to enlighten our thinking and motivate our mood. Rob’s Free Will Astrology, is a syndicated weekly column appearing in over a hundred publications. He is also the author of Pronoia Is the Antidote for Paranoia: How All of Creation Is Conspiring To Shower You with Blessings. (A free preview of the book is available here.)

Here is your weekly horoscope…

FREE WILL ASTROLOGY – Week of May 30, 2026
Copyright by Rob Brezsny, FreeWillAstrology.com

GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Among the Dogon of Mali, Sigui so is a secret language. It’s used in a sacred ritual when people gather to retell their beginnings and patch up strains in tribal harmony. I’m borrowing “Sigui so” here as a symbol for a way of talking that I hope you will specialize in during the coming weeks: language that eases tensions, soothes friction, and fosters unity. Start like this: Unleash your trademark wit but spike it with sly blessings and tactful probes. Wield your fluency to burn away confusion and uncover unspoken feelings. If you’re in an extra-bold mood, give everyone tacit permission to be their idiosyncratic selves instead of their polished personas.

CANCER (June 21-July 22):
What’s the holiest, most healing trouble you could rustle up right now? I mean trouble that freshens what’s stale but doesn’t scorch the earth. Maybe it’s a buoyant disruption, like telling wild truths you usually tend to soften. Or maybe it’s asking for what your future self pines for instead of what your past self regards as polite and reasonable. As a Cancerian soul myself, I dare both you and me to give ourselves permission to rumble. Let’s be brazen as we instigate creative upheavals in service to our cheerful vigor. Let’s instigate at least one concrete action that will rattle the stagnant pattern just enough to make life more interesting.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Sea otters are a keystone species. Their presence is essential to the health of their entire ecosystem. As they eat sea urchins, the kelp forests flourish. Without otters, the urchins overgraze, and kelp forests may collapse, which in turn affects hundreds of other species. One creature’s appetite helps regulate an entire undersea neighborhood. I suspect you’re serving a similar function, Leo. You’re having more impact and wielding more influence than you realize. No pressure! But please act accordingly: with maximum integrity and robust responsibility.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
A Dutch woman who died left her grand-nephew an inheritance of 220,000 euros. The only problem is that he’s homeless and constantly on the move, so the executors haven’t been able to find him. This echoes a recurring pattern in your life. Even now, sources of blessings are searching for ways to reach you, but you are slow to notice their approach or to magnetize yourself to their arrival. My prayer: May you figure out what needs to be done to make yourself fully available for these gifts—and then ingrain that capacity in your habit mind.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22):
Visualize your fears. Consider how few of them rest on a genuine likelihood that the scary events could ever take place. Then ask yourself how much of your uneasiness springs from vivid fantasies or from a practiced tendency to fret. You might also ruminate on how you absorb the background worry that’s amplified by mass culture. After reflecting on all that, I invite you to take one concrete action to lower the level of tension you have come to treat as normal. Take another action to weaken the grip of your deepest dread. The current planetary patterns suggest you now have the bold, creative power necessary to shrink your baseline anxiety.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Even more than usual, you have a sacred duty to celebrate your poignant sweetness and dark intelligence. For the sake of your emotional health, you should pay wild reverence to your deepest, most mysterious yearnings. To be the person we all you need you to be, you must tenderly nurture the parts of your inner world that resemble the aurora borealis. I want to support you in these sublime sacraments, which is why I suggest you memorize the following prayer by Rainer Maria Rilke: “Be attentive to what is arising within you, and place that above everything you perceive around you. What is happening in your innermost self is worthy of your entire love.”

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Linguists use the term “false friends.” These are words in different languages that seem similar but don’t have the same meaning. For example, the Spanish word embarazada resembles “embarrassed” to English speakers but actually means “pregnant.” I suspect you’re dealing with another type of false friend, Sagittarius: people or situations that turned out to be at variance with what you initially imagined. But rather than feeling unsettled by these revelations, I suggest you treat them as a prod to see with fresh eyes. Your disorientation could be the beginning of more interesting understandings.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
An ISBN (International Standard Book Number) is a code assigned to a book for commercial and cataloging purposes. It contains key information and includes a built-in error-detection notation. If you transpose two numbers when entering an ISBN, the last digit will tell you something’s wrong. In this spirit, Capricorn, I heartily recommend that you build more mistake detection into your life. Invest in extra safeguards. Add verification steps. Build in double-checks. The goal is to create systems robust enough to survive oversights and gaffes. I very much want you to give yourself the gift of safety nets that will empower you to take smart risks and intriguing gambles.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
You may not yet grasp how richly creative you are right now, nor how much more abundant your generative powers could become. So it’s auspicious that you are reading this horoscope now. Consider this your advance notice: Your capacity to originate ideas, projects, and connections is surging, and it’s crucial to choose with care which possibilities you nurture and which you decline. If you are selective and intentional about what you sow, then about six months from now, you will be far more likely to gather lush, beautiful harvests instead of wrestling with overgrown, unruly tangles.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Ethnobotanist Wade Davis documented how different cultures perceive entirely different realities despite inhabiting the same physical world. It means that two people can stand in the same forest and see different forests through their cultural lens and personal mythology. This is simultaneously the problem and the opportunity you face, Pisces. You and others in your orbit are inhabiting divergent realities that superficially seem the same. If you hope to reconcile the differences, you must first acknowledge them as real. You’re dealing with fundamentally different ways of constructing meaning, not just small misunderstandings.

ARIES (March 21-April 19):
In the weeks ahead, simply being right won’t necessarily lead to success. Having strength, intelligence, wealth, or connections might help, though not as much as usual. But a different approach will work well as you strive to overcome challenges: a blend of cleverness and integrity. I invite you to be cunning while remaining honorable. Practice subtle strategy in service of higher aims. And here’s one more secret to ensure victory: Let go of any need to receive full recognition for your efforts.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
“Dear Horoscope Guy: Two astrologers have assured me that as a Taurus, I’m a natural-born money magnet. So why am I broke? I keep begging the Divine for cash miracles, and I buy lottery tickets twice a week. Still nothing! Please tell me when I’ll finally hit the jackpot. Better yet, give me the winning numbers. –Taurus Desperate for Dollars.” Dear Desperate: The “luck” you crave will arrive as you diligently pour yourself into building your sweetest dreams, spurning shortcuts and enjoying yourself as much as possible. The Divine prefers to fund eager co-creators, not wishful thinkers. I predict that a slow-motion jackpot will ultimately arrive through your devoted attention to doing what excites you.

WANT MORE? Listen to Rob’s EXPANDED AUDIO HOROSCOPES, 4-5 minute meditations on the current state of your destiny — or subscribe to his unique daily text message service at: RealAstrology.com

(Zodiac images by Numerologysign.com, CC license)

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“In three words I can sum up everything I’ve learned about life: it goes on.” – Robert Frost

Credit: Meiying Ng

Quote of the Day: “In three words I can sum up everything I’ve learned about life: it goes on.” – Robert Frost

Photo by: Meiying Ng

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

Credit: Meiying Ng

Good News in History, May 30

ESA Patch 2022

51 years ago today, the European Space Agency was founded by ten member states: Belgium, Denmark, France, West Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom, that united two disparate space agencies into the one entity which today has been instrumental in several giant leaps for mankind. READ more… (1975)

Welcome to the Gas Giant Planet Where Clouds Turn to Stone

The gas giant WASP-94A b - credit, artistic interpretation by Hannah Robbins, released by Johns Hopkins University
The gas giant WASP-94A b – credit, artistic interpretation by Hannah Robbins, released by Johns Hopkins University

Welcome to WASP 94A b, where clouds made of rock melt every morning like the June gloom in Southern California.

Powered by the James Webb Space Telescope, humanity’s study of exoplanets marches on as a team from Johns Hopkins University explored the atmospheres of several “Hot Jupiters” out in the Microscopium constellation.

Inside is WASP-94A, a star located 700 lightyears from Earth that hosts a gas giant planet which orbits it at a closer proximity than Mercury does to our Sun.

This has created a unique set of planetary conditions that David Sing, a distinguished professor of earth and planetary sciences at Johns Hopkins, was eager to study.

By isolating the planet’s clouds, Sing and his team were able to more accurately measure the atmosphere and provide one of the clearest pictures to date of the planet’s composition—a significant advance in planetary science that will provide important context and correlations in future research.

“I’ve been looking at exoplanets for 20 years, and general cloudiness has been a thorn in our side. We’ve known for quite a while that clouds are pervasive on Hot Jupiter planets, which is annoying because it’s like trying to look at the planet through a foggy window,” said Sing.

“Not only have we been able to clear the view, but we can finally pin down what the clouds are made out of and how they’re condensing and evaporating as they move around the planet.”

Though long theorized to exist, the first exoplanet was detected in 1991. Since then, their known diversity has increased exponentially.

Humanity has identified an exoplanet almost as big as its star, another that orbits two stars like Tatooine from Star Wars, some which don’t rotate and have permanent dark and daytime sides, one with the density of a marshmallow, and one that’s shaped like a lemon where it rains diamonds.

To study WASP-94A b, Sing and his team leveraged the James Webb Space Telescope to capture several transits which the planet made in front of its host star.

They took separate measurements of WASP-94A b’s leading edge as it started to cross in front of the star and the trailing edge as the planet completed its transit. At the leading edge, the air flows from the night side of the planet to the day side, effectively making it the morning. Air flows from day to night at the trailing edge, making it the evening.

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Observations revealed that mornings and evenings on WASP-94A b have extremely different weather patterns, with mornings that are riddled with clouds made of magnesium silicate, a common mineral found in rocks, while the evening has clear skies.

The phenomenon may be akin to morning fog burning off on Earth, but on an extreme scale. Clouds would form in the darkness of the planet’s nightside. As they drift into the scorching heat of more than 1,000 degrees on the day side, the chemicals that make up the clouds boil away, and the clouds simply vaporize.

Alternatively, powerful winds might lift clouds high into the sky on the cooler side of the planet and then plunge downward on the hotter dayside, dragging the clouds deep into the planet’s interior.

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Because the evenings are clear of clouds, the researchers could look to the trailing edge specifically to see what the atmosphere of the planet looked like—something the Hubble telescope could not provide, said first-author Sagnick Mukherjee.

When the researchers looked at the clear evening sky, they found that WASP-94A b was much more like Jupiter than they thought. Previously, when the clouds were averaged in, the data suggested the planet was made of hundreds of times more oxygen and carbon than Jupiter—a finding that baffled researchers given it couldn’t be explained by planet formation theory. Instead, the team found just a comparatively small amount of extra oxygen and carbon.

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Using WASP-94A b as a benchmark, the team looked at eight other hot gas giants and discovered the same distinctive cloud cycle on two other worlds: WASP-39 b and WASP-17 b.

The research was able to establish two early hypotheses, that Jupiter-like compositions (even in Hot Gas Giants) and WASP-94A b’s cloud cycling are both not uncommon in the galaxy. Next, Sing plans to compare his study of hot gas giants to other gas giants that are known to orbit the Habitable Zone of their host stars.

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Bruce Springsteen Celebrates His New Center for American Music Opening Soon with All-Star Concert for the Ages

The Bruce Springsteen Center exterior - credit, CookFox ©, released
The Bruce Springsteen Center exterior – credit, CookFox ©, released

A New Jersey university is now the proud address of the Bruce Springsteen Archives and Center for American Music—set for a June 4th public opening concert featuring a star-studded lineup of American performing artists.

Far from just being a venue, the Center will a place of learning and sharing, for exploring major moments in American music history through the Archive’s collection of rare interviews and footage, and an academic gold mine for enhancing Monmouth University’s liberal arts programs.

Why Monmouth University? The campus is located not far from where Springsteen wrote his landmark single “Born to Run,” and was the site of many of his earliest shows from 1969 to 1974.

“Our institution will offer exciting research opportunities for students, journalists, and historians, and give Springsteen fans the chance to explore his music and the role it plays in American history like never before,” stated Robert Santelli, the center’s executive director.

“Teachers will also find the Archives and Center for American Music a valuable educational resource. Lesson plans, teaching strategies, and online programs will be available to teachers and enable them to bring American music into the classroom.”

The 30,000 square-foot building houses exhibits on the music of Bruce Springsteen and of American music at large; the Springsteen archives; a 240-seat auditorium for concerts, academic lectures and video screenings; and gallery space for changing exhibitions.

Additionally, the museum will partner with E-Street Band guitarist Stevie Van Zandt’s non-profit TeachRock to organize activities with local schools.

The entrance facade in steel and wood – credit © CookFox, released
The Bruce Springsteen Center Archives will feature listening rooms and a huge collection of recordings and written material – credit, CookFox © released
Gallery space – credit, CookFox © released

According to the university, the Archives house nearly 48,000 items from 47 countries ranging from articles and oral histories to concert memorabilia and promotional materials.

“At 19… I played on these very steps out here, and so to stand here today is quite humbling knowing that I’m going to be a presence here on this campus, which I really look forward to being,” Bruce Springsteen said in 2023 at the announcement ceremony.

“It’s deeply satisfying, and I look forward to working with everyone to make the building and this endeavor a great success.”

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Built by the acclaimed New York architecture firm CookFox, the building embodies themes from New Jersey’s industrial heritage and Springsteen’s music from the weathering steel of the factories to boardwalk and Jersey Shore designs. Unstained wood is everywhere, with the panels of the exterior made just so to embrace the impact of time on the material.

The June 5th billing for Music America – credit © the Bruce Springsteen Center

End-grain wood block flooring, CookFox explains, often used in factories a century ago, reveals the growth rings of the trees it’s made from while inviting visitors into the auditorium.

The auditorium will mostly be a place of presentations and lectures, since the show that Springsteen has put together to celebrate the Center’s opening, along with America’s 250th Birthday, will need a few more seats.

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Called Music America: The Songs that Shaped Us, the concerts will take place on June 4th and 5th at the OceanFirst Bank Center on the Monmouth campus, just prior to the grand opening of the Bruce Springsteen Center on the 7th.

Among the artists scheduled to perform over the two nights are Jon Bon Jovi, Jackson Browne, Rosanne Cash, Kenny Chesney, Gary Clark Jr., Dion, Dropkick Murphys, Shemekia Copeland, Valerie June, Jimmie Vaughan, Keb’ Mo’, Nils Lofgren, and more, all delivering their uniquely American music of blues, bluegrass, rock, hip-hop, Americana, jazz, country, and gospel.

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A New York Cemetery Was Hiding Over 5 Million Burrowing Bees, One of the World’s Largest Concentrations

Andrena regularis bee nesting near the east lawn cemetery entrance - credit, Bryan Danforth
Andrena regularis bee nesting near the east lawn cemetery entrance – credit, Bryan Danforth

At roughly 5.5 million, a colony of ground-nesting bees that scientists discovered under a New York cemetery may be one of the largest bee aggregations ever documented.

Subsequent research showed that the bees have likely lived there for more than 100 years, thriving in the cemetery’s undisturbed sandy soil—an incredible discovery.

Rachel Fordyce used to save money by parking at Ithaca’s East Hill Plaza and walking through East Lawn Cemetery on her way to work at a Cornell University entomology lab. During one walk in the spring of 2022, she noticed something unusual. Bees were everywhere.

She collected some in a jar and brought them to her supervisor, Bryan Danforth, professor of entomology in Cornell’s College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

“These are all over the cemetery,” she told him. The insects were identified as Andrena regularis, commonly called the “regular mining bee,” a solitary wild bee species that nests underground and helps pollinate crops and wild plants.

That simple observation led to the extraordinary discovery: a 100-year-old colony of 5.5 million solitary bees across 1.5 acres. According to the researchers, that is comparable to more than 200 honeybee hives, and exceeds Manhattan’s human population by more than threefold.

“I’m sure there are other large bee aggregations that exist around the world that we just haven’t identified, but in terms of what is in the literature, this is one of the largest,” said Steve Hoge, lead author of the resulting study on the colony published April 13th in the journal Apidologie.

To estimate the bee population and study emergence patterns, researchers used a new monitoring method involving emergence traps. These small mesh tents cover less than a square meter of ground and funnel emerging insects into glass jars.

“You capture a whole community of animals coming out of the ground with this approach,” Danforth said.

Between March 30th and May 16th, 2023, the research team placed 10 traps throughout the cemetery. They collected 3,251 insects representing 16 species of bees, beetles, and flies. A. regularis overwhelmingly dominated the samples.

Researchers used the number of bees captured in each trap to calculate average bee density across the cemetery’s total land area. Based on those calculations, the estimated total population ranged from about 3 million to 8 million bees.

The study also explored the biology of these poorly understood wild bees while also highlighting their importance as pollinators for valuable agricultural crops such as apples, one of New York’s signature commodities.

“The research elevates the value of solitary ground-nesting bees and shows just how abundant these bees are, how important they are as crop pollinators, and that we need to be aware of these nest sites and preserve them,” Danforth said.

Historical records showed that A. regularis has been present at East Lawn Cemetery since at least the early 1900s. The cemetery itself dates back to 1878.

Scientists say the discovery strengthens the idea that cemeteries can act as important refuges for biodiversity. Older cemeteries, especially in cities, are already known to shelter uncommon plants, insects, birds, and mammals.

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Keven Morse, superintendent of East Lawn Cemetery, said he has seen deer, geese, hawks, foxes, coyotes, and countless bees during his family’s 46 years helping manage the nonprofit cemetery.

“I just felt bad having to mow in certain areas,” Morse told a Cornell University news team. “There’s probably three or four sections where they really migrate heavy, there’s a lot of them.”

Researchers explained that cemeteries provide especially good habitat because the land is peaceful, rarely disturbed, and largely free of pesticides.

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Cornell Orchards, located about one third of a mile from the cemetery, may help support the massive bee population by providing abundant spring flowers. Danforth also noted that the bees prefer sandy soil, which the cemetery contains in large amounts.

“These populations are huge, and they need protection,” Danforth said. “If we don’t preserve nest sites, and someone paves over them, we could lose in an instant 5.5 million bees that are important pollinators.”

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