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Tasmanian Tiger RNA Recovered from Preserved Specimen in Groundbreaking World First

A thylacine in a zoo
A thylacine in a zoo

A team of Scandinavian researchers has recovered messenger and micro RNA from a Tasmanian tiger specimen kept in a museum collection.

It’s the first-ever collection of RNA from an extinct creature in history, an achievement long sought after in the study of extinct species and for other applications.

The Tasmanian tiger, or thylacine, was truly unique for an apex predator. This large predatory marsupial was king among Tasmanian forests which remain largely intact since its extinction 130 years ago.

For this reason, the potential resurrection of the thylacine has received a lot of attention, as it would immediately solve many problems facing the balance of the Tasmanian ecosystem without the complexities of trying to replace the apex predator role with a non-native animal.

The thylacine evolved on Tasmania, and putting it back would be by far the easiest solution provided the incredibly difficult task of somehow recreating the thylacine through paleogenomics could be accomplished. Colossal Biosciences in Texas is currently working to produce viable thylacine-like embryos using already sequenced DNA to raise in surrogates over the next few years.

Now though, a Swedish-Norwegian team has isolated the transcriptome of the skin and skeletal muscle tissues from a 130-year-old desiccated Tasmanian tiger specimen preserved at room temperature in the Swedish Museum of Natural History in Stockholm.

The functional difference between DNA and RNA is that DNA stores genetic information which only RNA can read. RNA reads and carries out the instructions for protein-coding contained within DNA.

The researchers were able to isolate useable RNA from a thylacine that carried instructions for skin and skeletal muscle coding which might be key to any resurrection.

OTHER DE-EXTINCTION EVENTS: ‘Important Message of Hope’ Made by Re-Planting Extinct Tree Species on Hawaii

“This is the first time that we have had a glimpse into the existence of thylacine-specific regulatory genes, such as microRNAs, that got extinct more than one century ago,” says Marc R. Friedländer, Associate Professor at the Wenner-Gren Institute at Stockholm University.

The authors point out that museum collections around the world contain vast collections of endangered and extinct species, and their technique for recovering the thylacine RNA holds promise for the study and or protection of all these creatures.

They write that the RNA from the thylacine looks a lot like that of existing marsupials.

MORE STORIES LIKE THIS: How ‘Frozen Zoos’ Are Helping Save Vanishing Species

“Resurrecting the Tasmanian tiger or the woolly mammoth is not a trivial task, and will require a deep knowledge of both the genome and transcriptome regulation of such renowned species, something that only now is starting to be revealed,” says Emilio Mármol, the lead author of a study recently published in the Genome Research journal.

The idea of resurrecting a species has nothing to do with cloning, and has so far centered around the idea of altering the genetic expression of the animal’s closest living relative in utero. In the case of the wooly mammoth, it would be the elephant, and in the case of the thylacine, perhaps the fat-tailed dunnart or Tasmanian devil.

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Girl Celebrating 7th Birthday Finds 2.95-Carat Diamond in State Park

Crater of Diamonds State Park - Arkansas

Whether she likes Disney Princesses or not, a 7-year-old girl was certainly celebrating her birthday like one after finding a 2.95-carat diamond on a hike in Arkansas.

Found in Crater of Diamonds State Park, located on the site of an extinct diamond volcano, it’s about the size of a green pea, golden brown in color, and without a single broken facet.

Aspen Brown and her father Luther went to the park in September for her birthday, several weeks after construction workers had dug out a 150-foot-long trench for infrastructure, which the Park Superintendent, Caleb Howell, said probably brought several tons of diamond-bearing material to the surface.

Dad Luther remembers the moment quite clearly, as it was a very warm day in the diamond search area.

“She (Aspen) got hot and wanted to sit down for a minute, so she walked over to some big rocks by the fence line,” Mr. Brown said according to a park statement. “Next thing I know, she was running to me, saying ‘Dad! Dad! I found one!’”

It’s the second-largest diamond found in the park this year, and was found close to where another large diamond, the 3.72-carat Caro Avenger, was discovered in 2019. The birthday girl decided to name it the “Aspen Diamond.”

A Google search for a diamond of that size in white shows they can cost anywhere from $12,000 to $50,000 polished and set.

LITTLE HANDS FINDING BIG THINGS: Little Girl Declares She Wants to Find a Megalodon Tooth—and Promptly Plucks One From Beach on Christmas Day

“Aspen’s diamond has a golden-brown color and a sparkling luster. It is a complete crystal, with no broken facets and a small crevice on one side, created when the diamond was formed,” said Waymon Cox, assistant park superintendent. “It’s certainly one of the most beautiful diamonds I’ve seen in recent years.”

100 million years ago, a hotspot where pressures, temperatures, and materials mix in the perfect quantities to forge diamonds deep in the Earth’s mantle—the second layer of the planet below the crust—was forced to the surface through volcanism.

MORE INTERESTING DIAMOND STORIES: Rare Diamond Within a Diamond Is Unearthed in India and Dubbed ‘The Beating Heart’

Smithsonian Institute’s Sarah Kuta reports that precious stones found in the park include garnet, jasper, quartz, amethyst, and agate, as well as diamonds in three colors: yellow, brown, and white.

The Crater of Diamonds is the only safe place in the world where the public can prospect for diamonds and keep what they find. Around 89 carats in total have been found there.

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New Color-Changing Coating Inspired by Chameleons ‘Could cool and warm buildings cheaply all year round’

American Chemical Society / Harbin Institute
American Chemical Society / Harbin Institute

The search has intensified for alternative energy-saving technologies for heating and cooling that don’t run on fossil fuels.

Now, by mimicking a desert-dwelling chameleon, Chinese scientists have developed a cheap energy-efficient, cost-effective coating on houses.

They say the new material could keep buildings cool in the summer or warm in the winter without using additional energy.

“Many desert creatures have specialized adaptations to allow them to survive in harsh environments with large daily temperature shifts,” said Dr. Fuqiang Wang, author on the paper describing the invention and researcher at the Harbin Institute of Technology. “For example, the Namaqua chameleon of southwestern Africa alters its color to regulate its body temperature as conditions change.”

This critter in particular appears light grey in hot temperatures to reflect sunlight and keep cool, then turns a dark brown once it cools down to absorb heat instead.

This unique ability is a naturally occurring example of passive temperature control—a phenomenon that could be adapted to create more energy-efficient buildings.

But many systems, such as cooling paints or colored steel tiles, are only designed to keep buildings either cool or warm, and can’t switch between modes.

Inspired by the Namaqua chameleon, Dr. Wang and his colleagues wanted to create a color-shifting coating that adapts as outside temperatures fluctuate.

To make the coating, the team mixed thermochromic microcapsules, specialized microparticles, and binders to form a suspension layer, which they sprayed or brushed onto a metal surface.

When heated to 68 degrees Fahrenheit, the surface began to change from dark to light grey. Once it reached 86F, the light-colored film reflected up to 93% of solar radiation.

Namaqua Chameleon Hans Stieglitz CC
Laika – CC2.0 Namaqua Chameleon

“Even when heated above 175 degrees Fahrenheit for an entire day, the material showed no signs of damage,” reported Dr. Wang.

OTHER IDEAS LIKE THIS: This Paint is So White it Reflects Heat So Humans Don’t Need as Much Cooling

The team then tested it alongside three conventional coatings—regular white paint, a passive radiative cooling paint, and blue steel tiles in outdoor tests on doghouse-sized buildings throughout all four seasons.

In winter, the new coating was slightly warmer than the passive radiative cooling system, though both maintained similar temperatures in warmer conditions.

In summer, the new coating was significantly cooler than the white paint and steel tiles, according to the findings published in the journal Nano Letters.

MORE NATURE-BASED SOLUTIONS: ‘Living Breakwater’ Makes Room for Oysters and Tidal Pools In Award Winning Design off Staten Island

“During spring and fall, the new coating was the only system that could adapt to the widely fluctuating temperature changes, switching from heating to cooling throughout the day,” Dr. Wang added.

The researchers say that the color-changing system could save a “considerable” amount of energy for regions that experience multiple seasons, while still being inexpensive and easy to manufacture.

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“Though we travel the world over to find the beautiful, we must carry it with us, or we find it not.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

Quote of the Day: “Though we travel the world over to find the beautiful, we must carry it with us, or we find it not.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

Photo by: Ryan Spencer

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NASA’s New ShadowCam Reveals Mysteries of Moon’s Darkest Corners in Stunning Glimpses

Shackleton crater on the moon - NASA ShadowCam / Arizona State University / Korea Aerospace Research Institute
Shackleton crater on the moon – NASA ShadowCam / Arizona State University / Korea Aerospace Research Institute

Of all of NASA’s missions and toys, ShadowCam has gone under the radar after it went into orbit around the Moon last December.

Designed to image directly into the permanently shadowed craters at the Lunar poles, ShadowCam is 200 times more sensitive to light than previous Lunar cameras.

ShadowCam is one of six instruments on board the Korea Aerospace Research Institute (KARI)’s Korea Pathfinder Lunar Orbiter, known as Danuri, which launched in August 2022.

What secrets is ShadowCam revealing? It’s helping scientists understand how much ice is located at the bottom of these craters which have been measured as some of the coldest places in all the solar system. NASA knows there are ices there, but what they hope to learn with ShadowCam and a future mission involving a rover will be what happens to ice and soil when they go without so much as a single lumen of sunlight for literally billions of years.

In 2009, NASA crashed to spacecraft into the Moon and revealed the presence of “volatiles,” a shorthand term in astronomy to refer to solid, icy forms of gases or liquids like water, methane, CO2, carbon monoxide, and ammonia.

The condition of these volatiles is important to understand since they can be used to create drinking water for astronauts, rocket propellent for returning home, and as shielding agents against the harmful radiation of the Sun, key components of sustaining the longtime goal of the Artemis missions to establish a permanent presence on the Moon.

“We know the volatiles are there, but we don’t know if it’s icy dirt or dirty ice,” Jacob Bleacher, chief exploration scientist at NASA, told Nat Geo.

MORE UPDATES ON THE ARTEMIS MISSION: Plants Have Been Grown in Lunar Soil For The First Time Ever

To get a closer look, or to examine specific examples spotted by ShadowCam, NASA is sending the VIPER, or Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover next year, to make daily dips into the polar craters and extract samples before hurrying back up to the surface before the 9 hours of battery expires down in the darkness without the Sun’s rays to recharge it.

In general, it’s difficult for spacecraft to survive on the moon since after 14 days of perpetual daylight it has to endure 14 days of darkness, but the VIPER will have solar panels mounted on the sides of its chassis which will catch sunlight in the polar regions that receive low-angled sun pretty much all the time.

WATCH a NASA explainer video… 

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Sherpas Laughing in the Face of Death While Saving Partner Who Fell 200 Feet into an Everest Crevasse

credit Gesman Tamang
credit Gesman Tamang

The indigenous people of the Himalayas, often referred to as Sherpas, are without a doubt some of the most incredible members of our species.

Just take a look at this video of master mountaineer Gesman Tamang, rescuing a comrade who fell 200 feet down a crevasse, 20,000 feet up on the slopes of Everest, or Sagarmatha, in their language.

Whilst shoveling out the snow to free the trapped Sherpa, Tamang and another Sherpa can be heard laughing and cracking jokes during what is a textbook example of the single worst place a climber could ever find themselves in.

Mountain glaciers are literally rivers of ice, and they can move several feet per day. Crevasses form during this slow-motion grind down the mountain, as the top layer of ice isn’t as strong, and cracks rather than resists the pressure.

Crevasses can be 200 feet deep or more, and can form or expand in just a matter of hours.

“It’s a miracle that this man survived falling into a crevasse like this,” Tamang wrote on his truly worthwhile Instagram account. “Luckily, our timely response and teamwork made it possible to get him out safely.”

“My gratitude goes out to all those involved in this rescue, and also to the Sherpa himself. His strength and resilience played a significant role in his survival.”

Talk about laughing in the face of death.

They rescued the trapped Sherpa, who can be seen in the video wearing an oxygen mask, by using ropes and other climbing equipment.

MOUNTAINEERING NEWS: All-Black Climbing Team Makes History Reaching Top of Everest, Inspiring Diverse Adventurers

During this year’s climbing season, GNN reported on another Sherpa guide who convinced his client to abandon the attempt to summit Everest so he could rescue a Malaysian climber trapped in the Death Zone where humans can’t survive without oxygen masks.

In the video he posted to his equally worthwhile Instagram account, he can be seen wrapping the injured climber in a blanket, tying it up with cords, and carrying him down on his back.

MORE RESCUE STORIES: All His Training Pays Off: Slackliner Wins Carnegie Medal for Ski Lift Rescue Over Cables

A common surname, ‘Sherpa’ is actually a slang term for “Eastern People”.

These super-human Himalayans hold dozens of world mountain climbing records and have epigenetic adaptations and spiritual beliefs suited for living at high altitudes.

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‘Living Breakwater’ Makes Room for Oysters and Tidal Pools In Award Winning Design off Staten Island

Living Breakwaters coastal defense system in Staten Island – Obel Award winner 2023
Living Breakwaters coastal defense system in Staten Island – Obel Award winner 2023

Off Staten Island, a new concrete breakwater is being assembled that makes room for nature in a beautiful, yet simple way.

Dubbed a ‘Living Breakwater,’ every one of the blocks is specially formed to maximize the space for bivalves like oysters to glom onto, while above the water line, depressions capture the seawater and allow for tidal pools to form in the tops.

Designed by Kate Orff, of the eco-design and architecture firm SCAPE, their brilliance comes from the subtle tweak to an existing product that makes room for nature.

Orff had originally created them for a US Department of Housing and Urban Development contest in the wake of Hurricane Sandy called Rebuild by Design, but now, Living Breakwaters have been awarded the Obel Award (not to be confused with the Nobel Award) for this year’s theme of adaptation.

“The physical design of Living Breakwaters is an ingenious mix of natural and carefully modeled artificial elements that mimic naturally occurring reef formations in order to support marine life,” read the Obel Award citation.

MORE NATURAL ARCHITECTURE: Stunning ‘House of Arches’ Uses Gorgeous Geometry to Keep Three Generations Cool in Rajasthan’s Heat

“Architecture must recognize its ecological and social responsibilities. Living Breakwaters does exactly that. As such, this relatively low-cost, low-tech response provides a seminal example of how to design not against but with nature in adapting to the changes that lie ahead.”

As oysters colonize and put the ‘life’ in the Living Breakwaters, the space between each individual block will narrow and harden, making it more effective as a flood and storm defense system.

Orff explained that with her invention and other solutions like it, humanity can act fast to tie back the various components of nature’s protective systems.

MORE NATURE-BASED SOLUTIONS: Skyscraper Bursting with 80,000 Plants Opens to the Public in Singapore–LOOK

“[It] will not only protect humans and revitalize the coastline of New York City but also restore lost marine biodiversity,” said American landscape architect Martha Schwartz, who served as chair of this year’s Obel Award jury.

“This is a visionary project that tackles the full task of adaptation, and which has the capacity to inspire and to positively impact vulnerable shorelines worldwide.”

SHARE This Award-Winning, Osyter-Approved Harbor Wall With Your Friends…

40 ‘Heroes’ Lift a Berlin City Bus Off Trapped Young Man–(WATCH)

N-tv News, Berlin - screengrab
N-tv News, Berlin – screengrab

After an 18-year-old got caught under the tire of the rear axle of a Berlin commuter bus, a swarm of bystanders jumped into action.

It started with the bus driver who quickly noticed the young man and stopped, after that it was down to around 40 passengers and passersby who all lined up alongside the vehicle and began to push.

“There was chaos,” Frank Kurze, one of the volunteer rescuers told German news channel n-tv. “I saw the men trying to lift the bus, and it was clear to me that I also had to help lift the bus and try pull the young man from underneath.”

Before long the manpower prevailed and the victim was hauled out to a trio of waiting physicians—two nurses and a surgeon, who administered first aid on what the Berlin police department described as an injury to the pinned arm.

“He was responsive but very perplexed and didn’t know what was happening,” said Sandra Grunwald, one of the nurses, who along with two colleagues saw what was happening from their office window, and all together ran out to help. “I think it’s nice that one can still more or less have trust in society,” she added.

N-tv further reported that the man was taken to the hospital and underwent surgery on his arm.

MORE RESCUES LIKE THIS: Pakistani Man is True Hero in Dramatic Cable Car Rescue After Youths Were Stranded 15 Hours–WATCH

The Berlin police said they were impressed by the quick, collective actions of the Berliners, who they described as “heroes”.

“Thank you, Spandau, thank you, Berlin,” the police department wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

WATCH some of the rescue footage… 

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“Just remember, once you’re over the hill you begin to pick up speed.” – Charles M. Schulz

Quote of the Day: “Just remember, once you’re over the hill you begin to pick up speed.” – Charles M. Schulz

Photo by: Centre for Ageing Better

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Volunteers ‘De-seaweeding’ Results in Dramatic 600% Improvement of Coral Regrowth

Dr. Adam Smith removes macroalgae from corals off the coast of Magnetic Island. Credit Roxana Caha
Dr. Adam Smith removes macroalgae from corals off the coast of Magnetic Island. Credit Roxana Caha

Any good gardener knows what a good de-weeding can do for a vegetable garden. As it turns out, it’s much the same for coral reefs.

Following a volunteer “sea-weeding” program launched in Australia, scientists are witnessing compounding coral recovery both in quantity and diversity, and suggest that this simple method has the power to transform degraded reefs overrun by macroalgae.

In a balanced ecosystem, macroalgae is kept in check by the size and health of corals, but as extreme weather events or coral bleaching causes some sections of reef to die, macroalgae has no other neighbor keeping a check on its spread.

Over a period of three years, the joint Earthwatch Institute program led by James Cook University Senior Research Officer Hillary Smith and Professor David Bourne, also at JCU and the Australian Institute of Marine Science, has organized volunteer citizen scientists to help remove macroalgae at two experimental reef sites.

The results of the first three years of work and study have now been published in the Journal of Applied Ecology, and they show a 600% increase in coral recovery rates.

“It’s just like weeding your garden,” Smith said. “Every time we return, the seaweed is growing back less and less, so this method could provide lasting benefit without requiring endless effort.”

The sites were located in the central zone of the Great Barrier Reef at an inshore location called Yunbenun (or Magnetic Island).

MORE AUSTRALIAN MARINE SCIENCE: Weird and Wonderful Discoveries of New Deep Sea Fish Below Australia’s Ancient Underwater Volcanoes

The importance of the study, Smith details, is that a lot of reef recovery efforts globally are powered by expensive, high-tech, and experimental solutions. The study hoped to show that manual de-weeding was just as effective, and thereby encourage organizations or nations that lack the tech or funding of a country like Australia to pursue sea-weeding as a way of protecting their corals.

“We have yet to see a plateau in coral growth within these plots at Magnetic Island, which is characterized as one of the degraded reefs on the Great Barrier Reef,” Smith said. “We also found an increase in coral diversity, so this method is benefitting a wide range of different coral types.”

MORE GOOD CORAL NEWS: 4 Decades of Data Suggests Pacific Coral Reefs Can Acclimate to Warming Oceans and Resist Future Bleaching

Smith said her team are now scoping other locations where the sea-weeding technique could be useful, including the Whitsunday Islands, which are home to a different species of predominant seaweed.

They also want to employ them in French Polynesia, Indonesia, and even Singapore, where experts have identified out-of-control macroalgae spread along coral reefs.

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First Baby Beaver in 160 Years Seen in S.F. Bay Area Exciting Scientists with Possibility of Recovery

Screengrab from Palo Alto Online video
Screengrab from Palo Alto Online video

A strange creature was spotted in a trail cam scampering across the Matadero Creek near Palo Alto south of San Francisco.

Biologists were scratching their heads as they reviewed the footage. It was clearly a mammal, but there are only a certain number of mammals in the area.

“Finally, it hit me in the head,” Bill Leikam, president and co-founder of the Urban Wildlife Research Project, told SFGate. “Could that be a baby beaver?”

In the 21st century, the Bay Area has witnessed a number of mammalian returns and the Urban Wildlife Research Project has typically specialized in documenting the return of the gray fox, but breeding beavers haven’t been recorded in the Palo Alto area in 160 years.

In September 2022, a pair of beavers was photographed on the trail cameras; Leikam believes that it’s possible they have had a baby, because the one that darted past their trail camera was simply too small to be an adult.

Leikam believes the mating pair and their baby are offspring of a group of beavers that were reintroduced to the nearby Los Gatos Creek by CA Fish and Wildlife.

“It’s taken them this long to disperse, have babies, and spread, and spread and spread,“ he said. “It looks like they’re going along the northwestern edge of San Francisco Bay.”

REWILDING STORIES YOU’LL LIKE: 500 Baby Sharks to be Released in Unprecedented Rewilding of the Ocean

Palo Alto Online provides extensive reporting on the various creeks the beavers might expand into if their population naturally continues to grow. Research has shown that from the concrete channel creeks in the Baylands to the natural creeks in the uplands, beavers tend to positively affect their riverine environments.

BEAVERS RECOVERING EVERYWHERE:  NASA Became “Beaver Believers” After Using Satellites To Measure Their Impact On US Rivers

By building dams they turn creeks into creeks + ponds, which retain water for longer and fortify the surrounding area from drought. In the winter, meltwater floods blow the dams out, preventing them from becoming so big as to dry up creeks lower down. It’s also documented that various game fish like trout and salmon can leap over the dams no problem.

“The beaver ponds in the uplands will also create habitat for all manner of birds, amphibians, bats, and will serve as an insect cafeteria for trout and salmon. That’s why we refer to the beaver as a keystone species,” said Dr. Rick Lanman, President of the Institute for Historical Ecology.

WATCH the beaver pass by… 

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Stolen Van Gogh Returned by Sherlock Holmes of the Art World–Seized from Museum During COVID

The early Van Gogh painting ‘Parsonage Garden’ was stolen on the anniversary of the artist's birth 167 years earlier – By Singer Laren Museum
The early Van Gogh painting ‘Parsonage Garden’ was stolen on the anniversary of the artist’s birth 167 years earlier – By Singer Laren Museum

An early van Gogh painting worth millions was stolen during a museum heist in 2020 under the cover of COVID lockdowns, but while the thief was arrested, the painting remained at large.

Now, with the help of private art detective Arthur Brand, the painting has returned to the Groniger Museum, after an anonymous person who was able to take possession of the painting left it on Brand’s doorstep in an Ikea bag.

The painting, The Parsonage Garden at Nuenen in Spring, by Vincent van Gogh is from 1884 and painted in oil on paper on panel. It’s one of his earliest surviving works and clearly was made before he developed his iconic style.

DNA evidence left on the broken glass at the Singer Museum in Laren, where the painting was on loan, was used to confirm the burglar’s identity—a Mister “Nils M.” However the painting was still at large, but no one wanted to cash in.

“We knew that the painting would go from one hand to another hand in the criminal world, but that nobody really wanted to touch it,” Brand told the Guardian. “You could only get in trouble. So it was a little bit cursed.”

With Nils M. in prison for several years and harangued with a $9 million fine for the theft, the subsequent profiting off of it would mean exponentially greater penalties if caught.

SUPER SLEUTH STORIES: Priceless Tapestry Is Made Whole as Missing Piece is Returned, Solving 40-Year Heist Mystery

Smithsonian Magazine reports that Brand has recovered over 200 artworks through his detective work, including two bronze horse sculptures commissioned by Hitler, and works by Picasso, Dali, and even artifacts such as 15th-century Persian poetry manuscripts.

The media has branded him the ‘Indiana Jones’ of the art world, though since his Instagram handle is ‘art detective,’ Sherlock Holmes seems the more apt fictional celebrity comparison.

Apparently, Brand had heard from someone anonymously who could get their hands on the painting and return it, and Brand worked to gain their trust, explain the situation to the authorities, and sanction an unmonitored drop-off.

MORE STOLEN PAINTINGS RETURNED: 101-Year-old Woman Is Amazed After Being Reunited with Her Lost Painting Looted by Nazis

“Mr. Brand, I could turn in the van Gogh, but I don’t want to get in trouble,” the person wrote.

The work will be thoroughly investigated in the near future. The painting has suffered, but is, at first glance, still in good condition. It will be scientifically investigated in the coming months.

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He Found the Largest Old Growth Cedar in BC – The Tree of His Lifetime (LOOK)

Ancient Forest Alliance photographer TJ Watt and Ahousaht hereditary representative Tyson Atleo stand beside an ancient western red cedar tree that ranks as one of the biggest trees in Canada (TJ Watt/Ancient Forest Alliance)
Ancient Forest Alliance photographer TJ Watt and Ahousaht hereditary representative Tyson Atleo stand beside an ancient western red cedar tree that ranks as one of the biggest trees in Canada (TJ Watt/Ancient Forest Alliance)

Logging still goes on in British Columbia where nature lovers would prefer it didn’t, but rather than bemoan the decision from afar, photographer TJ Watt goes and looks for the best arguments for forest protection—giant, ancient trees.

Ever since he was 19, Watt has been trekking across the verdant landscapes of his home to look for the oldest trees he can, but on a recent trip to Flores Island in Clayoquot Sound, he has found one of the largest, oldest trees in the country.

“No tree has blown me away more than this one,” he told CBC News. “It literally is a wall of wood.”

Found on Ahousaht First Nation land, the tree is a Western red cedar, sometimes called redcedar because it’s not actually a cedar tree. It’s estimated to be 1,000 years old, with a width at its base of 5 meters (16.5 feet), and a height of 45 meters (147 feet.)

The tree has been nicknamed “The Wall” or “ʔiiḥaq ḥumiis,” meaning “big redcedar” in the Nuu-chah-nulth language

“Unlike most other trees, it actually gets wider as it goes up,” said Watt. “It’s really the highlight of my life to come across something this spectacular.”

OTHER GIANT TREES: Italy is Protecting its Giant Trees Forever – Monumental Trees that Can Live for Centuries

Ancient, large trees like this one are ecosystems unto themselves, and provide the forests they live in with a wealth of genetic information on how to survive diseases, pests, drought, storms, and more, as they continually produce or pollinate offspring.

TJ Watt-Ancient Forest Alliance

The Ahousaht Nation is using the giant tree as a reminder to those seeking eco-tourism excursions in the Clayoquot Sound, recognized by UNESCO as a Biosphere Reserve, that the forests hold many awe-inspiring surprises.

This tree is located in a forest that’s ineligible for logging, which hopefully means it will enrich the forest for centuries to come.

SHARE This Forest Giant With Your Friends In The Northwest… 

“What happens is not as important as how you react to what happens.” – Ellen Glasgow

Quote of the Day: “What happens is not as important as how you react to what happens.” – Ellen Glasgow

Photo by: Denis Oliveira

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Otherworldly Images Show Breathtaking Beauty of Oceans in Photo Competition

Sylvie Ayer - released
Sylvie Ayer – released

Oceanographic Magazine is heralding the conclusion of its photo/photographer of the year awards, and the results highlight the otherworldy nature of our oceans.

The winners of the various categories had to beat out thousands of entries and come from all over the Earth, from quiet estuarine seagrass meadows to the blackness of the ocean Pacific.

“The range and quality of submissions entered into this year’s competition is special. From world-class drone images of megafauna to breathtaking underwater images of deep-dwelling ocean wildlife, the full spectrum of ocean life is brought to life like never before,” Will Harrison, editorial director of Oceanographic Magazine and the Ocean Photographer of the Year, said in an email sent to CNN Thursday.

“This is an extraordinary collection of photography from an extraordinarily talented group of ocean photographers: divers, surfers, and sailors uniting to dazzle the world.”

In the category entitled Marine Conservation (Hope), Sylvie Ayer from Florida caught the above image: a manatee comes for a visit with what looks like the light of the Holy Spirit from behind.

“The manatee on the picture came close to look at me and was suddenly perfectly positioned in front of the sun’s rays,” Ayer recounts. “I hope this photo helps raise awareness of the need to protect these mammals.”

The overall contest winner was captured during a nighttime dive in the Pacific off the coast of the Philippines, where spotlights are used to attract marine life.

Jialing Cai – released

“Following the Taal Volcano eruption in the Philippines, the water column filled with particles from the stirred-up sediments,” remembers contest winner Jialing Cai. “Navigating through the low visibility and dense fog during a blackwater dive, I found this female paper nautilus. When I pressed the shutter, the particles reflected my light.”

Second place was taken by a diver investigating a large anemone for other inhabitants. Winner Andrei Savin says that anemones are a lot like apartment complexes where other animals live a symbiotic life among their tentacles.

Andrei Savin – released

This crab happened to emerge right as Savin had the anemone in focus, and it sat in the middle looking right into the viewfinder.

CNN also featured some of the results, like two octopuses in an interlocking hug, or a marlin turning about-face to look back at the bait ball it just plunged through.

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93-Year-Old Summits Yosemite’s Half Dome ‘Stubborn as a Mule’

Sidney Kalin, Everett Kalin and Jon Kalin summited Half Dome in Yosemite National Park. Courtesy of Sidney Kalin
Sidney Kalin, Everett Kalin, and Jon Kalin summited Half Dome in Yosemite National Park. Courtesy of Sidney Kalin.

Everett Kalin was looking for an adventure to celebrate his birthday. For a man of his age, that might entail going out to eat ethnic food, but the 93-year-old Californian had other plans.

“When you hit your 90s, you think, ‘What would be some things I’d like to do?’” he told SF Gate. “… I guess Half Dome was the thing that most popped into my mind.”

Half-Dome—the monumental mass of granite in Yosemite Valley is no place for faint hearts or knackered knees. For those with apposite fitness, it’s a 14-16 hour endeavor that involves gaining and then losing over 4,000 feet in elevation. Toward the top, cables embedded in the rocks require upper body strength to pull oneself up steep inclines.

Despite all that, Everett was determined, and requisitioned the company of his son Jon, 57, and granddaughter Sidney, 19, for the excursion.

Training hard, Everett made ample use of the days leading up to the trek to walk up and down stairs, and around Lake Merritt.

Then the day of the hike came, and Everett admits that he probably underestimated the difficulty of the beginning half, with plenty of steep paths that he described as slick.

Jon and Sidney helped him along every step of the way, even pushing on his backside during particularly vertical bits.

It took the hikers, who decided to go steady, until the middle of the second day to summit Half Dome’s pinnacle, all the while the people passing them on the trails marveled at the determination and spirit of the geriatric hiker.

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“He’s stubborn as a mule. When he sets his mind to something, he’s going to do it,” Jon said, adding that when they got to the top, “there were tears in everyone’s eyes. It was like paparazzi, everyone taking videos and photos. It was unreal. I’m choking up just talking about it now. The power of seeing him was so much joy and inspiration.”

They almost couldn’t make the summit as the skies were winking with rain and thunder. But the weather held out for three days—enough to finish the whole trek.

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Jon spoke with several rangers along the route, and while some of them had seen some hikers complete Half Dome in their 80s, none of them had ever heard of one doing so in their 90s—indeed Everett might be the oldest.

SF Gate reported that when Everett returned to his home in Oakland, he was absolutely buzzing, and neither sore nor too eager to find another adventure, such was the excitement manifested by the Half Dome hike.

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Teen Finds Whale Skull from 34 Million Years Ago While Fossil Hunting in Alabama

Lindsay and teacher Andrew with the fossil loaded up - ASMS
Lindsey Stallworth, who found the fossil on her family farm – Alabama School of Math and Science

Like many kids, Lindsey Stallworth from Alabama loves a day out to look for sharks’ teeth. But on one such trip, it was a far bigger, far older discovery that awaited her.

Stallworth was with her high school biology teacher, but it was the young student who noticed some small bone fragments embedded in soft rock. Following them up a hill, they turned up the nearly complete skull of a 34-million-year-old whale.

Stallworth has been looking for sharks’ teeth on her family farm since she was little, and after her first biology class at the Alabama School of Math and Science in Mobile, she learned her new teacher, Andrew Gentry, was a paleontologist.

Showing him a plastic bag of some of the teeth she had found over the years, one in particular caught Gentry’s eye, and he was curious to look in the area where she’d found it.

Not long ago geologically speaking, Alabama was covered in shallow seas, and it’s why Stallworth finds shells and sharks’ teeth nowhere near the beach. She invited Gentry to come along on a fossil hunt on the farm, and it’s where they found the staggering discovery.

“To find one that’s this complete is actually very rare,” Gentry told NBC 15’s Andrea Ramey. “We’re very excited by the fact that we got the majority of the skull out and that there is more of the skeleton left to uncover, which could give us the complete animal.”

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The animal is from the family Basliosauridae, a group of extinct, primitive, toothed whales that may have included the heaviest and largest animal ever to live.

Lindsay and teacher Andrew with the fossil loaded up – ASMS

“We didn’t actually know what we’d found at first,” Gentry explained to FOX News. “There was only a small portion of the skull actually exposed on the surface, and we spent about three or four days digging away with very small dental picks and tiny hand chisels until we uncovered more of the lower jaw of the animal.”

It took months to extract the skull from the rock and bring it to the ASMS in Mobile for further examination. The date—34 million years ago—indicates that it’s likely to be a new species of Basilosaurid.

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“I was really overwhelmed, but at the same time I was just full of excitement that I actually get to be here for this project, I get to see it happening in front of my eyes and be a part of it because as a high schooler I didn’t think I’d get to do any of this stuff,” Stallworth told NBC 15.

Next summer, the pair will return to the hill in which they found the intact skull to see if the rest of the skeleton is still entombed.

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She Was About to End it All, Until a Stranger She’d Never Meet Told Her ‘Don’t Jump’

Trieste Belmont - released
Trieste Belmont – released

If the suicide of Anthony Bourdain, the beloved restauranteur and travel personality taught the country anything, it’s that depression is still poorly understood.

In 2014, a young woman named Trieste Belmont was struggling with depression. Her grandmother had just passed, and she was going through a dramatic break-up.

She was teaching a dance class at this time, but without a driver’s license, she relied on a friend to drive her to and from work every week. One day however the friend didn’t show, and Belmont waited for hours before being forced to walk home.

The route she used went over a high bridge. And when she got there, she stopped for a moment.

“I was just having one of the worst days of my life. And I was looking down at all the cars, just feeling so useless and like such a burden to everyone in my life that I decided that this was the time and I needed to end my life,” Belmont told NPR.

“I was sobbing and crying and working up the courage to just go through with it, because I knew at that moment that it was going to make everyone’s lives better.”

At that moment, a driver, whose face Belmont didn’t see, and whose hand she would never shake, passed over the bridge and hollered out of the window.

“Don’t jump,” they said.

It immediately clicked a lightbulb on in her head; that if a stranger could care enough to speak up, then suicide was not the answer.

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She enrolled in therapy, and with the help of her friends, family, and therapist, she is far down the road indeed from that dark and fateful day.

Belmont uses the incident as an example to teach others to be kind to people, as it’s never obvious what they’re going through. The smallest kindness is multiplied by the distance, socially, between two strangers.

SHARE This Inspiring Tale Of Compassion And Recovery With Your Friends… 

“I don’t know how to feel, how to think, how to love. I am a character in an unwritten novel.” – Fernando Pessoa 

Quote of the Day: “I don’t know how to feel, how to think, how to love. I am a character in an unwritten novel.” – Fernando Pessoa 

Photo by: Ayom Rohmansyah

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Kansas Farmer Plants 1.2 Million Sunflowers for His Wife–A ‘Perfect’ 50th Anniversary Gift (Video)

It’s the Kansas state flower and his wife‘s favorite—which made it the perfect gift from her husband on their 50th anniversary.

KAKE-TV News talked to farmer Lee Wilson who sacrificed 80 acres of crops to give his ‘gal’ a gift she’ll never forget.

He said it added up to about 1.2 million sunflowers in total, which he kept a secret for three months after planting them in May, until their big day in August.

“It made me feel very special,” Renee told KAKE-TV in the video below. “It couldn’t have been a more perfect anniversary gift.”

People came from miles around to take pictures and experience the flowers in bloom near the town of Pratt off Highway 54.

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See the news coverage below…

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