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1,000-Year-old Scientific Instrument Was Passed Between Muslims and Jews, Historic Neighbors for Centuries

The Verona astrolabe, an 11th Century Islamic scientific instrument discovered by Dr. Federica Gigante in Verona Italy – Cambridge University / SWNS
The Verona astrolabe, an 11th Century Islamic scientific instrument discovered by Dr. Federica Gigante in Verona Italy – Cambridge University / SWNS

Scientists say an 11th-century Islamic astrolabe, bearing both Arabic and Hebrew inscriptions, is one of the oldest examples ever discovered, and one of only a handful known in the world.

They say the astronomical instrument was adapted, translated, and corrected for centuries by Muslim, Jewish, and Christian users in Spain, North Africa, and Italy where it was discovered.

Dr. Federica Gigante, of Cambridge University, first came across a newly uploaded image of the astrolabe by chance on the website of the Fondazione Museo Miniscalchi-Erizzo, in Verona. Intrigued, she asked them about it.

“The museum didn’t know what it was, and thought it might actually be fake,” she told the press. “It’s now the single most important object in their collection.”

“When I visited the museum and studied the astrolabe up close, I noticed that not only was it covered in beautifully engraved Arabic inscriptions but that I could see faint inscriptions in Hebrew,” she said. “I thought I might be dreaming, but I kept seeing more and more. It was very exciting.”

Dr. Gigante is an expert on Islamic astrolabes and previously a curator of Islamic scientific instruments. She says astrolabes were kind of like the world’s first smartphone, a computational device that could be put to hundreds of uses.

The instruments provided a portable two-dimensional model of the universe fitting in the user’s hand, enabling them to calculate time and distances, plot the position of the stars, and even forecast the future by casting a horoscope.

She identified the object as Andalusian, and from the style of the engraving, and the arrangement of the scales on the back, matched it to instruments made in Al-Andalus, the Muslim-ruled area of Spain, in the 11th Century.

“The Verona astrolabe underwent many modifications, additions, and adaptations as it changed hands,” she said. “At least three separate users felt the need to add translations and corrections to this object, two using Hebrew and one using a Western language.”

“This isn’t just an incredibly rare object. It’s a powerful record of scientific exchange between Arabs, Jews, and Christians over hundreds of years.”

One side of a plate is inscribed in Arabic ‘for the latitude of Cordoba, 38° 30′,’ while the other side ‘for the latitude of Toledo, 40°.’

The Verona astrolabe, an 11th Century Islamic scientific instrument discovered by Dr. Federica Gigante in Verona Italy – Cambridge University / SWNS

Dr. Gigante suggests that the astrolabe might have been made in Toledo at a time when it was a thriving center of coexistence and cultural exchange between the Abrahamic faiths. The astrolabe features Muslim prayer lines and prayer names, arranged to ensure that its original intended users kept on time to perform their five supplications.

The signature inscribed on the astrolabe reads in Arabic: “for Isḥāq […]/the work of Yūnus.”

MORE INTERFAITH STORIES: School Teaches Students on Opposite Ends of Violent Conflicts – Reconciliation Over Revenge

She said the two names Isḥāq and Yūnus—Isaac and Jonah in English—could be Jewish names written in the Arabic script, a detail that suggests that the object was at a certain point circulating within a Sephardi Jewish community in Spain, where Arabic was the spoken language.

A second, added plate is inscribed for typical North African latitudes suggesting another era of the object’s life. It was perhaps used in Morocco, which hosted a large Jewish diaspora for centuries, and contains Jewish sites that today are still marked by pilgrimage and celebration.

Hebrew inscriptions were added to the astrolabe by more than one hand. One set of additions is carved deeply and neatly, while a different set of translations is very light, uneven, and shows an insecure hand.

ANOTHER ANCIENT COMPUTER:  One of Archaeology’s Great Mysteries Nearly Solved as Scientists Piece Together 2,000-yo Astronomy Calculator

“These Hebrew additions and translations suggest that at a certain point, the object left Spain or North Africa and circulated amongst the Jewish diaspora community in Italy, where Arabic was not understood, and Hebrew was used instead,” said Dr. Gigante.

The Verona astrolabe, an 11th Century Islamic scientific instrument, pictured here with Arabic and Hebrew inscriptions, discovered by Dr. Federica Gigante in Verona Italy – Cambridge University / SWNS

Other Hebrew inscriptions are instead translations of the Arabic names for astrological signs, for Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn, Aquarius, Pisces, and Aries.

Dr. Gigante, whose findings were published in the journal Nuncius, says that the translations reflect the recommendations prescribed by the Spanish Jewish polymath Abraham Ibn Ezra in the earliest surviving treatise on the astrolabe in the Hebrew language written in 1146 in Verona, exactly where the astrolabe is found today.

MORE FASCINATING HISTORY: Dozens of Strange 12-Sided Objects from Roman Times Have Been Found—No One Knows What They’re For

Twelfth-century Verona hosted one of the longest-standing and most important Jewish communities in Italy, and Ibn Ezra warned his readers that an instrument must be checked before use to verify the accuracy of the values to be calculated.

Dr. Gigante suggests that the person who added the Hebrew inscriptions might have been following such recommendations.

The astrolabe features corrections inscribed not only in Hebrew but also in Western numerals. All sides of the astrolabe’s plates feature lightly scratched markings in Western numerals, translating and correcting the latitude values, some even multiple times.

Dr. Gigante believes it is highly likely that the additions were made in Verona for a Latin or Italian language speaker.

In one case, someone lightly scratched the numbers “42” and “40” near the inscription reading ‘for the latitude of Medinaceli, 41° 30′,’ though Dr. Gigante points out the original Arabic was actually more accurate for this latitude.

The astrolabe is thought to have made its way into the collection of the 17th Century Veronese nobleman Ludovico Moscardo before passing by marriage to the Miniscalchi family. In 1990, the family founded the Fondazione Museo Miniscalchi-Erizzo to preserve the collections.

“This object is Islamic, Jewish, and European, they can’t be separated,” Dr. Gigante confirmed.

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New AI Smartphone App Accurately Diagnoses Ear Infections and Prevents Unnecessary Antibiotic Use

(Left) a normal eardrum next to a (right) an infected one - credit University of Pittsburgh, released.
(Left) a normal eardrum next to (right) an infected one – credit University of Pittsburgh, released.

An AI-powered application developed by physician-scientists at the University of Pittsburgh in the US could decrease unnecessary antibiotic use in children by diagnosing ear infections via smartphone.

The only thing worse than your child getting an ear infection is wrongly believing they have one and administering a redundant course of antibiotics which obliterates their developing gut microbiome.

Around 70% of children develop an ear infection before the age of one, the most common of which is acute otitis media (AOM).

However, AOM is often confused with other issues such as fluid behind the ear, which can lead to infections being incorrectly diagnosed and incorrectly treated.

The study’s senior author Dr. Alejandro Hoberman, a professor of pediatrics, explained that an underdiagnosis of AOM results in inadequate care, while overdiagnosis results in unnecessary antibiotic treatment, which can compromise the effectiveness of currently available antibiotics.

To develop the new AI tool, Dr. Hoberman and his research team built and annotated a training library of 1,151 videos of the tympanic membrane, also known as the eardrum, from 635 children who visited outpatient pediatric offices at the University of Pittsburgh’s Medical Center between 2018 and 2023.

“The eardrum is a thin, flat piece of tissue that stretches across the ear canal,” explained Dr. Hoberman. “In AOM, the eardrum bulges like a bagel, leaving a central area of depression that resembles a bagel hole.”

“In contrast, in children with otitis media with effusion, no bulging of the tympanic membrane is present.”

Two trained experts with extensive experience in AOM research reviewed the videos and made a diagnosis of AOM or not AOM, which the research team then used to teach two different AI models

The completed AI tool works by looking at a video of a patient’s eardrum and assessing its shape, position, color, and translucency to make a diagnosis.

Results, published in the journal JAMA Pediatrics, revealed that diagnosis was 93% accurate, with low rates of both false negatives and false positives.

AI IS ALSO USED TO TEST FOR: Scientists Find Drug that Could Combat Resistant Infections Like MRSA, Thanks to AI

Previous studies of clinicians have revealed a diagnostic accuracy of AOM ranging from 30 to 84%, depending on the type of healthcare provider, level of training, and age of the child being examined.

“These findings suggest that our tool is more accurate than many clinicians,” said Dr. Hoberman. “It could be a game-changer in primary health care settings to support clinicians in stringently diagnosing AOM and guiding treatment decisions.”

He added that another benefit of the tool, which makes a diagnosis by assessing a short video of the eardrum captured by an otoscope connected to a mobile phone camera, is that the videos can be stored and used to further improve diagnosis.

MORE DIAGNOSIS INNOVATION: Artificial Intelligence ‘Can Help Spot Early Signs of Cancer in Chest X-Rays’

“The videos we capture can be stored in a patient’s medical record and shared with other providers, meaning we can show parents and/or students what we see and explain why we are or are not making a diagnosis of ear infection,” he added.

“It is important both as a teaching tool and for reassuring parents that their child is receiving appropriate treatment.”

Hoberman hopes that the newly developed technology could soon be implemented widely across healthcare centers.

SHARE This Really Awesome Use Of AI And Smartphones… 

These Twins Are Thriving 10 Years After Open Heart Surgery at Queensland Children’s Hospital

Benson and Albert Tass have matching scars from open heart surgery as newborn twins - released to the media by Maria Tass.
Benson and Albert Tass have matching scars from open heart surgery as newborn twins – released to the media by Maria Tass.

It’s never a bad time to take a moment and thank our lucky stars for pediatric medicine. These beautiful twin boys were each born with a different form of congenital heart defect, and despite dozens of procedures, they’re healthy and living their best life; playing Rugby on the weekends.

Benson and Albert Tass were each born with heart valve problems and had to be operated on immediately after their mother, Maria, gave birth to them at Queensland Children’s Hospital (QCH).

Dr. Nelson Alphonso, a pediatric cardiologist performed the operation which saw Benson and Albert taken from their mother immediately. The poor woman wasn’t afforded even a moment to hold her newborns before they were rushed away.

Dr. Alphonso performed open-heart surgery on both infants; a cardiovascular reconstruction with a bovine pericardium. Benson went into sepsis, and had to be washed out with three liters of water. A month passed, and Maria admitted she was “sad all the time” but then, a phone call arrived early on Christmas morning from QCH.

Dr. Alphonso (left) says Albert and Benson’s cases were highly unusual – Supplied Queensland Children’s Hospital.

They “came out on top,” said Maria, who was finally able to visit the hospital and hold her boys.

“I have many patients who are twins and one is perfectly fine with no congenital heart defect,” Dr. Alphonso told ABC News, Australia. “So to have two twins at the same time with a related heart defect is very unusual.”

OTHER INFANT MEDICAL CARE: World’s Smallest Baby, Born the Size of an Apple, Finally Leaves Hospital as Healthy 5-Pound Infant

More than 2,800 children have received lifesaving heart surgery at QCH, which opened the very year Albert and Benson were born.

An early photo of Benson and Albert Tass after recovering from their surgeries – released to the media by Maria Tass.

Dr. Alphonso said that of this number, 40% weren’t even a month old at the time.

The twins have undergone countless tests, scans, and procedures since that discordant entry into the world, but mother Maria and father Farron do everything they can to ensure they are able to live their best lives.

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This has included playing Rugby 7s on the weekends for years.

“I try to let them live their best life, and experience life as much as they can, but also protect them as much as possible,” Maria told ABC.

Albert and Benson have had countless hospital trips for check-ups and monitoring – Released to the media by Maria Tass.

It won’t be long now before the twins are set for their first return to QCH since the surgery for a check-up with Dr. Alphonso, who hasn’t seen them since they were tiny infants.

The mortality rate of children with congenital heart defects in Australia has fallen so low thanks to the success of institutions like QCH, that now research and funding is focused on morbidity.

Dr. Alphonso admitted that the field has rapidly advanced over the last decade, and that the majority of the pediatric department’s focus is now tailored towards reducing the complications as much as possible.

SHARE These Twins’ Harrowing Tale And Remarkable Progress With Your Friends… 

ARK Becomes ‘Life Raft’ Saving Over 15,000 Animals from Ukraine With Rescue Partners in Germany

Rescued mother and puppies found beneath rubble in Ukraine-released PETA
Rescued mother and puppies found beneath rubble in Ukraine-released PETA

The war in Ukraine recently passed the two-year mark, and more than 15,000 animals impacted by the war have been saved by PETA Germany and the Ukraine-based Animal Rescue Kharkiv (ARK).

Stories about Ukrainian zoo animals, such as these lions and this Asiatic black bear, have made it into the headlines over the course of the conflict, but thousands of other domesticated animals have been saved as well—sometimes out from under shelling.

ARK’s dedicated teams are providing upwards of 40 tons of food per month to cats, dogs, horses, donkeys, and other animals; offering free spay/neuter surgeries to 150 animals every month; and helping maintain refuges for animals in Kharkiv.

With their partners in Germany, many of these animals are getting second or third chances at life through international rescue programs. All the links below contain what may be considered tear-jerking or occasionally graphic scenes.

PETA is understandably proud of the work that ARK, whom they support, is doing, and posts regular updates anytime animals are saved. Many of their stories and videos—like this rescued pregnant dog and her 8 puppies—involve soldiers and civilians going out of their way in desperate times to care for and shelter animals abandoned during shelling or other violent flare-ups.

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Not all rescues involve crossing lines of fire—this swan was stranded on razor-thin ice with a blood-stained wing, and ARK members used an inflatable boat like a sled to reach him—the boat served as part-stretcher part-lifeboat in case the ice broke under their feet.

Nearly all of the animals rescued need immediate medical treatment for shrapnel injuries, broken bones, or infections. ARK’s hospital treats a staggering 100 to 130 animals per day, like this goat named Alaska who suffered a broken leg, for war-related injuries or deprivation.

MORE RESCUE OPERATIONS: Ukraine Girl Bereft Without Her Cat is Reunited Thanks to Kind Strangers in 5 Countries and 7,000 Miles–WATCH

“Animals don’t wage wars, but they’re victims of them, left to suffer without food, water, or veterinary attention for grievous injuries unless someone who cares comes to their aid,” says PETA President Ingrid Newkirk. “PETA urges everyone to consider the animals impacted by conflicts and the heroes putting their own lives at risk to help them.

Readers interested in contributing to this life-saving work can donate to the PETA Germany Compassion Fund which goes directly you Ukrainian partners like ARK.

SHARE This Incredible Work Reminding These Animals That Humans Are Friends…

“Big doesn’t necessarily mean better—sunflowers are no better than violets.” – Edna Ferber

Quote of the Day: “Big doesn’t necessarily mean better—sunflowers are no better than violets.” – Edna Ferber

Photo by: Bruce Kee

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

Shape-Shifting Fiber Produces Fabrics That Shrink or Expand in Real-Time and Fit into Existing Manufacturing

The actuating fibers from MIT - courtesy of the researchers
The actuating fibers from MIT – courtesy of the researchers

Imagine if the same forces that shrink your wool sweater when you forget what water temp to wash it at could be used at will to decide the fit of your clothes in real-time.

This is the aim of a project at MIT looking to make shape-shifting fabrics for everything from medical devices to everyday clothes to utility tools like tarps and nets.

The project has produced the prototype of a programmable, actuating fiber that’s called FibeRobo. The fiber contracts in response to an increase in temperature, and then self-reverses when the temperature decreases, without any embedded sensors or other hard components.

“We use textiles for everything. We make planes with fiber-reinforced composites, we cover the International Space Station with a radiation-shielding fabric, we use them for personal expression and performance wear,” says Jack Forman, a graduate student in the Tangible Media Group of the MIT Media Lab, with a secondary affiliation at the Center for Bits and Atoms, and lead author of a paper on the actuating fiber.

“So much of our environment is adaptive and responsive, but the one thing that needs to be the most adaptive and responsive—textiles—is completely inert.”

Joined on the paper by 11 other researchers at MIT and Northeastern University, they present together the findings of their initiative to develop a fiber that could silently change shape and be compatible with existing textile manufacturing methods.

They developed a material called liquid crystal elastomer (LCE) and then invented a machine that squirts this material out like a hot glue gun into a chamber where it’s bathed in UV light to solidify it.

Spooled up at the top of the machine, Forman and his team can produce a little more than half a mile of fiber per day that fits the specifications for tensile strength, fineness, and durability that allows it to be used with weaving looms, embroidery tools, and industrial knitting machines.

MIT press explains that by carefully mixing chemicals to synthesize the LCE, the researchers can control the final properties of the fiber, such as its thickness or the temperature at which it actuates.

MORE INNOVATIVE FABRICS: MIT Scientists Develop the Perfect Breathable Earth-Friendly Fabric Using The Same Material as Single-Use Bags

They perfected a preparation technique that creates LCE fiber which can actuate at skin-safe temperatures, making it suitable for wearable fabrics.

“At the end of the day, you don’t want a diva fiber. You want a fiber that, when you are working with it, falls into the ensemble of materials—one that you can work with just like any other fiber material, but then it has a lot of exciting new capabilities,” Forman says.

SIMILAR SOFT ROBOTICS: These Flabby Gel Robots Could Deliver Life-Saving Drugs by Inching Along Using Changes in Temperature

Some of the finished properties are really cool. At 60 times cheaper than similar shape-changing fabrics, the fiber can shrink at a ratio of 25% of its size, shrinking when heat is applied (think of a self-constricting compression sleeve that activates during sport or exercise) or 40% of its total size for the less-than-skin-safe version, (imagine a tarp that auto-compresses around a pallet of goods).

Forman used it to make a compression vest for his dog Professor, who suffers from separation anxiety, for which compression vests have been known to help.

The LCE is not recyclable in its current form, but most clothes end up in landfills because they don’t fit or they’re unwanted. A shape-changing fabric would solve those two issues at least, and in any case, products made with FibeRobo would probably cost enough to dissuade simply throwing it away when you’ve had enough of it.

WATCH the machine and the textile in action below… 

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Britain’s Oldest Soccer Senior at 90-years-old Is Still the ‘Ninja’ of Goals–Playing 3x a Week

Mike Fisher playing in the Walsall FC foundation – SWNS
Mike Fisher playing in the Walsall FC foundation – SWNS

Britain’s oldest striker is still banging in the goals for his local soccer team three times a week—at the grand old age of 90.

Sprightly Mike Fisher—nicknamed ‘Ninja’ by teammates—averages three goals a game following an amateur footballing career that began 75 years ago in 1949.

The former RAF veteran turns out every Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday for two local walking soccer teams after he started playing for them at age 82.

Before that, the granddad-of-two played up until his 40s before taking a break from the beautiful game.

Falling back in love with the sport in his 80s, he now regularly appears for Old Corinthians, who play at non-league Rushall Olympic’s ground in Walsall.

The goal machine even celebrated his 90th birthday with teammates in late February by bagging five goals in a game against opponents 40 years younger than him.

“They all call me ‘Ninja,'” Mike admits, “because they say I’m gone in the blink of an eye, just like that. One minute you think you’ve collared me and the next minute I’m gone and the ball is in the back of the net.”

“If you ask anyone if they play with Mike Fisher, they won’t have a clue who you’re on about, but if you say ‘do you play with Ninja’ they will know who you mean,” he said.

Mike Fisher plays with people sometimes 40 years his junior – SWNS

Mike began playing when he was 14 in the Luton and District League in his native Bedfordshire before he moved to the Midlands after meeting his wife, Doris. He fell for Doris in Blackpool, where he was stationed with the RAF.

MORE GOLDEN OLDIES: 90-Year-old Earns Judo Belt Level Reached By Only 6 People in the Nation

Sunday league soccer around the country is famously competitive and forms a deep part of squad members’ lives. A Luton Town fan, Mike is no doubt fiercely celebrating the return of his team to the Premier League for the 2023-2024 season, having been relegated in 1992, and floating between the third, fourth, second, and even fifth leagues for a generation.

“I still love football and I’ll keep going for as long as I can—or at least while I’m still scoring on a regular basis. That feeling of scoring goals never gets old—even if I am,” he said, speaking like a true striker.

“I’ve lost count of how many I’ve scored but I get four or five a game usually and have been playing walking soccer three times a week regularly for eight years. A few times I have scored ten in a match,” he said.

After serving in Libya, Egypt, and Iraq in 1954 as an RAF motor mechanic, Mike married Dorris and moved to Blackpool where they had two children. Dorris passed away in 2020.

MORE STORIES LIKE THIS: Five Classy Olympic Moments That Should Win a Gold Medal For Inspiration

“The football gives me a reason to still get up and out and stay fit and active. I don’t want to be sitting in a chair all day long. I began playing in Luton when I was around 14/15 and I played as a forward or as wide forward as it was known then,” he said.

Mike Fisher celebrating his 90th birthday – SWNS

“I played for a team called Yale once I moved up to the Black Country and then played with Wednesfield Civil Defence when I was around 33/34.”

“It wasn’t until I moved into my flat in Bloxwich that we went along to this community center and they asked what sort of thing I enjoyed doing,” said Mike. “I said I used to play football and they mentioned the walking football, although I thought I’d be way too old at 82, I just gave it a go.”

INSPIRING SENIOR CITIZENS: This Grandad is All-Action at Aged 92: ‘I do martial arts daily’ (Watch)

“All of a sudden, I started playing against people in their 50s and 60s and realized I could still do it. These days I just wait up front to stick it in the net if I’m needed. I’m a bit like Jimmy Greaves, I suppose,” he continued. “He was the classic poacher, he used to hug the box and score goals from close range.”

Old Corinthians teammate Mike Stevenson, 76, said of ‘Ninj’ simply that “he comes, he scores.”

“Can there be anyone else still playing regular football at this great age?” he added.

SHARE This Inspiring Reminder That You’re Never Too Old To ___ 

Fateful Lunch Delivery Leads to Dog Adoption at Virginia Shelter: ‘Love at First Sight’

Alan Moncayo and Jihoo - credit, Alan Moncayo, released to the press
Alan Moncayo and Jihoo – credit, Alan Moncayo, released to the press

When Alan Moncayo arrives to deliver someone’s lunch, the only thing he might expect to walk away with could be a tip, but when he brought an office lunch out to a Virginia animal shelter, he got so much more than gratuity.

Moncayo arrived with a GrubHub delivery outside the Lorton campus of the Fairfax County Animal Hospital on February 10th.

Walking to the door, he saw a dog staring at him through the window.

“It was love at first sight,” Moncayo, 51, tells PEOPLE Magazine. “He looked at me, and I looked back at him.”

“My daughter’s been asking me for a puppy for the longest time. She wanted a dog so bad.”

As it happened to be a Saturday, Moncayo had his 5-year-old daughter in the car with him, and while the black and white pit bull mix in the window wasn’t exactly a puppy at 65 pounds, he couldn’t shake the feeling that this pooch was special.

He asked if the two of them could meet the dog, named Jihoo, and were allowed to take him out of the kennel to play fetch. Jihoo had been at Lorton for 240 days, ten times as long as the average stay for a dog.

MORE ADOPTION STORIES: ‘It’s Scratching, Dude’– US Coast Guard Inspectors Rescue Stowaway Dog from Shipping Container

Since his owners surrendered him, he had become like a mascot for the hospital, greeting visitors, playing with toys, going on hikes, and jumping up on the countertops wagging his tail.

As it happened, Moncayo’s visit happened to coincide with the Super Bowl, and the shelter was trying to drive adoptions around the big game with an “Adoption Bowl” for linebacker-sized dogs.

ALSO CHECK OUT: Magician Performs Tricks for Shelter Dogs So Their Enthusiastic Reactions get Them Adopted–Watch

Any shelter dog over 45 lbs. was free to adopt, making it all the easier for Moncayo to go home with his dream dog. The shelter added a crate, leash, toys, and food, all free of charge.

SHARE This Man’s Newfound Happiness With Your Friends… 

Colorado Town is Case Study for Electric School Buses in Wintertime—They Outperformed Diesel

credit MPCA Photos, CC 3.0.
credit MPCA Photos, CC 3.0.

These frozen smoke belchers are Minnesota school buses that were set for a retrofit with diesel engines in 2012. New evidence, however, from a small town in Colorado suggests that another retrofit is needed—to electric motors and batteries.

That’s because the West Grand School District is finding that in the frigid winter temps of -30°F, their electric buses outperformed their diesel-powered ones, both in running costs and reliability.

EV skeptics and critics are quick to mention the reduced range of a battery pack when exposed to such brutal temperatures, but no Minnesotan or Coloradoan needs reminding about those especially cold mornings when the car won’t start.

Kremmling Colorado is one of the coldest towns in the country, and the school district that encompasses this hamlet of 1,500 people was able to begin using an electric bus in their fleet starting in 2020 thanks to grants from the EPA, along with the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE).

“What we are seeing is that these buses are doing great in cold weather they still maintain a battery charge even when it’s cold,” said Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) representative, Casey Becker.

OTHER EV NEWS: Number of Electric School Buses More than Doubled in the U.S. in Past Year

“It averages 26 cents per mile and the diesel buses, just for fuel not including oil changes, filters, lubes, is 58 cents per mile,” said West Grand County School District Director of Transportation, Bethany Aurin.

Becker told Fox 9 News that there will be a total of 49 electric school buses heading to nine Colorado School Districts, including four in Summit County and three in Steamboat Springs.

WATCH the story below from Fox 9 Colorado… 

SHARE This Surprise Performance Case Study In Perfect Test Conditions…

“When you forgive others, they may not notice, but you will heal.” – David Whyte

Quote of the Day: “When you forgive others, they may not notice, but you will heal.” – David Whyte

Photo by: Lee Soo hyun

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

Run by Grandmothers, a Staten Island Restaurant Highlights Homecooking from Around the World

credit - Enoteca Maria, retrieved from Facebook
credit – Enoteca Maria, retrieved from Facebook

Most visitors going to Staten Island are doing so to see the Statue of Liberty, but within the kitchen at 27 Hyatt Street can be found one of the most unique restaurants in the whole city.

Enoteca Maria is open Friday, Saturday, and Sunday for visitors to get a glimpse inside another world—many other worlds—as the menu prepared for each weekend is designed and cooked to order by a staff of grandmothers.

From Syria to Peru, Japan to Sicily, the “Nonnas of the World” project showcases traditional home cooking by those in the family who almost always do it best, and whether they’re American citizens, visiting grandmothers, or even refugees, the food and recipes are cooked the way they ought to be, the way they always were.

Established by the son of Sicilian immigrants Enoteca Maria opened in 2007 with a staff entirely of Italian Nonne, or grandmothers.

More than 100 women have come through the doors since then, representing Sri Lanka, Syria, Bulgaria, Greece, South Korea, and Siberian regions according to the BBC, while La Reppublica reports the visiting contributions of grandmas from Egypt, Peru, Japan, Azerbaijan, Algeria, Turkey, and Argentina.

Grandma Rosa from Peru cooks ceviche or lomo saltado, while Grandma Yumi makes dengaku: sliced and steamed eggplant with a sweet miso glaze.

Owner Joe Scaravella opened the restaurant to try and replace something he lost—his own grandma, the sweetest woman on earth he says, who raised him, and who was the best cook. But what started as an homage to his Sicilian heritage transformed into a living, gastronomic, cultural repository.

MORE RESTAURANT CONCEPTS: 3 Cooks in Prison Honed Creativity with Drab Ingredients–Now Out, Award-Winning Chef And Businessmen

As well as filling out the reservation book, Scaravella created a virtual registry project called Nonnas of the World where the stories and recipes of the grandmothers who come through to cook are recorded, ensuring that they will be available to anyone looking to celebrate as their ancestors did.

As it happens, a similar restaurant concept was opened in London—La Mia Mamma.

WATCH a 5-minute BBC piece on the restaurant and meet some of the nonne…

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Deputies Rescue 5-yo Girl With Autism Wandering in a Florida Swamp: “We Were Looking for You, Sweetie’

credit - Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office retrieved from Facebook
credit – Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office, retrieved from Facebook

A 5-year-old girl was reported missing recently near Tampa, after the autistic child wandered off and got lost in a swamp.

The haunt of snapping turtles, alligators, water moccasins, and other beasties, Florida swamps are no place for an unattended child, but fortunately a coordinated rescue operation by the sheriff’s office located her before disaster struck.

Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office deployed their aviation unit with thermal imaging to a heavily wooded area after receiving a call about the missing child.

Speaking to officers among the reeds and cypress, the pilot located the girl about one hour after the search began.

Bodycam footage released by the HCSO shows the three officers finding and calling her name. “We were looking for you sweetheart,” said one.

Fortunately the girl came to the officers instead of running further away and potentially hurting herself, and seemed perfectly happy when one of the rescue team lifted her out of the water and onto dry land.

credit – Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office, retrieved from Facebook.

Sheriff Chad Chronister commended the officers, saying that their “quick action saved the day, turning [a] potential tragedy into a hopeful reunion.”

MORE OFFICER RESCUES: Cop Saves Unconscious Driver From Burning Truck, ‘I’m either going to die here with him or get him out’ –WATCH

“Their dedication shows what service and protection are all about here at the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office,” Chronister said in a statement.

WATCH the rescue footage below… 

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American Marten May Be Set for Return to Pennsylvania Forests After 100 Year Absence

Jacob Frank - public domain
Jacob Frank – public domain

Pennsylvania’s Bureau of Wildlife Management is working on an experimental reintroduction plan to restore the American marten to woods and hills in the Keystone State.

This tree-dwelling relative of the mink was extirpated from the state 100 years ago, and a plan to create an experimental, non-protected population to monitor how a predator introduction would affect existing ecosystems in PA is set to be discussed in April.

Weighing between 1 and 3 pounds, the American marten is a true omnivore, preying on insects, fish, plants, rodents, and other items.

As part of a Feasibility Assessment, the Game Commission conducted extensive diet research from across the marten’s range in other states and found that marten eat primarily rodents.

Some opponents of the reintroduction worry these canny predators will damage populations of game species like grouse and wild turkey or those listed as endangered or vulnerable like the northern goshawk.

At least during the Feasibility Assessment however, species such as turkey, including eggs and chicks, and the northern goshawk, were not identified as prey items in the diet research.

MORE NEWS FROM PENNSYLVANIA: Pennsylvania SPCA Shelter Empties Kennels for First Time in 47 Years: ‘A True Miracle’

The BWF believes that because the marten has lived in Pennsylvania recently, reintroducing them will help bring the ecosystem into better balance by increasing biodiversity, and returning ecological processes such as seed dispersal and rodent population management.

MORE GOOD WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT: Rockfish Populations Rebound After Strict Management Decades Ahead of the Expected Date

According to North Central PA, a January survey targeted at hunters found a pretty even split of opinion on the reintroduction, with 37% in favor, 32% in opposition, and 31% remaining neutral.

The BWF hopes to understand and perhaps assuage concerns among those in opposition by collecting more information for them in time for the April meeting.

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Poverty Rate in India Drops Below 5% First Time Ever as Rural-Urban Divide Shrinks

Unsplash - Austin Curtis
Unsplash – Austin Curtis

The images of Mother Theresa’s work in Calcutta gave many people the idea that post-independence India was a place of destitution and grinding poverty, but today it’s on course for one of the great economic miracles in history.

This gargantuan nation-state has reduced the official poverty level to below 5%, according to the consumer-expenditure survey conducted by the National Sample Survey Office (NSSO).

The last such survey was released a decade ago, and over the latest sample period, the office separated respondents into 20 different categories based on household income and found that the average per capita monthly expenditure in rural households is 3,773 rupees ($45) while in urban households it reaches 6,459 rupees ($78).

This is the lowest divide in monthly expenditure between urban and rural Indians ever recorded by the NSSO. Since the last survey, there has been a 2.5-fold increase in consumption in both urban and rural households, suggesting “significant progress” in alleviating poverty.

MORE POVERTY FALLING: The Unprecedented Decline in U.S. Child Poverty—Down 59% in 26 Years

Consumption is often used to measure strength and prosperity in modern economics. As a method it has major flaws, such as the ability to disguise underlying weaknesses, but the NSSO believes that their data indicates the fall of poverty in India to below 5%.

More granularly, the NSSO recorded a fall in spending on cereals and grains, and an increase in spending on fruit, vegetables, dairy products, and processed foods, showing an evolving dietary pattern indicative of more economic means available to the general public.

OTHER STORIES OF PROGRESS: New UN Treaty for the High Seas Finally Drafted After 17 Years of Debate on Language

While India contains several of the world’s largest cities, there are still 1.8 rural Indians for every 1 urbanite. If rural Indians were a country they would be the second most populous on Earth.

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“Who, being loved, is poor?” – Oscar Wilde

Quote of the Day: “Who, being loved, is poor?” – Oscar Wilde

Photo by: Kenny Eliason

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Onlookers ‘in Awe’ After Orca Pod Leaps Out of Water Just Meters From the Beach – WATCH

By Rémi Boudousquié
File photo by Rémi Boudousquié

Beach goers near Seattle experienced an incredible sighting last week when a pod of orcas began leaping out of the water just meters from the shore.

Alyssa Slovinac was visiting Golden Gardens Beach, in the state of Washington on February 24 when she was treated to an astonishing show that left onlookers ‘in awe’.

The video below shows one member of the orca pod breach clear out of the surface of the bay while another appears to wave with its massive fin.

Belonging to the largest species in the dolphin family, the six orcas frolicked in the foreground, while one leaped from the water, twisting in midair before landing again.

“I was absolutely ecstatic,” said Alyssa.

“I’m a bit of an orca enthusiast, so I’ve seen this type of behavior before—but this was the first time in my seven years in Seattle that I’ve seen them this close to shore.

“The environment on the beach was electric as everyone was so thrilled by such a close encounter.

LOOK: Farmer Filmed the Adorable Moment His Newborn Quails Caused a Mini Stampede in His Home

“The level of surface activity varied over the near hour and a half we watched them, but during this time there was lots of celebrating after what I’d guess was a quick snack.”

They are often called ‘killer whales’, maybe because of such appetites but not a misnomer because orcas (and all dolphins)—along with porpoises, sperm whales, beluga whales, and narwhals—are members of the the sub-order of whales that have teeth, known as odontocetes.

WATCH the thrilling video from SWNS below…

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Top Keepsakes Parents Save From Their Baby’s First Years and Why

One mom kept a variety of baby items and now is doling them out for grandchildren. (Copyright)
One mom kept a variety of baby items and now is doling them out for grandchildren. (Copyright)

A survey of 2,000 parents looked at how they hold onto their child’s younger years, with three in four saying their child is growing up way too fast.

Most of them believe they’ve became a more sentimental person since becoming a parent—and their answers confirmed it.

The child’s age that parents missed the most, on average, was two years old, and most of those surveyed said they would go to great lengths to get that time back.

“They change so much and so fast,” said one respondent. “I really miss them being a child.”

Since they can’t go back, the survey conducted by OnePoll for baby-products company Stokke found that 84% have kept something related to an important childhood milestone.

The average parent in the random double-opt-in poll said they were holding on to nine things from their child’s earliest years, with one in seven saying they’ll hold onto at least 20 different items.

Some are common keepsakes like their baby’s clothes (51%), a copy of their footprint or handprint (50%) and their pregnancy test or ultrasound images (48%).

Others have kept a memento that belonged to their baby like a lock of their hair (35%) or a fallen tooth (28%).

When asked why parents are sentimental about items from their child’s early years, one mom simply said, “The socks are so tiny and cute!”

FOR PET PARENTS: Do You Know Your Pet’s Love Language? Survey Shows Which are the Most Popular

Illustration via SWN

Another said, “It just reminds me of a happy time.”

Parents save things primarily for memories, but 37% also hope to be passing them down to those kids when they’re older.

Although they feel sentimental, parents are also keen on keeping their home clutter-free, so most have given away certain items to other families, especially when kids outgrow things so fast.

ALSO: Survey Says These Are the Best Things About Raising a Child – #1 are the Cuddles

To be resourceful and look for value, the same percentage (82%) would accept used items from other parents.

But wistfully hearkening back to the past happens not only when the child turns 18, but for all time.

“He was growing and would no longer be my little baby, (but) only in age would he not be my baby forever.”

These Are the 20 Best Cities in America By the Numbers… 7 Are in California and 7 in the Midwest

Lake Elizabeth in Fremont, California, by Oleg Alexandrov, CC license

As the International Day of Happiness approaches on March 20, an interesting comparison of cities in the US was published, which provides helpful benchmarks for anyone thinking of moving.

Although WalletHub entitled its new report “The Happiest Cities in America”, they didn’t actually interview people to find out if they were happy. Rather, they looked at which cities provide the best conditions for residents to optimize mental and physical well being.

They compared more than 180 of the largest U.S. cities, including the 150 most populated—plus at least two of the most populated cities in each state—across three key dimensions: 1) Emotional & Physical Well-Being, 2) Income & Employment, and 3) Community & Environment.

They evaluated these categories using 29 key indicators of happiness—from the depression and suicide rates to sports participation, from the income-growth rate to job satisfaction and unemployment, along with the weather, average leisure time and how many parks per acre, among others.

Taking all these into consideration, Fremont, California (located in the San Francisco Bay Area) is the best overall U.S. city for residents today.

One contributing factor is that Fremont (with its population of around a quarter million) has the highest share of households with an income above $75,000—at nearly 80%. Studies have shown that people who make at least $75,000 per year are happier than people with lower incomes. In addition, Fremont has the lowest separation and divorce rate in the country (4.6 times lower than in Detroit, the city with the highest). Fremont also has the lowest share of adults who report having 14 or more mentally unhealthy days in the past month.

California must have a lot of positives going for it, because seven of the top 20 cities are in the Golden State. In the category of Emotional and Physical Well-being, the top four cities are all in Cali.

According to the new report, the top 20 Best Cities in America are:

1. Fremont, CA
2. Overland Park, KS
3. San Jose, CA
4. Madison, WI
5. Irvine, CA
6. Honolulu, HI
7. San Francisco, CA
8. Pearl City, HI
9. Columbia, MD
10. Scottsdale, AZ
11. Sioux Falls, SD
12. Huntington Beach, CA
13. Minneapolis, MN
14. Garden Grove, CA
15. San Diego, CA
16. Fargo, ND
17. Portland, ME
18. Seattle, WA
19. Lincoln, NE
20. Bismarck, ND

CHECK OUT: Beautiful City of Savannah Wins Survey of Top 5 Most Underrated Places to Visit in USA

Interesting Facts:

Newark, New Jersey, has the lowest number of suicides per 100,000 residents, which is 7.9 times lower than in Casper, Wyoming, the city with the highest.

Two cities in Hawaii—Honolulu and Pearl City—scored in the Top 20, and they also snagged the top two spots in the Community and Environment category.

While the Midwest figured prominently in the Top 20 cities, no Southern cities ranked higher than 22 (Charleston, SC). Texas and Florida were not on the list until you drop down to #35 (Plano, TX) and #48 (Pembroke Pines, FL).

The two worst ranking cities were Detroit and Cleveland, with the bottom 20 rounded out by many Southern metropolises—3 in Alabama, and 2 each in Louisiana, Texas, and Mississippi.

NEW POLL: 82% of U.S. Adults Are Hopeful About Their Own Future and Their Community’s Future

“Money can buy happiness to a certain degree because a stable income is essential… but the happiest cities combine economic security with kind communities and conditions that are conducive to low depression rates and high life satisfaction,” said Cassandra Happe, a WalletHub analyst.

VIEW the full report to find your U.S. city’s rank.

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He Lost 210-lbs on Carnivore Diet Eating Just Meat and Eggs–After Fertility Became an Issue

Before and after photos of Isaiah Caldwell on a carnivore diet - SWNS
Before and after photos of Isaiah Caldwell on a carnivore diet – SWNS

A man shed a staggering 210 pounds—almost half his bodyweight—by eating a diet consisting of just meat and eggs.

After tipping the scales at 434 pounds and being told his weight might be causing fertility issues, the 28-year-old decided to change his lifestyle.

Isaiah Caldwell now weighs 224 since sticking with a carnivore diet, which includes anything that come from animals—meat, fish, eggs, bone broth, and dairy.

The 6-foot-4-inch salesman from St Louis, Missouri, says he’s now happier and healthier—and hopes to jumpstart his family with his wife Amanda.

“Having a baby became an obsession of ours—we were really excited about it,” Isaiah recalled. “We started trying for a year before we began to suspect that there might be some issues fertility-wise.

“I knew if there was anything I could do to give us a chance, I would do it.”

He decided to ditch all food groups except for meat, eggs, and dairy, and found out that it was pretty easy to lose weight.

“People think there’s some magic to it, but the reality is you’re just eliminating overeating—as it’s really hard to binge eat meat.

He lost 21lbs in the first month by eating steak and smoked brisket—and said he was “blown away”. He decided to stay on the carnivore diet for another month, and lost another 18 lbs, so continued on it.

By Leonardo Carvalho

“I felt unbelievable even one week; psychologically I felt so much better, my brain fog was totally gone. I felt a million times better.”

CHECK OUT: Cutting Calories by 12% Can Help People Live Healthier, Longer Lives, Says Study

He knew he wasn’t going to be able to keep it up forever, just eating meat, and after months, he expanded his diet to include some fruit.

After ten months he had lost a mammoth 118 pounds.

Once the weight loss began to slow up, Isaiah decided to start a training regime used by bodybuilders and began meticulously tracking his calorie intake.

He lost another 35 pounds, and now continues his calorie counting.

“If anyone is thinking maybe they can’t do it, they should know that I felt exactly like that too. It felt impossible and hopeless, but everyone is capable of it.”

Isaiah Caldwell with his wife Amanda after his weight loss (via SWNS)

He admits that because it is a very restrictive diet, it’s “probably not for everyone.”

There is little scientific research on the carnivore diet, but plenty of anecdotal reports of lowered blood pressure and joint pain, and better sleep. One 2021 study based on a self-reporting survey of 2,029 adults concluded in a paper published by the American Society for Nutrition that adults consuming a carnivore diet experienced “few adverse effects and instead reported health benefits and high satisfaction”.

DON’T FORGET FISH: Holy Mackerel! Fish Really Is Brain Food – Even if You Only Eat a Small Amount

Many professionals in the nutrition industry would prefer—because the full range of effects from the carnivore diet have not been studies—that people follow carb-limiting meal plans, instead—such as the ketogenic (keto) diet which hyper-restricts carbohydrates (flour, sugar, grains, and most fruits) and loads up on proteins and fats, like meats, cheese, avocados, and nuts.

As for Isiah and Amanda, they are due to go back to the doctors in the coming months to see if his efforts have had an impact on his fertility.

“We’re really optimistic,” said the newly-fit hubby. “I’m going to get testing done, but I’ve increased odds from zero to at least something.

WHAT ABOUT THE EARTH? How Do Nutritional Plant-Based Diets Compare With Meat Diets For Our Environment? Scientists Answer.

“I’m in best shape of my life and we are excited to find a way to be parents no matter what.”

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“When one paints an ideal, one does not need to limit one’s imagination.” – Ellen Key

Quote of the Day: “When one paints an ideal, one does not need to limit one’s imagination.” – Ellen Key

Photo by: A Girl with Flowers on the Grass by Jacob Maris (1878, Rijksmuseum)

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