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Mystery of Armenia’s Giant 6,000-Year-old ‘Dragon Stones’ is Finally Solved

Dragon stones of Armenia – Credits: Armen Manukov (left) and Sonashen (right) CC BY-SA 3.0
Dragon stones of Armenia – Credits: Armen Manukov (left) and Sonashen (right) CC BY-SA 3.0

For the first time in the country’s history, a detailed analysis of Armenia’s “dragon stones” has been conducted with the hope of solving the mystery of these large Neolithic monuments.

Raised between 4200 and 4000 BCE, in concert roughly with the megaliths of Stonehenge, Armenia’s vishaps, meaning dragons, weigh between 3 and 8 tons, and stretch across a highland region bearing either the carved imagery of a fish or a stretched cowhide.

Dozens have been found and identified, and their ubiquity along with their seeming randomness have defeated previous attempts to define their role in ancient Armenian society.

A new survey and analysis conducted by the Yerevan State University Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography has cracked the code somewhat, even if it involved being stumped once or twice along the way.

Concentrated among the mountainous regions in the Caucasian country’s western reaches, 43 sit among the Geghema Mountains, 36 are found on the slopes of Mount Aragats, and 17 among the Vardenis Mountains. Others have been found beyond this north-south axis, but the vishap builders seemed to primarily work in these areas.

These standing stones present a mystery when considering their elevation.

“[L]arger vishaps would necessitate greater processing time, especially in regions where the duration of the snow-free period decreases with increasing altitude,” wrote the authors.

“Therefore, it might be expected that, at higher elevations, smaller vishaps would be found, assuming that their size and location were not of particular significance to their constructors. However, the results of our analysis contradicted this hypothesis.”

Indeed, even considering the extraordinary labor that would come from building at every additional meter above sea level, there was no correlation between size of the megalith and position with regards to altitude. There were stones higher than 9 feet tall and weighing in excess of 7 tons that were located 9,000 feet up the mountains, where among other challenges such as a paucity of food and shelter, the ground is covered with snow from October to May.

Piscis type vishap – credit Vishap Project, A. Bobobkhyan

The research team’s working hypothesis is that the stones are likely tied to an ancient water cult, “as vishaps are predominantly located near springs as well as are represented by fish forms.”

ARMENIA NEWS: Nobel-Worthy Prime Minister Attempts to End Century of Ethnic Hatred for Armenians

Additionally, the cow-hide designed stele are more routinely clustered in valleys at lower altitudes where they mark out what may have been ancient irrigation channels, and where pastured livestock may have grazed. Classical and medieval-era settlements, including churches and remote fortresses are located along these same irrigation paths, suggesting the ample snowmelt would have sustained communities for thousands of years after the time of the vishap builders.

In any study of ancient monuments, the most compelling question is always why expend the substantial amounts of labor, and the resources necessary to sustain it, in pursuit of raising the monument.

MORE ANCIENT ARCHAEOLOGY: Archaeologists Uncover 5,500-year-old ‘Ritual Landscape’ in Jordan

Though the effort may have been excessive, the stones, carved and standing, would embody the cultural and spiritual beliefs of the people who carved them as well as their spirit of cooperation and teamwork. Other such projects in other countries have been theorized as acting as anchors of a community—proof that the landscape was theirs.

Incidentally, the ancient vishap builders weren’t the only ones who saw in the standing stones a marker of place and purpose. Future civilizations, including the Urartians, contemporaries of the Babylonians and Assyrians, and early Christian communities, both carved their own marks into the vishaps, the former with their Cuneiform alphabet, the latter with their cross.

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Thrift Shop Buried Under ‘Rags’ Gets Helping Hand from Designer Who Wants to Reduce Landfill Waste

Victoria Ford - credit Derian House Childrens Hospice
Victoria Ford – credit Derian House Childrens Hospice

An English thrift shop that found itself buried under mountains of old donated clothes has gotten a helping hand from a talented designer.

Recent fashion and design graduate Victoria Ford approached the shop and offered to transform some of its unwanted rags into bespoke pieces for sale at premium prices.

The thrift shop proceeds benefit Derian House Children’s Hospice in Chorley, but rather than generating revenue to pay for the hospital’s expenses, the shop had mostly become a dropping off point for unwanted clothes which piled up in “eyewatering amounts” and sat unsorted in huge sacks in the shop’s warehouse.

Most would have probably ended up in a landfill if it weren’t for Ford’s belief in second-chance fashion and an eye for quality.

“Rather than letting things go to waste, I wanted to help Derian House to give their unsellable clothing a new life, and to turn them into something others can enjoy,” Ford told the BBC. 

Mick Croskery from the Derian House shop said Victoria’s collection was attracting a new crowd to the shop.

Victoria’s collection – credit Derien House Childrens Hospice

Running on “super tight margins” and “inundated with rags” too worn down, or with holes, stains, or burns, to sell on, Croskery said “it is that kind of stuff that Victoria has repurposed for us that we couldn’t sell.”

They used to pay 70 cents per bag of donated clothes, but the shop was receiving so many “rags” that they eventually lowered that all the way to 15 cents.

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Ford has had to get creative to make use of the excess, but she’s been doing just that since she was 10, she said, finding items in similar thrift shops and transforming them with her sewing machine as a child. She’s redesigned dozens of items, and even made a handbag out of an inflatable mattress.

Derian House Children’s Hospice cares for more than 400 babies and toddlers, children, young people and their families, and costs more than £6 million, or about $7.8 million to run annually.

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“The past cannot be cured.” – Queen Elizabeth I

By Hannes Flo, CC license
Credit: Hannes Flo, CC license

Quote of the Day: “The past cannot be cured.” – Queen Elizabeth I

Photo by: Joseph Pearson

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?

By Hannes Flo, CC license
Credit: Hannes Flo, CC license

 

Good News in History, February 19

40 years ago today, the Soviet Union launched the space station Mir, and with it, a new phase in space exploration. Mir, which means both peace and world in Russian, would provide the home base for a permanently manned international complex orbiting the Earth– and was occupied for 10 years of its 15 in orbit. READ more… (1986)

Ancient Blocks From the Lighthouse of Alexandria Raised from the Sea to Better Understand Their Wondrous Construction

- credit, GEDEON Programmes / CEAlex
– credit, GEDEON Programmes / CEAlex

22 massive granite blocks that once formed the Great Lighthouse of the Alexandria have been hauled up from the bottom of city’s ancient harbor.

The blocks weighed dozens of tons each and consisted of upright pillars, frames, and crossbeams called lintels that once formed the entrance to the structure.

Called one of the 7 Wonders of the Ancient World by the Greeks of the time, a series of earthquakes in the 10th century CE and later sent the famous lighthouse crumbling into the harbor.

France’s National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS) and Egypt’s Center for the Studies of Alexandria (CEAlex) led a project to map and study the blocks and other remnants scattered across the seabed. Ongoing for over a decade, a landmark 2014 analysis identified some 3,000 blocks and another 5,000 stone pieces of the lighthouse scattered across a 4 acre area.

Every block that came up was thoroughly photographed, with the results channeled into a photogrammetry database where researchers could return and study each block with precise 3-dimensional detail in the lab.

With many of the blocks thusly analyzed, the CNRS team, led by Isabelle Hairy, began to hypothetically reassemble the ancient monument block by block. Sophisticated digital modeling software allowed them to test how certain blocks would fit together at the click of a mouse rather than the groan of a crane. The precise 3D-renders included things like rough and fine edges, chips, and tool marks that informed the potential placements.

Earth.com reports that when two segments seemed to fit, they could also run simulations to see what characteristics an earthquake might have had, in terms of intensity and direction, to crack and topple it.

– credit, GEDEON Programmes / CEAlex

Built when an august general under Alexander of Macedon named Ptolemy decided to make himself ruler of Egypt after the former’s empire was carved up following his death, the lighthouse guided ships into the harbor of Alexandria for centuries, and was built so soundly that it took multiple earthquakes over several hundred years to eventually destroy it.

Ibn Jubayir, a Moorish pilgrim on route to Mecca, attempted description of the lighthouse, but couldn’t wrap his head around exactly where to start.

It is most strongly built in all directions and competes with the skies in height. Description of it falls short, the eyes fail to comprehend it, and words are inadequate, so vast is the spectacle. We measured one of its four sides and found it to be more then fifty arms’ lengths. It is said that in height it is more than one hundred and fifty. Its interior is an awe-inspiring sight in its amplitude, with stairways and entrances and numerous apartments, so that he who penetrates and wanders through its passages may be lost. In short, words fail to find a conception of it.

WONDERS OF THE WORLD: Protecting The Great Wall of China From Erosion, Lichen Soil Crust Shields Monument from Weather Damage

Several of the blocks bore Egyptian imagery and iconography, even though they were carved with Hellenistic techniques, capturing the synthesis of cultures under the Ptolemaic dynasty. At the same time, however, the CNRS team believes that some of the granite monoliths came from an Old Kingdom site at Abu Rawash, which would predate the lighthouse by 2,000 years at least.

As tantalizing as it is to imagine reassembling at least part of the structure, Egyptian authorities do not permit the recovery of any blocks over 220 pounds. After so many years immersed in salt water, exposure to oxygen risks irreparable damage to the larger stones coming from salt crystals growing in size in the cracks and crevices while drying out.

MONUMENTAL ARCHAEOLOGY: This German Town Carefully Reconstructed a 5,500-Year-Old Monument Lifting 13 Tons of Stone

After photographing, the largest elements were returned to their watery beds.

The 3D model that has been constructed could, the researchers suggest, lead to novel ways of interpreting and presenting the nature of the monument to visitors. With a precise idea of how the lighthouse was built and the stones stacked, one can imagine, perhaps given another decade, a holographic projection of the structure rising above the harbor at Alexandria just as its name sake had done for more than a millennia.

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Hero Stranger Rescues Mom and 3 Kids After Car Flips into Canal Waters: ‘Nobody was around’

Credit: MARTIN COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE
Credit: MARTIN COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE

A Good Samaritan said he thanked the Good Lord that he was close at hand when a mother, driving with her kids, suffered a seizure and hurtled off the road into a canal.

What started as a calm Sunday drive turned into anything but when a glance into his review mirror left Casey Curtis shocked: a car that had been following him quickly accelerated, veered to the right, and flew off the road into the bushes.

Halting near the scene of the accident, Curtis jumped out of his car and followed the tire marks whilst calling 911.

Beyond several meters of roadside brush, he came across a Jeep flipped upside down half-submerged in water.

“I got to the car, opened up the door, and there were three kids sitting there, staring at me, helpless,” Curtis told local news at the time.

Aged 8, 2, and 4 months, they had been crying for help, and for their mother, whose head was submerged below the water.

He quickly got the kids out and onto the bank before immersing himself up to his chest in the canal water to and save the driver.

SIMILAR DISASTERS, SIMILAR HEROES: Florida Paramotor Pilot Helps Save Woman Clinging to Submerged Car That Crashed into Canal –WATCH

“I lifted the mom’s head up out of the water, and she wasn’t breathing,” Curtis said. “I gave her a breath, and… she started breathing again.”

First responders arrived at the site of the accident on Allapattah Road in Martin County, and rushed the family of four to the hospital. An extended family member said that the 3 children were mercifully unharmed, but that their mother, Shyenique Wilkins, remained hospitalized on a ventilator.

MORE FLORIDA MEN: Trio of Neighbors Honored for Saving the Lives of Florida Plane Crash Survivors

Wilkins’ niece set up a GoFundMe to help with the family’s medical bills. It has raised $4,100 towards a $10,000 goal.

Curtis said he thanked God he was in the right place at the right time, as there was no one else on the road that day, and anyone who’d have come after could not have seen the car beyond the tree line.

WATCH The story below from ABC’s local affiliate…

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Planting Billions of Trees Turned Barren Desert into a Carbon Sink That Lowers CO2

A mixed-species section of the Green Great Wall - Credit: 中国新闻网 CC 3.0. BY
A mixed-species section of the Green Great Wall – Credit: 中国新闻网 CC 3.0. BY

China’s multi-decade long, successful effort to plant a ring of trees around one of the world’s most hostile deserts has sprouted an unexpected benefit to humanity.

Along with protecting the nation’s grasslands and agriculture from the spreading sands of the dismal Taklamakan Desert, the giant ring of trees has turned previous unproductive land into a carbon sink that draws CO2 out of the atmosphere.

It’s thought, and some isolated research has indeed demonstrated, that humans can prevent the worst effects of a rise in average global temperatures by planting trees to absorb more CO2 from the atmosphere.

This strategy has limits, however, when viewed on a global scale. Atmospheric CO2 levels continue to rise, while there is a limit in the amount of land that can be turned over to forests.

One-third of our planet is covered in deserts, where vegetation is sparse or absent, and rainfall is scarce, yet despite their vast acreage they collectively hold less than one-tenth of the world’s carbon stock, or the amount of carbon that is held underground.

A study conducted by NASA and California Technical Institute (Caltech) has used satellite data to demonstrate that the “sea of death” as the Taklamakan Desert was called in antiquity, could be utilized to store carbon and reduce the greenhouse effect.

The Taklamakan Desert. Credit: NASA World Wind 1.4.

Starting in 1978, China’s Three-North Shelter Belt program aimed to plant trees along the borders of the great Taklamakan to stop sandstorms from ruining adjacent pasture and agriculture land. As the world’s single farthest point from any ocean, the Taklamakan is one of the driest and most hostile landscapes on our planet.

The massive Himalayas rise to the south and east, the Pamirs to the southwest, and a pair of mountains known as the Tian Shan and the Altai to the west, leaving landscape completely isolated from moisture.

66 billion trees have been planted by estimates since the start of the Shelter Belt program, which finished in 2024. Monikered the “Green Great Wall,” this incredible increase in greenery has raised average rainfall by several millimeters, resulting in a natural growth of foliage during the wet season that boosts photosynthesis along the tree line, leading to greater degrees of sequestration.

TRANSFORMING OUR PLANET: 

“We found, for the first time, that human-led intervention can effectively enhance carbon sequestration in even the most extreme arid landscapes, demonstrating the potential to transform a desert into a carbon sink and halt desertification,” study co-author Yuk Yung, a professor of planetary science at Caltech and a senior research scientist in NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, told Live Science in an email.

By precise numbers, it has reduced the average carbon content in the desert air from 416 parts per million to 413 ppm. Parts per million is used as a measurement for the greenhouse effect. Worldwide, the number is 429.3. It was 350 in before the advent of industrialization.

If more shelter belt-style tree planting efforts could be used to reclaim desert landscapes, it could open vast areas to absorbing carbon. With little to no vegetation, deserts in their natural state have precious little ability to do so.

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Manatee Stuck in Florida Storm Drain Showing Signs of Recovery After SeaWorld Rescued Him

- credit SeaWorld Orlando, released
– credit SeaWorld Orlando, released

On February 9th, SeaWorld in Orlando received a call that there was an exhausted manatee stuck in a storm drain that needed immediate help.

Arriving on scene, rescuers quickly confirmed that the juvenile male had entered a storm drain and didn’t know how to escape.

Crews had to break through concrete and dig through several feet of soil to reach a “baffle box,” the structure where he had become trapped. Authorities believe he swam into the storm drain seeking warmth during a recent cold snap.

The rescue lasted several hours before the 410-pound marine mammal was transported to SeaWorld’s rescue and rehab center for manatees. This facility rescued 56 manatees in 2025, and this young male is already the 7th this year.

After an examination, it was determined he was significantly underweight, and showed signs of skin lesions that told of a struggle against the concrete baffle box.

3 days later, SeaWorld sent word out that the unfortunate was showing signs of improvement, breathing on his own, moving independently, and showing interest in food.

The manatee when it arrived at SeaWorld’s rescue facility – credit SeaWorld Orlando, released

“Our animal care team is awaiting lab results, which will guide the care plan for this manatee and next steps,” SeaWorld Orlando told GNN in a statement. “[Our] goal is always to stabilize and rehabilitate rescued manatees so they can ultimately be returned to the wild once deemed healthy and stable by the Zoo teams.”

There are two recognized sub-species of the West Indian manatee, one is the Florida manatee, and the other the Antillean manatee.

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Good News in History, February 18

(left) Mingo Hagen, and (right) in 2006 by McSmit, CC licenses

20 years ago today, American speed skater Shani Davis became the first Black athlete to win a gold medal in Winter Olympic history for an individual event, winning the men’s 1,000-meter in Italy. He also won a silver medal in the 1500-meter race. Four years later at the Olympics in Vancouver, Canada, he repeated the feat, and became the first man to win back-to-back gold medals in the 1000 meters, and repeating as the 1500-meter silver medalist, too. WATCH him win the gold… (2006)

Mysterious ‘Hero’ Dog Leads Police Straight to Missing 3-year-old Officer Says in Body Cam Video

Louisville Metro Police Department - credit, released
Louisville Metro Police Department – credit, released

A police officer and self-described “dog guy,” hooked his own instincts up to those of a local dog to find a missing 3-year-old in Kentucky.

There was a drone and helicopter in the air and a half-dozen officers from the Louisville Metropolitan Police Department scouring the immediate location of a missing persons call on January 7th.

Reasoning that a boy that young can’t run very fast, Officer Josh Thompson and another officer who rides a beat in that area, named Story, began to canvas the street near the boy’s house.

“As I’m walking to the front [door] the craziest thing happens: there’s a dog, and he starts walking with me,” said Thompson. “And at first you don’t know about dogs, you don’t know where the dog’s from, he’s barkin,’ jerkin’ at me a little bit.”

“So I begin to knock on the house again and then I make a gesture on body cam, kinda’ funny—I guess I’m a dog guy right?—but I just said, ‘let’s go find this kid.'”

The dog immediately spun around and started trotting back in the direction Officer Thompson came from, barking periodically. He described it all in a video posted on social media by the department, and at one point said unflappably that the dog was telling him to “hurry up,” maybe showing just how much Thompson’s heart and mind had merged in the moment.

Sure enough they returned to the back of the house, and the Thompson knew that the child was there somewhere. The dog ran over to a parked car and sat down next to the back wheel, and Officer Story called out that he’d found the child in the seat of the car.

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He was locked inside with the child locks on, and they had to coach him on how to open the door. When he finally did, “he jumped out of the car, bear hugged my neck and wouldn’t let go.”

“I don’t think I’ve ever seen a happier kid in my life.” Thompson said. “I don’t know where the dog came from, but it was a blessing from God that day.”

Indeed, neither the department nor CBS, reporting on the event, figured out whose dog it was.

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‘Mushroom Mining’ Could Be Cheap Way to Recover Rare Earth Minerals from Industrial Waste

Brandy Vailes via Unsplash
Brandy Vailes via Unsplash

Decades of underinvestment in mining and refining across Europe and North America has landed the manufacturing sector in a problem, which a group of scientists believe can be helped by mushrooms rather than excavators.

One must have been living under a rock not to have recently read the terms “critical minerals” or “rare earth elements.” These components—nickel, to use an example of the former, and gallium from the latter—are needed in increasing amounts to build next generation technologies of all kinds, from longer-lasting batteries in electric vehicles to AI data centers and spacecraft.

Traditionally, these materials have been recovered through mining operations, but each gram that enters the supply chain will eventually become a waste product, and it is out of that waste that scientist from Austria believe mushrooms can recover enough minerals to make a sizable impact in the world economy.

For the mercifully uninitiated, rare earth elements (or rare earths for short) are actually not that rare: they’re found practically anywhere, just at very low levels. For that reason, mining them isn’t very efficient, and they’re very often collected as a byproduct from mining other minerals.

“Mycomining,” as Alexander Bismarck and Michael Jones from the University of Vienna have called it, could take advantage of fungi’s exceptional capacity to grow in contaminated areas to recover rare earths from industrial waste like mine tailings and slime dams, or even from coal ash.

“We really could do this over large areas and quite easily collect [the mushrooms] using existing agricultural machinery,” Jones told the BBC. 

Below the innocent mushroom cap we see on the forest floor is a sprawling network of filaments called mycelia that actually makes up more than 95% of the fungi’s total biomass. These mycelia worm their way into every nook and cranny and remain extremely small compared to a tree’s roots which gradually widen.

That mycelia soaks up nutrients the fungi and surrounding plants need, but that’s not all they soak up. Fungi have been studied for the mycelium’s ability to absorb nuclear radiation, toxic heavy metals like lead and mercury, and rare earth elements that go into making our smartphones and other devices.

Compared to other non-mining forms of recovering rare earths, Jones and Bismarck admit that concentrations in fungi would be low, perhaps as little as one tenth that of dissolved e-waste, for example. On the other hand, the fungi don’t need the power of a flash joule heater, which you’d use to dissolve the e-waste, nor would they be grown atop e-waste, but in contaminated areas that might even be hazardous for humans to work in.

MORE MINING NEWS: Researchers Invent Way to Turn Harmful Mine Waste into Healthy Soil

BBC spoke with Jones and Bismarck about their project, which is also being investigated separately at the University of Arizona, where Professor Oona Snoeyenbos-West plans to launch a startup to source fungi already growing in contaminated areas for the purpose of bioremediation and bio-recovery of critical minerals, especially rare earths and copper.

Major mining already spends a lot of time and money on bioremediation. DRD Gold, a subsidiary of South African mining major Sibanye-Stillwater, produced around 160,000 ounces of gold during the last fiscal year entirely from retreating mine tailings through a simultaneous rehabilitation program to render both water and materials nontoxic, much of which is powered by solar panels.

Mine tailings refers to the gravel-like material left behind after ore has been stripped of the majority of gold, silver, copper or other metals through the milling, flotation and/or leaching process.

BIOREMEDIATION: Researchers Use Wastewater to Generate Electricity – While Cleaning It Up

Tailings storage facilities are expensive to build on-site, as they must contain the polluted material from contaminating the nearby environment. Companies can bring their tailings straight from the mill to DRD Gold’s locations for reclamation, saving money and ensuring they are treated soundly. DRD is just one company engaged in this practice, which is becoming more common as operators target big tailings mounds both as an environmental hazard to remove and a bounty of leftover gold, silver, and other metals from eras when metallurgical technologies were less efficient.

The future can only be positive for these strategies of mineral recovery. All the gold in the world both above and blow ground would only form a cube small than the Great Pyramid of Kufu, and eventually there will be more circulating in waste streams than is left below the Earth.

OTHER RECOVERY METHODS: Chemical Process Produces Critical Battery Metals from This Unloved Mineral with No Waste

A similar destiny may be in store for rare earths, one in which the preponderance of e-waste—predicted only to grow larger and larger over the next 25 years—becomes so unignorable that the materials already mined and used simply outnumber the quantity recoverable through traditional mining.

Will mushrooms be present in that future? No one can say for certain, but it seems likely that few if any methods will be as cheap.

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Volunteers Save 51 Dogs in Large-Scale Operation Following Arkansas Shelter Collapse

One of 51 dogs rescued by ARC's operation in Arkansas - credit ARC, supplied
One of 51 dogs rescued by ARC’s operation in Arkansas – credit ARC, supplied

From Arkansas comes the story of a huge animal rescue operation of 51 dogs trapped in a derelict shelter.

Headquartered in nearby Nashville, Tennessee, the Animal Rescue Corps (ARC) received information about a nonprofit dog rescue in Ashdown, Arkansas, where an acrimonious divorce between the shelter’s owners left the dogs caught in the crossfire.

Much like children, the animals had unwittingly become victims of a marital conflict they had no involvement in.

Many had already been stuck in the shelter waiting for adoption for years by the time the owners’ union unraveled, including one named Yoshi who had been there a decade.

After confirming the surrender of the dogs via court order, ARC’s Field Team flew into action, conducting one of the organization’s largest rescue operations to date.

“Many of these dogs have lived here for years,” ARC Executive Director Tim Woodward, a finalist for CNN’s 2025 Hero of the Year Award, said in a statement. “Our focus now is giving them the space, care and stability they haven’t had.”

The dogs are primarily large-breed, reportedly friendly, and all have been spayed or neutered. At one time, the dogs were confined to small cages with limited daily release. ARC responders found that the dogs had been moved to outdoor kennels prior to the team’s arrival.

The condition of the kennels were described as “austere.”

MORE OF ARC’S GOOD WORK: 18 Outdoor Dogs Rescued from Winter Storm–and One Gives Birth Safe and Warm Inside Shelter

“The goal was to prevent the situation from getting worse and becoming more detrimental for the dogs,” Woodward said. “Once it became clear that no one was stepping in for them, intervention was necessary.”

All 51 dogs were safely transported without issue to ARC’s Rescue Center outside Nashville, where they will receive veterinary evaluations, enrichment and long-term care planning.

BETTER RUN SHELTERS: This Animal Shelter Closes Empty from Day After Day of Instant Adoptions: ‘It’s Been Nonstop’

ARC does not handle adoption proceedings for the dogs they rescue, but rather facilitate the animals’ transfer, when appropriate, to a series of trusted adoption partners.

“Readers considering adopting a dog can contact ARC for more information on when and perhaps where these rescued dogs will be available for adoption,” a publicist for the organization told GNN.

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Urban Farm Shops Combine Dutch Greenhouse Technology and Food-Retail into One

Urban Farm Shop concept rendering - credit, LocalDutch
Urban Farm Shop concept rendering – credit, LocalDutch

In the city of The Hague, a Dutch agri-tech firm has had the bright idea of combining a greenhouse grow operation with a grocery and delivery business.

Called LocalDutch, their idea is that the greenhouse grocers will integrate on-site food production with direct-to-consumer retail and local delivery in a single location, hoping the result will reduce transportation costs and food waste.

LocalDutch is calling its idea Urban Farm Shops, and believe the concept is straightforward and scalable—produce fresh vegetables year-round, sell them locally, and build a social meeting point around food that is grown in the community.

That local focus matters in parts of the United States, the Caribbean and Africa where fresh produce can still be hard to access and supply chains often rely on long-distance transport.

Urban Farm Shops would generate revenue through direct retail sales, Community Supported Agriculture (SCA) memberships, and last-mile delivery partnerships, allowing flexibility for every local market while maintaining a consistent operational backbone.

“What we are bringing to the United States is truly Dutch technology, applied in a way that is both effective and easy to scale,” said Arne Spliet, co-founder of LocalDutch, in a press release. “In a sector where skilled greenhouse climate specialists are scarce, our system automates much of that work. That helps ensure consistently successful local production—and that is exactly what many communities around the world urgently need.”

If anyone is wondering why this hasn’t been done before, LocalDutch claims that at least one major barrier for high-performing greenhouses is expertise: keeping a stable, optimal climate requires specialist knowledge, and those professionals are scarce.

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LocalDutch says its answer is automation. Its system uses an indoor climate “autopilot,” managed centrally through AI and cloud services, so individual locations can run consistently without relying on rare in-depth climate specialists on site.

So far the idea—ambitious in that it doesn’t target LocalDutch’s home market—has received substantial interest from investors, with over $68 million in funding proposals received so far, the company says.

In February 2025, LocalDutch received a $40,000 grant from Pennsylvania’s Agricultural Innovation Program to support its automated greenhouse model.

Would You Shop Here?… SHARE This Dutch Idea For American Shores…

“Each friend represents a world in us, a world possibly not born until they arrive.” – Anaïs Nin

Credit: Joseph Pearson

Quote of the Day: “Each friend represents a world in us, a world possibly not born until they arrive.” – Anaïs Nin 

Photo by: Joseph Pearson

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?

Credit: Joseph Pearson

 

Good News in History, February 17

Happy 69th Birthday to a titan of folk music: the multi-instrumentalist Loreena McKennitt. Born in Manitoba to Irish-Scottish ancestry, she fell in love with Celtic music traditions after a trip to Ireland. She learned how to play the Celtic harp and used it on the busk to make money to record her first album. She has sold more than 14 million records worldwide, with each album featuring a mix of different folk music traditions. During her production in the 90s, The Visit and Book of Secrets were certified quadruple platinum in Canada, while The Mask and Mirror reached triple. She has collected many honors for her music from both industry awards, and the country of Canada. LISTEN to her fill the Alhambra with her beautiful voice… (1967)

Giant Seed Vault Freezes Beneath Atacama Desert, Preserving Chile’s Floral Diversity For the Ages

A blooming cactus in the National Park of the Llanos in Chile's Atacama Desert - credit Kelly Mella via Unsplash
A blooming cactus in the National Park of the Llanos in Chile’s Atacama Desert – credit Kelly Mella via Unsplash

Amid the scorching/freezing desert of Atacama in Chile, one of South America’s largest botanical storehouses aims to protect both the wild and cultivated heritage of the country’s plant life.

Called the Initihuasi Seed Bank, this genetic mothership is the central node in a nationwide network of institutions that are safeguarding the country’s plant diversity, come what may.

Built into the sides of a rocky outcrop, the facility stays cool under the ground of the driest desert on Earth. Inside, a walk-in freezer keeps aluminum foil seed packets at -4°F. The countless packets contain seeds from all families of plants that grow in the country.

Initihuasi’s seed vault sits beyond thick, earthquake-proof concrete walls. Among its shelves are rare and almost extinct species of flower cactus, and varieties of the country’s wine grapes and other agricultural exports.

“We have a very important mission, because we are contributing to the conservation of our biodiversity,” Ana Sandoval, a researcher who has worked at the center for more than a decade, told John Bartlett at NPR.

Inithuasi works in tandem with several other seed banks and scientific institutions around the country to ensure there are stores of all 4,655 of Chile’s plant species, 46% of which are endemic to the country. Field expeditions continually scour the landscape to expand the seed bank’s reserves, while several on-site greenhouses and grow facilities allow researchers to document the best-practices for propagating and growing some of the rarer species.

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It additionally supports a continental network of South American seed banks to ensure that the most biodiverse part of the world can remain so even if the climate changes dramatically, or the majestic landscapes between the Atacama, the Andes, and the Amazon fragment away.

Seed vaults are now a common discovery the world over, with major facilities located at the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew location in Wakehurst, the UK, and the famous Global Seed Vault on the Norwegian island of Svalbard above the Arctic Circle.

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Community Rallies to Save Poor Town’s Last Youth Center –And Succeeds with Government Grant

credit - Pie Factory Music
credit – Pie Factory Music

One of England’s poorest coastal towns is filled with “hope and relief” after their last youth center was saved from closure.

The nonprofit Pie Factory Music has been based in Ramsgate, on the coast of Kent, for 13 years. It offers counseling, employment advice, life-skills, creative projects, or just a safe supportive space to make friends, for 8 to 25-year-olds.

Then the charity which runs the center had to try and respond to the town council’s preparations to auction the land on which the building was located. The center organized a campaign to stop the auction, working with other local community groups to raise awareness about how much good it does for Ramsgate.

The organizers also sought assistance in the form of a grant from the “Pride in Place” strategy, a fund organized by the current Labor government to invest in deprived communities across the country.

With more than $500,000, Pie has been able to buy the freehold title to the land, giving them the literal foundation to continue their lifechanging work.

“The board is making a clear statement: we are committed to providing safe, positive spaces for the next generations to thrive,” said Brian Horton, interim chair of the Ramsgate Neighborhood Board who signed off on the loan.

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“Knowing our future in the building is secure fills us with hope and relief,” said Pie’s chief executive, Zoë Carassik. “We are deeply grateful to the Pride in Place program and everyone who has helped us.”

Pie Factory organizes all kinds of activities, from letting refugee families organize cooking classes to soccer yard kickabouts, but the one constant that never changes is music: there’s always music playing at Pie, and every kid gets a turn at putting on what he or she likes.

WATCH a bit of what they do below… 

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Secrets Behind Rome’s Self-Healing Concrete Leads Scientist to Launch Roman-Style Concrete Business

A compositional analysis of cement (overlayed to right) in Pompeii - credit Archaeological Park of Pompeii
A compositional analysis of cement (overlayed to right) in Pompeii – credit Archaeological Park of Pompeii

A scientist who figured out the secret behind ancient Rome’s self-repairing concrete has recently confirmed his theory at a Pompeii building site where such concrete was in use.

This marriage of theoretical and historical knowledge combined with hard evidence has inspired the very same scientist now 3 years later to open a concrete business selling the world’s most popular building material the way the Romans made it: built to last.

Concrete was the foundation of the classical Roman empire. It enabled Rome’s storied architectural revolution to produce large buildings, bridges, and aqueducts, many of which are still used some 2,000 years after their creation.

In 2023, MIT Associate Professor Admir Masic and his collaborators published a paper describing the manufacturing process that gave Roman concrete its longevity: lime fragments were mixed with volcanic ash and other dry ingredients before the addition of water.

Once water is added to this dry mix, heat is produced. As the concrete sets, this “hot-mixing” process traps and preserves the highly reactive lime as small, white, gravel-like features. When cracks form in the concrete, the lime clasts redissolve and fill the cracks, giving the concrete self-healing properties. GNN reported on the discovery at the time.

There was only one problem, MIT press reports, the process Masic’s team described was different from the one described by the famed ancient Roman architect Vitruvius. Vitruvius literally wrote the book on ancient architecture.

His highly influential work, De Architectura, written in the 1st century BCE, is the first known book on architectural theory. In it, Vitruvius says that Romans added water to lime to create a paste-like material before mixing it with other ingredients.

“Having a lot of respect for Vitruvius, it was difficult to suggest that his description may be inaccurate,” Masic said. “The writings of Vitruvius played a critical role in stimulating my interest in ancient Roman architecture, and the results from my research contradicted these important historical texts.”

Now, Masic and his collaborators are assuming Vitruvius was misinterpreted, after confirming that hot-mixing was indeed used by the Romans, a conclusion he reached by studying a newly discovered ancient construction site in Pompeii that was exquisitely preserved by the volcanic eruption of Mount Vesuvius in the year 79 CE.

They also characterized the volcanic ash material the Romans mixed with the lime, finding a surprisingly diverse array of reactive minerals that further added to the concrete’s ability to repair itself many years after these monumental structures were built, and revealing further the genius of Roman engineering.

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“There is the historic importance of this material, and then there is the scientific and technological importance of understanding it,” Masic explains. “This material can heal itself over thousands of years, it is reactive, and it is highly dynamic. It has survived earthquakes and volcanoes. It has endured under the sea and survived degradation from the elements.”

In his 2023 paper, Masic used samples from a city wall in Priverno in southwest Italy, which was conquered by the Romans in the 4th century BCE. But there was a question as to whether this wall was representative of other concrete structures built throughout the Roman empire.

The recent discovery by archaeologists of an active ancient construction site in Pompeii (complete with raw material piles and tools) therefore offered an unprecedented opportunity.

For the study, the researchers analyzed samples from these pre-mixed dry material piles, a wall that was in the process of being built, completed buttress and structural walls, and mortar repairs in an existing wall.

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“We were blessed to be able to open this time capsule of a construction site and find piles of material ready to be used for the wall.”

The site offered the clearest evidence yet that the Romans used hot-mixing in concrete production. Not only did the concrete samples contain the lime clasts described in Masic’s previous paper, but the team also discovered intact quicklime fragments pre-mixed with other ingredients in a dry raw material pile, a critical first step in the preparation of hot-mixed concrete.

The researchers also analyzed the volcanic ingredients in the cement, including a type of volcanic ash called pumice—much of which pummeled Pompeii. They found that the pumice particles chemically reacted with the surrounding pore solution over time, creating new mineral deposits that further strengthened the concrete.

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Masic notes that calcium is a key component in both ancient and modern concretes, so understanding how it reacts over time holds lessons for understanding dynamic processes in modern cement as well. Towards these efforts, Masic has also started a company, DMAT, that uses lessons from ancient Roman concrete to create long-lasting modern concretes.

“This is relevant because Roman cement is durable, it heals itself, and it’s a dynamic system,” Masic says. “The way these pores in volcanic ingredients can be filled through recrystallization is a dream process we want to translate into our modern materials. We want materials that regenerate themselves.”

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Over 90 California Fish Stocks Almost Totally Rebuilt Thanks to Trawling Ban, Other Measures

Getty Images for Unsplash +
Getty Images for Unsplash +

Over the last 25 years, Californian fishing regulations have seen the dramatic recovery of various game fish like sea bass and rockfish to the point where they can be fished sustainably again.

Collectively known as groundfish, these stocks were serially depleted in the 1990s and early 2000s. Fish like ocean perch and bocaccio live close to the sea bed, and fishermen adopted bottom trawling nets that depleted the fish and destroyed their habitat.

By 2000, it was declared a “fisheries disaster.”

“Fishery managers at the time didn’t fully understand how slowly groundfish grow, how long they live, or how vulnerable they are to overfishing,” explained a post on the California Curated substack post. “As a result, catch limits were set too high.”

In response to the collapse, a wide variety of measures were undertaken to try and give the groundfish stocks the time, space, and peace, to rebuild themselves. It started, according to California Curated, with a trawl vessel buyback program, which spent some $46 million compensating fishermen for investing in trawlers to take advantage of the poorly-set catch limits.

Next, for the one-fourth of trawlers that remained after the buyback program, the Trawl Catch Share Program mandated onboard observers to confirm the fishermen were abiding by historical catch quotas.

Various restrictions in the size of trawling gear, and requirements for bycatch-reducing devices followed, in advance of a near-total trawling ban in most California fisheries. Rockfish and cowcod conservation areas were set up in breeding hot beds, and by 2011, most of the more than-90 managed groundfish stocks were recovering or rebuilt, some years ahead of earlier projections.

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The only California native gamefish that remains overfished is the yelloweye rockfish, but even this is slated for recovery in 2029.

The Marine Stewardship Council has certified many of these groundfish stocks as being sustainably managed, capable of growing year-over-year while feeding the coastal populations of California.

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In spring 2024, the NOAA released its annual State of the Stocks report that showed that 94% of fish stocks in the US oceanic and gulf waters are not being overfished. This was at the time an all-time high of sustainability, and would no doubt have included these California groundfish stocks which the state has done such a good job replenishing.

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“The most exciting, challenging, and significant relationship of all is the one you have with yourself.” – Carrie Bradshaw

Credit: Keegan Houser

Quote of the Day: “The most exciting, challenging, and significant relationship of all is the one you have with yourself.” – Carrie Bradshaw (TV character)

Photo by: Keegan Houser

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?

Credit: Keegan Houser