Strangers around the country are rewarding a Michigan woman for her honesty after turning in nearly $15,000 cash to the police that she found at a gas station.
It turned out to be the contributions of guests to a pair of newlyweds, who were more than overwhelmed by her integrity.
65-year-old Dianne Gordon has been walking 2.7 miles to and from her job behidn a deli counter every day since her Jeep broke down and she didn’t have enough money to fix it. One day she decided to stop at a gas station for a snack and noticed a plastic bag. Inside there was a lot of money; turning it around there were some greeting cards, and a lot more money.
Just doing what she “was taught to do” the grandmother of two called the police, who sent an officer to take custody of the sum.
Gordon could have walked into any dealership in the state and driven something off the lot that day, but new because the money wasn’t hers, it wasn’t correct to take it.
“If it doesn’t belong to you, you don’t keep it,” she told the Washington Post. “I didn’t do anything special. All I did was return something that didn’t belong to me.”
Police Chief Dan Keller of the White Lake Township Police Department telephoned Gordon later that day to tell her they had used the information on the cards inside the bag to track down the owners. The happy couple was “overwhelmed” by Gordon’s honesty, as was Keller’s wife Stacy Connell.
“As a police officer’s wife, I typically hear the bad things, so this was obviously heartwarming,” said Connell. “I was hoping we could help her get a car, since she could have walked into any dealership and used that money.”
Connell set up a GoFundMe, and in just 6 days it raised four times as much money from people wanting to reward Gordon’s act of selflessness as she had found in the sealed bag that morning.
Grateful for the money and the words of encouragement from all the contributors, who celebrated with comments like “there are still good people in the world,” Gordon said she was stunned by the outpouring of generosity, which at the time of publishing, raised $82,000 and then closed.
On February 8th, Friends of Dianne wrote: “Dianne officially signed for her new Jeep Compass yesterday at Szott M-59 in White Lake Township. Along with the new car, she also got an extended warranty, maintenance, insurance, and plates/tabs.”
Femke Bol breaking the record - retrieved from Twitter
Femke Bol breaking the record – retrieved from Twitter
A 41-year-old world record in women’s track and field stands no longer after a young Dutch speed demon smashed it in front of her home crowd.
Femke Bol took off at the starting pistol at the Dutch Indoor Championships in Apeldoorn, and completed a 400-meter sprint in 49.26 seconds, beating Jarmila Kratochvílová’s world record of 49.59 seconds set in 1982.
“It was because of all the fans here that I ran this record,” said the 22-year-old Olympic bronze medalist.
“Never have I ever seen that many people here. When I crossed the line, I knew that the record was mine because of the noise that the crowd made.”
Kratochvílová’s record was the longest-standing record in track and the second oldest in track and field.
Bol also set a world record for the best indoor 500-meter of 1:05.63 in Boston in her first race of this season. During the last Summer Olympics, she collected a bronze medal in the 400-meter hurdles.
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Quote of the Day: “A gentleman is one who puts more into the world than he takes out.” – George Bernard Shaw
Photo by: Dollar Gill
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A picture of MDMA-assisted psychotherapy in progress at MAPS’ a Charleston Treatment Center. credit MAPS.org.
MDMA-assisted psychotherapy in progress at a Charleston treatment center – credit MAPS.org
Australia’s version of the FDA surprised the nation in early February when they announced that psilocybin and MDMA would be considered medicines, and prescribable by psychiatrists for various mental health disorders by July.
Psilocybin, the psychoactive component in psychedelic mushrooms, and MDMA, commonly known as ecstasy, are two of the most effective treatments for dangerous and persistent mental health disorders like treatment-resistant depression and PTSD.
The current illegality of these substances in most countries makes them difficult to study in large trials, but small ones have been universally successful.
For psilocybin, Johns Hopkins University found it reduced symptoms of depression by 71% when combined with assisted psychotherapy, and prevented any return in symptoms in 54% of trial participants.
In 2021, the Department of Neurology at UC San Francisco also concluded a phase III trial of MDMA-assisted psychotherapy for victims of PTSD and found it improved symptoms by 88%, and smashed the FDA criteria for safe and effective.
The Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) said it considered several thousands of written public submissions before making its decision.
“The number of such submissions is a reasonable indicator of the scope and gravity of the issues for individual and public health,” it said in a statement. “The submissions confirm the need for greater access to alternative treatments for patients with persistent mental health conditions where currently available treatments have not been effective.”
“Prescribing will be limited to psychiatrists, given their specialized qualifications and expertise to diagnose and treat patients with serious mental health conditions.”
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The Bourakébougou pilot hydrogen unit - credit Petroma, released
The Bourakébougou pilot hydrogen unit – credit Petroma, released
In the beautiful West African country of Mali, a huge discovery has a town drawing a flammable gas from the earth that produces loads of electricity without CO2 emissions.
The town called Bourakébougou was prospected by Malian energy entrepreneur Aliou Diallo, who believed the mysterious gas which in the daytime shone with a blue color like sparkling ocean water, and at night like golden dust, could represent a fortune.
In 2012, he recruited Chapman Petroleum to determine what the gas was. It was 98% hydrogen. Months later, Diallo’s firm Petroma had installed a pilot unit to turn the gas into electricity that produced water as an exhaust product, and transformed the village into one with reliable, plentiful electricity.
In the decade since, belief that a potential inexhaustible natural energy source that’s zero emissions saw scientists and energy companies fly into action, scouring academia and the world for more information on underground hydrogen reservoirs
In 2018, a science team published a paper on the Bourakébougou hydrogen well, which concluded from evidence obtained from a dozen exploratory wells in the vicinity that it was “possible to confirm the presence of an extensive hydrogen field featuring at least five stacked reservoir intervals containing significant hydrogen that cover an estimated area well superior to 8 km in diameter.”
Furthermore, the study found that the current estimate of its exploitation price is much cheaper than manufactured hydrogen, either from fossil fuels or from electrolysis.
Cratons and cash
It was long believed, a feature in Science Magazine details, that hydrogen gas reservoirs were extremely rare. It’s rare to find them in places where energy companies drill for oil and natural gas, true, but if one knows where to look, they’re more common.
One such place are Earth’s “cratons,” the oldest and stablest parts of the tectonic plates. Some continents have more than one craton, others like the North American craton, are much larger and so cover most of the continent.
Olivine, a mineral believed to create hydrogen gas underground CC 2.0. דקי
Unlike oil and gas which need thousands of years to form from decomposing organic matter, hydrogen gas is constantly being made underground as water interacts with iron minerals at high pressures and temperatures.
Among these iron minerals is olivine, which through a chemical reaction called serpentinization, steals an oxygen molecule from water percolating down from Earth’s surface to transform olivine into serpentinite, and the water into hydrogen gas.
Deposits of olivine are richest in an underground, cratonic feature called a “greenbelt.” It’s thought that these greenbelts, because of their high concentration of olivine, act as Earth’s hydrogen gas engine.
Hydrogen fuel has huge potential to transition off fossil fuels as it’s the best currently perceived alternative for diesel or kerosene-based transport such as semi-trucks, jet aircraft, and cargo ships.
Currently, the Malian wells could produce hydrogen gas at 50 cents per kilo, one-tenth of the cost of hydrogen created through electrolysis with solar, wind, geothermal, or other green energies.
Ian Munro, CEO of Helios Aragon, a startup pursuing hydrogen in the foothills of the Spanish Pyrenees, told Science his break-even costs might end up between 50 and 70 cents, adding that would revolutionize energy production.
As for Diallo, he started a new company called Hydroma, which now produces electricity for the area via the hydrogen reservoir, and is looking into using it as a means to create green hydrogen via electrolysis.
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Secret cameras have captured the amazing moment two incredibly rare tiger cubs were born at a UK zoo. The tiny twins arrived at Chester Zoo on January 7th to proud first-time parents, tiger mom Kasarna and her partner Dash.
The births have been heralded as a “major boost for the conservation of these incredible animals”, as the Sumatran tiger sub-species is currently Critically-Endangered.
Zookeepers installed covert cameras in the tiger enclosure to capture the births which also filmed Kasarna mothering the cubs. It’s not clear what sex the newborns are—zookeepers don’t feel like checking under Kasarna’s watchful gaze.
“We’ve been closely monitoring Kasarna on our CCTV cameras as she gets to grips with motherhood and her first litter of cubs,” said Dave Hall, Carnivore Team Manager at Chester Zoo. “It’s a real privilege and incredibly special to watch.”
“She’s a great mom and is being very attentive to her new infants, keeping them snuggled up in the den and feeding them every few hours.”
There are only 350 Sumatran tigers in the wild and the only surviving population lives in the Indonesian islands of Sunda.
“One day, the pair will hopefully go on to themselves make a vital contribution to the endangered species breeding program, which is now playing a critical role in preventing these majestic animals from becoming extinct,” said Hall.
“The arrival of the cubs is a real testament to the expertise and scientific work of our teams who, only last year, paired up a female tigress, Kasarna, with a male Sumatran tiger, named Dash,” said Mike Jordan, Director of Animals and Plants at the zoo.
“They were coupled together based on their genetic make-up, age, and character and this news is cause for real celebration among the global conservation community.”
WATCH momma tiger with her new cubs…
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Quote of the Day: “There’s poetry, wonder, and meaning, even in death.” – Steam Punk Protagonist, Castle (TV Series)
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Artists rendition of two neutron stars colliding - CC University of Warwick/ Mark Garlick
Artists rendition of two neutron stars colliding – CC University of Warwick/ Mark Garlick
Astronomers just finished putting into words the first observation of a “kilonova,” or the merger of two neutron stars.
The scientists described it as the “perfect explosion” as it was utterly spherical, and brighter than a billion suns. After the two heavy stars merged, for a few moments they formed a massive neutron star, after which they collapsed into a black hole.
A kilonova is a very unique event in the galaxy since few things are as materially dense as a neutron star. There are plenty of objects more massive—the two neutron stars were only a combined 2.7 times the mass of the sun, but no other heavenly bodies can pack so much matter into so small a space.
In the middle of the merger, there could be fundamental physics that astronomers don’t understand yet. For example, the magnetic field formed around it is the strongest recorded in the universe, and so strong it can distort the structure of atoms.
“It is a perfect explosion in several ways. It is beautiful, both aesthetically, in the simplicity of the shape, and in its physical significance,” said astrophysicist Albert Sneppen of the Cosmic Dawn Center in Copenhagen, lead author of the research published in the journal Nature.
“This is fundamentally astonishing, and an exciting challenge for any theoreticians and numerical simulations,” Sneppen told the Guardian. “The game is on.”
Located in a galaxy called NGC 4993 found in the constellation Hydra, about 150,000 light-years from Earth, the two neutron stars began their life as normal stars orbiting each other billions of years ago. Neutron stars are essentially a star “heart” leftover from a supernova explosion. White, dense, small, and spinning incredibly fast, they are fascinating phenomena.
“Given the extreme nature of the physical conditions, with densities greater than an atomic nucleus, temperatures of Billions of degrees, and magnetic fields strong enough to distort the shapes of atoms, there may well be fundamental physics here that we don’t understand yet,” Cosmic Dawn Center astrophysicist and study co-author Darach Watson told the Guardian.
Their merger was witnessed by the European Southern Observatory’s Very Big Telescope in the Atacama Desert, Chile, in 2017. The outer parts of the new stars were torn and stretched into long thin streamers which probably launched gold, uranium, arsenic, platinum, and other rare elements into the universe.
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After teetering on the edge of extinction almost 50 years ago, the wood stork is now widespread across the southeastern US, and is preparing a flight off the Endangered Species List (ESL).
It’s all in a day’s work for the ESL, the world’s most successful conservation program in history, and the only stork native to North America is just the most recent beneficiary.
The wood stork faced extinction when listed in 1984 under the Endangered Species Act. The population had decreased from 20,000 nesting pairs to less than 5,000 pairs, primarily nesting in south Florida’s Everglades and Big Cypress ecosystems.
The recovery program worked to restore and protect the ecosystems which the four-and-a-half-foot-tall bird calls home.
Today, the wood stork breeding population has doubled to 10,000 or more nesting pairs and increased its range, including the coastal plains of Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and the Carolinas. These long-legged wading birds more than tripled their number of nesting colonies from 29 to 99 in their expanded range.
US Fish and Wildlife explained they’ve adapted to new nesting areas, moving north into coastal salt marshes, old, flooded rice fields, floodplain forest wetlands, and human-created wetlands.
The Fish and Wildlife Service will take comments on the proposal through April 17th, and even if it is delisted, it would remain a protected species under other legislation such as the Migratory Bird treaty.
The scale-headed wader, not-so-affectionately-termed a “flinthead,” hunts fish, frogs, and crustaceans in marshes, swamps, and rivers, and is actually listed globally by the IUCN as a species of Least Concern, due to its range extending across almost the entire South American continent east of the Andes.
“The wood stork is recovering as a result of protecting its habitat at a large scale,” said Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks Shannon Estenoz. “This iconic species has rebounded because dedicated partners in the Southeast have worked tirelessly to restore ecosystems, such as the Everglades, that support it.”
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Dusseldorf University Hospital - credit duesseldorf-health.de
Dusseldorf University Hospital – credit duesseldorf-health.de
The “Düsseldorf Patient”, a man now aged 53, is just the third person worldwide to have been completely cured of HIV via stem cell transplantation.
As in the case of the other two patients, the so-called “Berlin Patient” and “London Patient,” the transplantation was undertaken to treat an acute blood disease, which had developed in addition to the HIV infection.
The Düsseldorf Patient received a stem cell transplant used to treat leukemia in 2013 and has shown persistent suppression of HIV-1 ever since, including during the last 4 years after the patient stopped taking anti-retroviral medication.
“I still remember very well the sentence from my family doctor: ‘don’t take it so hard,'” the Düsseldorf Patient, who had leukemia as well as HIV-1, said in a statement. “‘We will experience together that HIV can be cured!’ At the time, I dismissed the statement.”
Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is a procedure used to treat certain cancers, such as leukemia, by transferring immature blood cells from a donor to repopulate the bone marrow of the recipient.
Scientists now understand that individuals with two copies of the Δ32 mutation in the gene for the HIV-1 co-receptor CCR5; are resistant to HIV-1 infection. The two previous cases of both the London patient and the Berlin patient involved receiving a stem cell transplant from a donor with these unique mutations.
The patient was diagnosed as having acute myeloid leukemia and proceeded to undergo transplantation of stem cells from a female donor in 2013, followed by chemotherapy and infusions of donor lymphocytes.
After the transplantation, anti-retroviral therapy was continued, but HIV was undetectable in the patient’s blood cells. Anti-retroviral therapy was suspended in November 2018 with the patient’s informed consent, almost 6 years after the stem cell transplantation, to determine whether the virus persisted in the patient.
“I very much hope that these doctors will now get even more attention for their work,” said the patient. “I have now decided to give up some of my private life to support research fundraising. And of course, it will also stay very important for me to fight the stigmatization of HIV with my story.”
The authors conclude that although HSCT remains a high-risk procedure that is at present an option only for some people living with both HIV-1 and hematological cancers, these results may inform future strategies for achieving long-term remission of HIV-1.
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Remains of the whaling ship Industry, found by an offshore oil producer Credit NOAA
Remains of the whaling ship Industry, found by an offshore oil producer Credit NOAA
As part of existing requirements for offshore energy production, 600 shipwrecks have been found in the Gulf of Mexico alone by oil and gas producers, however scientists and historians reckon this number is just a fraction of how many are actually out there.
A new proposal to the Federal Register by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management would obligate offshore energy companies to conduct maritime archaeological surveys before undertaking any operations that would disturb the seafloor off the continental shelf.
In 2011, an unnamed energy company spotted a shipwreck near its operations which was excavated last year by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Admin. (NOAA). It turned out to be the 207-year-old whaling ship Industry
The Boston-built Brig was associated with freed-slave and maritime entrepreneur Paul Cuffe, and hunted whales across the Atlantic Ocean, the Caribbean, and the Gulf of Mexico for 20 years. It was lost when a strong storm snapped its masts and opened its hull to the sea on May 26, 1836.
Current methods used to preserve undiscovered shipwrecks involve predicting where they could be found based on historic reports in newspapers and state records, as well as weather patterns and historic shipping lanes, but scientists now believe it’s a method that notably undercounts how many ships are actually down there.
Furthermore, oil and gas companies are currently only required to conduct a survey when they have “reason to believe” that a shipwreck may be present in their area of operations.
“By improving our reporting requirements, we can increase the likelihood of identifying these important resources before they are inadvertently damaged by an [oil or gas] operator and help ensure compliance with the National Historic Preservation Act,” James Kendall, BOEM Gulf of Mexico regional director, told Science.
The new proposal, currently open for public comment, puts oil, gas, and offshore wind all on the same page for survey requirements. Typically working beyond 5.5 kilometers from the shore, these installations must be preceded by an archaeological survey of the area before they begin construction.
Public comment will carry on until mid-April.
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A drone photo of Trench 6 at Lagash - Lagash Archaeology Project
A drone photo of Trench 6 at Lagash – Lagash Archaeology Project
It doesn’t get much older than Sumeria, but even the modern concept of going out to eat was already established 1,000 years before the Great Pyramids were built.
In the ancient Near Eastern city-state of Lagash, the foundations of a tavern were recently found by archaeologists that included an open-air sitting area, and a kitchen complete with a clay oven, clay chiller, and ancient crockery.
One of the oldest areas in Ancient Mesopotamia, Lagash was already inhabited in the fifth millennium BCE. Today it’s located on a mound 4,000 yards in length and 2,000 yards in width.
A joint project of the Univ. of Pennsylvania Museum, Cambridge University and the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage in Baghdad has renewed work at this critically important settlement as recently as 2019.
Using new magnetometry techniques and sedimentary analysis, the renewed work is taking a different approach to archaeology compared to past excavations of the city.
“It’s not like old-time archaeology in Iraq,” says Zaid Alrawi, project manager for the Lagash project at the Penn Museum, in the statement. “We’re not going after big mounds expecting to find an old temple. We use our techniques and then, based on scientific priority, go after what we think will yield important information to close knowledge gaps in the field.”
The Lagash Mound – Lagash Archaeology Project
According to established records of the procession of Mesopotamian city-states, Lagash might be the fourth such large important settlement in the area, following Eridu the first city, Uruk, and Ur.
Among the tavern’s contents were conical eating dishes which contained the remains of fish, a staple among ancient Mesopotamian settlements, and other storage jars that contained food.
It goes to show, according to the archaeologists, that the city wasn’t simply divided into the priestly and royal strata, and the lower classes, but rather contained a middle class as well who could afford to eat out as it were.
“The fact that you have a public gathering place where people can sit down and have a pint and have their fish stew, they’re not laboring under the tyranny of kings,” says Reed Goodman, an archaeologist at the University of Pennsylvania, to CNN. “Right there, there is already something that is giving us a much more colorful history of the city.”
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Quote of the Day: “The consequence of pessimism in the life of a nation is the same as in the life of the individual.” – Helen Keller (It’s Presidents’ Day)
Photo by: Harini Rath, Mount Rushmore, CC BY-SA 4.0
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Goffin’s cockatoos have been added to the short list of non-human animals that use and transport sets of tools. In a study publishing in the journal Current Biology on February 10, researchers show that the cockatoos carry multiple tools to their worksite when the job calls for it.
This type of behavior has only been previously reported in chimpanzees—our closest relatives.
The clever white parrots that hail from the Tanimbar Islands archipelago in Indonesia can use up to three different tools to extract seeds from a particular fruit, according to recent research. Up until now, though, it wasn’t clear whether the Goffin’s cockatoos considered these tools as a “set”; it’s possible that what may look like a toolset is instead nothing more than a chain of single tool uses, with the need for each new tool appearing to the animal as the task evolves.
Now, a team of researchers have used controlled experiments to clarify that the cockatoos do indeed recognize when a job requires more than one tool—and will come prepared.
“With this experiment we can say that, like chimpanzees, Goffin’s cockatoos not only appear to be to using toolsets, but they know that they are using toolsets,” says first author Antonio Osuna-Mascaró, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna.
“Their flexibility of behavior is stunning.”
Osuna-Mascaró was inspired by the termite-fishing Goualougo Triangle chimpanzees of northern Congo, the only other known non-human animal to use toolsets. These chimpanzees fish for termites via a two-step process: first, they use a blunt stick to break holes in the termite mound, and then they insert a long, flexible probe to “fish” the termites out of the holes. In this study, the cockatoos were tasked with fishing for cashews instead of termites.
To mimic the termite-fishing set-up, the researchers presented the cockatoos with a box containing a cashew behind a transparent paper membrane. To reach the cashew, the cockatoos had to punch through the membrane and then “fish” the cashew out. They were provided with a short, pointy stick for punching holes and a vertically halved plastic straw for fishing. (See the video below for footage…)
Seven of the ten cockatoos tested taught themselves to extract cashews successfully by punching through the membrane, and two of the cockatoos (Figaro and Fini) completed the task within 35 seconds on their first attempt. The cockatoos don’t have an equivalent foraging behavior in the wild, so there was no chance that their tool use was based on innate behaviors, and each cockatoo used a slightly different technique.
Next, the team tested the cockatoos’ ability to change their tool use in a flexible manner depending on the situation. To do this, they presented each cockatoo with two different types of box: one with a membrane and one without. The cockatoos were given the same two tools, but they only needed the pointy stick when a membrane was in the way.
“The cockatoos had to act according to the problem; sometimes the toolset was needed, and sometimes only one tool was enough,” says Osuna-Mascaró.
All of the cockatoos mastered the test in a very short period of time and were able to recognize when a single tool was sufficient. However, the birds engaged in an interesting behavior during this choosing phase. “When making the choice between which tool to use first, they were picking one up, releasing it, then picking up the other one, releasing it, returning to the first one, and so on,” says Osuna-Mascaró. The researchers found that when cockatoos did this switching, they performed better on the tests.
Next, the team tested the cockatoos’ ability to transport the tools as a set on an as-needed basis. They put the cockatoos through a series of increasingly challenging trials to reach the boxes: first they had to climb a short ladder while carrying their tools; then they had to fly horizontally with them; and in the final test, they had to carry the tools while flying vertically. As before, the birds were only sometimes presented with a box with a membrane barrier, so they had to decide whether the problem required one or both tools.
Some cockatoos learned to carry the two tools together — by inserting the short punching stick into the groove of the halved straw — when they were presented with a box that required both. This meant they only had to make one trip, albeit while carrying a heavier toolset. Most of the cockatoos transported the toolset on an as-needed basis, further indicating that they knew ahead of time when two tools were required, though some made two trips when necessary. One cockatoo, Figaro, decided not to waste time thinking and instead carried both tools in almost every trial.
“We really did not know whether the cockatoos would transport two objects together,” says Alice Auersperg, senior author on the study and a cognitive biologist at the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna. “It was a little bit of a gamble because I have seen birds combining objects playfully, but they very rarely transport more than one object together in their normal behavior.”
There’s a lot more to be learned about cockatoo tool use, the researchers say. “We feel that, in terms of technical cognition and tool use, parrots have been underestimated and understudied,” says Auersperg.
“We’ve learned how dexterous the cockatoos are when using a toolset, and we have a lot of things to follow-up on,” says Osuna-Mascaró. “The switching behavior is very interesting to us, and we are definitely going to use it to explore their decision making and their metacognition — their ability to recognize their own knowledge.”
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Conservationists at Chester Zoo became the first in Europe to successfully breed a rare Coquerel’s sifaka lemur – SWNS
Conservationists at Chester Zoo became the first in Europe to successfully breed a rare Coquerel’s sifaka lemur – SWNS
The first ever ‘dancing lemur’ to be bred in Europe was born at a UK zoo in a “landmark moment for the species”.
The precious baby Coquerel’s sifaka arrived at Chester Zoo on December 19, weighing just 4oz (119g) following a 130-day pregnancy.
Proud parents Beatrice and Elliot, both aged ten, successfully bred after being transferred from a US zoo as part of a program to protect this critically endangered species.
It is the first time a Coquerel’s sifaka—otherwise known as ‘dancing lemurs’ because of their swinging movements—has been born in Europe.
Adorable pictures and video show the cute baby clinging to its mom Beatrice while she shows it around their enclosure.
The sex of the baby is not yet known but staff say they will find this out when the tiny primate starts to explore on its own.
“It’s really exciting to be the first team of conservationists in Europe to successfully breed this unusual and extremely rare primate,” said Mark Brayshaw, Curator of Mammals at Chester Zoo. “While it’s still early days, both mum and baby are doing great.
Newborn Coquerel’s sifaka lemur born at Chester Zoo, in vital new conservation breeding program with U.S. partners – SWNS
“Beatrice is feeding her new arrival regularly and is keeping it nestled in her fur as she leaps from tree to tree. In a few weeks’ time, the baby will graduate to riding on her back, before branching out and learning to climb trees independently at around six months old.”
“It won’t be long until this bright-eyed baby will be bouncing 20-feet from tree to tree just like its parents.”
A Coquerel’s ‘dancing’ distinguishes it from other lemurs. They maintain an upright posture whilst springing side to side along the floor on their back legs and leap more than 20-ft through the treetops in a single bound.
Listed by the IUCN as critically endangered, the wild population has declined by 30 percent in Madagascar in the last 30 years due to deforestation.
“The birth of a Coquerel’s sifaka in Europe is a real landmark moment for conservation and, importantly, has kickstarted the endangered species breeding program in European zoos for the species,” says Mike Jordan, Director of Animals and Plants at Chester Zoo.
“This could be a real lifeboat.”
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The annual Western monarch count to measure the population of overwintering butterflies shared fantastic news for the second year in a row.
Motivated by the surprising rebound in 2021, volunteers’ excitement continued to grow when early reports hinted at a consecutive year of improved numbers.
Surveying a total of 272 overwintering sites across coastal California in November and December—along with a few sites inside California and Arizona—volunteers tallied 335,479 individual monarchs.
Over 130,000 butterflies were reported in Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo Counties alone. The San Francisco Bay Area also witnessed a comeback from last year with more than 8,000 butterflies reported in surrounding counties.
This season’s results are a welcome reprieve from the dismal total of less than 2,000 individuals counted in 2020—and larger than the 250,000 counted last year.
335,479 is squarely back into what was considered “normal” in 2000-2017.
“We can all celebrate this tally,” says Emma Pelton, a conservation biologist at the Xerces Society which leads the western monarch count. “A second year in a row of relatively good numbers gives us hope.”
That said, the storms that hit California after the count will certainly effect the total. At some sites, butterflies were blown out of their clusters, making them more vulnerable to cold, but other sites, like Pacific Grove, fared relatively well with the majority of monarchs still holding on.
Managing groves to be more resilient to climate change and severe weather may help improve monarch survival and ensure there is habitat long into the future. This can include replacing dead and dying trees, mitigating future flooding, and planting more native nectar sources.
All the small but collectively powerful efforts to re-wild and protect our landscapes for monarchs are producing results. Consider joining the monarch-boosting mission of the Xerces Society.
Here are five actions you can take to support monarch butterflies:
Plant native milkweed.
Plant a diversity of nectar plants, ideally native to your area.
Stop using pesticides, or minimize risk associated with pesticide use.
Call on legislators to support greatly needed policies such as Recovering America’s Wildlife Act and the Monarch Action, Recovery, and Conservation of Habitat Act.
Contribute to community science projects that track monarchs, such as the Western Monarch Milkweed Mapper, Western Monarch Mystery Challenge, and nationwide Integrated Monarch Monitoring Program.
(Scroll down here to see links for these items.)
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Extraterrestrial signatures studied by Peter Ma – SWNS
Extraterrestrial signatures studied by Peter Ma – SWNS
Astronomers have picked up eight mysterious radio signals that could be coming from aliens sending messages with technology more advanced than our own.
The electromagnetic waves were detected using state of the art AI (artificial intelligence), or deep learning.
The signals were sourced to areas surrounding five ‘nearby’ stars 30 to 90 light years away.
The pulses were ‘hiding in plain sight’ among a huge number of recordings from more than six years ago.
An international team developed a computer algorithm to analyze the unimaginably large amount of information in more detail.
Lead author Peter Ma, an undergraduate at the University of Toronto, said his team searched through 150 TB of data from 820 nearby stars. (One terabyte could hold 1,000 copies of the Encyclopedia Brittanica).
“The dataset had previously been searched through in 2017 by classical techniques but labeled as devoid of interesting signals.”
It was collected by the Green Bank Telescope in West Virginia, which is bigger than the Statue of Liberty and part of the Breakthrough Listen project aimed at identifying extra terrestrial activity.
No ‘targets of interest’ were originally indicated. But the new neural network found this to be far from the case.
Manual re-examination also confirmed the findings shared several key characteristics. The signals were narrow band, meaning they had a small spectral width of just a few Hz (Hertz). Natural phenomena tend to be broadband.
“The key issue with any techno-signature search is looking through this huge haystack of signals to find the needle that might be a transmission from an alien world,” explained Dr. Steve Croft, a California astrophysicist with the Breakthrough Listen team (and one of Ma’s research advisors). “Peter’s algorithm gives us a more effective way to filter the haystack and find signals that have the characteristics we expect from techno-signatures.”
Furthermore, the readings, reported in the journalNature Astronomy, were ‘sloped’, indicating acceleration.
They also appeared only when the instrument focused on a specific celestial source, disappearing when it pointed away.
Radio is a great way to send interstellar information. It passes through dust and gas at the speed of light—20,000 times faster than our best rockets.
Many SETI (search for extraterrestrial intelligence) efforts use antennas to eavesdrop on any signals aliens might be transmitting.
“These results dramatically illustrate the power of applying modern machine learning and computer vision methods to data challenges in astronomy, resulting in both new detections and higher performance,” said co-author Dr. Cherry Ng, of the French National Centre for Scientific Research in Paris.
“Application of these techniques at scale will be transformational for radio techno-signature science.”
The researchers are now planning to deploy the algorithm on the SETI Institute’s COSMIC tool in New Mexico, where Jodie Foster heard an alien signal in the 1997 movie Contact. It’s been surveying 40 million stars for ‘techno-signatures’
Since SETI experiments began in 1960 with Frank Drake’s Project Ozma at the same Green Bank Observatory used in this latest work, technological advances have enabled researchers to collect more data than ever.
Quote of the Day: “Yesterday is not ours to recover, but tomorrow is ours to win or lose.” – Lyndon B. Johnson
Photo by: Tim Foster
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An Englishwoman is turning old leather sofas into beautiful handbags as a way to save them from the landfill.
Lisa Crick gets the pre-loved couches donated to her for free, and she upcycles the good parts into totes, messenger bags, and luggage in the space of a week.
She tries to use every part of the furniture that she can, even giving away the cushion stuffing for free to people for use as dog beds or to stop window drafts.
“I am passionate about waste and conscious of how much we do waste,” said the 53-year-old who calls her business ‘New Baginnings’. “When I see people with my bags I get such a sense of pride.”
She sells her totes on a website and in a pop-up store in Dilton Marsh, Wiltshire, England, for anywhere between £25 to £200—and says “the sofa bags are flying off the shelves”.
Lisa tried her hand at sewing in 2018 when her husband, Dave, asked what she was going to do with the waste material from old curtains they had replaced.
“I just said ‘I’ll make luggage’,” she recalled. “Never in a million years did I think I’d be here.”
She turned to Pinterest, tried making denim bags, and continued to play around with different fabrics. The ex-fitness instructor had more time to explore her sewing skills when the pandemic hit in 2020—and by the time lockdown ended she had decided to pursue making bags as a business.
She first sewed with leather after a friend asked if I fancied a leather chair.
“I love the challenge of different fabrics. Every fabric that comes in teaches me something else.
She then started looking on Facebook Marketplace to collect sofas people were giving away. Lisa can make up to nine bags from a sofa and chair—and has also created products, including a line of aprons, from hot air balloon fabric, carpets, and old jeans.
One woman loved the bags so much that she ordered one made from her own sofa.
Lisa Crick / SWNS
She estimates she has saved 20 sofas from the landfills over the last 16 months, and sews 6-10 leather bags weekly to sell from her website—and each bag comes with a label to tell you what it was in its previous life.
“I’m so proud of the bags I produce. It’s not about the money for me. I really enjoy what I do.”
INSPIRE Your Friends With This Upcycling Handbag Hero…
Three-quarters of people who reached 70 years or older agreed in a new poll that the ‘old age stereotypes’ no longer apply to today’s seniors.
In fact, 72 percent of this group feel “years younger” than their actual age and are far more active than they imagined they would be.
The survey of 1,000 people over 70 found a varied diet, laughing daily, socializing with friends, and even an active sex life are what keeps them staying young.
Going out dancing, having a strong skincare routine, and keeping up to date with new tech, are also among the things that help them feel young.
Others swear by hanging out with people younger than themselves (16 percent) and keeping up with new music (9%).
And, one in 20 said they still jump up on supermarket carts to glide around, whenever the spirit moves them.
A spokesperson for Vitabiotics Wellman 70+ vitamins, which commissioned the poll, said: “Getting older no longer means you have to slow down and miss out on the things you love.
“For a long time, a popular phrase was ’40 is the new 30’ – but now, as people are living longer, it’s probably fair to say in many cases 70 can be the new 50.
76 percent of those polled believe people are reaching ‘old age’ much later now than in previous generations—and most of the silver seniors don’t think of themselves as old until they turn 78.
43 percent think they are doing a good job of changing people’s perceptions of what old people are like. In fact, 14 percent of those surveyed by OnePoll feel as many as 20 years younger than the figure on their birth certificate.
sudoku puzzle – SWNS
More than four in 10 tend to feel they age more physically than mentally, with just one in ten feeling the strain in their brain. And 23% believe their grandchildren don’t see them as ‘old’, with 29 percent claiming they are even seen as in-the-know on current trends by young people.
“By making the effort to stay active, both physically and mentally, as well as taking good care of your general health, it really is possible to stave off those feelings of being old for years, or even decades.”
TOP 30 WAYS OVER 70s STAY YOUNG:
Eating well
Keeping your mind active with things like sudoku, crosswords and Wordle
Laughing at least once a day
Socializing with friends
Dressing how you please
Keeping an interest in what your grandchildren, nieces or nephews are doing
Getting lots of sleep
Abiding by the rule of having ‘a little of what you fancy’
Keeping up to date with how to use latest technology
Playing with younger grandkids/nieces/nephews
Taking vitamin supplements
Exercising regularly
Having a good skincare routine
Watching new TV shows
Doing 10k steps a day
Walking the dog
Keeping up to date with popular culture such as museums and exhibitions
Having an active or regular sex life
Hanging out with people younger than you
Stretching/ yoga
Playing in the snow
Regular trips to the pub
Dying your hair
Continuing education or learning something new
Sending a Valentine’s card
Keeping up with new music
Going out dancing
Playing video games
Using social media
Doing pranks on family members
Gliding round on supermarket carts