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Good Gardening Week 2: What Are You Growing This Year — Share Photos and Tips

GNN Managing Editor, Andy Corbley, in his garden in Vergiate, Italy
GNN Managing Editor, Andy Corbley, in his garden in Vergiate, Italy

Welcome back to Good Gardening! In our Week 1 discussion thread we discovered what readers are using in their soil to boost production in the garden. They joined us on Facebook and sent in emails to share their secrets:

Smith Edward Bruce makes compost to fertilize and amend his soil and offered a suggestion if you are mixing in large amounts of dried brown material, such as fall leaves: Use the leftovers from comfrey and stinging nettle tea, to speed up the decomposition.

Deborah Gillespie has become interested in native plant gardens, and their “shocking resilience”…

“I was involved in planting a native community garden this spring in Pennsylvania,” she shared with GNN. “The leader of the project encouraged us to plant on a rainy day, in heavy, wet, clay soil, packing plants tightly into the mud, and walking all over the bed as we worked. Every “rule” I’ve ever learned about soil amendments, composition and compaction was broken, and I was convinced we were laboring in vain. Two months later, the garden is thriving.”

Llyn and Chris from The Sharing Gardens wrote in about their experience using coffee grounds in their community garden. “Coffee grounds provide generous amounts of phosphorus, potassium, magnesium, and copper. They also release nitrogen into the soil as they degrade. When we have it, we spread it about 1/4″ thick on beds before we plant.”

Some of Chris and Llyn’s neighbors helping out.

“For some reason, worms love coffee grounds! By sprinkling grounds in your garden beds, you will attract worms to come into your soil and, since coffee grounds also contain many nutrients on their own, we also recommend adding them to your greenhouse paths and compost bins. They will attract worms and speed up the process of decomposition.”

And, finally, Dianna Palermo reports that she planted clover everywhere: “It protects the soil from erosion, fixes nitrogen and suppresses weeds. I’ve restored compacted soils using Dutch clover and planted crimson clover around my vegetable garden.”

“Gardens are not made by singing ‘Oh, how beautiful,’ and sitting in the shade,”
— Rudyard Kipling.

Good Gardening Week 2: What Are You Growing this Year?

Question 1: What’s blooming, fruiting, or growing in your garden this year?

Question 2: Is your preference for flowers, vegetables, fruit, or a mixture?

Question 3: Why did you choose the species or varieties you did?

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

Little Bella and Adri helping out! Submitted by The Sharing Gardens

Remember that your green thumbs can help novice greenhorns—and garden jargon is encouraged! And Please SHARE This with Gardeners on Social Media…

Amazing Spectacle as Rare White Risso’s Dolphin Leaps Above the Water For Photographer – LOOK

See SWNS story SWBRdolphin. All white, what a sight! A wildlife photographer captured an amazing spectacle when a rare WHITE Risso's dolphin flipped out of the water. Jay Spring was enjoying a Californian boat tour last month when he found himself lucky to be facing the right way as the distinctive creature breached. He explains: "I could not believe what I was seeing and luckily I was looking the right way at the right time and was able to get some pictures of him. "I later learned this is "Blanco", the rare leucistic Risso's dolphin." "This dolphin has a form of leucism, which gives this individual its completely white colouring, outlined with thin black piping along with the head, pectoral fins, and fluke.
– SWNS

A wildlife photographer captured an amazing spectacle when a rare white Risso’s dolphin flipped out of the water.

Jay Spring was enjoying a Californian boat tour last month when he found himself lucky to be facing the right way as the distinctive creature breached.

“On 22 June, I was out on a whale watching boat with Captain Dave’s Whale Watching out of Dana Point, when we came across a pod of about 30 to 40 Risso’s dolphins just cruising around the boat,” said Spring.

“This is unusual as Risso’s dolphins are not known to be boat friendly like other dolphin species. Thunderstorms had just moved through the area when suddenly a rare, almost all white individual started breaching.”

RELATED: Rare White Whale Spotted as Sightings Hit Record High in NZ (WATCH)

“I could not believe what I was seeing and luckily I was looking the right way at the right time and was able to get some pictures of him,” he said.

As it turns out the whale watchers have a name for this individual, “Blanco”. He has leucism, a condition separate from Albinism, that results in an irregular distribution of melanin pigments. Spring was told there are no existing photographs of Blanco, and that his are the first ones on the internet.

– SWNS

“I have been photographing wildlife since 2016 as a retirement hobby. I primarily photography birds but in the past year have gotten into whales and dolphins.

“I am a technical person by nature and never thought I would enjoy photography so much.”

Risso’s dolphins usually have a distinctive grey body which over time becomes covered in scars. They are named after Antoine Risso, whose study of the animal formed the basis of the recognized description by Georges Cuvier in 1812.

Leucism is found in other animal species, and recently a sperm whale with leucism, literally Moby Dick, was seen in Jamaica.

Help This Dolphin BREACH Onto Your Friends Social Media Feeds…

Albuquerque Gas Station Cut Prices in Half to “Try to Help Out” Customers For a Saturday

Dominic Holguin, CEO of Chronic Kings Gas Station / KOB4 news. YouTube.
Dominic Holguin, CEO of Chronic Kings Gas Station / KOB4 news. YouTube.

Last Saturday, an Albuquerque gas station treated the city to a customer appreciation day, by cutting their gasoline prices in half between 10:00 AM and noon.

The staff at Chronic Kings Dispensary and Gas Station on Lomas and Arnold street were tired of seeing neighbors struggle with record high gas prices, so with 5,000 gallons waiting in the tanks, they decided to help out.

“It’s mainly just to give back to the people and try to help them out just for a few hours,” says Chronic Kings CEO Dominic Holguin, who mentioned to local news he expected the whole city to show up.

“They’re upset about it, we’re upset about it, that’s kind of the reason we’re doing this event.”

RELATED: Sikh Gas Station Owner Sells Gas 50 Cents a Gallon Cheaper than What it Costs to Help Customers

Years of falling investment in oil drilling and refining in the West had, by January of 2022, placed the global oil market on course for record-high profits as developing-world demand continued growing while production lagged behind.

Then after the War in Ukraine started, gas prices rose to their highest levels in Europe and North America in history.

But the United States has seen a few gas station owners rejecting their own margin requirements and offering gas at cut rates as a way of giving their communities a break.

GNN reported in June that a Sikh man in Phoenix was losing hundreds of dollars a day by selling gasoline at 50 cents cheaper than what he buys it for.

“If you have something, you have to share it with other people,” said Jaswiendre Singh at the time.

Ravi Patel, owner of a Georgia Chevron gas station offered 50% off over the July 4th weekend, taking a $12K hit in the process of helping out his community.

Watch a local news report below…

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Vitamin D Could Help Protect Women Against and Even Reverse Ovarian Cancer – Study

(c) Andy Corbley

Researchers believe vitamin D could be key in preventing ovarian cancer, one of the most lethal, as they found it stopped a key transformation in the metastasis of the cancer.

Furthermore, vitamin D actively reversed a process by which ovarian cancer turns the host’s defenses against them, suggesting it could also be key as part of a treatment plan for early stage diagnosis.

Ovarian cancer often undergoes a process called peritoneal metastasis, whereby its cells detach from their primary site in the ovary and travel to a secondary site such as the peritoneal wall or diaphragm.

The peritoneum defends itself a barrier consisting of mesothelial cells, which prevent the adhesion of cancer cells and limit their spread. However, ovarian cancer gets around this defense by transforming the protective mesothelial cells into cancer-associated mesothelial cells. This creates an environment that helps metastasis, assisting the spread of cancer around the body.

For this reason, ovarian cancer has been dubbed ‘a silent killer’ as it often causes few distinct symptoms until it is advanced. Nine-in-ten women with an early-stage diagnosis survive. If it’s picked up late just one-in-ten live more than five years.

READ MORE: Scientist Who Helped Develop Breakthrough Ovarian Cancer Treatment Donates All $1.2 Million in Profits

Now researchers from Nagoya University School of Medicine, led by Dr. Masato Yoshihara found that vitamin D not only counteracted this process but also reverted the cancer-associated mesothelial cells to their original state. This process strengthened the barrier effect of mesothelial cells and reduced further spread of the cancer.

“We showed the potential of vitamin D for normalizing cancer-associated mesothelial cells, which is the first study of this kind,” said Dr. Kazuhisa Kitami, the first author of the study.

“This study’s most interesting point is that in situations where early detection of ovarian cancer is still extremely difficult, we showed that the peritoneal environment can be restored to its normal state where it prevents the adhesion and growth of cancer cells.”

The sunshine vitamin accomplishes this by interrupting the pathway for a tumor growth-factor protein called TGF-B1 to produce changes in gene expression that specialize in the process of peritoneal metastasis mentioned earlier.

It’s another reason why women should seriously consider a vitamin D supplement of between 2,000-4,000 IUs unless they spend time outside for work. Some estimations put 42% of Americans at deficiency for vitamin D, though deficiency depends on what a given researcher decides to use as the minimum level, and that’s often not agreed upon.

RELATED: Vitamin D Supplements Protect Black Population Against COVID-19, According to New Research

If one considers what some recent work considers optimum vitamin D levels not just for preventing illness, enhancing health and fitness, then deficiency in America could be more than half the population.

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Meet the Alpaca Who Thinks She’s a Dog and Rides in a Car Bought Especially For Her – LOOK

- SWNS
– SWNS

Meet the alpaca who thinks she’s a dog—and even travels round in a Vauxhall estate car bought especially for her.

Spoiled two-year-old Annie the alpaca was rejected by her mum and had to be bottle-fed every two hours by owner Dannie Burns.

This strange story begins when Burns first bought two alpacas on a whim 14 years ago after losing his job. Dannie described keeping them as an “addiction” and has ten staff on hand at The Alpaca Trekking Centre in Stirling to look after alpaca, cows, sheep, and even a golden eagle.

Annie grew up living a luxurious life as a family pet and wanders around doing what she wants.

In the beginning, father-of-three Dannie brought her with him everywhere he went as Annie needed a strict feeding routine, and she lived in his house in Stirling along with three dogs and two cats.

– SWNS
– SWNS

However she has since been barred from the house due to chewing through cables, raiding profiteroles at Christmas, and even opening doors with her mouth.

LOOK: ‘Goat 2 Meeting’ Service Lets Farm Animals Make Cameo Appearance on Your Next Zoom Call to Support Shelter

She prefers to socialize with the three Labradoodle dogs and believes she is one, and loves to relax on car journeys in the back of the big Vauxhall Zafira station wagon bought to accommodate her. She loves to stretch her head out the window and recently charmed traffic cops who stopped to take pictures with her.

“She was in our house for six months, getting bottlefed every two hours,” Burns remembers. She was eating everything—toy soldiers, ribbons, bits of plastic, she’s a nightmare.”

“She was with us the last two Christmases but she is very naughty, she ate profiteroles and pulled lettuce out the bowl. She sleeps on the porch now.

RELATED: Dog Thrown From Car in Accident Found Herding Sheep on Nearby Farm

Annie is currently expecting her own baby and Dannie is not sure how she will take to motherhood, as she has rejected mixing with the herd of 75 alpacas which roam around in fields.

“We are hoping she will go back with the herd once she has her baby,” he explains. “She wants nothing to do with the other alpacas, she hides when she sees them [or maybe] has a superiority complex over them.”

SHARE This Stirling Story Of An Adorable Alpaca…

“Luck will carry someone across the brook if they are not too scared to leap.” – Danish proverb

Quote of the Day: “Luck will carry someone across the brook if they are not too scared to leap.” – Danish proverb

Photo: Kid Circus

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?

Mindfulness Meditation Reduces Pain by Separating it From the Self

Lillie Kate, CC license
Lillie Kate, CC license

For centuries, people have been using mindfulness meditation to try to relieve their pain, but neuroscientists recently showed it does actually work—by interrupting communications from the pain to the brain.

Researchers measuring the effects of mindfulness on pain perception and brain activity showed that meditation interrupted the communication between brain areas involved in pain sensation and those that produce the sense of self.

The study, published in PAIN, details a proposed mechanism whereby pain signals still move from the body to the brain, but the individual does not feel as much ownership over those pain sensations, so their pain and suffering are reduced.

“One of the central tenets of mindfulness is the principle that you are not your experiences,” said senior author Fadel Zeidan, PhD, associate professor of anesthesiology at UC San Diego School of Medicine.

“You train yourself to experience thoughts and sensations without attaching your ego or sense of self to them, and we’re now finally seeing how this plays out in the brain during the experience of acute pain.”

On the first day of the study, 40 participants had their brains scanned while painful heat was applied to their leg. After experiencing a series of these heat stimuli, participants had to rate their average pain levels during the experiment.

RELATED: 10 Easy Ways You Can Practice Mindfulness

Participants were then split into two groups. Members of the mindfulness group completed four separate 20-minute mindfulness training sessions. During these visits, they were instructed to focus on their breath and reduce self-referential processing by first acknowledging their thoughts, sensations and emotions but then letting them go without judging or reacting to them.

Members of the control group spent their four sessions listening to an audio book.

On the final day of the study, both groups had their brain activity measured again, but participants in the mindfulness group were now instructed to meditate during the painful heat, while the control group rested with their eyes closed.

Researchers found that participants who were actively meditating reported a 32% reduction in pain intensity and a 33% reduction in pain unpleasantness.

“We were really excited to confirm that you don’t have to be an expert meditator to experience these analgesic effects,” said Zeidan. “This is a really important finding for the millions of people looking for a fast-acting and non-pharmacological treatment for pain.”

POPULAR: These Schools Are Offering Yoga and Mindfulness Class as an Alternative to After-School Detention

When the team analyzed participants’ brain activity during the task, they found that mindfulness-induced pain relief was associated with reduced synchronization between the thalamus (a brain area that relays incoming sensory information to the rest of the brain) and parts of the default mode network (a collection of brain areas most active while a person is mind-wandering or processing their own thoughts and feelings as opposed to the outside world).

One of these default mode regions is the precuneus, a brain area involved in fundamental features of self-awareness, and one of the first regions to go offline when a person loses consciousness.

Another is the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, which includes several sub regions that work together to process how you relate to or place value on your experiences. The more these areas were decoupled or deactivated, the more pain relief the participant reported.

“For many people struggling with chronic pain, what often affects their quality of life most is not the pain itself, but the mental suffering and frustration that comes along with it,” said Zeidan. “Their pain becomes a part of who they are as individuals—something they can’t escape—and this exacerbates their suffering.”

SEE ALSO: Hope for Migraine Sufferers: Clinical Trial Shows Benefits of Yoga and Meditation

By relinquishing the self-referential appraisal of pain, mindfulness meditation may provide a new method for pain treatment. Mindfulness meditation is also free and can be practiced anywhere. Still, Zeidan said he hopes trainings can be made even more accessible and integrated into standard outpatient procedures.

“We feel like we are on the verge of discovering a novel non-opioid-based pain mechanism in which the default mode network plays a critical role in producing analgesia. We are excited to continue exploring the neurobiology of mindfulness and its clinical potential across various disorders.”

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Carpet Cleaner With Autism Has Learned 40 Languages – Watch His Talent in Action

- CBS Morning News YouTube
– CBS Sunday Morning. YouTube

A carpet cleaner in Maryland has a secret. There’s nothing else to call it but a superpower, but you would never know it unless you took him to the UN headquarters.

Vaughn Smith of Gaithersburg, Maryland is a “hyperpolyglot,” a person who speaks 11 languages or more. In a basic sense, it means learning languages comes easy.

How easy? Smith has got 40 under his belt.

While it’s not uncommon to meet someone from, say, Belgium or Switzerland who can speak 4 or 5 European languages, the Washington Post recently confirmed that Smith is fluent or can carry a conversation in essentially all the languages of Europe, including Welsh, Irish Gaelic, and Scottish Gaelic.

But he hasn’t stopped at the Old World, the reserved and kindly man knows several tribal languages including Lakota, Salish, Navajo, and Nahuatl, while from the far East he knows Japanese, Mandarin, Sinhalese, and Indonesian, and Amharic (Ethiopian) Hebrew, and Arabic, from the middle of the map.

RELATED: Take This Test To See You if You Have a Face-Recognizing Superpower

The draw, he says, is to connect with people—people are happier and kinder when you can speak their language. He and his mother both suspect that he is autistic to a degree, as he had a difficult time participating in school and interpreting people’s feelings. But much like his ability to speak 40 languages, the passerby probably wouldn’t suspect that he was on the spectrum.

Autistic savantism is well-documented, and it’s poetic—almost a paradox that his disorder may have given him a special ability that seems tailor-made to helping him connect with other people.

WATCH The video below… *Note to Those Outside the U.S: View video at CBS.com…

TRANSLATE This Amazing Story Into Your Language On Social Media…

Paul Rudd With Ant Man Helmet Befriends Boy Who Had No Friends–LOOK

- Cassandra Ridder
– Cassandra Ridder

When a 12-year-old was saddened after a schoolyear yielded him just 2 signatures in his year book, A-lister Paul Rudd stepped up to support the youngster.

It’s a superhero update to a story GNN covered in June—of young Brody Ridder from the Denver suburbs who had to sign his own yearbook in lieu of friends after a year of intense bullying.

A flood of well-wishes and support for the teen arrived after his mom Cassandra posted about his tribulations on Facebook, including Marvel’s Antman himself, Paul Rudd.

Rudd had a video call with Brody last month, and sent him a handwritten note afterwards with a replica helmet of the one Rudd wears as the Antman character in Antman, and Avenger’s Endgame. 

– Cassandra Ridder

“It’s important to remember that even when life gets tough that things get better,” wrote Rudd. “There are so many people that love you and think you are the coolest kid there is — me being one of them!”

According to Brody’s mom Cassandra, her son keeps the helmet on a special display stand in his room, and is very proud of it.

Cassandra is currently in talks with several non-profits about potential bullying awareness and prevention campaigns based in spreading messages of kindness and compassion. She also reports Brody is excited about the next school year and making the effort to try and make new friends.

WATCH The two have a video call below…

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Webb Telescope Captures Images That Move a NASA Scientist ‘to Tears’ – LOOK

James Webb telescope / Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, and STScI
James Webb telescope / Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, and STScI

The dawn of a new era in astronomy is here as the world gets its first look at the full capabilities of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope.

The full set of the telescope’s first full-color images and spectroscopic data, which uncover a collection of cosmic features elusive until now, released Tuesday to an eager and adoring public, some of whom have waited thirty years to see them.

“Today, we present humanity with a groundbreaking new view of the cosmos from the James Webb Space Telescope – a view the world has never seen before,” said NASA Administrator Bill Nelson.

“These images, including the deepest infrared view of our universe that has ever been taken, show us how Webb will help to uncover the answers to questions we don’t even yet know to ask; questions that will help us better understand our universe and humanity’s place within it.”

Infrared vision, something the Hubble Space Telescope can’t do, is necessary to see the earliest, i.e. farthest away scenes of the universe.

CHECK OUT: Hubble Telescope Spots Most Distant Star Ever Seen on Record, From 12 Billion Light Years Away

“The Webb team’s incredible success is a reflection of what NASA does best. We take dreams and turn them into reality for the benefit of humanity. I can’t wait to see the discoveries that we uncover—the team is just getting started!”

Indeed Webb is already booked for more than 6,000 hours of research time across dozens of different projects by various astronomers to look at everything from “high red-shift quasars,” to exoplanets, to asteroids in our own solar system.

Southern Ring Nebula imaged with two different Webb instruments. credit / NASA, ESA, CSA, and STScI

Webb’s first observations tell the story of the hidden universe through every phase of cosmic history—from neighboring planets outside our solar system, known as exoplanets, to the most distant observable galaxies in the early universe.

“It took decades of drive and perseverance to get us here, and I am immensely proud of the Webb team,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. “These first images show us how much we can accomplish when we come together behind a shared goal, to solve the cosmic mysteries that connect us all. It’s a stunning glimpse of the insights yet to come.”

LOOK: Glimpse of God? The Hubble Telescope’s 12 Best Photos on the 30th Anniversary of its Launch into Orbit

Webb’s first observations were selected by a group of representatives from NASA, the European Space Agency, the Canadian Space Agency, and the Space Telescope Science Institute. They reveal the capabilities of all four of Webb’s state-of-the-art scientific instruments.

  • SMACS 0723: Webb has delivered the deepest and sharpest infrared image of the distant universe so far—and in only 12.5 hours. For a person standing on Earth looking up, the field of view for this new image, a color composite of multiple exposures each about two hours long, is approximately the size of a grain of sand held at arm’s length. This deep field uses a lensing galaxy cluster to find some of the most distant galaxies ever detected. This image only scratches the surface of Webb’s capabilities in studying deep fields and tracing galaxies back to the beginning of cosmic time.
  • WASP-96b (spectrum): Webb’s detailed observation of this hot, puffy planet outside our solar system reveals the clear signature of water, along with evidence of haze and clouds that previous studies of this planet did not detect. With Webb’s first detection of water in the atmosphere of an exoplanet, it will now set out to study hundreds of other systems to understand what other planetary atmospheres are made of.
  • Southern Ring Nebula: This planetary nebula, an expanding cloud of gas that surrounds a dying star, is approximately 2,000 light years away. Here, Webb’s powerful infrared eyes bring a second dying star into full view for the first time. From birth to death as a planetary nebula, Webb can explore the expelling shells of dust and gas of aging stars that may one day become a new star or planet.
  • Stephan’s Quintet: Webb’s view of this compact group of galaxies, located in the constellation Pegasus, pierced through the shroud of dust surrounding the center of one galaxy, to reveal the velocity and composition of the gas near its supermassive black hole. Now, scientists can get a rare look, in unprecedented detail, at how interacting galaxies are triggering star formation in each other and how the gas in these galaxies is being disturbed.
  • Carina Nebula: Webb’s look at the ‘Cosmic Cliffs’ in the Carina Nebula unveils the earliest, rapid phases of star formation that were previously hidden. Looking at this star-forming region in the southern constellation Carina, as well as others like it, Webb can see newly forming stars and study the gas and dust that made them.

WATCH Zurbuchen’s emotional explanation from Reuters…

RING In The New Era Of Space Exploration On Social Media…

“To a brave man, good and bad luck are like his left and right hand. He uses both.” – Catherine of Siena

Quote of the Day: “To a brave man, good and bad luck are like his left and right hand. He uses both.” – St. Catherine of Siena

Photo: Andrew Moca

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?

Samsung Cuts Energy Usage of Their Computer Chips by 50% In Big Market Innovation

The leaders of Samsung Foundry Business and Semiconductor R&D Center / Samsung. Released
The leaders of Samsung Foundry Business and Semiconductor R&D Center / Samsung Released.

Samsung Electronics announced that it has started initial production of its 3-nanometer semiconductor chips, down from their previous 5-nanometer.

The company is starting the first application of this nanosheet transistor with semiconductor chips for high performance, low power computing application and plans to expand to mobile processors.

CHECK OUT: Sweat Could Power Smart Watches and Activity Trackers in the Future – Researchers Develop New Technology

Compared to 5nm process, the first-generation 3nm process can reduce power consumption by up to 45%, improve performance by 23% and reduce area by 16%, while the second-generation 3nm process is expected to to improve these even more.

“Samsung has grown rapidly as we continue to demonstrate leadership in applying next-generation technologies to manufacturing… We seek to continue this leadership with the world’s first 3nm process,” said Dr. Siyoung Choi, President and Head of Foundry Business at Samsung Electronics.

“We will continue active innovation in competitive technology development and build processes that help expedite achieving maturity of technology.”

This smaller, more powerful computer chip is the company’s best attempt to compete with the Taiwan market dominance of chips and integrated circuits.

POPULAR: Toyota is Granting Royalty-Free Licenses to Almost 24,000 Patents for Their Electric Vehicle Technology

A 3nm chip opens up huge variety of possibilities for tech manufacturers to save space in the circuit boards of their devices, and combined with a mass-production plant they are hoping to have operational in Texas by 2024, Samsung is poised to help along another diminution in device size and price.

As technology nodes get smaller and chip performance needs grow greater, chip designers face challenges of handling tremendous amounts of data to verify complex products with more functions and tighter scaling. To meet such demands, Samsung has said they hope to provide a more stable design environment to help reduce the time required for design, verification and sign-off process, while also boosting product reliability.

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World’s Oldest Martian Meteorite is Traced to the Precise Crater Where it Originated

"Black Beauty" - SWNS
“Black Beauty” and her impact crater – SWNS

Artificial intelligence has traced the world’s oldest Martian meteorite to the precise crater on the Red Planet where it originated.

Nicknamed “Black Beauty,” it formed almost 4.5 billion years ago and contains more traces of water than any other Martian meteorite, adding to evidence that the planet was once habitable.

The famous space rock, measuring less than two inches long and weighing about 11 ounces, was found in the western Sahara in 2011.

An international research team used a supercomputer to track its creation on the red planet in a region known as Terra Cimmeria-Sirenum. A machine-learning algorithm identified about 90 million impact craters through analyzing thousands of high-resolution images from a range of Mars missions to find Black Beauty’s ejection site.

CHECK OUT: Photo From Mars Curiosity Rover Looks Like We Found a Doorway

When it was attached to Mars it formed part of a primordial crust that hosted oceans of water. Then, a meteorite smashed into Mars and catapulted Black Beauty into the atmosphere on a collision course with the Sahara Desert.

Martian surface impact craters, with Karratha in red – SWNS

The dust settled

That impact crater has been named Karratha after a city in the Pilbara area of Western Australia renowned as a site of some of the oldest rocks on earth, and according to the International Astronomical Union naming customs that state small impact craters must be named after cities with less than 100,000 in population.

Karratha Crater can be found in the southern hemisphere of the planet, where there are many gullies that could have been carved by flowing rivers. For that, the team wants NASA to priorities the area around Karratha Crater as a future landing site on Mars, as it may contain some of the oldest rocks and sediments on Mars, offering a look into the earliest, potentially wettest, Martian environment.

“For the first time, we know the geological context of [a] Martian sample available on Earth, 10 years before the NASA’s Mars Sample Return mission is set to send back samples collected by the Perseverance rover currently exploring the Jezero crater,” said lead author Dr. Anthony Lagain, of Curtin University, Perth.

“Finding the region where the ‘Black Beauty’ meteorite originates is critical because it contains the oldest Martian fragments ever found, aged at 4.48 billion years old, and it shows similarities between Mars’ very old crust, aged about 4.53 billion years old, and today’s Earth continents.”

The authors explain how the technology will identify the source of other Martian meteorites—and billions of impact craters on Mercury, the Moon, and other bodies. It also paves the way to locate the ejection site of the more than 300 Martian meteorites that have landed on Earth, to assemble the most exhaustive view of the Red Planet’s geological history.

WATCH: Watch a Stunning Solar Eclipse on Mars in Video Captured By NASA’s Perseverance Rover

“We are also adapting the algorithm that was used to pinpoint Black Beauty’s point of ejection from Mars to unlock other secrets from the Moon and Mercury,” said co-author Professor Gretchen Benedix, also from Curtin.

“This will help to unravel their geological history and answer burning questions that will help future investigations of the Solar System such as the Artemis program to send humans on the Moon by the end of the decade or the BepiColombo mission, in orbit around Mercury in 2025.”

SHARE This ‘Impactful’ Story With Your Friends Earthling…

Reaching Out to Friends After Long Time is More Appreciated Than You Know, Says Research

People consistently underestimate how much others in their social circle might appreciate an unexpected phone call, text or email just to say hello.

Additionally, the more surprising the connection, the greater the appreciation.

In a paper published by the American Psychological Association, researchers conducted a series of experiments involving more than 5,900 participants that explored how accurate people are at estimating how much others might appreciate an attempt to connect and what factors might play into that level of appreciation.

“People are fundamentally social beings and enjoy connecting with others,” said lead author Peggy Liu, PhD, of the University of Pittsburgh.

“There is much research showing that maintaining social connections is good for our mental and physical health. However, despite the importance and enjoyment of social connection, our research suggests that people significantly underestimate how much others will appreciate being reached out to.”

CHECK OUT: Even Moderate Socializing With Friends Could Ward Off Dementia in Older People, Study Finds

In one experiment, half the participants were asked to recall the last time they reached out to someone in their social circle “just because” or “just to catch up” via email, text or phone, after a prolonged period of not interacting with them. The rest of the participants were asked to recall a similar situation where someone reached out to them.

Participants were then asked to indicate on a 7-point scale (1=not at all, 7=to a great extent) how much either they or the person they reached out to (depending upon the condition) appreciated, felt grateful, felt thankful or felt pleased by the contact.

A surprising result followed: people who recalled reaching out thought the gesture they recalled was significantly less appreciated than those who recalled receiving a communication.

In a second experiment, participants sent a short note, or a note and a small gift, to someone in their social circle with whom they had not interacted in a while, rather than a text or call, and again both groups were asked for a rating of appreciation.

Across all experiments, those who initiated the communication significantly underestimated the extent to which recipients would appreciate the act of reaching out. The researchers also found one interesting variable that affected how much a person appreciated a reach out.

“We found that people receiving the communication placed greater focus than those initiating the communication on the surprise element, and this heightened focus on surprise was associated with higher appreciation,” said Liu.

“We also found that people underestimated others’ appreciation to a greater extent when the communication was more surprising, as opposed to part of a regular communication pattern, or the social ties between the two participants were weak.”

READ MORE: These Women Have Been Penpals for 70 Years, Forging a True Friendship From 10,000 Miles Away

Many people have lost touch with others in their lives, whether they’re friends from high school or college or co-workers they used to see at the water cooler before work went remote. This is true now more than ever, as there was the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, but now the amount of remote workers, business closures, lay offs, and inter-state translocation is also especially high.

Initiating social contact after a prolonged period of disconnect can feel daunting because people worry about how such a gesture might be received. These findings suggest that their hesitations may be unnecessary, as others are likely to appreciate being reached out to more than people think.

“I sometimes pause before reaching out to people from my pre-pandemic social circle for a variety of reasons. When that happens, I think about these research findings and remind myself that other people may also want to reach out to me and hesitate for the same reasons,” Liu said.

“I then tell myself that I would appreciate it so much if they reached out to me and that there is no reason to think they would not similarly appreciate my reaching out to them.”

REACH OUT To Your Distant Friends Just Like In This Study…

Firefighters Save Kitten Stuck in an ATM – And His New Name is Cash

Photo courtesy of Fort Smith Fire Department
Photo courtesy of Fort Smith Fire Department

Cats are known for getting themselves stuck in all manner of places, but for the staff at Fort Smith Animal Haven, an ATM was a first.

A grey tabby had to be withdrawn from an ATM by Fort Smith Fire Department in Arkansas, after someone probably heard a meow inside the machine.

After arriving at the shelter, “Cash” surprised everyone with his story.

“Probably trying to find shade is why, but I can’t tell you how,” Alexis Bloom, a cat and kennel tech at Fort Smith Animal Haven, told local news.

“This is actually my first experience with a cat getting stuck in an ATM,” added vet tech Ashley Deane. “You know, I never thought that somebody would be able to go up and make a withdrawal and get a cat out instead of some cash, so now we have both.”

LOOK: Heroic Sailor Dives Into Choppy Seas to Save 4 Kittens From Burning Ship

The tabby was hungry, cranky, in need of a bath, and a name. Cash was a pretty obvious choice for the little would be cat-burglar.

After a week or so, the kitten has made a full recovery, and is getting up to a healthy weight before he can receive his vaccinations and socialize with other kittens on his way to a foster home. No doubt cash will be a popular withdrawal after his story made headlines, but the shelter said there are plenty of loving animals in need of a home, all of which can be found on their adoption program website.

Recently GNN reported on a kitten (another grey tabby) stuck in a Pepsi Co. vending machine outside of a Walmart, proving that there is virtually no machinery too enclosed for a kitten to infiltrate.

Fort Knox beware.

WATCH the local news report below…

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“Faith is like radar that sees through the fog—the reality of things at a distance that the human eye cannot see.” – Corrie Ten Boom

Quote of the Day: “Faith is like radar that sees through the fog—the reality of things at a distance that the human eye cannot see.” – Corrie Ten Boom

Photo: Ricardo Gomez Angel (cropped)

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Teen Hailed as Hero for Saving 3 Girls And an Officer After Vehicle Sinks in River

Corion Evans receives award – Moss Point Police Department
Corion Evans receives award – Moss Point Police Department

The right place at the right time—that’s where 16-year-old Corion Evans was when a car full of three teenage girls drove into a river in Mississippi.

Now hailed as a hero, the powerful young swimmer rescued all three girls plus a police officer who had jumped in to help, but ended up swallowing water.

It was 2:30 AM on the I-10 boat ramp in Moss Point, Mississippi when, following their GPS, three teenage girls drove their car off a boat ramp and floated 25 yards out into the Pascagoula River before it started sinking.

They managed to get out of the car and onto the roof, according to ABC news. Evans heard them crying for help, and took off his shirt, shoes, and his left his phone behind him as he jumped into the water.

“I was just like, ‘I can’t let none of these folks die,'” Evans, who said he had been a strong swimmer since age 3, told local news at the time. “‘They need to get out the water’. So, I just started getting them, I wasn’t even thinking about nothing else.”

RELATED: Caught on Camera: Teen Hero Dives Into Bay to Save Drowning Woman From Sinking Car

Moss Point Police Officer Gary Mercer arrived on the scene, and he too swam out to aid in the rescue.

Evan’s friend Karen Bradley also jumped in, and as the rescuers were helping the victims to shore, the story took another unlucky turn. Denver news reported that Officer Mercer was too close to a struggling victim and was pushed under where he inhaled water.

“I turned around. I see the police officer,” Evans said. “He’s drowning. He’s going underwater, drowning, saying, ‘Help!” So, I went over there. I went and I grabbed the police officer and I’m like swimming him back until I feel I can walk.”

Evans and Bradley helped the three girls and officer to the shore, while describing the ordeal as very tiring.

“The police department and I commend Mr. Evans’s bravery and selflessness he displayed by risking his own safety to help people in danger,” Moss Point Chief Brandon Ashley said in a statement. “If Mr. Evans had not assisted, it could have possibly turned out tragically instead of all occupants rescued safely.”

CHECK OUT: A Pregnant Mom Became a Hero After Saving 4 Kids From Drowning

Despite a bout of vomiting from water inhalation, all four are expected to make a full recovery. Evans and Officer Mercer afterwards were given certificates of commendation from the City of Moss Point.

Many lessons can be drawn from this story: don’t trust your GPS around poorly marked waterways, don’t get too near a drowning person, not all heroes wear capes, and keeping yourself capable of swimming 75 yards might save your life, or someone else’s.

WATCH Local news coverage below…

DIVE Into Social Media To Give This Hero The Recognition He Deserves…

World’s Oldest Brain Has Been Found in Remains of a 3-Eyed Giant Prawn From Half-Billion Years Ago

SWNS
SWNS

The world’s oldest brain has been found in the remains of a three-eyed prawn that swam the oceans more than half a billion years ago.

Its complete central nervous system is still visible, providing unprecedented insights into the ancestors of insects, spiders and crustaceans.

Named Stanleycaris hirpex, it was described as “the stuff of nightmares.” It had two eyes “on stalks” with a bigger one in the middle, and spiked claws.

It lived during the period known by paleontologists as the Cambrian Explosion, a time of rapid evolution in shallow seas when most major animal groups emerge in the fossil record.

The creature was a member of the radiodonts, a type of early arthropod—essentially creepy crawlies with jointed limbs, and at 3-feet in length, were actually the apex predators of their time, equivalent to the great white shark.

Despite Stanleycaris‘ bizarre appearance, it is the contents of its head that has scientists most excited.

– SWNS

A thinking man’s shrimp

The new specimens provide a glimpse into what the ancestral nervous system looked like. Finding any fossilized soft tissue is rare, and this is very unique.

In 84 out of 268 individuals unearthed at Burgess Shale, a prehistoric graveyard in the Canadian Rocky Mountains, the brain and nerves are still preserved—even after 506 million years, and an analysis of their makeup was published in Current Biology.

SIMILAR: Spectacular Fossils Discovered from Prehistoric Rainforest Reveal Intimate Details From 11 Million Years Ago

Most fossils are bone and or hard body parts such as teeth or exoskeletons turned into mineral casts, while brains and nerves are made of fatty like substances that normally don’t survive.

“We can even make out visual processing centers serving the large eyes and traces of nerves entering the appendages,” said lead author Joseph Moysiuk, a University of Toronto PhD candidate. “The fine details are so clear it is as if we were looking at an animal that died yesterday.”

The central nervous system coordinates all neural and motor functions. In vertebrates, it consists of the brain and spinal cord.

In arthropods the brain is more condensed with a chain-like series of interconnected masses of nervous tissue resembling a string of beads. Stanleycaris‘ brain was composed of two segments, the protocerebrum and deutocerebrum.

They connected with the eyes and frontal claws respectively, and control vision and antenna signals in arthropods today.

ALSO READ: Astounding Fossil Discovery in California After Man Looks Closely at Petrified Tree And Finds Bones of Great Beasts

“We conclude a two segmented head and brain has deep roots in the arthropod lineage,” said Moysiuk, based at the Royal Ontario Museum. “Its evolution likely preceded the three segmented brain that characterizes all living members of this diverse animal phylum.”

In modern arthropods, such as grasshoppers and other insects, the brain also has a tritocerebrum.

Repeated copies of many arthropod organs can be found in their segmented bodies. Working out how they line up is key to understanding diversification.

“These fossils are like a Rosetta Stone, helping to link traits in radiodonts and other early fossil arthropods with their counterparts in surviving groups,” said Moysiuk.

The Cambrian Explosion was when life gave everything a shot. – credit Professor Drew Muscente , Cornell University / YouTube

Bottom dweller’s nightmare

In addition to a pair of stalked eyes, Stanleycaris had a big central peeper at the front of its head; a feature never before seen in a radiodont.

“The presence of a huge third eye in Stanleycaris was unexpected,” said co-author Professor Jean-Bernard Caron. “It emphasizes these animals were even more bizarre-looking than we thought. It also shows us the earliest arthropods had already evolved a variety of complex visual systems like many of their modern kin.”

CHECK OUT: One of the Largest ‘Sea Dragon’ Fossils Ever Found in Britain Unearthed As a Complete Ichthyosaur

“Since most radiodonts are only known from scattered bits and pieces, this discovery is a crucial jump forward in understanding what they looked like and how they lived.”

During the Cambrian, radiodonts were among the biggest animals. Anomalocaris, dubbed the ‘weird wonder,’ was at least 3ft 3in, making it a veritable sea monster. Radiodont means ‘radiating teeth’. The unusual animals were named after their toothy, circular jaws. They were adapted to the dim light of deep water.

At no more than eight inches, Stanleycaris was much smaller. But it would have been an impressive killer at least three times the size of most rivals.

“With large compound eyes, a formidable looking circular mouth lined with teeth, frontal claws with an impressive array of spines, and a flexible, segmented body with a series of swimming flaps along its sides, Stanleycaris would have been the stuff of nightmares for any small bottom dweller unfortunate enough to cross its path,” said Moysiuk.

Most were collected in the 1980s and 1990s and now sit  in an extensive collection of fossils from Burgess Shale—a World Heritage site—housed at Royal Ontario Museum.

CREEP Out Your Friends With This Ancient History…

Onondaga Nation Celebrates First Land Return of 1,000 Acres in New York’s Tully Valley Following Legal Settlement

In a rare moment of return for East Coast Native Americans, the Onondaga Nation has had 1,023 acres of ancestral land in New York state returned to them.

The land in the Tully Valley includes the headwaters of Onondaga Creek, more than 45 acres of wetland and floodplains, and approximately 980 acres of forests and fields.

The agreement is a result of the March 2018 Natural Resource Damage Assessment and Restoration (NRDAR) settlement between the Natural Resource Trustees and Honeywell International, Inc.

Honeywell, manufactures of household appliances like air conditioners, were found to have been polluting Onondaga Lake in the Tully Valley, Central New York, for almost 100 years, and it had begun to spill into neighboring Onondaga lands.

They have settled on orders to pay $5 million dollars to the Natural Resource Trustees, give the 1,023 acres of land over to the Onondaga, restore several hundred acres of polluted area, and construct 18 projects related to conservation and recreation, of which 7 have been completed.

“It is with great joy that the Onondaga Nation welcomes the return of the first substantial acreage of its ancestral homelands. The Nation can now renew its stewardship obligations to restore these lands and waters and to preserve them for the future generations yet to come,” said Onondaga Nation Chief Tadodaho Sidney Hill.

RELATED: Native American Tribe in Maine Gets Back Sacred Island Taken 160 Years Ago

For the Onondaga people, Onondaga Lake and Onondaga Creek are sacred. They are considered living relatives, central to the Onondaga worldview and spirituality, the tribe detailed in a statement.

Secularly, the cold waters of Onondaga Creek support a small population of brook trout, a population which may be fully restored with proper stewardship. The wetlands, floodplains, forests and fields are home to wildlife such as great blue heron, songbirds, waterfowl, hawks, bald eagles, frogs, bats, and other mammals including white-tailed deer.

“We look forward to drawing upon the Onondaga Nation’s expertise and Indigenous knowledge in helping manage the area’s valuable wildlife and habitat,” said Sect. of the Interior, Deb Haaland.

It’s more common now than ever that tribal nations are recovering rights to use their ancestral lands as they always had, but for tribes in the super-developed Mid-Atlantic region, these opportunities are rare.

CHECK OUT: The ‘Sioux Chef’ Brings Indigenous Food Back to the Forefront of American Diets

However as the Onondaga point out, recent world-wide land surveys have shown that 80% of the world’s biodiversity is currently located in areas stewarded by indigenous peoples, or lands contested as such, despite the fact this amounts to less than half the land of the planet.

As such, they are keen to show what indigenous stewardship can bring to the biodiversity of America’s East Coast, and the current plan with state officials is to turn the Onondaga Lake and Tully Valley into a wildlife sanctuary, but one with ample opportunities for recreation, as Honeywell were ordered to construct many boat launching sites along the lake and rivers.

WATCH the local news report below…

CELEBRATE This Indigenous Victory On Social Media…

Being A ‘Weekend Warrior’ Boosts Health as Much as Working Out Every Day, According to New Research

-Dannii Coughlan
-Dannii Coughlan

Being a ‘weekend warrior’ boosts health just almost as much as working out every day, according to new research.

People who cram exercise into one or two sessions on the weekend lower their risk of premature death as much as peers who spread exercise through the week.

Both groups are less likely to succumb to cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes and other killer diseases than couch potatoes, say scientists.

The findings published in JAMA Internal Medicine are based on more than 350,000 adults in the U.S. followed for just over a decade, on average. An earlier analysis from more than 63,000 Britons by another team came to the same conclusion.

At least 150 or 75 minutes of moderate or vigorous intensity respectively is advised for 18 to 64-year-olds in both countries.

Out of almost 22,000 deaths, there were 8 and 15 percent fewer in weekend warriors and regularly active individuals, respectively.

RELATED: Exercise in the Morning May Stave Off Cancer, As Opposed to Later in the Day, New Study Says

“We found they had similar all-cause and cause-specific mortality, suggesting when performing the same amount of physical activity, spreading it over more days or concentrating it into fewer days may not influence outcomes,” said study author Professor Yafeng Wang, of Jiangnan University, China.

It has implications for those who struggle to find time owing to work or family commitments, and who may find it easier to fit less frequent bouts of physical activity into a ‘busy, busy’ lifestyle.

The international team, including British scientists, looked at links between the weekend warrior and other physical activity patterns and deaths from all causes, cardiovascular disease and cancer.

“The findings underscore that regular physical activity has been associated with lower risks of all-cause and cause-specific mortality compared with physical inactivity.” said Wang.

CHECK OUT: New Research Says That Short Bursts of Exercise Could Make You Smarter

“Most importantly, these findings suggest that whether the recommended amount of moderate to vigorous physical activity is spread out during the week or concentrated into fewer days, there may be no significant difference in health benefits.”

“For people with fewer opportunities for daily or regular physical activity during their work week, these findings are important.”

RUN This Story Over To Your Fellow Warriors’ Social Media…