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Promising Trial Results Show Male Contraception May Be Arriving in the Near Future

A phase 2 trial showed that a gel-based male contraceptive is both effective at preventing unwanted pregnancies and quickly reversible.

Tests will continue to examine the effectiveness, safety, acceptability, and reversibility of contraception after treatment stops, but the results are a sign that reliable male birth control may not be far away from a pharmacy near you.

The NIH’s Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development is funding the study, which included 222 men who completed at least 3 weeks of daily treatment with the contraceptive gel.

Applied daily to the shoulder blades, the gel contained 8 milligrams (mg) of a hormone called segesterone acetate and 74 mg of testosterone.

By week 15, 86% of the participants were tested and showed a sperm count below the level at which a man is typically diagnosed as infertile.

Testosterone treatment alone decreases sperm production, with a median time of 15 weeks but the addition of segesterone acetate speeds the time and lowers the dose of testosterone needed to suppress sperm production over testosterone alone, said senior researcher Diana Blithe, Ph.D., chief of the Contraceptive Development Program at the National Institutes of Health.

ALSO CHECK OUT: Contraceptive Pill for Men Nears Reality After Major Breakthrough

In the daily segesterone-testosterone gel regimen, blood levels of testosterone were kept in the physiologic range to maintain normal sexual function and other androgen-dependent activities.

MORE DRUG DISCOVERIES: Smokers Twice as Likely to Quit if Using Drug from Laburnum Tree, Finds Study

“We’ve been pushing for hormonal male contraceptives for 50 years, but there isn’t enough money available to really drive something through a very large phase 3 trial,” Daniel Johnston, a senior colleague of Blithe’s, told NBC News. “We’ve been chasing this for a long time. I hope we’re entering new territory.”

The research was presented at the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Boston but hasn’t been peer-reviewed yet.

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Paleontologists Hunted for This Giant Bird Skull for Over a Century–Finally, a Complete ‘Thunderbird’

An artistic rendering of Genyornis newtoni - credit Jacob C. Blockland
An artistic rendering of Genyornis newtoni – credit Jacob C. Blokland

The first complete skull ever found of a gargantuan flightless bird that lived 100,000 years ago in Australia is helping paleontologists understand more about the last of the continent’s ‘Thunderbirds.’

Fossilized skull fragments of the beastly bird, which stood 7 feet tall and weighed 500 pounds, were found in 1913, but they provided very little context or evidence about the animal’s life and lineage.

Also known as a mihirung, the Aboriginal name meaning ‘giant bird,’ Genyornis newtoni is a member of the family of flightless birds from Australia called Dromornithidae. A complete skull was recently uncovered in a site near Australia’s Lake Callabonna filled with Dromornithidae fossils, and for the first time, G. newtoni can be properly identified.

A skull contains the brain cavity, the sense organs, the feeding apparatus, and as often happens in birds, ornamentation as well. When looked at together with existing skeletons, these traits give the impression of a gargantuan goose.

“It is only now, 128 years after its discovery, that we can say what it actually looked like,” Larry Witmer, a professor of anatomy and paleontology at Ohio University, who wasn’t involved in the research, told CNN in an email. “Genyornis has a very unusual beak which is very goose-like in shape.”

Skull of G. newtoni – courtesy Flinders University

The bill of this mihirung was adapted to gripping and ripping young shoots out of the ground, while a soft, grated palate would have allowed it to easily squash fruit into a pulp. Other characteristics suggest it may have even fed underwater as modern waterfowl do.

This surprised Witmer, who said that while being related to the ducks and geese of today, there are no waders or divers anywhere near its size today that feed on subsurface aquatic plants.

MORE PREHISTORIC BIRDS: Prehistoric Bird Once Thought to Be Extinct Returns to New Zealand Wild

The closest living relative it has on Earth today is a ‘screamer.’ These wading birds from South America are part of an order called Ansiformes, one of only two types of modern birds to be confirmed present during the Mesozoic alongside the other dinosaurs.

Study coauthor and avian paleontologist Jacob Blokland, at Flinders University where the skull was examined, told CNN‘s Mindy Weisberger that when attempting to make an illustration of this giant flightless bird, he ran into several surprises.

“It surprised me how superficially goosey it looked, with its large spatulate bill, but definitely unlike any goose we have today,” Blokland said in an email.

MORE AUSTRALIAN ORIGINS: Exquisite New Fossil Shows Scientists How Much More Ferocious Australia’s Crocs Once Were

“It has some aspects reminiscent of parrots, which it is not closely related to, but also landfowl, which are much closer relatives. In some ways it appears like a strange amalgamation of very different-looking birds.”

Australia is famous for large flightless birds, including the cassowary and emu, the former being an omnivore, and the latter having a part herbivorous, part insectivorous diet. It’s fascinating to think that the landscape sported other giant birds of other lineages with totally different feeding patterns.

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“Time is but the stream I go a-fishing in.” – Henry David Thoreau

Quote of the Day: “Time is but the stream I go a-fishing in.” – Henry David Thoreau

Photo by: Hendrik Cornelissen (Yoho National Park in Canada)

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Data from Battery-Powered Trains Shows Swapping Batteries for Diesel Saves 12 Million Tons of Emissions Every Year

credit - Siemens
credit – Siemens

Thanks to performance and operational data from their trains in Germany, the rail giant Siemens is convinced its new battery-powered trains can completely replace diesel locomotives in the UK.

The change stand would stand to save Britain £3.5 billion and 12 million metric tons of carbon emissions—or the equivalent of taking 80,000 internal combustion cars off the road—over 35 years.

It’s also the equivalent of planting a forest across an area the size of the Isle of Man and saving 1.8 million liters of diesel fuel per year.

Siemens Mobility’s new Train Manufacturing Facility in Goole, East Riding of Yorkshire, would manufacture the new trains that are called ‘bi-mode’ trains, meaning that they can run on battery charge or from the electrified wires that already exist above British railways.

This in part is where the significant savings come in because most of Britain’s rail track is already electrified, and because a large battery pack is carried onboard, only 20% to 30% of a railway needs to be electrified for a train to complete its journey without using all the charge.

Furthermore, Siemens already has modular converting systems that allow trains to charge directly from the power grid in just 20 minutes. All this, the company says, is enough to cut five and a half years off the required time to complete a transition from diesel to battery-powered trains

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“Our battery trains, which we’d assemble in our new Goole factory in Yorkshire, can replace Britain’s aging diesel trains without us having to electrify hundreds of miles more track in the next few years,” said Sambit Banerjee, Joint CEO for Siemens Mobility UK & Ireland.

“So, on routes from Perth to Penzance, passengers could be traveling on clean, green battery-electric trains by the early 2030s. And the best thing is that this would save the country £3.5bn over 35 years.”

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A number of train operators are looking to replace their aging diesel fleets, including Chiltern, Great Western Railway, Northern, ScotRail, TransPennine Express, and Transport for Wales.

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Melinda Gates is Giving $1 Billion to Support Women’s Rights–and Families with Young Men, Too

Melinda French Gates at the UN's Every Woman Every Child summitt in 2015 - CC 2.0.
Melinda French Gates at the UN’s Every Woman Every Child summitt in 2015 – CC 2.0.

Melinda French Gates has recently announced that she will begin a new chapter of philanthropy by committing $1 billion of her personal fortune to assist in welfare programs that support women around the country, and the world.

Ms. French Gates, now divorced, who recently announced she was resigning from her executive role in the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, claimed in an op-ed that only 2% of charitable giving in the United States goes to organizations focused on women and girls.

In her op-ed French Gates gives a rough outline of what this small percentage is attempting to combat, which she describes as malnourishment, political violence, conventional medical assistance, maternal mortality, rape as a tool of war, depression, paid family or medical leave, and reproductive medicine options.

In the founding of a new philanthropic fund, Pivotal, French Gates plans to more directly support organizations working to combat these hazards that face women, including the  National Women’s Law Center, the National Domestic Workers Alliance, and the Center for Reproductive Rights.

“Melinda has new ideas about the role she wants to play in improving the lives of women and families in the U.S. and around the world,” said Gates Foundation CEO Mark Suzman. “After a difficult few years watching women’s rights rolled back in the U.S. and around the world, she wants to use this next chapter to focus specifically on altering that trajectory.”

MORE PHILANTHROPY: MacKenzie Scott Has Now Given Away $16.5 Billion with New Grants Announced, Since Divorcing Amazon’s Jeff Bezos

In much the same way as McKenzie Scott has attempted to dole out her personal fortune to grassroots non-profits, who have a direct connection to the people they’re working on behalf of, French Gates says that she will channel $250 million to an initiative, set to begin this fall, that will include an “open call” to these small organizations.

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NPR reports that another $240 million in partnerships will be offered to 12 global female leaders, including former New Zealand prime minister Jacinda Ardern; athlete and maternal health advocate Allyson Felix; and Afghan educator and women’s rights advocate Shabana Basij-Rasikh, with each receiving a $20 million fund to distribute to organizations that improve women’s health both in the U.S. and internationally.

“As a young woman, I could never have imagined that one day I would be part of an effort like this. Because I have been given this extraordinary opportunity, I am determined to do everything I can to seize it and to set an agenda that helps other women and girls set theirs, too,” French Gates wrote.

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How One Man Stumbled Upon Complete Stegosaurus Skeleton Now Set to Earn Millions at Auction

Sotheby’s in Manhattan to auction the Apex stegosaurus – Credit: Matthew Sherman
Sotheby’s in Manhattan to auction the Apex stegosaurus – Credit: Matthew Sherman

Jason Cooper is a fossil hunter, so when his 45th birthday rolled around and a friend asked him what he wanted, the answer was a simple one—another extra special dinosaur fossil.

The keyword is “another” because with a 100-acre home atop Colorado’s Morrison Formation, Cooper has dug up plenty of dino bones before.

The BBC aptly describes the Morrison Formation as being to dinosaurs “what California was to nuggets of gold in the mid-19th century.” But as big as some of those nuggets of gold were, even the biggest couldn’t measure up to what Cooper stumbled upon in 2022.

“We looked around. My friend found some vertebrae. I said, ‘Oh my gosh, this is turning out to be a really great birthday!'” Cooper told the BBC. “I saw the spikes of a tail sticking out and a couple of the big plates on its back. I could tell it was still curled up.”

Cooper had discovered a three-fourths complete skeleton of an adult male stegosaurus, standing 11.5ft tall (3.5m) and stretching 27ft from the top of its head to the tip of its spikey tail.

Taking out as much as there was from the sedimentary rock of a cliff face, Cooper and his friends sealed the exposed fossils up in protective jackets and hauled them away in a truck to the birthday boy’s workshop.

Once there, the non-academic professional did an exquisite job removing the millions of years of sediment and rock from the mineralized bones. Cooper has donated many fossils of different kinds to scientific institutions, but this one was destined for Sotheby’s showrooms on the island of Manhattan, where it’s predicted to earn $4 to $6 million when it goes up for auction.

MORE EXQUISITE FOSSILS: Giant Rhinoceros Skeleton Found in China – One of the Largest Land Mammals Ever (Look)

Some of the most famous fossilized skeletons of dinosaurs, including complete Tyrannosaurs and Montana’s famous “dueling dinosaurs” have been auctioned, but Cassandra Hatton, Sotheby’s Global Head of Science and Popular Culture, says it is the first time a stegosaurus of this kind has been offered by a major international auction house.

“This is an incredibly important discovery, and I don’t know of another stegosaurus that matches the size and quality of this one,” she said, adding that “even impressions of the skin have been preserved.”

Jason Cooper in the middle of excavating the stegosaurus – credit, Jason Cooper, released

Cooper named the skeleton “Apex” because it represented the full size that stegosaurus could grow to be.

Cooper won’t be at the auction in July—he’ll leave the particulars to an agent and be back out at his ranch looking for the next big find.

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FBI Cracks Down on Rental Price-Fixing Scheme, Raiding Company That Uses Software to Raise Cost of Housing

The downtown section of Tucson just before sunset, viewed from Sentinel Peak - Bill Morrow, CC 2.0. BY-SA
The downtown section of Tucson, one of the cities where rents have sharply increased because of RealPage pricing – Bill Morrow, CC 2.0. BY-SA

As part of a criminal investigation, the FBI raided the offices of Cortland, a property management company operating in Arizona to find out if it was involved in an illegal price-fixing scheme centered around AI-driven rent control software.

In February, the Arizona Attorney General announced a lawsuit against nine major rental companies for alleged price fixing. All nine as well as Cortland rely on RealPage, a pricing algorithm that takes market data and determines how high rents can be in order to maximize revenue.

An article in 2022 by the Pulitzer Prize-winning media outlet ProPublica reports that following the acquisition of a rival company, RealPage was pricing 2 million units nationwide by 2017. Many rental companies found that they could increase their net operating income between 3%–7% without minimizing vacancies—in other words, they could make more money even though they had fewer tenants.

As early as 2018, ProPublica reports, the FTC was aware of RealPage’s activities, and the consideration that the firm’s breadth of clientele combined with its encouragement to share private pricing information and market data between RealPage users to increase the accuracy of the algorithm was reminiscent of the particulars in previous antitrust cases in the 20th century.

Since that ProPublica story, rents in Arizona have gone up 30% on average, with even higher increases seen in parts of Phoenix and Tucson.

Local reporters at the Copper Courier reported that the nine rental management companies named in the Arizona AG suit not only controlled over 100,000 rental units in the metropolitan areas where rents were rising the fastest, but that they all used RealPage software in at least some cases to set unit prices.

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“The conspiracy allegedly engaged in by RealPage and these landlords has harmed Arizonans and directly contributed to Arizona’s affordable housing crisis,” said AG Kris Mayes. “This conspiracy stifled fair competition and essentially established a rental monopoly in our state’s two largest metro areas.”

The Courier reports that the FBI is investigating RealPage’s influence in allegations of price-fixing and monopolistic behavior in 8 states and Washington D.C.

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RealPage denies and rejects the charges, saying the algorithm includes publicly available data, among other objections.

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“Give light – and people will find the way.” – Ella Baker

Quote of the Day: “Give light – and people will find the way.” – Ella Baker

Photo by: Foad Roshan

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Canada’s First Grocery Store Where Food is FREE Opens in Saskatchewan

Plan for Community Food Hub – Credit: Regina Food Bank
Early rendering for the Community Food Hub – Credit: Regina Food Bank

In Saskatchewan, Canada’s first free grocery store is set to open as a flourishing food bank continues to look for ways to support the community.

Located at 1881 Broad St. in Regina, the Food Hub will be stocked like any old grocery store, and unlike similar projects that operate out of churches or community centers, it will feature a produce section, floor-to-ceiling display fridges, and be open all week.

The Regina Food Bank believes that allowing people who rely on the food bank for food security to fill out a cart just like a normal grocery store gives back agency, and may actually help feed more people by reducing waste.

“None of us fit in a box, but that’s what we give our clients today,” Regina Food Bank vice-president David Froh told CBC News. “When you give choices, you give not just dignity, but actually, we figure we can feed about 25% more people.”

One client explained that getting handed a crate of canned/boxed goods put together in a hurry based on what was in stock rarely provides a selection that accounts for things like dietary restrictions, allergies, proper nutrition, or even just synergistic flavors between the foods.

Credit – Regina & District Food Bank

“Normally I barter with my neighbors and we swap back and forth, so it kind of works out that way. But a lot of people don’t do that,” said food bank client Jon White. “So there’s a lot of stuff that just goes to waste.”

FEED THE COMMUNITY: They’ve Collected 20 Million Pounds of Food From People Who are Moving—And Delivered it to Food Banks

Credit – Regina & District Food Bank

The Regina Food Bank doesn’t just support the unhoused or others in dire need of aid; 18% of its clients work full-time, and 2,000 students receive school snacks and meals through their work. Part of their overall objectives with the Food Hub is to reduce societal stigma against using a food bank.

Food banks do not receive government subsidies, so Froh and his colleagues had to look for private donations to raise the CAD$3.7 million they needed to get the Food Hub off the ground. Some of this came from piggy bank-sized gifts, but they also received a CAD$1 million donation from The Mosaic Company.

ALSO CHECK OUT: Texas Food Bank Builds Housing for the People Who Need Their Food–Right Next Door

Much of the stock is produced, grown, or processed in Saskatchewan—part of Regina Food Bank’s goal to improve the sustainability and nutritional quality of the food their clients rely on.

WATCH the story below from CBC… 

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Relics Found in Egyptian Pet Cemetery: Evidence of Monkeys Imported from India and Centurion Letters of Papyrus

Studying the pet cemetery in Egypt – Professor Marta Osypińska
Studying the pet cemetery in Egypt – Professor Marta Osypińska

Classical Egypt was controlled by the Roman Empire for 600 years, and in the excavations of a pet cemetery, archaeologists from Poland are discovering fascinating insights into the lives of the legionaries who lived there.

Alongside the remains of beloved animals, letters on papyrus written by Roman centurions, or commanders, detail trade and military organization in the province.

The skeletons of more than 200 cats, dogs, calves, and monkeys were found in specially-made graves where they were preserved with care and effort.

“Berenike, located on the Red Sea in Egypt, was an ancient port in decline after its initial success in importing elephants from the south,” a statement on the excavations from the University of Wrocław reads.

“The emporium became an intercontinental hub for the empire, through which exclusive goods from India, Asia, Arabia, and East Africa flowed – says researcher Professor Marta Osypińska.”

This is also testified in the words of the Roman centurions Lucinius and Petronius. In one letter, Petronius asks Lucinius, who was stationed in Berenike about the prices of some of the exotic luxury goods there. Petronius writes that he’s sending money via “dromedarius.”

This was a unit of Roman soldiers that traveled on camels, and for their arrival Petronius requests “veal and tentpoles” for his men, Smithsonian reports.

The cemetery included more than 200 burials of pet cats, dogs, monkeys and calves – Professor Marta Osypińska

The Romans who lived here seemed to favor owning macaques from two different species native to India as pets. This could only mean that they arrived via the Indian Ocean and Red Sea, and would have likely been an expensive import that conveyed status as well as offered companionship.

Interestingly, monkeys, very rare elsewhere in the Roman provinces, were very abundant at this site, the statement says, and the fact that their status was special and they were treated as almost humans is evidenced, according to the researchers, by the different burial methods compared to dogs and cats.

ALSO CHECK OUT FROM ROMAN HISTORY: Spy Satellite Photos Reveal Hundreds of Long-Lost Roman Forts, Challenging Decades-Old Theory

Only monkey graves have furnishings. These seem to be mostly objects for play: iridescent shells, knobbly things, a cow’s tail but also collars or harnesses. Quite often, monkeys were buried with their own pets, the researchers believe.

“Among the standout graves was one in which a female macaque had been buried with a beautiful, large haliotis shell from the Indian Ocean next to her head. The entire burial was covered with a reed mat, backfilled with dune sand, and a tombstone of large amphora fragments was laid on the surface.”

MORE ROMAN EXCAVATIONS: Archaeologists May Have Found the Villa Where the Roman Emperor Augustus Died

“The almost humane treatment of the monkeys is also evidenced by traces of [what] can be seen as medical treatment. One of the macaques had its feet covered in balsam resin. In antiquity, it was regarded as a healing and painkilling agent. It was also used in embalming and anointing the bodies of the dead.”

It’s a fascinating image—the Roman centurion in his red, gold, and purple armor and trappings of command, but with a monkey on his shoulder. Such a discovery, which for other civilizations would be one of the most informative and important ever found, is for Rome somewhat normal because of her vast size and incredible organization.

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Lunar Probe Is First to Land on Far Side of the Moon to Collect Samples

An image taken by Chang'e-6 - released by CNSA
An image taken by Chang’e-6 of the Moon’s far side – released by CNSA

The indefatigable Chinese space program continues to enjoy success as its most recent lunar probe touched down on the far side of the Moon in advance of a sample recovery mission.

The Chang’e-6 probe touched down on the Moon’s South Pole-Aitken Basin where it will soon begin to drill into the Lunar soil—known officially as ‘regolith.’

It follows five successful lunar missions (Chang’e 1 through 5) that included establishing a weather station on the Moon’s far side in Chang’e-4—the first time any craft had made it there, and a sample return mission from the polar region with Chang’e-5, which brought back the first Lunar samples since the Apollo missions.

It’s believed that the Apollo Crater in which Chang’e-6 landed contains some of the oldest regolith on the Moon, dating back 4 billion years to the earliest formations of the Earth.

Chang’e-6 contains an orbiter, lander, ascent vehicle, and re-entry module. The land’s mechanical drill arm will gather and stow the samples before blasting them up into space in the ascent vehicle which will be picked up by the orbiter, and sent back to Earth in the re-entry module.

AMERICA’S RECENT GIANT LEAP: Intuitive Spacecraft Lands on Moon in Nail-Biting Descent of Odysseus–A First for US Company, 50 Years After Apollo

All this will be commanded and controlled through the Queqiao-2 satellite because normal communications are blocked on the Moon’s far side. If successful, China will become the first nation to land and sample on the far side.

An image taken by a mini rover of Chang’e-6 – released by CNSA

This is the last sample-return mission in the Chang’e mission series, with missions 7 and 8 slated for in-situ experiments destined to inform and assist a permanent Chinese robotic base on the Moon.

JAPAN ON THE MOON: Japan Moon Lander Comes Back to Life After Wonky Angle for its Solar Panel, but ‘Unprecedented Pinpoint Landing’

INDIA ON THE MOON: India Becomes Fourth Nation to Touch Down on the Moon In Mission to Study its South Pole

The Chinese space program has come on leaps and bounds in the last 6 years. Missions Chang’e 4 and 5, the latter being a sample return mission, were complete successes. Following Chang’e-5’s landing, but before the return of the samples, the CNSA became the only space program to see its first orbiter, first lander, and first rover sent to Mars all succeed on the first time of asking.

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How Two Filipinos Helped Thousands of Migrant Teachers Settle in New Zealand

Collage from Vilma Leonidas and Penny Cajipe
Collage from Vilma Leonidas and Penny Cajipe

New Zealand enjoys the company of 72,000 Filipino migrants, many of whom are women arriving to fill the nation’s teacher shortage.

This pipeline of talented educators seeking better lives to the south has led a pair of women to start a flourishing support group to help navigate the immigration system, get teaching qualifications recognized in NZ, and find employment.

“Is there any way to expedite my teaching registration aside from emailing the teaching council?” asks one prospective teacher.

“Is there anyone here who was assessed in NZQA and then was directed to WES for verification?” asks another.

It may sound like an overly specific niche, but the Pioneering Pinoy Teachers in NZ Facebook group has 23,000 members. The group was founded by Vilma Leonidas, a teacher working in Auckland for the past two years who told Good News Pilipinas that between mastering English, standing for the teaching evaluation, and getting the teaching certificate, many immigrant teachers throw in the towel.

Leonidas and another teacher, Penny Cajipe—who also runs a Facebook group, called Filipino Teachers in NZ Support Page, both said the process is challenging, and getting clear directions from someone who’s been through it in one’s native language is of enormous benefit.

In her home country, Leonidas holds a doctorate of philosophy, which she imagined might be enough to at least guarantee a simple teaching job, but even that wasn’t straightforward.

MORE STORIES LIKE THIS: New U.S. Citizen From Cuba Celebrates ‘First Paycheck in America’ in Viral Video-WATCH

After struggling to find work during the pandemic, with NZ instituting some of the strictest lockdowns on Earth, Leonidas received a teacher’s certificate and was later granted a scholarship in a training program for educators. She teaches seventh grade as a substitute.

It was that long process which made her think she should share all she had learned going through it—if only because it could help others settle in a new country with fewer difficulties than she endured. For Cajipe, who endured a similar path, she felt the same.

IMMIGRANTS MAKING THE WORLD BETTER: Moscow Teens ‘Saved Over 100’ From Attack on Crocus City Hall

“What if other teachers in the Philippines are also aspiring to fulfill that dream of teaching here, and they’re looking for a better future for their family? What if they’re also like me and they don’t know what to do?’ So that’s how that actually made me start the page,” Cajipe told Summer Sanares, reporting for Good News Pilipinas.

“Whatever it is that you have, you share it,” Leonidas said. “Not everything is about money. When you need to help, help without asking or expecting any return because God sees our heart. And that’s the legacy that we have to leave behind, especially among teachers.”

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“Art is like a border of flowers along the course of civilization.” – Lincoln Steffens

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Quote of the Day: “Art is like a border of flowers along the course of civilization.” – Lincoln Steffens

Photo by: Werner Du plessis (Alex Kats painting in the Guggenheim)

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?

Screenshot

World’s Largest Genome Discovered in a Tiny Fern: ‘Breaks all records’

A group of small fork ferns - credit Pol Fernandez, released via iScience
A group of small fork ferns – credit Pol Fernandez, released via iScience

On the island of New Caledonia, a simple, unassuming species of fern has been identified as having the longest genome of any living organism known.

It is 50 times longer than a human’s, 7% longer than the previous world record-holding species for longest genome, and 20% longer than the record-holding animal.

Compared to 23 pairs of chromosomes in every human cell, the tiny fern contains 416—and if unraveled, would climb higher than Big Ben in London’s Westminster.

Questions abound, as does admiration for the majesty and mysteries of biological life.

“Compared to other organisms, plants are incredibly diverse when viewed at the DNA level, and that should make us pause to think about their intrinsic value in the wider picture of global biodiversity,” said Dr. Ilia Leitch, Senior Research Leader at the Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew.

“This discovery also raises many new and exciting questions about the upper limits of what is biologically possible, and we hope to solve these mysteries one day.”

Tmesipteris oblanceolata is a species of New Caledonian fork fern that grows on the ground or out of rotting tree trunks. A team from Kew and the Institut Botànic de Barcelona traveled to New Caledoina’s largest island of Grand Terre to collect this species for study.

MORE GENETIC FOCUSED DISCOVERIES: Bizarre New Plant Species Feeds on Fungi: First New Flora Species in 100 Years to Be Discovered in Japan

20,000 species from the Tree of Life have had their genomes completely sequenced, and this literature has shown that having a complex genetic code isn’t always an advantage.

Larger genomes require more resources for DNA replication, repair, and transcription, while a larger DNA sequence needs a larger nucleus, and therefore a larger cell, to house it.

Dr. Leitch told Reuters that “perhaps unsurprisingly, species with larger genomes are at greater risk of extinction,” for a similar reason, one might imagine, that simpler machines with fewer moving parts tend to last longer than complicated and sophisticated machines with many; a Honda Civic will run longer than a Lamborghini Aventador.

YOU’LL ALSO LIKE: The Story of How Rapa Nui Lost its Flowering Trees, But Humans Ensured its Survival

The previous record holder for the longest genome was the Japanese flowering plant species Paris japonica while the longest genome known from the animal kingdom is the African marbled lungfish, (Protopterus aethiopicus).

The smallest genome is the fungus species Encephalitozoon intestinalis, with 2.6 megabase pairs. For context, the New Caledonian fork fern contains 168 gigabase pairs. An appropriate comparison would be to compare the file size of the original Tetris game to that of a modern open-world role-playing game like The Witcher or World of Warcraft.

For those with greater interest in DNA, Dr. Leitch and her colleagues from Kew and IBB published a paper on the fork fern, writing that genome size variation and its disconnect from species complexity, “is known as the ‘C-value paradox’ or ‘C-value enigma,'” and has intrigued biologists for over half a century.

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“Rapid advances in DNA sequencing are now providing compelling evidence showing that variation in DNA amount arises predominantly from differences in the frequency of polyploidy, abundance of non-coding repetitive DNA, and the dynamics of the processes that amplify, erode, and delete DNA,” they write in their introduction.

However with only 20,000 species that have had their genomes sequenced, the authors doubt that science has uncovered the full extent of genome size diversity.

WATCH the story below from Reuters… 

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Heavy-Set Grandmother Completes Terrifying 29-Mile Swim Through Shark-Infested Waters to Break the Record

credit - John Chapman / MSF
credit – John Chapman / MSF

A grandmother has defied her age and weight by becoming the first woman to swim from San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge to the Farallon Islands—a distance of darn near 30 miles.

The former collegiate swimmer had not done any swimming for 24 years before she started training, but braved frigid waters, sharks, and jellyfish—all without a wetsuit.

Amy Appelhans Gubser leapt into the waters around her support vessel at 3:27 a.m. and proceeded to swim for 17 hours to arrive at the Farallons after nightfall. Observed by an agent of the Marathon Swimmers Federation (MSF), her record is pending verification, but would make her the first woman to complete the swim, and the first of either sex to do so in the outbound direction, i.e. bridge to islands.

Two male swimmers have completed the distance starting from the islands, but Gubser succeeded in the other direction after all three previous attempts failed, which were monitored by the MSF.

The resident of Pacifica, California, told Fox News Digital that because of fog and red tide, she did the vast majority of the swimming in something like a sensory deprivation bubble, in which she could see only a few feet in any direction above water, and not even one inch past her fingertips below it.

In shark-prowled waters, such conditions would give most people a heart attack, but Gubser entered a “meditative state,” broken up every thirty minutes by snack breaks.

“I really had to be very thoughtful and careful about how I approached this swim because of the sharks,” she explained. “And April, May, June is when a very big migration of great white sharks takes place away from the Farallon Islands. That’s why the swim has to take place during that timeframe.”

Amy Gubser (second from left) smiles for the camera after completing her 17 hour swim – credit MSF

She continued, explaining she didn’t wear a wetsuit to fit with MSF rules despite the warmth and added buoyancy it would have offered.

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“When you wear a wetsuit your skin rubs against the material, and the last thing that I really wanted was for my skin to bleed near a shark island,” she said.

The water temperatures hovered in the high 40s Fahrenheit at the onset, and gradually climbed about 10 degrees over the course of the swim. She kept up a steady stroke rate of around 61 per minute, and ate chicken broth, canned peaches, hot chocolate, and some potatoes along the way.

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On two occasions she was stung by a jellyfish.

Gubser said she hopes the feat will be inspirational to all who need it, by demonstrating that athletic excellence can be maintained despite age and body weight.

WATCH the record-setting swim below… 

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Carved 40,000 Years Ago and Found in a Cave, These Are the Oldest-Known Animal Sculptures

Museopedia - de.Wikipedia.org (CC BY-SA 4.0)
Museopedia – de.Wikipedia.org (CC BY-SA 4.0)

This is the first depiction of a horse ever made by humans as far as we know; cut from ivory an incredible 35,000 – 40,000 years ago.

The carver is believed to be part of the Aurignacian, an Upper Paleolithic group whose people lived between 43,000 and 35,000 years ago, and whose territory overlapped with Neanderthals.

It’s determined that the carving represents a stallion, but whether it’s rearing back to fight off a predator, strutting to impress a mare, or merely bending down for a mouthful of grass, is unknown because the legs were never recovered.

The story of their discovery is an interesting one, and comes with a double-portion of auspicious fortune. In 1931, amateur German archaeologist Hermann Mohn unearthed several flintstone flakes while examining a badger’s den. He informed the University of Tübingen, which led to the excavation of the den by paleo-historian Gustav Riek.

The excavations led into a cave 60 feet above the banks of the River Lone called Vogelherd Cave where Riek found a selection of ivory figurines carved by early humans including a lion, mammoth, bison, and this horse. Human occupation of the site was documented over the course of digging out the whole cave, which yielded tools and other artifacts like beads from the Neolithic and Bronze ages.

Then, more than 70 years later, a large operation was carried out at Vogelherd Cave to comb through Riek’s waste piles. Riek, it seemed, was no less of an amateur than Mohn, as the wealth of artifacts found in his excavation tailings saw the cave listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

217,000 worked stone pieces of various sizes, 1,713 tools made from bone, antlers, or ivory, 479 kg of bones from hunted animals, (plus 235 kg of burned bones) 28 kg of mammoth ivory, and 326 pierced pendants/pieces of jewelry have been recovered over the operation that lasted from 2005 to 2012.

One of two intact Vogelherd mammoth carvings – credit, Thilo Parg CC BY-SA 3.0.
The most intact lion carving found at Vogelherd – credit, Mogadir, CC 3.0. BY-SA

The mammoth and lion sculptures both bear a pattern of crisscrossing lines that might have been an attempt to render the appearance of fur, but other theories exist, suggesting they were instead markings that carried religious significance.

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Along with the figurines, fragments of small bones carved into flutes were recovered.

Aside from a site of the early arts, the cave has been determined to be a place where hunters brought hunted carcasses for the hours-long process of butchering them with stone implements.

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Among the large assemblage of animal bones in Vogelherd Cave, reindeer and horse remains were the most common, indicating that Aurignacian groups hunted and ate these animals before all others, and in at least one of these instances, carved an image, perhaps in veneration of their quarry.

A bison carving from Vogelherd – credit, Mogadir, CC 3.0. BY-SA

Auroch, red deer, wild boar, bison, and chamois remains are also documented but seem to have been secondary game, while the mammoth remains were almost certainly gathered from sites of natural death, and were not hunted by the Aurignacian.

In 2007, Vogelherd was designated as a World Heritage Site called Caves and Ice Age Art in the Swabian Jura which includes 5 other caves collectively known as the “cradle of art.”

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Chester Zoo Celebrates as 11 Adorable Endangered Penguin Chicks Hatch–the Most for a Decade

Baby penguins hatched – Chester Zoo
Baby penguins hatched – Chester Zoo

It’s hatching season for Humboldt penguins at the Chester Zoo, and this year the keepers have seen a record number of chicks hatched.

The 11 chicks joining the colony are a delight for visitors and handlers alike, as well as a boon for the species which was recently classified as “Vulnerable” by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature.

Chester Live reports that the zoo has seen all 11 successfully make it through the first 40 days of life—the most delicate period for the flightless birds—and that now the naming process will begin.

The zoo has previously used themes to keep track of hatching groups and their years, with previous generations being named after NHS doctors, Olympic athletes, and retail chocolate bars, this year’s theme is flowers. Nettle, Thistle, Dandelion, Tulip, and Daffodil are among the confirmed names so far.

“We’re delighted to say that all of the chicks are looking really healthy and the parents have done a superb job of caring for their new arrivals up to this point. As keepers, our main role in raising the new youngsters is to ensure the adult penguins have all they need,” said Zoe Sweetman, team manager of parrots and penguins at the zoo.

“Sometimes this can mean providing extra fish, which the parents swallow, churn into a high-protein soup, and then regurgitate to feed the chicks. We also weigh the chicks regularly so that we can monitor their development—on average they’ve gone from a mere 80g to 2.5kg in just 40 days. It’s been a huge team effort.”

– credit Chester Zoo

Chester Zoo is one of the UK’s most active institutions in the captive breeding of endangered species, and GNN has reported on their efforts raising the Philippine spotted deer, Andean bear, okapi, Sumatran tiger, Coquerel’s sifaka, cotton-top tamarin, Sulawesi crested macaque, and greater one-horned rhino.

In their natural habitat, Humboldt penguins are found on the coasts of Chile and Argentina, where their name comes from the chilly Humboldt current that brings frigid, nutrient-rich waters up from Antarctica.

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There are 17 known penguin species in the world and the Humboldt penguin is one of the most vulnerable. Living in borrows in large colonies, these birds can swim at 25 miles per hour, the same as Usain Bolt’s average speed across his record-setting 100-meter dash.

SHARE These Cute, Vulnerable Featherballs With Your Friends… 

“Fear is the mother of foresight.” – Thomas Hardy

Quote of the Day: “Fear is the mother of foresight.” – Thomas Hardy

Photo by: Mayer Tawfik

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Entire School Surprised with 500 Tickets to a Red Sox Game–Thanks to Food Pantry’s Continuing Generosity

© Matt Stone Photography
© Matt Stone Photography

Over the last five years, the Stop & Shop Food Pantry has provided $100,000 in healthy food donations to make sure students don’t come to school hungry.

They’ve hit a home run against hunger—and the Boston Red Sox have stepped up to the plate to celebrate the victory.

The baseball team’s first baseman Triston Casas showed up at a ceremony to honor the 5-year anniversary of Stop & Shop opening a food pantry inside the Washington S.T.E.M. Elementary School in Lynn, Massachusetts.

He surprised the kids and the entire staff with 500 tickets to a Red Sox game at Fenway Park—as a school-wide field trip.

“We wanted to invite all of you guys to a game this year!” said Casas to the cheering crowd.

Casas took photos with the kids alongside the team’s World Series Trophy and the team’s mascot, Wally The Green Monster.

The in-school pantry first opened in 2019 as one of the original five schools enrolled in the Stop & Shop School Food Pantry Program, an initiative that has since donated over $112,500 to Washington S.T.E.M.

Triston Casas and Red Sox mascot surprising the school – Stop & Shop

Stop & Shop’s Jennifer Barr said they now run 235 in-school food pantries across five states in the Northeast. To commemorate the fifth birthday of this original school pantry, she also presented a check for $22,500 to the school.

Stop & Shop is benefitting from the Red Sox ‘Strike Out School Hunger Program’. For every strikeout that’s thrown at Fenway Park, the team donates 10,000 meals to kids in need through the school pantry program.

© Matt Stone Photography / Stop and Shop

Casas complimented the kids after hearing how well they are doing at school—with 42 kids being honored for perfect attendance.

“You people do great work, I hear a lot of great things,” the MLB athlete told the assembled crowd.

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This year, 95% of Washington S.T.E.M. students were identified as living below the poverty line, which is why the pantry is called a ‘lifeline’.

Stop & Shop’s food truck was brought in to host a “popsicle party” handing out frozen treats to all students.

They also handed out 250 birthday kits containing cake mix, frosting, birthday cards, and party hats for the school to distribute to students in need on their birthdays.

“The Stop & Shop School Food Pantry program is all about helping students and their families thrive, and the impact we are seeing at Washington S.T.E.M. exemplifies that mission,” said Barr.

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Sand Batteries Could Be The Next Frontier In Renewable Energy–And it’s Already Heating Homes in Finland

Credit: De an Sun
Credit: De an Sun

Reprinted via EarthTalk®, From the Editors of E – The Environmental Magazine

Could plain old beach sand be the next frontier in renewable energy?

In the ongoing quest for sustainable energy solutions, innovative technologies are necessary to implement renewable sources like solar and wind power.

One such potential breakthrough revolves around an unexpected but abundant resource: beach sand.

Sand batteries represent an emerging approach to energy storage, particularly effective in harnessing and retaining energy from intermittent sources like solar and wind.

The physical properties of sand, such as its ability to store heat at high temperatures, make it an excellent medium for energy retention. This capacity is being leveraged by innovative technologies to create a more stable and reliable energy supply, as sand can efficiently accumulate and release heat as required​​.

The science behind sand batteries involves heating sand to high temperatures using surplus energy generated from renewable sources. This stored heat can then be converted back into energy when needed.

This system capitalizes on the thermal properties of sand to create a natural battery that can offer both heating solutions and electricity generation​.

As National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s (NREL) Patrick Davenport notes, “Sand and concrete silos with refractory insulation are very inexpensive materials that can lead to low-cost energy storage.”

A few key players currently pioneering this technology include Polar Night Energy in Finland, which has implemented a sand battery for residential and commercial heating, and EnergyNest in Norway, which specializes in thermal energy storage using similar principles.

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Using sand for energy storage offers multiple benefits: it is abundant, low-cost, eco-friendly, and can store heat for long periods. This makes sand an attractive option for enhancing the stability of renewable energy systems, and providing a reliable energy supply even during times of low sunlight or wind.

Sand battery technology is currently being tested and used in various projects worldwide, not only demonstrating the viability of sand as an energy storage solution but highlighting its potential scalability and integration into existing energy infrastructures.

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Despite the potential, challenges remain. Developing and deploying sand battery technology on a large scale requires significant research and development efforts. So, the role of government and private investment is crucial in overcoming barriers and driving forward the innovation needed for the widespread adoption​​ of this potentially game-changing battery technology.

EarthTalk® is produced by Roddy Scheer & Doug Moss for the 501(c)3 nonprofit EarthTalk. See more at emagazine.com. To donate, visit Earthtalk.org. Send questions to: [email protected].