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Satellites Can Help Predict Bridge Collapses by Spotting Tiny Changes, Thanks to Scientist’s Solution

The I-35W Mississippi River Bridge after its collapse - credit, Mike Wills CC 2.0. via Flickr
The I-35W Mississippi River Bridge after its collapse – credit, Mike Wills CC 2.0. via Flickr

A University of Houston scientist is helping reveal the world’s weakest bridges—and how to fix them before it’s too late.

In a study of 744 bridges across the globe, an international team found that by combining radar and satellite imaging into risk calculations, engineers can identify which bridges are at risk of structural damage long before such damage occurs.

Published in Nature Communications by lead author Pietro Milillo, the team says their method could close a significant gap in the understanding of the structural condition of bridges.

“We can significantly lower the number of bridges classified as high-risk, especially in regions where installing traditional sensors is too costly,” Milillo told University of Houston press.

The international team, including collaborators at the University of Bath in the UK and Delft Tech Univ. (Netherlands), used a remote sensing technique called Multi-Temporal Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (MT-InSAR).

The researchers revealed it can complement traditional inspections by detecting millimeter-scale displacement on the structure caused by all the vagaries of time, decay, and nature. Such a solution could change how infrastructure is protected worldwide: monitoring bridge stability from space to detect problems before they become disasters.

They also revealed that the structures in North America are in the poorest condition, followed by those in Africa. While North American bridges are in poorer shape due to most being built in the 1960s, they still benefit from visual inspections by trained professionals.

By contrast those in Africa or Oceania may be in comparatively better condition, but inspections are virtually non-existent.

In-person visual inspections of bridges can be subjective and expensive, while inspectors may miss signs of early deterioration between typical bi-yearly inspection cycles. Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) sensors offer a more cost-effective solution, but their implementation remains limited primarily to newer bridges and specific concern cases, with the study confirming that they are installed on fewer than 20% of the world’s long-span bridges.

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“Remote sensing offers a complement to SHM sensors, can reduce maintenance costs, and can support visual inspections, particularly when direct access to a structure is challenging,” said Millilo.

“For bridges specifically, MT-InSAR allows for more frequent deformation measurements across the entire infrastructure network, unlike traditional inspections, which typically occur only a few times per year and require personnel on the ground.”

MORE BRIDGE STORIES: NYC Innovation Sees Century-Old Bridge Replaced – at $93M Under Budget, Without Stopping Trains

Researchers found that incorporating data from MT-InSAR, particularly pixels with stable scattering properties known as persistent scatterers (PS), into risk assessments provides more accurate risk registers through uncertainty reduction, enabling better risk prioritization and maintenance planning.

By providing more frequent updates than typical visual inspections, this combined monitoring approach reduces uncertainty about a bridge’s current condition, leading to more accurate risk classification.

SHARE This Fantastic Way To Monitor And Protect Our Structures… 

Beautiful Tortoiseshell Butterfly Recolonizes England Decades After Elm Disease Had Eliminated it

Large tortoiseshell butterfly (Nymphalis polychloros) by Hectonichus via CC BY-SA 4.0 Wikipedia
Large tortoiseshell butterfly (Nymphalis polychloros) by Hectonichus via CC BY-SA 4.0 Wikipedia

The butterfly-mad British are celebrating what seems to be a permanent return of this large and spectacular species after Dutch elm disease killed it off from the island.

Unlike the small tortoiseshell butterfly, the large tortoiseshell butterfly hasn’t been a resident of the UK since the 1960s, but after several years of continuous widespread sightings, it’s clearly no longer just a migratory visitor.

Indeed, having been seen in Kent, Dorset, the Isle of Wight, Sussex, Hampshire, and Cornwall, Britain’s Butterfly Conservation has officially designated it as the 60th ‘resident’ species in the UK.

“The signs are really positive, which is lovely,” said Richard Fox, head of science for Butterfly Conservation.

“It is resident and therefore it is another species to add to Britain’s total, which is good news. It’s not well-established enough yet to say it’s definitely back for good and will be widespread across multiple landscapes—we’re still in that zone of uncertainty at the moment, but there are exciting signs.”

Its caterpillars hatch on trees and feed on the leaves of elm, willow, aspen, and poplar.

Lepidopterists, or butterfly biologists, believe that Britain represents the northern-most part of the animal’s range, and with Europe experiencing higher than recent-historic-average temperatures, this makes it an even more ideal home than during the 20th century.

GREAT BRITISH BUTTERFLIES: What Color is it? Photographer Captures Varied Luminescence of One of UK’s Rarest Butterflies

According to the Guardian, sightings have been reported as far back as 2006, but since butterflies can and often are migratory, it wasn’t at the time possible to say the animal was recolonizing its former haunts. Rather, it was more likely a seasonal visitor.

Then, in 2020, sightings of the first wild caterpillars in Dorset confirmed the animal was back and breeding in the wild, and as it spread out across the surrounding, lower English counties, gracefully returned to the resident list.

MORE STORIES LIKE THIS: Efforts to Save Endangered Blue Butterfly Quadruples its Population–but Also Saves a Lupine from Extinction

Butterfly Conservation are urging residents of these areas to log details of any sighting of the large tortoiseshell on iRecord, a citizen-science application which is helping build a picture of the expanding range of the insect.

SHARE This Insect’s Happy Return With Your English Friends On Social Media… 

The ‘Miracle Berry’ Helps Chemo Patients Remove Metallic Taste So They Can Enjoy Food Again

A miracle berry plant - credit, Hamale Lyman, released to the public domain
A miracle berry plant – credit, Hamale Lyman, released to the public domain

A species of red berry native to Africa and now grown in Florida is helping cancer patients reclaim the ability to enjoy food thanks to the berry’s properties which bear a “miracle” moniker.

“Miracle berry” is known as àgbáyun in its West African home. Scientifically, it’s designated Synsepalum dulcificum, with ‘dulcificum’ referring to its unique ability to turn sour foods sweet.

So iconic and striking is the effect it has on those who consume it, the active ingredient inside the plant’s fruit is a glycoprotein that’s literally called miraculin.

Studies investigating this compound report that at low pH (resulting from ingestion of sour foods) miraculin binds proteins and becomes able to activate the sweet receptors, resulting in the immediate perception of sweet taste.

What does this have to do with cancer? Proper nutrition is important to any cancer battle, but this can often become difficult because of something called “chemo mouth.”

“What patients report with chemotherapy is that they may develop a bothersome taste that could be described as metallic, rotten food,” said Dr. Mike Cusnir, an oncologist at Mount Sinai Medical Center who has led several initial studies into using miracle berries to make food more palatable for chemotherapy patients.

Dr. Cusnir told CBS News Miami that the ‘miracle’ in miracle berries doesn’t have anything to do with cancer, nor any method of preventing the damage chemotherapy does to the body. What it can do is restore one of the great joys of life—eating—to those who’ve lost it to chemotherapy drugs.

Julie Ascen has been battling lymphoma for a year, and told CBS that she considers the miracle berry to be just that: a miracle.

A BETTER CHEMO: Oncologists Treat Patient’s Rare Cancer with Isolated Chemotherapy Delivery, Preventing Side-Effects

“It is one of those miracles that, if you have this disease, you want to live your life and not have it control you. And this lets it not control me; I can control myself.”

The miraculin glycoprotein removes the chemo mouth sensation for 30-40 minutes, allowing patients to eat a meal and enjoy the flavors again.

CRAZY CROPS: Okra and Fenugreek Extracts Safely Remove Microplastics From Water in New Texas Research

Florida, says one miracle berry grower, is the only place in the US where this fruit grows well, as it enjoys the hot and humid conditions of the plant’s native West African forest home.

Hardly reserved for cancer patients, miracle berry is typically sold in freeze dried form, as the miraculin degrades quickly after the fruit’s separation from the plant. You can even buy it on Amazon. It makes for a fantastic party trick—eat one, then eat a lemon, and watch as everyone uniformly agrees that it tastes like an orange.

SHARE This Little Fruit Making A Big Difference In People’s Lives… 

‘What we really are’ matters more than what other people ‘think’ of us. – Jawaharlal Nehru

Petra Bensted - CC License

Quote of the Day: ‘What we really are’ matters more than what other people ‘think’ of us. – Jawaharlal Nehru

Photo by: Petra Bensted – CC License

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?

Petra Bensted – CC License

Good News in History, March 11

A restored page from the Rigoletto vocal score, featuring the Bella Figlia dell'Amore aria.

175 years ago today, Giuseppe Verdi’s Rigoletto premiered in Venice. This cornerstone of opera seasons present and past tells the story of a court jester who tries to interfere with a duke’s courting of his daughter, but it doesn’t go as he plans. There is cross-dressing, assassins, and one of the most iconic melodies in the tenor range, La donna è mobile. LISTEN to the aria below… (1851)

Rare Species of Pink ‘Fairy Club’ Fungus Discovered in UK for First Time

A Clavaria calabrica fungus - credit Diana Walker via SWNS
A Clavaria calabrica fungus – credit Diana Walker via SWNS

A rare, pale pink, fairy club fungus native to Italy was found during a mushroom survey in England last autumn, the first recording sighting anywhere in Great Britain.

The tennis ball-sized fungus has now been confirmed through DNA testing, as there are other species that look similar to it.

The “exceptional” discovery was made by a group of Naturewatch volunteers from Somer Valley Rediscovered in England’s southwest.

DNA extraction was done in Scotland and then sent to the University of Aberystwyth in Wales for sequencing, making the discovery a truly pan-British effort.

“This discovery further demonstrates that the South West is home to some of the most spectacular and diverse examples of these unique grassland fungi communities anywhere on the planet,” a local enthusiast named Dan Nicholas who led the mushroom survey told England’s Southwest News Service.

“We are truly blessed to have such a colorful spectacle of nature’s calendar right on our doorstep, something we need to cherish and protect at all costs.”

Clavaria calabrica is a small member of an informal group of fungi called fairy clubs, or coral fungi, that was first identified by scientists in Italy in 2017. Clava is the Latin word for “club,” and calabrica refers to the Italian region of Calabria.

It is usually found in grasslands that have been managed gently over time and are rich in wildlife. While the species has previously been recorded in Northern Ireland, this is the first time it has been confirmed in mainland Britain.

The fungus was discovered as part of the Somer Valley Rediscovered project, a partnership made up of local town and parish councils that aims to improve biodiversity whilst better connecting communities to their local green spaces and landscapes.

CRAZY BRITISH MUSHROOMS: Giant Puffball Mushroom Feeds Her Family for a Week

People across the region are being encouraged to take part in the West of England Wildlife Index, a citizen science program tracking wildlife at 20 sites across West England, contributing to the region’s State of Nature report.

Volunteers are asked to help count bees, butterflies, plants and wetland birds as part of well-established national monitoring programs, with guidance and support from the project’s ecologist.

FUN(GI) STORIES: Bionic Arms Enable Mushrooms to Create Music Using Their Own Energy (LISTEN)

“Finding a species never before recorded in Great Britain here in the West is something we can all be proud of. This shows again just how rich and unique landscapes across our region can be,” said Helen Godwin, Mayor of the West of England, a combined administrative authority that makes up Somerset but also Bristol and other areas around the River Avon.

“The work of the West of England Nature Partnership helps make sure these habitats are understood and protected. I encourage everyone to get involved in the West of England Wildlife Index, helping us record and safeguard the nature that makes our region so special.”

MAKE Room For This Mushroom On Your Social Media Channels Below… 

New Baby Boom for Cheetahs in India After First-in-the-World Reintroduction

Jwala the cheetah and her 5 cubs - credit, @byadavbjp
Jwala the cheetah and her 5 cubs – credit, @byadavbjp

A female cheetah named Jwala in India’s Madhya Pradesh state has given birth to a litter of 5 cubs, the third since she arrived in the country.

India’s Minister for the Environment wrote on X that the birth increases “the number of Indian-born thriving cubs has risen to 33, marking the 10th successful cheetah litter on Indian soil.”

There have been highs and lows for the growing cheetah population in India, reintroduced in 2022 via several groups of animals from African strongholds of Namibia, Botswana, and South Africa.

Their first destination was Madhya Pradesh’s Kuno National Park, where they were historically located before going extinct in the mid-20th century.

Though iconic to Africa, much like the lion and leopard, these cats spanned the Asian landmass as well, and in fact still live today as an isolated, Critically-Endangered population in Iran.

In India they were hunted for centuries for their pelts, and for sport. The government of long-serving Prime Minister Narendra Modi made “Project Cheetah” a keystone demonstration of his administration’s commitment to the environment.

However, mortality among the reintroduced cats has been high—a consequence typical of these sorts of projects—yet one which Modi has nevertheless taken substantial criticism over. 28 cheetahs were brought from Africa, but more than half have passed away. Some ecologists warned that they would have difficulty adapting to the predator density in Kuno, which harbors a robust leopard population.

There are now 53 cheetahs living in the wild and semi-wild habitats in both Kuno and Gandhi Sagar Wildlife Sanctuary. They total 11 animals remaining that were translocated from Africa, and 33 India-born cubs, some of which are reaching sexual maturity.

INDIAN WILDLIFE: The Tiger Population Doubled in India in Just Ten Years

“This achievement reflects the dedicated efforts, skill, and commitment of the veterinarians, field staff and all involved who continue to work tirelessly on the ground,” said Minister Bhupender Yadav on X.

The birth follows a mid-February litter of 3 cubs to another Namibian female cat named Gamini, the second since she arrived in India.

“A moment of pride for Kuno, and for India—may Gamini and her three little sprinters grow strong and carry the nation’s cheetah revival story forward with speed and grace,” Yadev said at the time.

ALSO CHECK OUT: Six Baby Cheetahs Born in the Richmond Zoo’s Prolific Breeding Program – 167 Cats Since 2013 (WATCH)

According to Japan Times which reported on Gamini’s litter, the National Tiger Conservation Authority of India, which oversees the cheetah project, said that survival rates and hunting successes are “comparable to other international cheetah reintroduction efforts, with recorded wild prey kills confirming successful adaptation to the Indian landscape.”

Another cheetah reintroduction program is taking place in Saudi Arabia, where cheetahs also once lived but went extinct.

SHARE This Story Of Ambition And Determination To Revive The Cheetah…

Once-in-a-Decade Superbloom Carpets Death Valley in Beautiful, Colorful Life (LOOK)

2026 Death Valley Superbloom - credit, Dianne Milliard, NPS
2026 Death Valley Superbloom – credit, Dianne Milliard, NPS

The largest and most vibrant spring wildflower bloom in a decade is taking place in Death Valley National Park after a confluence of ideal weather conditions left the bulbs and roots ready to explode.

The National Park Service said that ideally-spaced annual rains and gentler wind patterns as winter was giving way to spring allowed flowers the perfect mixture of fuel and calm to bloom.

In lower elevations the blooms are already bursting, and will continue to be vibrant until around late March. Meanwhile, at higher elevations, the blooms are still getting started and will only become earnestly “super” in April.

According to Scientific American, some of the flower species that can be seen are desert gold, wavyleaf desert paintbrush, grape soda lupine, and desert star.

The hottest place in North America, and in certain years the world, Death Valley lives up to its name with precious little water and scorching temperatures. It seems unlikely that anything could grow in such terrain, yet nature is resilient.

(Click below to watch a video from Accu Weather…)

 

And, no doubt the epic blooms will result in a buzz of insects feeding on nectar and pollen, which will in turn allow bird life to live high on the hog during nesting season.

GNN previously reported that a tiny fish known to live only in secluded below ground pools lives in Death Valley, and recently grew in population according to NPS surveys; proof that Death Valley is livelier than it appears.

CALL Your California Friends And Plan A Drive Out To This Exquisite Show… 

Kind Restaurant Owners Take Entire Staff on Paid Bahamas Vacation

Cruise selfie – Credit: The Standard Restaurant on IG / Adam Gonzales (Unsplash)
Cruise selfie – Credit: The Standard Restaurant on IG / Adam Gonzales (Unsplash)

As the busy holiday period wound to a close at The Standard restaurant in Toledo, the owners surprised their staff with a three-day cruise to the Bahamas.

Admitting that their team of cooks, servers, and hosts were the “lifeblood” of the business, Chef Jeff Dinnebeil and his wife, co-owner of The Standard Megan Lingsweiler, got the idea to reward their team after enjoying a cruise vacation with their own children last year.

The couple even took a few loyal customers and former team members out with them to the Royal Caribbean cruise, which stopped at the islands of Nassau and Bimini.

“Everybody went on there as employees, and when we left and went back home, everybody was like family,” Andrew Jackson, one of the restaurant’s cooks, told the Toledo Blade’s Sheila Howard.

Jackson had neither flown nor been on a boat in the ocean before, so the experience was a life-changing one. It felt the same for server Allison Latta, who like Jackson, said the experience turned her team members into family members.

“I had been on cruises before, but this alone was probably my top vacation,” she told the Blade. “It was just such a unique experience getting to see 60 of your co-workers around the boat.”

GENEROUS BOSSES: 

Serving upscale American cuisine with a focus on surf and turf, The Standard is a popular spot on Monroe Street in northwest Toledo.

Chef Dinnebeil in the middle, his wife Megan to his right, who took their staff to the Bahamas on a cruise vacation – credit, The Standard Restaurant

Dinnebeil and Lingsweiler credit the success of their restaurant to the quality of the team, who also received Christmas bonuses in addition to the cruise. The restaurant was closed to ensure that no team member had to stay behind while the others went and partied it up on the high seas.

Along with the island visits, the trip included Karaoke nights, scavenger hunts, large catered dinners, and a basketball competition.

SHARE These Generous Souls Choosing People Over Profit (Then Book A Table)…

“To the mind that is still, the whole universe surrenders.” – Lao Tzu

Credit: Léonard Cotte

Quote of the Day: “To the mind that is still, the whole universe surrenders.” – Lao Tzu

Photo by: Léonard Cotte

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: Léonard Cotte

 

Good News in History, March 10

Jon Hamm - credit, Philip Romano CC 4.0. via Wiki

Happy Birthday to Hollywood star Jon Hamm who turns 55 today. He rocketed to fame playing the 60s advertising executive Don Draper in the TV hit Mad Men, for which he won two Golden Globes and an Emmy, after 15 nominations. He also had a recurring role on NBC’s 30 Rock and is reportedly reuniting with his co-star Tina Fey in a new film directed by Mad Men co-star John Slattery called Maggie Moore, a dark comedy about a sheriff in a small town. WATCH some of his funny moments on talk shows… (1971)

Multiple Types of Plastic Are Turned into Vinegar Using Sunlight-Powered Process Without Emissions

Waterloo PhD student Wei Wei, who led the research - credit, University of Waterloo, released
Waterloo PhD student Wei Wei, who led the research – credit, University of Waterloo, released

Researchers at the University of Waterloo have discovered a way to turn plastic waste into acetic acid, the main ingredient of vinegar, using sunlight.

The breakthrough offers a promising new approach to reducing plastic pollution through photocatalysis, while simultaneously creating a useful, value-added chemical product through a process inspired by nature.

“Our goal was to solve the plastic pollution challenge by converting microplastic waste into high-value products using sunlight,” said Dr. Yimin Wu, a professor of mechanical and mechatronics engineering at the University of Waterloo, Canada.

Plastic waste, notably microplastics, has been found across many of the planet’s ecosystems, raising concerns about threats to terrestrial and marine life as well as human health. Plastic recycling rates remain low around the globe.

To tackle this problem, the team developed a bio-inspired photocatalysis process using iron atoms embedded in carbon nitride, a way that certain types of fungi break down organic matter using enzymes.

When exposed to sunlight, the material drives a series of chemical reactions that transform plastic polymers into acetic acid with high selectivity. The reaction takes place in water, making it particularly relevant for addressing plastic pollution in aquatic environments.

Acetic acid is widely used in food production, chemical manufacturing and energy applications. The study shows it can be produced from common plastic wastes, including PVC, PP, PE and PET, and remains effective across mixed plastic compositions.

This makes the approach well suited to real-world waste streams, offering a promising alternative to plastic incineration, and could support more circular approaches to material use while providing a new strategy for upcycling plastics.

FEWER PLASTICS IN THE OCEANS: Analysis Shows We’ve Been Overestimating the Amount of Plastic in Oceans by 30x

“Both from a business and societal perspective, the financial and economic benefits associated with this innovation seem promising,” said Roy Brouwer, executive director of the Water Institute and a coauthor of the article supporting the techno-economic analysis.

“This method allows abundant and free solar energy to break down plastic pollution without adding extra carbon dioxide to the atmosphere,” Wu adds.

TACKLING THE PLASTIC PROBLEM: Nonprofit Diverts an Ocean Plastic Tide, Removing 2 Million Pounds of Trash From Waterways

The findings also point to new possibilities for addressing microplastics directly. Because the process degrades plastics at the chemical level, it could help prevent the accumulation of microplastics in water systems.

While still at the laboratory stage, the team envisions that this approach could be adapted for scalable, solar-driven recycling and environmental cleanup and the photocatalytic upcycling system can be further enhanced through strategic engineering of the materials and manufacturing processes.

SHARE Yet Another Approach To Addressing Plastic Waste With Your Friends… 

Public Artwork is Hidden Until it Rains in Seattle–Now You Can Do it Anywhere in the World

- credit Rainworks
– credit Rainworks

Ask anyone who lives in a rainy city and they’ll tell you that you just have to make the best of it.

In Seattle, one artist did exactly that by making an eco-friendly spray material that can only be seen when it’s wet. It’s become so popular that the city government is using it to decorate bus stops.

Called Rainworks (rather than artworks) the product is sold in tandem with stencils and is based on superhydrophobic coatings. Perceptive readers may note that these coatings represent a source of the dreaded “forever chemicals,” but can also rest assured that the founder of Rainworks, Peregrine Church, recognized that too.

Partnering with some folks in Belgium who were seeking, like Church, to make nature-based hydrophobic coatings, he and his friends began with late-night guerilla artworks that would appear the following days in the rain as hidden messages or images appearing on sidewalks out of nothing.

Rainwork’s first social media highlight—of a bucket of water tossed on a sidewalk to reveal a hidden hopscotch course, went crazily viral and spawned instant demand for the product that was then just a prototype.

Church used the crowdfunding platform Kickstarter to fund the creation of a business to manufacture and market Rainworks products, and it’s been going strong ever since.

“Seattle has such a deep connection with rain. It’s integral to the culture and the personality of the city,” Church told the Seattle Times. “There’s also a lot of really kind, caring, passionate people here. And so I like to think about rainworks representing both of those things. Yes, it’s a rainy city. Yes, we have dreary days. But we’re also making the best of it.”

Seattle Department of Transportation recently commissioned Rainworks to make series of designs on their new Beacon Hill plaza bustop, a pedestrian area where the DoT surveyed commuters to figure out what they’d like to see more of.

ARTS AND CREATIVITY: ‘This Area is Slightly Haunted but Manageable’: New Signs Look Official But They’re Public Art Designed to Delight

The answers were places to spend time with friends, more shelter from the rain and the sun, and art.

Rainworks came and, with likely no one understanding what they were doing given that the coating that makes the artworks is invisible when dry, sprayed a couple of sea lions, an orca, a giant wave, and a 25-foot maze around the plaza and the bus shelter.

SEATTLE STORIES: Washington Man Rescues 2.4 Million Pounds of Farmers’ Crops Going to Waste, Gets Them to Food Banks Across State

Only when the inevitable Seattle nimbus clouds gathered above Beacon Hill, and the fat raindrops started falling, did commuters get a chance to see what was beneath their feet.

The Rainworks community is now worldwide, and given that the pieces are invisible in the dry, the website has a map of dozens of rainworks, from Nigeria to Scotland, and from Seattle to New South Wales.

SHARE The Creation Story Of These Fantastic Art Supplies With Your Friends…

Marsupials Previously Thought Extinct for 6,000 Years Discovered: ‘A once-in-a-lifetime discovery’

Photograph Carlos Bocos, licensed CC 4.0. Int. via inclusion in Flannery et al., 2026. Rec. Aust. Mus. 78(1): 17–34
Photograph Carlos Bocos, licensed CC 4.0. Int. via inclusion in Flannery et al., 2026. Rec. Aust. Mus. 78(1): 17–34

GNN has reported a-plenty on animals that were last seen in the 20th century and believed extinct that were then rediscovered, but a story from the island of New Guinea now stretches that pattern to its absolute limits.

Known only from fossilized bones that date back 6,000-plus years, two species of arboreal marsupials have been confirmed to still exist, begging the use of the often-exploited descriptor “living fossils.”

The pygmy long-fingered possum (Dactylonax kambuayai) and the ring-tailed glider (Tous ayamaruensis) are the two newest members of a very exclusive group of animals.

“A relatively small number of animal species hold the distinction of having been described initially from fossil remains, then subsequently discovered as a living animal,” the authors of a paper describing this incredible discovery, wrote in their introduction. “In paleontology, lineages that drop out of the fossil record and then re-emerge after long periods are termed ‘Lazarus taxa.’”

On the Bird’s Head, or Vogelkop peninsula of West Papua—the Indonesian-controlled portion of the island of New Guinea—late 20th-century archaeological excavations on Stone Age sites found skull and teeth evidence of an animal that didn’t exist previously in the fossil record. However, one researcher in 2007 suggested that very animal probably still existed based on its similarities to known marsupials on the island.

New Guinea is famously underexplored and its more secretive life-forms famously undocumented, and the researcher felt greater surveys would eventually reveal the animal’s continued existence.

A photographer named Carlos Bocos, on a visit to Vogelkop organized by mammalwatching.org, recently photographed a long-fingered possum in a tree, but that alone wasn’t enough evidence since there are two other species of long-fingered possums.

These animals have freakishly-elongated third digits which they use to feel around for and extract wood boring insects that make up their diet.

Fortunately for 70-year-old Tim Flannery, lead author of the paper on the rediscovery, two museum specimens had been wrongly-identified as a closely related species and stored at the University of New Guinea for teaching purposes.

A ring-tailed glider subadult photographed in 2015 credit – Arman Muharmansyah in Flannery et al. CC 4.0. Int.

“We’ve been able to finalize two pieces of work that are incredibly important from a biological and a conservation perspective, documenting the existence of rare marsupials in an area under threat,” Flannery told the Guardian. “It’s sort of a crowning glory in my career as a biologist.”

MORE STORIES LIKES THIS: Japanese Team Saves Nearly-Extinct Herons by Hand-Rearing Chicks

Flannery et al’s research, documenting Bocos’ photographs, the fossil record, and museum specimens helped him determine that the animal isn’t only a separate species, but a separate genus as well. It’s the first new genus of New Guinean mammal documented since 1937.

Fortunately for differentiating this possum over others, its enormous finger is a dead giveaway.

The other species that Flannery and his team described, which included members of the indigenous community of Vogelkop, who consider the animals to be sacred incarnations of past ancestors, is the ring-tailed glider.

Yet again this species was only known from fossilized skulls with teeth found in archaeological digs, but was actually photographed alive in 2015. Here too, Flannery and his team separated the animal into a new genus: Tous. 

FROM THE JUNGLES OF NEW GUINEA: Long-Beaked Creature Is Proven Not Extinct in First Ever Photos: ‘Blows My Mind’ After 60 Years

“This newly described genus is present in the Australian Pliocene and Pleistocene fossil record, and its living relatives are the Greater gliders (Petauroides spp.) and the Lemuroid ringtail (Hemibelideus lemuroides) of eastern Australia,” the introduction to the study describing this glider reads.

It proves that Australia and Vogelkop were once connected before the latter became part of New Guinea, suggesting its forests act as a potential haven of other archaic wildlife from Australia’s past.

SHARE This Truly Once In A Lifetime Achievement With Your Friends… 

Beloved Oregon Waterfall to Become Public Land as State Buys Abiqua Falls Property

Abiqua Falls in Oregon – Credit: Andy Witchger via Flickr (CC BY 2.0)
Abiqua Falls in Oregon – Credit: Andy Witchger via Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

A beloved Oregon waterfall that lies on private land is set to be purchased by the state after being placed on the market.

Far from being a story of a rallying cry to save nature from exploitation, Abiqua Falls has been owned for decades by good stewards who “bent over backwards” to facilitate public access, but who now feel their journey as such has ended.

The falls are one of the Pacific Northwest’s most iconic, are set on land owned by Mount Angel Abbey and Seminary and its foundation since 1908. The abbey put the falls up for sale on February 2nd.

A plunge-style waterfall, the Abiqua Creek surges over what looks to be moss-covered columnar basalt rock before falling 92-feet down into a pool below. Set near Scott’s Mill amid rustic surroundings and little trail infrastructure, it offers the chance for a stunning one-on-one encounter with nature.

State Senator Fred Girod (R) leapt at the opportunity to negotiate a price and close a purchase agreement to include within Senate Bill 5701, a $500 million funding bill that will pay for construction and maintenance of various kinds statewide.

The bill will include $2 million to fund the purchase of the falls, 42 acres immediately around it, and another 160 acres upstream owned by a large timber company. The abbey agreed to a price that would make the purchase as easy as possible, to ensure that its tradition of public access is maintained.

“If the abbey insisted on getting top dollar then this wouldn’t have happened,” Girod told the Statesman Journal. “They’ve been good stewards and bent over backward to make sure public access was guaranteed.”

ALSO CHECK OUT: 12 Famous American Waterfalls Are Looking Gorgeous on New Stamps From USPS

While the falls will come into public hands, Girod said that it’s not a given that they will feature in a new ‘Abiqua Falls State Park.’ Overcrowding the delicate microenvironment by beefing up parking and trail infrastructure is not what’s currently being envisioned, and, rather like the abbey has done, the prevailing concept is to leave it more or less as it is.

This could be done by transferring ownership of the land to the county, or to the state forestry department.

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“It is with deep gratitude and hope for the future that the Abbey Foundation of Oregon entrusts the stewardship and legacy of Abiqua Falls to the state of Oregon,” Dr. Amanda Staggenborg, director of communications for Mount Angel Abbey & Seminary said in a statement.

“The beauty of Abiqua Falls will be enjoyed by generations of Oregonians and all those who love Oregon’s natural wonders.”

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“There is a thin line that separates laughter and pain, comedy and tragedy, humor and hurt.” – Erma Bombeck

Credit: Nick Fancher / Unsplash+

Quote of the Day: “There is a thin line that separates laughter and pain, comedy and tragedy, humor and hurt.” – Erma Bombeck

Photo by: Nick Fancher for Unsplash+

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: Nick Fancher / Unsplash+

Good News in History, March 9

The Wealth of the Nation" mural Seymour Fogel - pub domain

Precisely one-quarter millennium ago, the Scottish economist Adam Smith published An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nationsone of the first great treatises in economics, called “the most important substantive proposition in all of economics,” by George Stigler. Most commonly referred to as simply The Wealth of Nations, this shortening diminishes the book’s true value, namely it was the first time that a scientist or philosopher stopped asking “why is there poverty,” and instead asked “why is there wealth?” a much harder question to answer. Smith’s conclusion was that between nations of equal standing, culture, and population, some are wealthier than others because of the degree to which they allow for individual economic pursuits. The treatise lays out some of the most fundamental economic laws and helped inform some of the greatest advancements in human prosperity ever seen. READ more about this seminal of seminal works… (1776)

Triceratops Had Huge Nose to Control its Body Temperature, Suggests Curious Scientist

Seishiro Tada with fossilized Triceratops – SWNS
Seishiro Tada with fossilized Triceratops – SWNS

Scientists wanted to know why the iconic triceratops had such an unusually large nose compared to most species—both past and present.

Their new study shows the triple-horned dinosaur had a huge nose to help control its body temperature.

The team used CT scans of fossilized Triceratops skulls and compared their structures with modern animals including birds and crocodiles.

Through direct observation and inference, the research team reconstructed how nerves, blood vessels and structures for airflow fit together in the skulls.

They concluded that horned dinosaurs probably used their noses not just for smelling but also to help control temperature and moisture. Project Research Associate Dr. Seishiro Tada, from the University of Tokyo Museum in Japan, wondered about moisture control while studying a fossilized triceratops.

“I have been working on the evolution of reptilian heads and noses since my master’s degree,” said Dr. Tada.

“Triceratops in particular had a very large and unusual nose, and I couldn’t figure out how the organs fit within it even though I remember the basic patterns of reptiles.

“That made me interested in their nasal anatomy and its function and evolution.”

Horned dinosaurs (or Ceratopsia) had some of the most elaborate skull types—and Triceratops was the most iconic and instantly recognizable.

But due to its relative uniqueness, the internal anatomy of Triceratops skulls has been poorly understood, until Dr. Tada explored the internal soft tissues using modern tools at their disposal.

SWNS

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“Employing X-ray-based CT-scan data of a Triceratops, as well as knowledge on contemporary reptilian snout morphology, we found some unique characteristics in the nose and provide the first comprehensive hypothesis on the soft-tissue anatomy in horned dinosaurs.

“Triceratops had unusual ‘wiring’ in their noses.

“In most reptiles, nerves and blood vessels reach the nostrils from the jaw and the nose. But in Triceratops, the skull shape blocks the jaw route, so nerves and vessels take the nasal branch.

“Essentially, Triceratops tissues evolved this way to support its big nose.

“I came to realize this while piecing together some 3D-printed Triceratops skull pieces like a puzzle.”

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The findings, published in the journal The Anatomical Record, also revealed a special structure in Triceratops’ nose called a respiratory turbinate, which almost no other dinosaurs are known to possess. Yet modern birds have them, as do modern mammals.

The structures are thin, curled surfaces within the nose that increase the surface area for blood and air to exchange heat.

Dr Tada says Triceratops probably wasn’t fully warm-blooded, but the researchers believe the structures helped keep temperature and moisture levels under control as its large skull would be difficult to cool down otherwise.

“Although we’re not 100% sure Triceratops had a respiratory turbinate, as most other dinosaurs don’t, some birds have an attachment base (ridge) for the turbinate. Horned dinosaurs have a similar ridge at the similar location in their nose as well.

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“Our research has filled the final piece of that dinosaur-shaped puzzle.

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Cannabis Compounds Can Cut Cholesterol and Lower Risk of Fatty Liver Disease (Without Getting High)

Credit: Getty Images For Unsplash+
Credit: Getty Images For Unsplash+

Naturally occurring chemicals found in cannabis have been shown to reduce the risk of potentially deadly fatty liver disease, according to new research.

The compounds can “significantly” cut liver fat and cholesterol levels and improve the body’s ability to efficiently process energy, said scientists.

The study reveals that two key cannabis compounds, Cannabidiol (CBD) and Cannabigerol (CBG)—which are not psychoactive and do not cause a high—work by creating a backup energy reserve in the liver and restoring the activity of cellular ‘cleaning crews” to break down harmful waste.

The findings, published in the British Journal of Pharmacology, highlight a new, plant-based path for treating the world’s most common chronic liver disorder.

Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), is currently the world’s most common chronic liver disorder, affecting around one-in-three adults and is closely linked to obesity, high blood pressure, and insulin resistance.

While lifestyle factors such as diet and exercise are important, they can be hard to maintain, and there are few approved medicines currently available for the condition.

His team used advanced tools to show that CBD and CBG do more than just reduce fat. They found the compounds actually help the liver function better internally— through a unique process of ‘metabolic remodeling’.

“One of the most important findings was the impact on the liver’s energy reserves,” said study leader Professor Joseph Tam, in a media release.

The researchers found that CBD and CBG restore the activity of cathepsins – enzymes that act like a “cleaning crew” within the cell’s recycling centers, known as lysosomes.

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“By getting this cleaning crew back to work, the liver is better able to break down and clear out harmful fats and waste.”

Cannabis researcher Professor Joseph Tam – SWNS

“These compounds increase levels of phosphocreatine, which acts like a backup battery to help the liver stay healthy under the stress caused by a high-fat diet.

“This is a new discovery, as the liver does not usually rely heavily on this specific energy system.”

“Our findings identify a new mechanism by which CBD and CBG enhance hepatic energy and lysosomal function,” said Prof. Tam, at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

“This dual metabolic remodeling contributes to improved liver lipid handling and highlights these compounds as promising therapeutic agents for MASLD.”

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The researchers also found that both treatments significantly reduced harmful lipids—such as triglycerides and ceramides. (The latter is known to contribute to insulin resistance and liver inflammation).

The study showed that while both compounds were effective, they each provided slightly different benefits for metabolic health.

“Both CBD and CBG were able to normalize blood sugar levels and improve how the body clears glucose.

“CBG appeared to have a more pronounced effect on certain metrics: it significantly reduced body fat mass and improved insulin sensitivity more robustly than CBD. CBG was also particularly effective at lowering total cholesterol and ‘bad’ LDL cholesterol levels.”

While the results are encouraging, the researchers say further studies are needed to understand how the findings can best be applied to patients.

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Dog Obsessively Sniffing Mom’s Breath Detected Lung Cancer–Now an E-Nose is Being Trained to Save More Lives

Courtesy of Medical Detection Dogs and Colleen Ferguson / SWNS
Courtesy of Medical Detection Dogs and Colleen Ferguson / SWNS

Colleen Ferguson says her German shepherd saved her life by detecting cancer in its earliest stages—and causing her to suspect something might be wrong when the dog kept obsessively smelling her breath.

For weeks, two-year-old Inca would sniff at her mouth and frown. The 60-year-old got her teeth checked, and doctors did tests related to her gluten intolerance, but they all came back negative.

Inca would not quit the habit, so the woman from Kent, England, decided to schedule a full body scan, which revealed a “golf ball sized tumor” in her left lung–it was stage one cancer.

“She just had this focused intent on my mouth,” the former science teacher said. “She would give me such a look and walk away.”

“In no way did I expect lung cancer. It was such a shock because I am a non-smoker, and I had absolutely no symptoms at all, apart from being tired.”

After a surgery to remove the tumor Colleen didn’t need any further treatment or radiation, and she’s now making the most of her retirement years as a creative writer and published author.

“The surgeon told me, ‘we never catch it at stage 1, your dog has saved your life.

“I was just so lucky. To catch it that early was just remarkable. People need to listen to their dogs.”

Researchers in the UK have evidence that is proving that dogs can, indeed, detect cancer with their superior sense of smell.

The nonprofit Medical Detection Dogs began a groundbreaking study in 2024 to teach seven pooches—Labradors, cocker spaniels, and a retriever—how to detect tumors simply by smelling urine in pots.

“Dogs have shown us time and time again that diseases have an odor,” Claire Guest, the CEO and Chief Scientific Officer at Medical Detection Dogs, told The Times. “We are not sure whether that is the odor of the tumor itself, or the body’s response to the tumor.”

Clinical trials have proven that dogs can reliably detect diseases including prostate cancer, bladder cancer, Covid-19, and even Parkinson’s—and dogs can be trained to do so.

Now a machine nose is being developed at MIT

Scientists are now developing an ‘e-nose’ trained by artificial intelligence to replicate the dogs’ responses to cancer samples.

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In collaboration with Medical Detection Dogs, a quantum physicist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dr. Andreas Mershin, has created the machine e-nose that uses chemical sensors to make it capable of “smelling” urine samples—and detecting the volatile organic compounds, which are tiny odor molecules in the air.

The e-nose is now being tested on 500 urine samples from patients at the Milton Keynes University Hospital near London, including some with prostate cancer and healthy controls, to see if it can accurately detect cancer.

Working with a chemistry team at the University of Texas at El Paso, Dr. Mershin hopes it will be approved as a clinical tool in hospitals within two years.

“This is a major milestone,” said Mershin. “We’ve worked to emulate the dogs’ abilities and train machines in a similar way—rewarding them for correct identifications.”

And such e-nose capabilities could ultimately be implemented into our smartphones. Our devices already have eyes and ears, and now technology with olfactory intelligence is the next frontier—informing a generation of non-invasive diagnostic tools for better health.

“It’s like giving our devices a new sense: a nose.”

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“When I trained our first cancer detection dog over 15 years ago, the goal was always to inform scalable technology—not to have a dog in every hospital,” said Ms. Guest. “Seeing that vision start to come to life with this E-nose is an incredibly proud moment.”

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