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Land Was Owned by Billionaires Who Didn’t Allow Access to National Monument – Now it’s Open

The Anchor ranchland, Montana - credit, American Prairie Reserve, released
The Anchor ranchland, Montana – credit, American Prairie Reserve, released

The largest private land conservation project in America recently took a huge step forward to its ultimate goal by acquiring a controversial, 22,000-acre property from recalcitrant owners.

The private ranchland blocked a 3.8-mile access road to a large National Monument in Montana, but its acquisition by the American Prairie Reserve will soon give residents in northwestern Montana and Idaho a straight shot to the Monument’s interior.

American Prairie Reserve has for years been buying and leasing land between the Charles M. Russel Nat. Wildlife Refuge and Upper Missouri Breaks Nat. Monument in Montana to create America’s largest assemblage of wild prairie for the purposes of conservation and recreation.

Stitching together grasslands, water features, ranchland, rolling hills, and woodland, the Reserve has accumulated 603,657 acres, which comprises 167,070 deeded acres and 436,587 leased public acres. Their goal is ultimately to protect and some cases rewild 2.3 million acres—far harder to achieve for citizens than government lawmakers.

Its most recent acquisition was Anchor Ranch west of the Fort Belknap Indian Reservation in central Montana. Located 69 miles southwest of Havre, 22,000 of the acres were private property, whose wealthy American owners leased 45,000 acres nearby for grazing. Together they makeup the 2nd largest land purchase in the organization’s 24 years of history.

“This is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to secure an important piece of ecologically and culturally significant land,” said American Prairie CEO Alison Fox. “But this acquisition is equally important as a way to return public access to the people so they can explore, hunt, and recreate on land that’s been off-limits for many years.”

The previous owners were so reluctant to allow people through their lands to access the Missouri Breaks NM that it spawned lawsuits. Though hunting, fishing, and other activities in the 67,000-acre parcel are not yet permitted, the road to the monument is officially opened.

“We believe that public lands should be in public hands, and are proud to be able to provide more permanent access to this special area of the Breaks,” said Fox. “While we will take some time to develop a comprehensive public access plan for this new property, the previously private stretch of Bullwhacker Road is now officially open to the public.”

Sportsmen and outdoorsmen advocacy groups applauded the purchase and the decision.

SIMILAR LAND AGREEMENTS: Elk Can Migrate Through Private Colorado Ranch After First-of-its-Kind Deal with Conservation Group

The family that leased a 5,400-acre plot for grazing rights under the previous owners will be able to renew those leases, as these agreements generate much-needed revenue to the 501(c)3 so that it can continue its mission of land acquisition. Indeed some 80% of the over 600,000 acres managed by American Prairie are open to grazing, reasoning that with American bison still so few in number compared to previous centuries, large grazers are needed on the landscape to maintain ecosystem integrity.

While much of American Prairie’s habitat base is leased to local livestock producers, nearly all of the 167,070 private acres it manages is open to the public. The nonprofit is one of the largest landowners participating in Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks’ Block Management program for hunters with more than 80,000 acres enrolled.

MORE AMERICAN PRAIRIE: Bison Get 22,000 Acres of Additional Prairie Land to Roam Free – Watch The Spectacular Moment They Were Reintroduced After 150 Years

As the organization grows, so do the facilities and recreational opportunities it provides, garnering interest and visitation from people from all over the country. In 2024, American Prairie set a new visitation record for the seventh year in a row with more than 6,600 overnight visitors to its huts and campgrounds, and over 5,000 visitors at its National Discovery Center in Lewistown, Montana.

GNN has previously reported on the organization’s activities, when in 2020, it acquired Blue Sky Ranch for the purpose of providing vital habitat to a large resident elk heard—currently now managed for bow and firearm hunting.

SHARE These New 100,000 Acres Opened To Public Access…

Bite-Proof Wetsuit Fabric Almost Entirely Prevents Shark Bite Flesh Wounds

A shark testing the materials - provided to Flinders University by Sam Cahir Predapix
A shark testing the materials – provided to Flinders University by Sam Cahir Predapix

Australian shark experts have tested four bite-resistant materials to assess their ability to reduce injuries and blood loss, and found that

While internal and crushing injuries may still occur, bite-resistant wetsuits can now be added to the ‘toolkit’ of measures available to reduce shark-bite risk and resulting injuries, say researchers from Flinders University’s Southern Shark Ecology Group.

Shark bites on humans are uncommon but can severely impact local coastal communities and businesses, especially where water-based tourism and recreation are common, often prompting pressure for better protection strategies for bathers.

Funded by the New South Wales Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development Shark Management Program, the study tested the efficacy of four bite-resistant wetsuit materials (Aqua Armour, Shark Stop, ActionTX-S, and Brewster material) to reduce lacerations incurred from white and tiger shark bites.

Traditional chainmail suits were protective but too inflexible and heavy for activities like surfing or diving, so the team looked towards new materials that offer a mix of heavy and lightweight fibers and tested them in shark territory.

Visiting Neptune and Norfolk Island, to find white sharks and tiger sharks respectively, they conducted 19 boat trips provoking shark bites and testing the materials. After baiting the water with fish guts, the team would quickly substitute in a wooden board over which a gel that replicates the density of human muscle was applied.

On top of the gel was the wetsuit material, and by jerking it back and forth, managed to convince the sharks to chomp down. Once the animals realized they’d been had and swam away, the researchers would pull the wood up and examine the gel to see how much shredding the sharks’ teeth did.

Dr. Tom Clarke and Professor Charlie Huveneers led a team in assessing each material’s potential in reducing injuries from these sharks by quantifying the amount of bite damage across four categories of increasing severity (ranging from ‘superficial’ to ‘critical’) and comparing it to damage on standard neoprene.

Professor Charlie Huveneers – provided to Flinders University by Sam Cahir Predapix

“While there were small differences between the four tested materials, they all reduced the amount of substantial and critical damage, which would typically be associated with severe hemorrhaging and tissue or limb loss,” says Dr. Clarke, from the College of Science and Engineering at Flinders University.

Clarke and Huveneers measured the materials 152 times and found that the tiger shark bites never created a critical wound, and while the white sharks sometimes did, it was still substantially better than normal neoprene, which they also tested.

PREVENTING SHARK ATTACKS: 

White and tiger sharks are responsible for the most unprovoked bites and are two of the top three species with the highest rate of fatal bites. Interactions between humans and sharks continue to rise in frequency globally, with expanding coastal populations and rising popularity of marine activities.

“Our study showed that bite-resistant materials incorporated into wetsuits can reduce damage from large white and tiger sharks (up to 3 meters) compared to standard neoprene wetsuit, even from moderate and severe bites,” says Dr. Clarke.

“While these suits don’t eliminate all the risk (e.g. internal injuries may still occur), our results indicate that they can reduce blood loss and trauma from major lacerations and punctures, potentially saving lives,” said Professor Huveneers, who leads the Southern Shark Ecology Group.

“Our findings will allow for informed decisions to be made about the use of bite-resistant wetsuit materials for occupational activities, as well as enabling the public to make appropriate decisions about the suitability of using these products.”

WATCH one of the sharks kindly testing the material…

SHARE This Important Science For Surfers With Your Friends Who Like The Sea…

In Prisons Across Ohio, Inmates Find Meaning by Saving Orphaned and Injured Animals

Courtesy of The Ohio Wildlife Center’s hospital
Courtesy of The Ohio Wildlife Center’s hospital

In Ohio, across multiple state correctional facilities, inmates are rehabilitating themselves by rehabilitating others: specifically the most fragile and vulnerable of others: injured or orphaned animals.

Tiny birds—victims of a fall from the nest, baby rabbits orphaned by the wheels of a Ford, or little opossums lost when their mother took off at the first sign of danger—they all need a helping hand and careful attention if they’re going to make it back to the woods or the fields.

At Marion and Richland Correctional Institutions, and the Ohio Reformatory for Women, the Ohio Wildlife Center trains interested inmates on how to feed and care for wounded or abandoned wild animals.

Housed in special aviaries or even inside cages within prisoners’ cells, it gives them someone to care for, and in doing so, perhaps it helps them care for themselves.

Between January and June at Marion, 284 animals were brought in for care, and Scott Fuqua a correctional officer and the program coordinator, says wants that to be 1,000 by years end; such is the impact it has had for the facility.

“The effect that this program has on the offenders here is quite remarkable,” Fuqua told Smithsonian‘s Olivia Young. “The men who participate in this program get a chance to care for something other than themselves, and you can see the changes in their behavior. They tend to stay out of trouble, away from substance abuse, and have an increased interest to learn more about the animals they care for.”

That might include even someone like Tierre M., who is well into his third decade of a potential life-sentence for murder. Tierre knows how to care for dozens of different species and situations.

“Some of these birds coming in, it crushes you to see them,” he told Young, who visited the Marion Correctional Institute’s makeshift wildlife rehabilitation center. “Then, to see [one] getting stronger and the strength coming back in it, the life coming back in it, it’s awesome.”

He was one of the first men who began the program after it started over 25 years ago, when the Ohio Wildlife Center, based in Columbus under the direction of its late founder, began expanding the wildlife treatment and rehab volunteer centers into the state’s criminal justice facilities.

Its first stop was more believable, perhaps, than a medium or maximum security prison. In 1994, some of those incarcerated at the Ohio Reformatory for Women began receiving training for how to care for wildlife, and have since helped rehabilitate thousands of orphaned animals under the guidance of the Ohio Wildlife Center.

ALSO CHECK OUT: Prisons Across the World Are Shaving Days Off Sentences for Every Book Read by Their Inmates

“It is important to our women that their time spent with us is transformative, and that it truly does help rehabilitate them,” said Clara Golden-Kent, public information officer for the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction. “That is the beauty of this program– the animals and the inmates are both being rehabilitated.”

“I grew up with animals, and animals have always been a part of my life,” inmate Amanda Sawyer said in 2019. “The program helps us and it helps the animals, so I really look forward to it.”

The Ohio Wildlife Center’s hospital treated some 9,000 animals from almost 200 species throughout the year so far, and many of them will require additional rehab before a release. This work is handled by volunteers, 70% of that is done in the prisons.

MORE CORRECTIONAL PROGRAMS TO TALK ABOUT: Formerly-Incarcerated Artisans Craft Tables Designed by Women in Prison, to Benefit Them When They Get Out

Over 60 inmates at 5 state correctional institutions have so far participated in the project, 52 of them at Marion, the only facility to take birds. These men suddenly have something to protect: their right to continue to see the injured animals and helping them. For one of the project’s bannermen, “Willie,” bad behavior would not only mean losing the access to the program, but losing his pet cockatiel, who joins him on his morning feeding routines.

SHARE This Inspiring Path To Redemption With Your Friends On Social Media… 

Soccer Team from George Clooney’s Holiday Town Donates Tournament Winnings to Flood Relief

credit - Vigili del Fuoco, via X
credit – Vigili del Fuoco, via X

The world-renowned beauty of Italy’s Lake Como has been turned into a disaster area after a rainstorm pummeled the eponymous city and surrounding towns.

With tens of millions in property damage, the local soccer team—currently experiencing a fairytale season—announced ahead of their match on Wednesday night in the Italian Cup that all proceeds would be donated to flood relief.

Manager Cesc Fabregas made the announcement on Instagram Tuesday, while the team was preparing for a match against Sassuolo.

“My thoughts are with everyone in Como today. Seeing our beautiful lake flood and the damage it has brought is heartbreaking,” he added.

“Como is more than just a city to me, it is home, it is family, it is community. To all the people, families and businesses affected, please know you are not alone.”

In Europe, soccer teams move up and down divisions every season based on performance, with the worst teams dropping down a division, and the best teams being promoted to the division above.

After spending 2003-04 in Serie A, Italy’s top-flight competition, Como had a precipitous fall to the point that it had to be liquidated in 2005 after declaring bankruptcy. Almost two decades would go by before the team from George Clooney’s holiday town made it back to Serie A.

MORE STORIES LIKE THIS: ‘It’s Been Amazing’ the Outpouring of Support From Pilots, Business, Celebrities and Government After Hurricane

They did so in no small part thanks to Fabregas’ exceptional coaching, earning promotion in 2024, and with it an enormous increase in revenues stemming from their games being broadcast internationally rather than only in Italy.

That new found wealth hasn’t spoiled the ownership, however, who have opted to hand over the match day revenues to their community as it struggles to clean up the piazzas and roads from landslide debris and flooding.

SHARE This Lovely Display Of Community Connection From The Home Team… 

Quote of the Day: “Wherever a beautiful soul has been, there is a trail of beautiful memories.”

Photo by: JL (A random bench in Minocqua, Wisconsin)

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

 

Good News in History September 26

Roxy cover and Bryan Ferry on stage in 2017

Happy 80th Birthday to singer-songwriter Bryan Ferry whose “elegant, seductive croon” and Mod stylings influenced a generation of glam art rock in the 70s. He was the lead singer and songwriter for Roxy Music, achieving three No.1 albums and 10 singles that reached the top 10 in the UK, including, Street Life, Love Is the Drug, Dance Away, Angel Eyes, Jealous Guy, Avalon, and More Than This... WATCH a great retrospective video…

Scientists Just Made CRISPR 3x More Effective at Treating Genetic Diseases

Illustration of spherical nucleic acid SNA nanoparticle carrying CRISPR cargo – Image by the Mirkin Research Group
Illustration of spherical nucleic acid SNA nanoparticle carrying CRISPR cargo – Image by the Mirkin Research Group

University scientists in Chicago have developed a new nanostructure that triples CRISPR’s ability to enter cells, potentially unlocking even more power to treat genetic diseases.

With the power to rewrite the genetic code that underlies countless diseases, CRISPR holds immense promise to revolutionize medicine.

Now, Northwestern University chemists have unveiled a new type of nanostructure that dramatically improves CRISPR delivery and potentially extends its scope of utility.

CRISPR machinery cannot enter cells by itself. It always needs a delivery vehicle. Called ‘lipid nanoparticle spherical nucleic acids’ (LNP-SNAs), these tiny structures carry the full set of CRISPR editing tools—like Cas9 enzymes.

They’re wrapped in a dense, protective shell of DNA that dictates which organs and tissues the nanoparticles travel to and makes it easier for them to enter cells.

In lab tests across various human and animal cell types, the LNP-SNAs entered cells up to three times more effectively than the standard lipid particle delivery systems used for COVID-19 vaccines, caused far less toxicity and boosted gene-editing efficiency threefold.

The new nanostructures also improved the success rate of precise DNA repairs by more than 60% compared to current methods.

Their study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, paves the way for safer, more reliable genetic medicines and underscores the importance of how a nanomaterial’s structure—rather than its ingredients alone—can determine its potency.

This principle underlies structural nanomedicine, an emerging field pioneered by Northwestern’s Chad A. Mirkin and his colleagues and pursued by hundreds of researchers around the world.

“CRISPR is an incredibly powerful tool that could correct defects in genes to decrease susceptibility to disease and even eliminate disease itself,” said Mirkin, who led the new study.

“But it’s difficult to get CRISPR into the cells and tissues that matter. Reaching and entering the right cells—and the right places within those cells—requires a minor miracle.

“We aimed to maximize CRISPR’s efficiency and expand the number of cell and tissue types that we can deliver it to.”

MORE GOOD CRISPR NEWS:
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Scientists sometimes use viral vectors as the as a delivery vehicle. Naturally good at sneaking into cells, viruses are efficient, but they can cause the human body to mount an immune response, leading to painful or even dangerous side effects.

LNPs, on the other hand, are safer but inefficient. They tend to get stuck in endosomes, or compartments within the cell, where they cannot release their cargo.

“Only a fraction of the CRISPR machinery actually makes it into the cell and even a smaller fraction makes it all the way into the nucleus,” Mirkin said in a media release.

To overcome this barrier, Mirkin’s team turned to SNAs, which are globular — rather than linear — forms of DNA and RNA previously invented in Mirkin’s lab at Northwestern.

The spherical genetic material surrounds a nanoparticle core, which can be packed with cargo. Roughly 50 nanometers in diameter, the tiny structures possess a proven ability to enter cells for targeted delivery. Seven SNA-based therapies are already in human clinical trials, including a Phase 1b/2 clinical trial for solid tumors being developed by Flashpoint Therapeutics, a clinical-stage biotechnology startup.

In the new study, Mirkin’s team started with an LNP core carrying the CRISPR machinery inside. Then, they decorated the particle’s surface with a dense layer of short strands of DNA. Because the DNA can interact with a cell’s surface receptors, cells easily absorb SNAs. The DNA also can be engineered with sequences that target specific cell types, making delivery more selective.

MORE SUCCESS: CRISPR Identifies Commonly Available Drug That Works as Cobra Venom Antidote

“Simple changes to the particle’s structure can dramatically change how well a cell takes it up,” Mirkin said. “The SNA architecture is recognized by almost all cell types, so cells actively take up the SNAs and rapidly internalize them.”

Boosted performance across the board

After successfully synthesizing LNP-SNAs with CRISPR cargo, Mirkin and his team added them to cellular cultures, which included skin cells, white blood cells, human bone marrow stem cells, and human kidney cells.

Then, the team observed and measured several key factors: how efficiently the cells internalized the particles, whether the particles were toxic to cells and if the particles successfully delivered a gene. They also analyzed the cells’ DNA to determine if CRISPR had made the desired gene edits.

In every category, the system demonstrated its ability to successfully deliver CRISPR machinery and enable complex genetic modifications.

RELATED BREAKTHROUGH: 3 Years After CRISPR Treatment 73 of 75 Patients Cured of Blood Disease – FDA Approval is Near

Next, Mirkin plans to further validate the system in multiple in vivo disease models. The university’s biotechnology spin-out Flashpoint Therapeutics is commercializing the technology with the goal of rapidly moving it toward clinical trials.

“CRISPR could change the whole field of medicine,” Mirkin said. “But how we design the delivery vehicle is just as important as the genetic tools themselves.

“By marrying two powerful biotechnologies — CRISPR and SNAs — we have created a strategy that could unlock CRISPR’s full therapeutic potential.”

SHARE THE CRISPR NEWS With Science Geeks on Social Media…

Britain’s Strongest Grandmother Breaks 4 World Records Just Months After Taking Up Powerlifting

Powerlifter Martine Barons competing in Squat at the European Championships – SWNS
Powerlifter Martine Barons competing in Squat at the European Championships – SWNS

‘Britain’s strongest grandmother’ has broken four world records just 18 months after taking up powerlifting “by accident”.

At the age of 65, Martine Barons has become a four-time champion after lifting for Great Britain at the World and European Championships.

The 5-foot 6-inch mother-of-three with four grandchildren started lifting weights for fun back in December 2023 but soon realized she had a natural gift.

She’s since been training five times a week for two hours a day—all while working full-time as an academic researcher at Warwick University.

“I was surprised to find a talent for powerlifting at the age of 63 after being poor at sports all my life.

“I get enormous pleasure from training and competing—and the health benefits of increased strength and mobility are astonishing.”

She first won the European Championships in Finland last June before successfully defending her title again this June in Poland.

Twelve weeks later, she continued her winning streak in the U.S. at the World Powerlifting championship in Idaho. She previously won the 2024 World Championships in Limerick, Ireland, so all together she’s won four major titles in her division since taking up the sport.

Powerlifter Martine Barons on winners platform at European Championships – SWNS

“It does make me happy and quite emotional to think about what I have managed to achieve. I never thought in the space of 18 months I could have achieved this.

“I have to pinch myself sometimes as I can’t believe it’s me. I’m still in shock, as it all started by chance, really.”

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The married woman from Stratford-upon-Avon, in Warkshire, England told SWNS news agency it began as a fun gym session with a work colleague last April.

“I took up powerlifting by complete accident. I went to a gym with a friend of mine who is a physical training instructor and she showed me how to deadlift.

“She was impressed that I could pick up 60kg. Then I picked up 100kg a few weeks later.

“It must be good genetics. I’m unusually strong for my age and gender.”

SWNS

Martine added 10kg to the squat world record to lift 100kg (220 lbs) and 7.5kg to the deadlift world record by lifting 155kg (342 lbs).

She also bench pressed 57.5kg (127 lbs) and added 12.5 kg to the powerlifting total world record by lifting 312.5kg (689 lbs).

Her most recent success was becoming the 2025 world champion in powerlifting, deadlift, and bench press in the Masters 5, Raw, U90kg division.

“I’m a person who needs a goal, so when my friend said you should compete, it was ‘all hands on deck’.

“To be good at a sport for the first time is kind of nice,” she added. “I’ve found I’m good at something, so why not?”

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Her next big competition is the British Single Lifts Championship at the Arnold Sports Festival at Birmingham’s NEC in March 2026.

“I’m proud to be represent my country. It’s not something I thought I’d ever do!”

SHARE THE INSPIRING GRANDMA With Seniors on Social Media…

Feeding Blueberries to Babies May Reduce Allergy Symptoms and Improve Gut Health

Blueberries on the shrub – SWNS
Blueberries on the shrub – SWNS

Feeding blueberries to babies may reduce allergy symptoms and improve their gut health, according to new research.

The ground-breaking clinical trial shows consuming the fruit early in life can improve immunity and support long-term health.

Feeding blueberries to babies as one of their first solid foods may help strengthen their immune systems, reduce allergy symptoms and support healthy gut development, says scientists at the University of Colorado.

To safely introduce the “superfood” to younger infants, the research team recommend pureeing them.

For older babies and toddlers, they say blueberries should be mashed or cut into small pieces to eliminate choking hazards.

The study, published in the journal Frontiers in Nutrition, is the first of its kind to rigorously test the effects of a specific food on infant health using a randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial.

“For parents beginning to wean their infants, it’s incredibly difficult to find solid, research-backed advice on what foods to introduce,” said the study’s senior author Professor Minghua Tang, from the University of Colorado in Anschutz.

“This study is a critical first step in filling that gap by offering real data on how a specific food like blueberries can improve your infant’s health.”

GOOD FOR SENIORS TOO:
When Blueberries and Grapes Are Combined, a Dramatic Decline in Memory Loss and Aging – Study
Blueberries May Fend Off Alzheimer’s: It’s All About The Anthocyanins

The researchers followed 61 babies in the Denver area from five to 12 months of age.

Each day, participants consumed either freeze-dried blueberry powder, or a placebo powder with no blueberries.

Parents were free to feed their children as they normally would, simply adding the powder to their daily routine.

The research team collected stool and blood samples every two months to monitor changes in the infants’ gut bacteria, immune system biomarkers and allergy-related outcomes. They also tracked growth and dietary habits.

Key findings included improved allergy symptoms in babies who consumed blueberry powder, reduced inflammation and signs of a stronger immune response, and “positive” shifts in gut microbiota—with changes considered beneficial for immune health.

“This research supports the idea that blueberries are not only safe for infants but also offer meaningful health benefits,” added Professor Tang.

“Just a few blueberries a day could make a difference in supporting long-term health.”

BLUEBERRIES FOR FERTILITY: Natural Compound in Grapes and Berries May Aid in Fertility, Resveratrol Study Shows

“We view infancy as a critical window of opportunity and what we introduce during this time can have lasting effects as children grow.”

The research team is continuing to explore what other early foods might help support healthy gut bacteria and a strong immune system as babies grow to ensure there’s better guidance in place for parents.

SHARE THE TIP With New Parents on Social Media…

‘Hairy’ Deep-Sea Coral Species Newly Discovered is Named After Chewbacca

New coral species (Iridogorgia chewbacca) named after Chewbacca -SWNS University of Hawaii
New coral species (Iridogorgia chewbacca) is named after Chewbacca – SWNS University of Hawaii

A new ‘hairy’ deep-sea coral species has been named after Chewbacca when researchers were reminded of the Star Wars character after the discovery in the tropical western Pacific.

The coral, named Iridogorgia chewbacca, is known for its long, flexible branches and shiny surface.

As seen in the photos, the nickname is well-earned due to the coral’s furry-looking branches standing upright, like an appearance of the furry Wookie seen in the sci-fi saga.

Les Watling, professor emeritus in University of Hawaiʻi Mānoa’s School of Life Sciences and co-author of the study published in Zootaxa, spotted the coral while reviewing research from colleagues in China.

His earlier work in Hawaiʻi waters and collaborations with NOAA expeditions helped confirm that it was a new species.

“Seeing this coral for the first time was unforgettable,” Watling said in a UH press release.

“Its long, flexible branches and shape immediately reminded me of Chewbacca. Even after years of deep-sea work, discoveries like this still make me stop and take notice.”

Closeup of coral named after Chewbacca U of Hawai’i / SWNS

The coral itself was first recorded in the wild in 2006, but at the time it was not officially described as a distinct species. Only after further research, including genetic analysis, did scientists confirm its uniqueness and formally recognize it as a new species in a peer-reviewed study.

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The discovery adds to scientists’ understanding of the biodiversity hidden in the deep ocean and demonstrates that even long-studied regions like the Pacific still hold surprises.

LET YOUR FRIENDS CHEW ON THIS By Sharing The Fun on Social Media…

“The secret of business is to know something that nobody else knows.” – Aristotle Onassis

Quote of the Day: “The secret of business is to know something that nobody else knows.” – Aristotle Onassis

Photo by: Bruce Mars

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

Good News in History September 25

The OIC logo since 2011 - public domain

56 years ago today, the charter establishing the Organization of Islamic Cooperation was signed in Rabat, Morocco. The OIC consists of 47 members that are either Islamic by law, Arab by lingua franca, or which contain a large Muslim population like Uganda. The opening preamble states that “Muslim governments would consult with a view to promoting among themselves close cooperation and mutual assistance in the economic, scientific, cultural and spiritual fields, inspired by the immortal teachings of Islam.” READ more about the union’s progress over the years… (1969)

Son Receives 24-Year-old Letter Written by his ‘Hero’ Flight Attendant Mom who Crashed on 9/11

Jevon Castrillo and mother Cee Cee Lyles-family photo
Jevon Castrillo and mother Cee Cee Lyles – family photo

The mother’s letter survived four different moves and 24 years—it was destined to reach her son.

Jevon Castrillo’s mother, Cee Cee Lyles, first wrote the letter in March of 2001. Her son had just finished a book end-to-end and Lyles wanted to share the good news with Jevon’s kindergarten teacher, Tammy Thurman.

“Dear Ms. Thurman, Jevon read a book last night that he brought home from the library. He read it from cover to cover. I told him I would write you a note and tell you what an outstanding job he did,” Lyles wrote. “We are very proud of him and will continue to work with him at home. Again thank you for your dedication and courage for the job that you do.” – Cee Cee Lyles

The story took its tragic turn in the fall of 2001 when Lyles was one of the flight attendants aboard United flight 93 that was hijacked during the September 11 attacks. While in the air, Lyles called her husband at home and told him the passengers aboard were going to fight back.

Thanks to Lyles and other heroes on the plane, Flight 93 eventually crashed down in an empty field in Shanksville, Pennsylvania—likely saving thousands of lives at potential targets in Washington, DC.

Cee Cee Lyles in United Airlines uniform – family photo

Jevon lost his mother that day, but Ms. Thurman kept a close eye on the letter ever since. This year, she gave the letter to a news reporter, Jon Shainman, who works near Lyles’ hometown of Fort Pierce, Florida, and he promised to get the letter to her son.

Another Teacher Making a Difference: Preschool Teacher Spots Symptoms and Tells Parents, Leading to Child’s Early Diagnosis With Rare Disease

The exchange took place this past September—24 years later. Thurman even sent along a class photo featuring 6-year-old Jevon.

“As a mom, I know you need to see those words from your mom,” Thurman told Jevon in the video below by WPTV in West Palm Beach… “She was a wonderful woman and you were a wonderful student.”

On camera, Jevon read the letter from his mother that praised his reading prowess so many years ago. A few decades worth of emotions overflowed.

Tears followed soon afterward, and a new connection was made between this life and the next one.

“It’s very touching…” Jevon said. “It seems very sweet and it seems like something she would definitely say, you know.”

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Jevon, now a father himself with a 3-month-old child, said he’ll continue working each day to make his mom proud.

But thanks to the 24-year-old letter that finally made its way home, Jevon can feel his mother’s pride in his hands, anytime he wants.

FLY THIS OVER to Your Own Guardian Angels on Social Media…

Golfer Hits First Hole-in-one, Then Gets a Second the Same Day and Wins $500 From a Scratch-off

By Lotus Head, CC license

This particular day will be tough to beat.

Anton Lawrence has been playing golf for 40 years and never once had a hole in one. Then, he stepped onto the teebox for Hole No. 8 at Cobbossee Colony Golf Course near Augusta, Maine.

Lawrence was playing in a charity golf tournament with his youngest son, his brother who was in town from Louisiana, and his good buddy Mark. His swing on No. 8 felt pretty solid. The ball soared into the September sky and was soon bouncing on a perfect line toward the hole. And then, it dropped in.

Lawrence had his first-ever hole in one – but there were still 10 holes to play.

Magic arrived again on Hole No. 2. Lawrence was playing the course out of order thanks to the tournament’s format.

He teed off on No. 2 and once again, his swing and shot seemed perfectly in sync. The golf ball sailed forward on an optimal path to the hole. This time, it hit the pin and fell in.

Lawrence, who had played for four decades without once feeling the thrill of a hole in one, now had experienced it twice in the same round.

“It was just great,” Lawrence told WGME-TV in Portland, Maine in the video below… “It was a fun feeling.”

Clearly, it was Lawrence’s lucky day. Friends told him he had better play the lottery too. Otherwise, he’d be wasting an epic run of good fortune.

Check Out This Golf Dream Come True: Great-Grandad Gets Hole-in-One at Age 93 – May Be the Oldest Golfer in Britain to Do it

As it turns out, they were right. Lawrence didn’t win the Powerball drawing that night, but the two scratch-off tickets he purchased instantly paid $500, topping off his legendary luck.

And when the day finally ended, Lawrence had another win too.

“We ended up winning the tournament,” Lawrence said. “…So it was a good time.”

It was indeed quite a time and quite a day—and it certainly will be a tough one to beat.

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California’s First Solar Panel-Covered Canal Is Now Fully Online

The 110-foot-long section near Hickman - credit, Turlock Irrigation District
The 110-foot-long section near Hickman – credit, Turlock Irrigation District

Californian power authorities have finished their first solar panel-covered canal project, that will generate 1.6 megawatts.

Overseen and built by and for the Turlock Irrigation District Water & Power overtop a curved section near the town of Hickman, the canal helps irrigate cotton, tomatoes, almonds, and other crops in California’s central valley.

The decision to install the panels was influenced by a landmark 2021 research paper, where scientists at Univ. of California Santa Cruz crunched the numbers and figured that the panels would save 63.5 billion gallons of water from evaporation annually by shading the flowing water.

It also found that for every megawatt of solar energy generated during Turlock’s 290 days of average sunshine, the pairing of panels over canals could replace 15-20 diesel generators used to pump water along the canals.

Called Project Nexus, the work began in October 2022 with funding of $20 million from the state’s coffers.

One of only a handful of arrays worldwide to be mounted over canals, and just the second in the US, Project Nexus will be monitored overtime to see how well the performance matches the earlier estimates.

The first canal-panel combo was installed last October on the Pima-Maricopa Indian Reservation near Phoenix, Arizona.

“Why disturb land that has sacred value when we could just put the solar panels over a canal and generate more efficient power?” said David DeJong, director of the Pima-Maricopa Irrigation Project, which is developing a water-delivery system for the Gila River Indian Community.

Along with preventing evaporation, reducing the land clearance needed for solar farms, and boosting the state’s green energy output, the canal-mounted panels are believed to benefit from longer functional lifespans, as the water underneath keeps the panels’ undersides cooler.

Yet further, without direct sunlight, harmful algae will not grow along the canals, removing the need to clear it by hand or with chemicals.

FINDING ROOM FOR THOSE PANELS: Resourceful Singapore Finds Perfect Place for 86 MW Solar Farm–its Biggest Reservoir

This idea actually began in the Indian state of Gujarat in 2014, when a pilot project covering 750 meters of canal space led to the creation of an entire canal-topped solar plant in Vadodara District, and another one totaling 100 megawatts off the Narmada River.

Researchers in India found that the water running beneath prevented overheating and resulted in an average efficiency increase of between 2-5%.

MORE SOLAR IDEAS: Turning a Landfill into a Solar Powerhouse, Pittsburgh Airport is Now Totally Energy-Independent

There are around 4,000 miles of canals in California, which could produce up to 13 gigawatts of power which would cover around 750,000 homes, or around half of Los Angeles.

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‘God is blessing me so I can bless others’ Woman Donates Lottery Winnings to Charities

Carrie Edwards with her winnings - credit, Virginia Lottery, released
Carrie Edwards with her winnings – credit, Virginia Lottery, released

A Virginia lottery winner immediately donated the entire sum of her winnings to three personally-important charities.

Winning $150,000 after matching 4 of the 5 numbers plus the Powerball number, a $1 dollar Powerplay addition saw her standard $50,000 prize tripled.

Carrie Edwards won the September 8th drawing, but received her gift yesterday.

According to WISTV, the first $50,000 gift was made to the Association for Frontotemporal Degeneration, an organization supporting urgent research and family resources for those affected by early-onset dementia.

The donation was made under Carrie’s name and her late husband, Steve, who died of the disease.

“This cause is deeply personal,” she said, during what happened to be FTD Awareness Month. “I wanted this gift to shine a light on the families who are fighting this disease and on the researchers working toward a cure. God is blessing me so I can bless others through him.”

The second gift was made to Shalom Farms. Based in Richmond, this organization strives to create richer food opportunities to underprivileged residents and low-income earners.

The third $50,000 was given to the Navy-Marine Relief Society, providing several programs and services, such as educational support, to assist active duty and retired Sailors, marines and their families in financial need.

LOTTERY WINNERS GIVING: 

“These three organizations represent healing, service, and community,” Edwards said. “Shalom Farms heals through food and soil, AFTD brings hope through research, and the Navy-Marine Corps Relief Society carries forward the tradition of supporting military families in times of need.”

“All of us at the Lottery are delighted to see this prize being shared with worthy causes, due to the wonderful generosity of Carrie Edwards,” said Lottery Executive Director Khalid Jones.

Edwards hopes the donations make a difference to their respective causes, but also that they inspire similar acts of kindness and generosity among Virginians.

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“Life is best when you are in love.” – Michael Moriarty

Clay Banks

Quote of the Day: “Life is best when you are in love.” – Michael Moriarty

Photo by: Clay Banks

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

Clay Banks

Good News in History September 24

RM8, first production AEC Routemaster, at a bus rally in Ocean Village, Southampton - credit, Murgatroyd CC 4.0. By SA

71 years ago today, the London street scene was made all the more iconic with the introduction of the Routemaster 8 (RM8) from AEC—becoming the double-decker red bus so associated with the British capital. A pioneering design, the Routemaster outlasted several of its replacement types in London, survived the privatization of the former London Transport bus operators, and even spread to other cities in the UK. READ a tad more about this iconic automobile… (1954)

Citizen Scientists’ Makeshift ‘Coffee Filter Arks’ Help Prevent These Sparrows Chicks from Drowning

Saltmarsh Sparrow (Ammodramus caudacutus) at Great Bay Boulevard Wildlife Management Area - credit, Brian Henderson CC 2.0. via Flickr
Saltmarsh Sparrow (Ammodramus caudacutus) at Great Bay Boulevard Wildlife Management Area – credit, Brian Henderson CC 2.0. via Flickr

This is a saltmarsh sparrow, an Endangered species of bird that builds its nest in its eponymous habitat.

A collaboration of citizen scientists working in Jacob’s Point salt marsh in Rhode Island is attempting to save the animal—which they believe will go extinct by mid-century—from drowning in the marsh.

In a state of nature untouched by man, these birds would build their nests in higher-elevation marshes where the threat of flooding was rare. But coastal development over the last 200 years has seen most of the higher-lying marsh cleared, forcing the sparrows to move to lower-lying marshes like Jacob’s Point that are routinely flooded by high tides.

The citizen scientists, under the moniker Needle in a Haystack Society, have for the last 10 years conducted a monitoring/intervention project in Jacob’s Point that has seen them floodproof the sparrows’ nests.

By placing a rigid coffee filter under their conical nests of intricately woven grass, the whole thing, eggs or chicks and all, rises and floats until the high tide or flood recedes. Not everyone they’ve contacted about the project are enthusiastic about it, with one expert pointing out how sensitive the mother sparrows are to signs of nest tampering.

But only half of the Haystack Society’s work is intervening. The other half is monitoring, and unfortunately that has involved capturing footage of nests and chicks being drowned by both floods and the highest tides.

Featured in a documentary from the Guardian newspaper in England, the society have gathered findings that remain unpublished which show the coffee filter “arks” prevent nests from drowning, in all but 8% of instances, and not a single parent has abandoned a nest after the ark was installed.

By contrast, unsecured nests drowned 18% of the time during extreme tides.

The saltmarsh sparrow sits on something like a waitlist for Endangered Species Act protections, but the society is worried that after 9 years on the waitlist, the potential protections will come too late to save the bird.

SALT MARSHES: There’s a Salt Marsh on the East Coast Where You Can See More Than 250 Species of Birds

Although, a previous critic of the society’s interventions, evolutionary biologist Chris Elphick at the University of Connecticut, Storrs, recently co-authored a paper in which he and his team presented findings which showed the decline in the saltmarsh sparrow had slowed, and the population actually increased.

The paper also concluded that sea-level rise, though seemingly more inevitable and apocalyptic than other factors like road density and habitat integrity, was not as good a predictor for the long-term population trends of coastal birds than the latter two factors.

MORE ENDANGERED BIRDS: First Egg Laid in the Wild by Guam Kingfishers in 40 Years–Hanging on to Survival Thousands of Miles from Home

In that sense, better habitat protections—like those that might prevail from an Endangered Species Act listing—could yet save this extremely specialized songbird from singing shanties in Davy Jones’ Locker.

And if that were the case, then the dozens of chicks who were made safe from rising tides by the coffee filter arks would be able to carry on building their curious nests long into the future, with the citizen scientists of the Needle in a Haystack Society to thank for it.

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112-Million-Year-Old Amber Samples Preserve a Snapshot of an Ancient Forest

A portion of spider web in a studied amber sample. Enrique Peñalver
A beetle in amber sample – Credit: Senior Researcher Enrique Peñalver

In the blockbuster 1993 film Jurassic Park, Steven Spielberg’s screenwriters tell the story of scientists who recover dinosaur DNA from a mosquito entombed in amber and use it to clone the animals back into existence.

Today, a recent paleontological discovery comes to the very doorstep of that fictional tale, bringing much of the excitement, short of the impossibilities.

A fly trapped in a studied amber sample. Mónica Solórzano-Kraemer

Two amber samples: one from below ground and one from the limbs of an ancient tree, show incredible 3D snapshots of life from 112 million years ago. 6 orders of arthropods are seen inside, including beetles, flies, and spiders encased within.

This entomological time capsule is only possible because of amber, a tree resin that when exposed to millions of years will harden into a crystalline structure. Sold as jewelry today, it also sometimes contains “bio-inclusions.”

“Amber essentially preserves the exoskeletons of small organisms from the past. The preservation of these outer structures is so excellent that, under a microscope, they can look like freshly dead organisms, yet they are millions of years old,” Xavier Delclòs, a paleoentomologist from the University of Barcelona and first author on the study, told Reuters.

To be fossilized, an organism needs to be made of sterner stuff than chitin—the material that forms the exoskeletons of insects—and Delclòs would later tale Gizmodo that without amber we’d never have the opportunity of seeing these prehistoric invertebrates.

Discovered in Ecuador, the amber dates to the period when all the continents were joined together into the giant Gondwana super continent.

A portion of spider web in a studied amber sample. Enrique Peñalver

In the amber piece that was exposed to air, creatures that come from the orders of flies and mosquitoes, beetles, and wasps/ants were all identified, as well as the silken strands of a spider’s web, if it can be believed.

They are just the second-ever bio-inclusions found from an amber in the Southern Hemisphere. They date to a period when the eons-long relationship between the flower and the pollinating insect first began, and the scientists who published the study on the examinations of the ambers believe they may help reveal more about this relationship at the very dawn of its development.

MORE AMBERS:

In Jurassic Park, the one fiction in the premise is that DNA could remain stable inside a mosquito encased in amber for tens of millions of years. The blood-sucking bug found in these ambers will almost have certainly fed on dinosaurs, but don’t be fooled into thinking your children will get to go see T. rex at a zoo, the delicate DNA will have long turned to nothingness.

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