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More Physical Activity, Less Screen Time Linked to Better Executive Function in Toddlers

Robert Collins - Unsplash

A new study found that 24-month-old children who spent less than 60 minutes looking at screens each day and those who engaged in more physical activity had better executive function.

The toddlers’ program was designed according to the American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines for physical activity, and their executive function was measured against a second group who did not meet these guidelines.

The study’s aim was to see the difference in the toddlers’ abilities to remember, plan, pay attention, shift between tasks, and regulate their own thoughts and behavior, a suite of skills known as executive function.

“Executive function underlies your ability to engage in goal-directed behaviors,” said University of Illinois professor Naiman Khan, who led the study.

“It includes abilities such as inhibitory control, which allows you to regulate your thoughts, emotions and behavior; working memory, by which you are able to hold information in mind long enough to accomplish a task; and cognitive flexibility, the adeptness with which you switch your attention between tasks or competing demands.”

Through its Bright Futures initiative, the AAP recommends that children spend less than 60 minutes looking at screens each day, engage in daily physical activity, consume five or more servings of fruits and vegetables and minimize or eliminate the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages, which isn’t half-different from what the guidelines ought to be for adults by the way.

Previous studies have linked adherence to guidelines for physical activity levels, screen time and diet quality with executive function in school-aged or adolescent children.

“We wanted to test the hypothesis that healthy weight status and adherence to the AAP guidelines for diet and physical activity would extend to greater executive function in 24-month-old children,” said Arden McMath, a graduate student of Khan’s and co-author of the paper.

“We focused on an earlier period in child development to see whether and how early in life these relationships begin,” she said.

The families of the 356 toddlers in the new research are participants in the STRONG KIDS 2 cohort study at the Univ. of Illinois, a long-term look at the interdependent factors that predict dietary habits and weight trajectories of children who are followed from birth to 5-years-old.

The study uses parental surveys and data on the children collected at eight time points over the five years, including when the children are 24-months-old.

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“The surveys asked parents to report on several aspects of their child’s daily habits, including how much time they looked at screens, how physically active they were, whether they had at least five servings of fruits and vegetables and whether they refrained from drinking sugar-sweetened beverages,” McMath said.

The parents also responded to a standard survey designed to measure executive function in toddlers. These questions asked them to evaluate their child’s ability to plan and organize their thoughts, regulate their emotional responses, inhibit impulses, remember information and shift attention between tasks.

The team then used a structural equation modeling technique to make their assessments of the data.

“We found that toddlers who engaged in less than 60 minutes of screen time per day had significantly greater ability to actively control their own cognition than those who spent more time staring at phones, tablets, televisions and computers,” McMath said. “They had greater inhibitory control, working memory and overall executive function.”

MORE HEALTHY KIDS: New Study Shows Garden Areas Improved the Immune Systems of Daycare Children in Only a Month

Toddlers who got daily physical activity also did significantly better on tests of working memory than those who didn’t, the researchers found.

“The influence of engaging in healthy behaviors on cognitive abilities appears to be evident in early childhood, particularly for behaviors surrounding physical activity and sedentary time,” Khan said.

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Hero Honeymooners Rescue Sleeping Babies from Burning Nursery in Spain: ‘Instinct Took Over’

courtesy of Doran Smith
courtesy of Doran Smith

Picture it: you and your spouse are on your honeymoon in Europe, you see a burning building, you decide to be heroes and run inside through the smoke and you end up in a room with panicking nurses, 20 sleeping infants, and no one speaks English.

Incredibly, that was the situation Rhode Island honeymooners David Squillante and Doran Smith found themselves in last month in Barcelona.

The newlywed 38-year-olds were on their way to tour a park when they saw a group of women standing around panicking next to a doorway, out of which was wafting thick smoke.

“I saw a flame coming out of the doorway, next to the door that these women had come out of,” Smith said. “So, I said ‘Oh my God there’s a fire.'”

Who knows what possessed the non-Spanish speaking honeymooners to run inside the burning building, as there was nothing on the exterior that hinted at the precious cargo within; they could have just been running into a normal apartment building.

READ ALSO: Europe Realizes its Shepherds and Ranchers Are Key in Preventing Wildfires

They went in all the same, and though neither Squillante nor Smith understood what was probably being explained to them, they found themselves communicating in a “universal language” before long.

They entered a room that had not caught fire and realized they were in a nursery of all places.

“Instinct took over,” Squillante said. “I found myself looking at 15, 20 babies sleeping, and immediately just kind of lined everyone up and we started grabbing them, putting them into the crib. It was like probably like ten minutes, but it seemed like an instant, but it turned out to be OK.”

MORE RESCUE STORIES: A Hero Just Passing By Saves Young Mom and Son From Dying in Wyoming House Fire

After everyone was out safely, the pair continued their honeymoon. According to an NBC affiliate they went right on to take the park tour they had planned.

People Magazine reports that Squillante is now exploring the possibilities to be a volunteer firefighter in their home town of Bristol.

WATCH the local news video below… 

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Kindhearted Boy Used His Birthday Money to Start a Food Bank in His Garden Shed

Isaac Winfield, 11 - SWNS photo
Isaac Winfield, 11 – SWNS photo

A kind-hearted 11-year-old boy used his own birthday money to launch a foodbank service which he runs from his garden shed.

Isaac Winfield fills bags of groceries which have been donated and hands them out
to the needy around his hometown.

Since starting the foodbank in 2020, the service has grown so much that Isaac’s family bought a shed to store the hundreds of donated items.

Well-wishers can now donate food or ask for supplies by contacting the schoolboy via his Friend’s of Isaac Food Bank Facebook page.

“We’d always donated to food banks, and during the pandemic he would take food parcels into school which would be given to people in need,” said his very proud mom Claire, who added that recently Isaac had moved to a specialist school which didn’t have a similar program, leaving him depressed that he couldn’t continue to help people.

“Being the resilient little lad he is, he said ‘it’s alright, we’ll give them food at my house,’” said Claire. “I was laughing, but he had just broken his arm so I let him do it to cheer him up. I doubled what money we gave them normally for food parcels and he went off to Aldi.”

Isaac Winfield in his van-SWNS-Friends of Isaac Food Bank

His parents give him a lift in the van at weekends which has been customized with Isaac’s instantly recognizable rainbow logo, but sometimes it’s Isaac who takes the bags of groceries to people on foot.

Those in need are also able to go to Isaac’s foodbank shed in his home town of Redditch, Worcester, which is open 24-hours-a-day, and help themselves.

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“With a little bit of help he put all the food he bought in a little greenhouse with some lights and started offering it from there,” Claire remembers. “Someone spotted it and put it on one of those Facebook community sites and it went mad. The greenhouse lasted four weeks before I had to go and get a shed because we ran out of room.”

Now Isaac is planning to expand the service and has a local charity sponsoring him to open a foodbank in the town. He has attracted the help of big sponsors like Morrison’s and a local charity called Building Bridges to keep his foodbank operational.

Isaac Winfield’s house – SWNS-Friends of Isaac Food Bank

YouTuber Mark McCann donated the aforementioned van, fully-taxed and insured, to help get the foodbank mobile.

“We have the big shed on the driveway and operations will continue from the house. Luckily we have a big driveway.”

Isaac was born with a rare chromosome disease, and the food bank has helped “massively” with his confidence, as he can’t read or write.

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“For his 11th birthday he just wanted foodbank donations and [the shed] was absolutely rammed,” said Claire. “He just wanted to get as many donations in as possible to help as many people as he can.”

Isaac has now been nominated for a local business award and hopes to open his second foodbank in the town next month.

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Tribute to Yu-Gi-Oh Creator Who Drowned While Trying to Save Child, Mom And U.S. Soldier: ‘He’s A Hero’

Takahashi Kazuki (photo by StGerner) and Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters (Konami Cross Media NY). Put together by Wren Graves.
Takahashi Kazuki (photo by StGerner) and Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters (Konami Cross Media NY). Put together by Wren Graves.

It became known recently that a Japanese anime icon risked all his fame and fortune to try and save a pair of drowning snorkelers.

Kazuki Takahashi, creator of the manga, anime, and trading card game Yu-Gi-Oh! was found to have died on July 4th from drowning during a rescue attempt off Okinawa Island, which did save an 11-year-old girl, her mom, and a 39-year-old U.S. soldier.

Tributes flooded social media for the “hero” Takahashi, alongside sworn statements from witnesses and fellow rescuer U.S. Army Major Robert Bourgeau of Missoula, Montana.

“This guy had a huge impact on the world,” said Bourgeau, 49. “He’s a hero, he died trying to save someone else.”

At around 2 PM, Bourgeau was getting read to teach a scuba-diving lesson at a popular swimming area called Mermaid’s Grotto, in Yomitan, when he was alerted to the girl and the soldier, who had been carried out in a rip current.

Bourgeau also recalled heavy 6-foot surf crashing on their heads, creating a whirlpool effect from which they couldn’t escape. Bourgeau and one of his students made their way towards them along a strip of shallow water, before the Major jumped in to rescue the girl, becoming completely exhausted in the process. He also encountered the girl’s mother, who had evidently tried to help and become trapped in the process.

It was at this point that witnesses saw Takahashi also enter the water, swimming out to the same spot to try and help, completely unbeknownst to Bourgeau.

Bourgeau managed to get the girl to safety, but returning to rescue his comrade proved too much. Turning back, he managed to direct the struggling soldier to safer waters.

“I didn’t think I was going to make it,” the 49-year-old said.

Takahashi’s body was later found on a beach in Nago City, the currents evidently had been too much for the 60-year-old as well.

Takahashi started his career in Manga, or Japanese comic books the 1980s, before creating the story of a kind, spikey haired teenage boy named Yugi Mutou, who finds a pyramid-shaped puzzle box in his grandfather’s antique shop that contained the soul of an ancient Egyptian pharaoh who also happened to be grandmaster of a magical card game.

This later developed into an actual card game, and one of the most popular anime series in history.

“We will always remember him with every single card we play, trade or collect,” wrote one fan on twitter “R.I.P King of Games.”

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“Poetry is what helps me remember that even in my fragments, I am whole.” – Jennifer Huang

Quote of the Day: “Poetry is what helps me remember that even in my fragments, I am whole.” – Jennifer Huang 

Photo by: Michael Krahn

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

70 Vultures Released Into Bulgaria to Start Wild Population After Dying Out 60 Years Ago

Hristo Peshev ©FWFF
Hristo Peshev ©FWFF

Two female Cinereous Vultures flew into the wild skies of Bulgaria—the culmination of a 7-year project that successfully completed its mission on September 3rd, “World Vulture Day”

At the end there were only two of them left in the conservation aviary in the Vrachanski Nature Park in the western part of the Balkan Mountains in Bulgaria.

Finally, these last two females were released as part of the EU-financed LIFE-Project which sought to repopulate the black vultures after the Bulgarian population had died out over sixty years ago.

Since 2018 around 70 young black vultures have been released in various regions of the Balkan Mountains. “After all the reintroductions of recent years, the release of these last two female vultures was still something special,” said Hristo Peshev from the Bulgarian partner organization the Fund for Wild Flora and Fauna and one of the biologists involved in the project.

“It will be exciting to see how the vultures acclimatize to their new environment. I am confident that they will be successful, like the majority of the other vultures released into the wild,” Peshev told the nonprofit Euronatur.

Despite isolated setbacks, the reintroduction project has been “very successful”, with several pairs of the reintroduced birds already raising offspring, both this year and last year—earlier than experts had expected.

RELATED: Ospreys Hunted to Extinction Are Now Breeding Across England for First Time in 200 Years: ‘A Tremendous Success’

Cinereous vultures (Aegypius monachus) are amongst the giants of the European bird world. With a length of a good meter or more (3-feet), and a wingspan nearly as long, these (and the bearded vulture) are Europe’s largest birds of prey – and some of the rarest.

Today on the continent there are only about 1,000 pairs of the majestic bird, most of them in Spain. Its reintroduction in the Bulgarian Balkan Mountains will boost the southeastern European population.

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Truly, in the last few years, a foundation for the permanent return of the carrion eaters, also known as black vultures, has been laid.

EuroNatur and its local partners will be taking measures to protect the vultures in the long term, with feeding stations maintained and cooperation from farmers in the region continuing.

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He Taught Parents How to Play Drums and Bass So he’d Have People to Jam With–Now They Have Album–WATCH

A New Zealander taught both his parents how to play the drums and the bass so he would have people to jam with—and now they have an album out.

Ryan Stokes couldn’t have his friends over to jam during lockdown so he decided to teach his parents how to play instruments.

Inspired by The White Stripes, a two-piece rock band, the 20-year-old guitarist initially taught his 55-year-old mom to play the drums. Two months later, his 60-year-old father picked up an electric bass for the first time.

The family appropriately named their band ‘Mommas Boy’, with Ryan crushing songs as the frontman vocalist, while Andrea Stokes keeps time on drums and Lyndon plucks the bass—all with with a lot of competence.

The trio has been practicing three to four times-a-week and they now have an album out called ‘Who Would Have Thought’, released in April on the band’s Spotify account.

“They were pestered to start the band by their very eager son,” joked Ryan, who was born in Hamilton, Scotland. “I had nothing to do during lockdown and wanted to play music.

“Mum loved the White Stripes—especially Meg White and was very excited to learn to drum like her.”

After a quick lesson on the drum kit in the garage, Ryan says “Sure enough she had a strong beat within an hour and was ready to play within three hours.” (See the video at the bottom…)

Both of the middle-aged newbies adapted to the rockstar life very quickly, appearing in videos on TikTok hours after picking up instruments for the first time.

The group quickly won the hearts of the internet, accumulating 72,000 followers on TikTok since their formation— with 700,000 views.

Mommas Boy plays Nirvana, Creedence, Queen, original songs, and-of course-The White Stripes.

Ryan, a student, and his parents, who both work in local government, are shocked by how popular Mommas Boy has become, and have been loving the support they get online.

“Mum is known as the ‘mumma drummer’ around her work and dad is constantly blown away by the response online, after initially thinking social media was a very negative environment,” Ryan told SWNS news.

WATCH: 81-Year-old Wows Nursing Home With Incredible Impromptu Performance of Righteous Brothers Classic

The band, with no record label yet, uses Ryan’s bedroom as a studio—and by using music editing software, they put together their album in just a month.

Since their big break online, the band also has also played live shows—with lots of jittery nerves leading up to their first gig.

“Mum constantly said that she was not good enough to play a live show and Dad was not optimistic, but after we completed our first show, they were overjoyed and could not wait for the next one.”

An incidental benefit now is that the family gets to spend more time together, and derive even more out of the music they all love.

“We always bonded over our shared love of music. Now we can bond over our shared love of making music,” quipped Ryan.

LOOK: Adorable Dash-cam Video Shows Father and 6-yo Belting Out Sinatra’s ‘Me & My Shadow’

“Our musical taste is the exact same, I was brought up listening to Dad’s live concert DVD’s and vinyl. I believe there is footage of me being brought home from the hospital after just being born and you can hear The Rolling Stones in the background.”

So far, according to Ryan, the band members haven’t had any disagreements over their music, but Andrea is turning out to be quite the rockstar.

“She seems to have the biggest fan base out of all of us on TikTok. Also, I feel like if we ever toured, she would be the one to drive a car into a swimming pool!”

WATCH the impressive trio play a selection of their tunes…

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World’s First Bed-and-Breakfast Powered By Electric Cars Offers FREE Luxury Nights in English Countryside

Hotel Hyundai concept illustration

The world’s first car-powered bed-and-breakfast has opened to the public—with all power supplied by electric vehicles for a true off-grid experience.

Situated outside of London in Essex, England, the secluded accommodation offers a quiet escape for two to the countryside—and the luxury stay is free for whichever winners are picked at random.

Guests will enjoy a local menu and mixology-curated drinks using innovative and sustainable ingredients sourced within Essex—all served in an outdoor bar and dining area near a fireplace amid a forest.

The new concept, Hotel Hyundai, was launched by the car brand alongside broadcaster Grace Dent to introduce their new electric vehicle. The whole experience will be powered through the Hyundai IONIQ 5’s V2L feature, which harnesses the car’s electricity to power other appliances through an adaptor.

The three-week pop-up hotel giveaway comes in the wake of new poll showing 44 percent would like to go on more short staycations, rather than traveling long distances.

With the public citing sustainability, supporting local businesses, and stress-free travel, UK travelers will find it all in this pop-up vacation destination.

Grace Dent, curator of the hotel concept, says, “We’re looking for unique, memorable stays now, more than ever, and this is a delicious blend of innovation, luxury, and comfort that gets you thinking.

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Another perk is an outdoor cinema that will give guests the opportunity to kick-back, relax and unwind.

Site of next week’s Hotel Hyundai

53 percent of respondents to the OnePoll survey would also like to invest their vacation cash in local UK economies rather than abroad—and half agreed nothing beats a holiday in the great British countryside.

Hotel Hyundai is open for 14 nights from October 19 to November 5 to members of the public who’ve won a stay. Sign up by October 19 and choose three preferable dates.

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The stay includes one night in the deluxe woodland cabin, surrounded by 200 acres of walking trails around a working farm with ancient forests and a babbling brook.

Hotel Hundai

Your 3-course menu for dinner will be personally prepared, with your food preferences collected in advance, along with a full breakfast.

They’re giving away 14 one-night complimentary stays—but you need to fill out the entry form by October 19 at the vacation website, Kip Hideaways, which offers ‘small places with soul’. See all the details, and sign up, on their website.

“This hotel concept has been possible thanks to IONIQ 5 and the supply of power, where an adapter from the car provides a socket which domestic appliances can be plugged into,” said Ashley Andrew, from Hyundai Motor UK.

RELATED: UK Residents Can Win a Good Night’s Sleep in World’s First BnB to Offer Actual Counting of Sheep

“The whole experience demonstrates the practicality of this pioneering technology, and we hope the concept inspires more people to go off grid.”

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“It cannot be a mistake to have cared. It cannot be an error to have tried. It cannot be incorrect to have loved.” – Nikki Giovanni

Quote of the Day: “It cannot be a mistake to have cared. It cannot be an error to have tried. It cannot be incorrect to have loved.” – Nikki Giovanni 

Photo by: Gus Moretta

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

The Humble Potato Could Hold the Key to Beating Hospital Superbugs as Well as Crop Diseases

EastWest Food Rescue group / Facebook
EastWest Food Rescue group / Facebook

The humble potato, which contains a natural antibiotic that destroys harmful bacteria, could hold the key to beating hospital superbugs in the future, according to research from a multinational team of researchers in Europe.

The compound, called solanimycin, combats a host of fungi that wreak havoc on crops. In these recent experiments, it killed Candida albicans, which causes possibly-dangerous infections, like thrush in women.

Most current therapeutic antibiotic compounds originate from soil microbes—and the solanimycin findings show that plant-based microorganisms should get a closer look.

The research team see the discovery as an encouraging sign that plant pathogens could be coaxed to make compounds that may be used not only against plant fungi in crops that have developed resistance to treatments, but also against the growing threat of antimicrobial resistance in humans.

“We have to open to the exploration of everything that’s out there to find new antibiotics,” said Microbiologist Rita Monson, Ph.D., at the University of Cambridge who co-led the study.

This week in mBio, the team reported the discovery of solanimycin, initially isolated from a pathogenic bacterium that infects potatoes, that appears to be produced by a broad spectrum of related plant pathogenic bacteria.

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The pathogenic potato bacterium Dickeya solani, which produces solanimycin, was first identified more than 15 years ago—and researchers at Cambridge have been investigating its antibiotic potential for a decade.

“These strains emerged rapidly, and now they are widely distributed,” said the paper’s co-author, molecular microbiologist Miguel Matilla, Ph.D., at the Spanish Research Council’s Estación Experimental del Zaidín, in Granada.
.
Solanimycin isn’t the first antibiotic discovered from the microbe. In previous work, researchers found that D. solani produces an antibiotic called oocydin A, which is highly active against multiple fungal plant pathogens.

Those previous discoveries, together with the analysis of the genome of the bacterium, hinted that it might synthesize additional antibiotics, also with antifungal potential.

That hint paid off: Matilla, Monson, molecular microbiologist George Salmond found that when they silenced the genes responsible for the production of oocydin A, the bacterium continued to show antifungal activity.

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That observation led to the identification of solanimycin and the identification of the gene clusters responsible for the proteins that make the compound.

The bacterium uses the compound sparingly, producing it in response to cell density. An acidic pH environment—as that present in a potato—also activates the solanimycin gene cluster. Monson said it almost looks like a clever protective mechanism.

“It’s an antifungal that we believe will work by killing fungal competitors, and the bacteria benefit so much from this,” said Monson. “But you don’t turn it on unless you’re in a potato.”

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Monson said the researchers have begun collaborating with chemists to learn more about the molecular structure of solanimycin and better understand how it works.

She and Matilla hope for further testing of the compound using plant and animal models—and will focus near-term on trying to use this antibiotic antifungal for crop protection.

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Researchers Found Ancient Village Remarkably-Preserved by Vesuvius Eruption, 2,000 Years Before Pompeii

Historic Pine of Naples overlooking Mt Vesuvius in 19th century, by Giorgio Sommer
Historic Pine of Naples overlooking Mt Vesuvius in 19th century, by Giorgio Sommer

2,000 years before Pompeii, an Early Bronze Age village was almost perfectly preserved— then hidden for centuries—after Mount Vesuvius erupted one autumn day.

Uncovered during the construction of a high-speed railway near Naples, Afragola offers a rare glimpse into life in the Campania region during harvest time.

Like Pompeii, Afragola was encased in many feet of ash, mud, and silt, which preserved the site so well that archaeologists could identify the season in which the disaster occurred from the remains of a food storage area.

Covering an area over 1.2 acres (5,000 square meters), the site also features well-preserved footprints of fleeing adults and children.

“The site is exceptional, because Afragola was buried by a gigantic eruption of Vesuvius and it tells us a lot about the people who lived there, and the local habitat,” said Dr. Tiziana Matarazzo of the University of Connecticut.

“In this case, by finding fruits and agricultural materials, we were able to identify the season of the eruption, which is usually impossible.”

The course of the eruption happened in various phases, starting with a massive explosion that sent debris away from the village, to the northeast.

This gave the villagers a chance to escape, which is why preserved footprints were discovered, and not bodies as at Pompeii, before the wind changed and ash and sea water blew over the village—mainly dispersed to the west and northwest up to a distance of about 15 miles (25km) from the volcano.

Vesuvius footprints from study by Dr. Tiziana Matarazzo of University of Connecticut / SWNS

“This last phase is also what completely buried the village. The thick layer of volcanic material replaced the molecules of the vegetal macro-remains and produced perfect casts in a material called cinerite.”

These conditions meant the materials were resistant to degradation, even after several millennia.

“Leaves that were in the woods nearby were also covered by mud and ash which was not super-hot, so we have beautiful imprints of the leaves,” added Dr. Matarazzo.

The village offers a rare glimpse at how people lived in Italy in the Early Bronze Age, according to the researchers, who published their most recent findings in the Journal of Archaeological Science.

“In Campania at this time, we have huts, but in Greece, they had palaces. These people probably lived in groups with maybe one or more persons as the head of the group.”

There was also one storage building in the village where all the grains and various agricultural goods and fruits were gathered from nearby woods to be stored and likely shared with the whole community.

Unlike the other huts in the village, the plant food warehouse caught fire, probably from a pyroclastic flow. It collapsed and carbonized the stored vegetables inside, which the villagers had amassed from the nearby woods, preserving the remains for thousands of years.

Imprints of leaves found at the base of trees and ripe fruit also point towards the harvest season.

Matarazzo said the Bronze Age Campanian Plain was home to a rich diversity of food sources, including a variety of grains and barley, hazelnuts, acorns, wild apples, dogwood, pomegranates, and cornelian cherry, all extraordinarily well-preserved in the aftermath of the volcanic eruption.

Author of a recent book about the remarkable preservation, Matarazzo says that future research will focus on animal bones found on site, including goats, pigs and fish, as well as footprints.

“The column of the Plinian eruption rose to basically the flight altitude of airplanes. It was unbelievable. This eruption was so extraordinary that it changed the climate for many years afterward.”

“The cover of ash was so deep that it left the site untouched for 4,000 years — no one even knew it was there. Now we get to learn about the people who lived there and tell their stories.”

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Texas Trucker is Named ‘Highway Angel’ for Stopping to Rescue a Police Officer Pinned in Vehicle

Gary Wilburn – Truckload Carriers Association
Gary Wilburn – Truckload Carriers Association

Truck driver Gary Wilburn was named a Highway Angel for offering aid to an injured Arkansas state trooper who was pinned inside his vehicle after a serious crash.

The Truckload Carriers Association bestowed the honor and shared the ‘incredible story.’

On the afternoon of October 4, near Forrest City, Arkansas, Wilburn was driving very slowly in heavy traffic. He came across a crashed State Trooper’s vehicle on the side of the road. Every other motorist was passing the vehicle without stopping to look inside.

“I was in traffic for an hour before I saw the trooper,” said the trucker from San Antonio, Texas. “Some of the stuff I noticed was insane—no one’s calling the police, cars are driving by, and no one stopped to help him.”

Wilburn, who drives for Anderson Trucking, called 911 and reported what he found.

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“He was banged up really bad,” Wilburn said. “Lower legs were broken, upper legs were broken and he was pinned in. His legs were crushed really bad.”

He then stayed with the trapped officer until emergency personnel arrived and he was airlifted to a local hospital.

Wilburn, who is still upset that no one had stopped, did not know what caused the accident, but says he is usually the man for the job.

“I’m that idiot that runs into burning buildings and pulls out pets. When I see something like that, I can’t keep going on about my day.”

Since the program’s inception in August 1997, nearly 1,300 professional truck drivers have been recognized as Highway Angels for exemplary kindness, courtesy, and courage displayed while on the job.

WATCH: Hero Trucker Ignores Own Safety to Save Utility Worker Stuck in a Bucket With Fire Blazing Below

There was no word on the officer’s condition. See more trucker heroes featured on GNN, here.

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Your Inspired Weekly Horoscope From Rob Brezsny: A ‘Free Will Astrology’

Our partner Rob Brezsny provides his weekly wisdom to enlighten our thinking and motivate our mood. Rob’s Free Will Astrology, is a syndicated weekly column appearing in over a hundred publications. He is also the author of Pronoia Is the Antidote for Paranoia: How All of Creation Is Conspiring To Shower You with Blessings. (A free preview of the book is available here.)

Here is your weekly horoscope…

FREE WILL ASTROLOGY – Week of October 15, 2022
Copyright by Rob Brezsny, FreeWillAstrology.com

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22):
When he was young, Libran poet W. S. Merwin had a teacher who advised him, “Don’t lose your arrogance yet. You can do that when you’re older. Lose it too soon, and you may merely replace it with vanity.” I think that counsel is wise for you to meditate on right now. Here’s how I interpret it: Give honor and respect to your fine abilities. Salute and nurture your ripe talents. Talk to yourself realistically about the success you have accomplished. If you build up your appreciation for what is legitimately great about you, you won’t be tempted to resort to false pride or self-absorbed egotism.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
In his absurdist play Waiting for Godot, Samuel Beckett offers us two characters, Vladimir and Estragon, who patiently wait for a white-bearded man named Godot. They’re convinced he will provide them with profound help, perhaps even salvation. Alas, although they wait and wait and wait, Godot never arrives. Near the end, when they have abandoned hope, Vladimir says to Estragon, “We are not saints, but we have kept our appointment.” My sense is that you Scorpios, like Vladimir and Estragon, may be close to giving up your own vigils. Please don’t! I believe your personal equivalent to Godot will ultimately appear. Summon more patience.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Poet Charles Wright has testified, “I admire and revere and am awed by a good many writers. But Emily Dickinson is the only writer I’ve ever read who knows my name, whose work has influenced me at my heart’s core, whose music is the music of songs I’ve listened to and remembered in my very body.” In my astrological reckoning, now is an excellent time for you Sagittarians to identify artists and creators who provide you with similar exaltation. And if there are no Emily Dickinson-type influences in your life, find at least one! You need to be touched and transformed by sublime inspiration.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
I’ve read and studied poetry for many years, but only recently discovered Capricorn poet Lizette Woodworth Reese (1856–1935). How is it possible I missed her? Her contemporary, journalist H. L. Mencken, described her work as “one of the imperishable glories of American literature.” She received many other accolades while alive. But today, she is virtually unknown, and many of her books are out of print. In bringing her to your attention, I am announcing my prediction about you: Anything in your life that resembles Reese’s reputation will change in the next 12 months. If you have until now not gotten the recognition or gratitude you deserve, at least some of it will arrive.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Author Sophia Dembling defines a friend as a person who consoles you when you’re feeling desperate and with whom you don’t feel alone. A friend is someone whose life is interesting to you and who is interested in your life. Maybe most importantly, a friend must not be boring. What’s your definition, Aquarius? Now is an excellent time to get clear about the qualities you want in a friend. It’s also a favorable phase to seek out vital new friendships as you de-emphasize mediocre and overly demanding alliances.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Do you or do you not wish to capitalize on the boost that’s available? Are you or are you not going to claim and use the challenging gift that would complicate your life but also expedite your growth? Act soon, Pisces! If you don’t, the potential dispensation may disappear. This is an excellent chance to prove you’re not afraid of achieving more success and wielding more power. I hope you will summon the extra courage necessary to triumph over shyness and timidity. Please claim your rightful upgrade!

ARIES (March 21-April 19):
“Magic Realism Bot” is a Twitter account that generates ideas for new fairy tales. Since you will benefit from imagining your life as a fairy tale in the coming weeks, I’ll offer you a few possibilities. 1. You marry a rainbow. The two of you have children: a daughter who can sing like a river and a son who is as gleeful as the wind. 2. You make friends with a raven that gives you savvy financial advice. 3. You invent a new kind of dancing; it involves crying and laughing while making holy prayer gestures toward your favorite star. 4. An angel and a lake monster join forces to help you dream up fun new adventures. 5. You discover a field of enchanted dandelions. They have the power to generate algorithms that reveal secrets about where to find wonders and marvels.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
On February 1, 1976, singer Elvis Presley was partying with buddies at his home in Memphis, Tennessee. As the revelry grew, he got an impetuous longing for an 8,000-calorie sandwich made with French bread, peanut butter, blueberry preserves, and slabs of bacon. Since this delicacy was only available at a certain restaurant in Denver, Colorado, Elvis and his entourage spontaneously hopped onto his private jet and flew 900 miles to get there. In accordance with astrological omens, Taurus, I encourage you to summon an equally keen determination to obtain pleasurable treasures. Hopefully, though, they will be more important than a sandwich. The odds of you procuring necessary luxuries that heal and inspire are much higher than usual.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Gemini writer Nikki Giovanni reminds us, “It cannot be a mistake to have cared. It cannot be an error to have tried. It cannot be incorrect to have loved.” In accordance with astrological omens, I ask you to embody Giovanni’s attitude. Shed any worries that your caring and trying and loving have been blunders. Celebrate them, be proud of them, and promise yourself that you will keep caring and trying and loving. The coming weeks will be an excellent time to renew your commitment to your highest goodness.

CANCER (June 21-July 22):
I’m not normal. I’m odd and iconoclastic. On the other hand, I don’t think my peculiarity makes me better than anyone. It’s just who I am. I love millions of people who aren’t as quirky as me, and I enjoy communicating with unweird people as much as I do with weirdos. Everything I just said is a preamble for my main message, Cancerian: The coming weeks will be prime time for you to give extra honor and credit to your personal eccentricities, even if they comprise a minor part of your personality.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Author Jennifer Huang testifies, “Poetry is what helps me remember that even in my fragments, I am whole.” What about you, Leo? What reminds you, even in your fragments, that you are whole? Now is an excellent time to identify the people, animals, and influences that help you generate a sense of unity and completeness. Once you’re clear about that, spend quality time doing what you can to nurture those healers. Maybe you can even help them feel more cohesion and harmony in themselves.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
How to be the best Virgo you can be during the coming weeks: 1. You must relish, not apologize for, your precise obsessions. 2. Be as nosy as you need to be to discover the core truths hidden beneath the surface. Risk asking almost too many questions in your subtle drive to know everything. 3. Help loved ones and allies shrink and heal their insecurities. 4. Generate beauty and truth through your skill at knowing what needs to be purged and shed. 5. Always have your Bullsh#t Detector with you. Use it liberally. 6. Keep in close touch with the conversations between your mind and body.

WANT MORE? Listen to Rob’s EXPANDED AUDIO HOROSCOPES, 4-5 minute meditations on the current state of your destiny — or subscribe to his unique daily text message service at: RealAstrology.com

(Zodiac images by Numerologysign.com, CC license)

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“Hope is a verb with its shirtsleeves rolled up.” – David Orr

Quote of the Day: “Hope is a verb with its shirtsleeves rolled up.” – David Orr

Image: Normal Rockwell painting, cropped

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

Good Gardening The Final Week: What We Learned After a Long Year, Plus Must-Have Gardening Tools

Welcome back to Good Gardening! In our Week 11 discussion, we wanted to know what the absolute must-have gardening tool is for our Good Gardeners. We got a lot of submissions. Here are some we liked…

Esther Colwell must have read my mind when, on the Sunday following Friday’s post, I began clearing the molding remains of my squash vines with my trusty “hori hori” a typical Japanese tool also called a “Leisure knife” (レジャーナイフrejā naifu) or “Sansai knife” (山菜ナイフsansai naifu). “Hori” is an onomatopoeia for a digging sound. In any case, Esther also uses one:

Andy’s Japanese hori hori.

It was given to me many years ago by my aunt Marian, who also loved to garden,” Esther wrote in. “It is great for tough weeds like dandelion roots, blackberries, and poison oak.”

Monica Richard’s “pick-axe hoe-thingy.”

Certified Permaculturalist Monica Richards wrote it to say the only thing she ever uses is her, “pick-axe hoe-thingy.”

On social media, we heard Emily Stover give two thumbs up for the “halo hoe” which is a precision deweeding tool that can be used from the comfort of a standing position, the same position from which GNN Founder Geri Weis-Corbley uses a mini-rake for clearing debris around the trunks of important plants.

“They who sing in the summer must dance in the winter,” – Italian Proverb.

Topic Week 12: End of season lessons learned

Question 1: What have you learned after a full season of gardening?

Question 2: What mistakes did you make that you will get right next year?

Question 3: Did you learn anything new from GNNs Good Gardening?

Tell Us Here in The Comments… or, send your questions, tips, and photos to [email protected]Join our Facebook Good Gardens thread every Friday on the GNN Facebook Page

Good gardening rules

  • Green thumbs can help novice greenhorns.
  • Share your gardening photos and resources.
  • Garden jargon encouraged!

INVITE Friends to our Gardening Discussion on Social Media–And Share Your Photos and Tips!

Meditation Could Protect Older People Against Alzheimer’s, According to New Research

Meditation could protect older people against Alzheimer’s, according to new research.

The practice of ancient religions and modern mindfulness heightens awareness and emotional health—faculties that decline with dementia like Alzheimer’s.

A strong point of the study was that the control group, meaning those who were used as a comparison to the meditators, were given another activity that has potential for fighting dementia—language learning.

In the study, French participants assigned to an 18 month meditation course did better than those given English lessons instead to keep their brains busy.

Author Dr. Gael Chetelat of the University of Caen-Normandy, said the meditation improved scores “reflecting attention regulation and socio-emotional capacities,” noting in particular that the attention regulation sub-score increased after meditation only.

“In the context of meditation practices, this capacity allows a heightened awareness and monitoring of the contents of experience without becoming absorbed by them,” said Dr. Chetelat. “Socio-emotional capacities decreased substantially after non-native language training, suggesting the difference observed may be due to maintenance of skills by meditation.”

The study included 137 men and women split into three groups. Meditation and English classes included two hour weekly sessions.

RELATED: Meditation and Music May Reverse Early Memory Loss in Adults

They also did home practice of at least 20 minutes a day. A control set carried on living their lives as normal, with no intervention.

The authors note that as meditation is becoming increasingly popular over recent years, it has helped people quit smoking, cope with cancer and even prevent skin condition psoriasis.

“Could meditation, a mental training approach toward attention and emotion regulation, preserve brain structure and function in cognitively unimpaired older adults?” said Dr. Chetelat.

SIMILAR: Meditation Training Reduces Long-Term Stress, Hair Analysis Shows

“Strategies to prevent dementia are urgently needed. Mental training that targets stress and attention regulation has the potential to improve both cognitive and emotional aspects of ageing.”

Staying ‘in the moment’ has been part of philosophical and contemplative practices for thousands of years. The hallmarks of many forms of mental illness is a preoccupation with one’s own thoughts, a condition meditation seems to affect.

“Mindfulness meditation can also reduce stress, anxiety and depression, including in older adults.”

MORE MEDITATION NEWS: Mindfulness Meditation Reduces Pain by Separating it From the Self

One draw back to the study was that the sample population was not representative of the global aging population, as it included very healthy individuals.

Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy, which combines meditation with orthodox ‘thought training’, is already recommended for depression in Britain and is available at the British NHS.

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Look How Gently this Marmoset Handles a Giant Katydid in Incredible Video

Apple+ Tiny World

Apes are not the only primates that can shock us with their displays of human characteristics, one look at this video of a marmoset, gently handling a katydid is enough to immediately conjure a sense of comradery with the small monkey.

There’s a palpable sense of wonderment in the motions of the marmoset as it reaches out for a species of giant katydid, reminiscent of the day a child first learns how to reach out and capture a butterfly.

This incredible scene was featured in a brilliant documentary available on Apple+ aptly-called Tiny Worldand it’s narrated by Hollywood A-list funnyman, Paul Rudd.

Maromsets can be found all throughout South America. They belong to the family Callitrichidae, and while their favorite food is a particular carbohydrate-rich tree sap they also eat insects.

However there’s not the slightest inkling of aggression in the way, for example, this marmoset gently lifts the katydid’s back leg. It’s as it he wants a closer look.

“Marmosets are usually like, palm sized,” one Redditor comments. “Not all species, I’m pretty sure this one is. So that’s a pretty big ‘buggo.’ But it is called a giant katydid.”

WATCH the video and decide for yourself… 

BONUS VIDEO: Watch Tiny Hummingbirds Trustingly Perch On Human Hand To Sip Nectar (Note: GNN has no affiliation with any ads displayed)

The Wholesome Moment an Italian Boy is Politely Invited to Peer Inside His Dream Sports Car

“Attenzione!” calls an Italian father to his young boy, who was eagerly peering inside the coach of a jet black Lamborghini parked in a quaint Italian mountain town.

The father had seen the owner approaching, and he was surely feeling a little vergogno, an Italian word for a kind of embarrassment, as his son looked into the car uninvited.

The owner, proving politeness has a magic of its own, encouraged the boy to come inside the car and check it out and snagged a cell video of his reaction.

Che bella”—”how beautiful,” the boy can be heard saying. Finishing a quick look around at the fiery orange interior, the boy turns and says “I like your car!”

“So careful, so polite and so much wonder and amazement in his face. Truly adorable kid!” a Redditor commented.

Another said “I don’t know who is it more wholesome for: the excited kid, the dad being happy and thankful, or the guy being able to do such thing.”

WATCH the scene below…

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Watch the Moment a Dog is Rescued by Volunteers After 26 Hours Down an Old Mine Shaft

Suka the terrier, rescued from an old mine - SWNS
Suka the terrier, rescued from an old mine – SWNS

A dog has been rescued by volunteers after spending over 26 hours down an old mining shaft.

Suka the terrier, went missing on Sunday while out for a walk with her owner Ben Weston near St Ives, Cornwall.

She wasn’t on a leash and ran off into the woods. When she never returned, her owners searched for her into the night and Monday morning.

Eventually, they came across an deep hole, and could hear their poor pup whimpering from inside.

An intense video filmed by Carbis Bay Crew, a volunteer group of cavers, divers, mine explorers and climbers, shows the extraordinary operation in action.

“The fire brigade turned up first and then we did five minutes later,” Sam Perkin’s, a member of Carbis Bay Crew who was present at the rescue. “They assessed the situation and couldn’t pick up any signs of life, so couldn’t commit to sending anyone down.”

“But as soon as they left, we could hear the dog yipping again—so I called up some other members to help get her out.”

The hold turned out to be an old mineshaft; so old that the timbers meant to support the opening had rotted away, leaving only the previously excavated dirt and granite which had been left behind to slowly compact in on itself to support the passage.

The footage also shows the moment the pup is reunited with her emotional owners. Suka is now reportedly safe and sound at home with her owners.

WATCH the video below…

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“We learn to keep going, because all the times we thought we couldn’t take one more step, we did.” – Shauna Niequist

Quote of the Day: “We learn to keep going, because all the times we thought we couldn’t take one more step, we did.” – Shauna Niequist

Photo by: Nazrin Babashova

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