All News - Page 360 of 1724 - Good News Network
Home Blog Page 360

New Evidence Shows Giant Meteorites Created the Seven Continents Upon Impact With Earth

NASA/JPL-Caltech
NASA/Jpl-Caltech/T. Pyle

New research suggests the seven continents were created by giant meteorite impacts—similar to the one that wiped out the dinosaurs.

They happened more than three-and-a-half billion years ago, before life on Earth began— so the discovery sheds fresh light on evolution.

Scientists analyzed a mineral called zircon, the microscopic grains of which act like a ‘geological clock’.

They were dug from ancient rocks at Pilbara Craton in Western Australia, which has been dubbed ‘the oldest place on Earth’.

Lead author Dr. Tim Johnson studied the composition of oxygen isotopes in these zircon crystals and found a “top-down process”.

“It started with the melting of rocks near the surface and progressed deeper—consistent with the geological effect of giant meteorite impacts.

“Our research provides the first solid evidence the processes that ultimately formed the continents began with giant meteorite impacts. They were similar to that responsible for the extinction of the dinosaurs, but occurred billions of years earlier.”

LOOK: Watch a Billion Years of Shifting Tectonic Plates Forming Our Continents in 40 Seconds

It led to the huge regions we know today as Asia, Africa, North America, South America, Antarctica, Europe and Australia—in order of size.

Dr. Johnson, of Curtin University in Perth, said the study even has implications for combating global warming: “Not least, the continents host critical metals such as lithium, tin and nickel… essential to the emerging green technologies needed to mitigate climate change.”

Massive space rocks regularly smashed into the planet during the first quarter of its four-and-a-half-billion year history. It’s known as the ‘Late Heavy Bombardment’—and had it continued life as we know it would never have got started.

For decades it had been theorized the continents originally formed at these sites but there was no proof until now.

“The Pilbara Craton represents Earth’s best-preserved remnant of ancient crust,” says Johnson. “By examining tiny crystals of the mineral zircon in rocks we found evidence of these giant meteorite impacts.”

CHECK OUT: A Gigantic Planet Found Hidden in Plain Sight

NASA/JPL-Caltech

The study also pushes back on when the first continents—called cratons—emerged from the ocean.

It was believed to have happened roughly 2.5 billion years ago. The findings, published in the journal Nature, add to evidence it happened much earlier.

They eventually formed into one ‘supercontinent’ named Pangaea, which began breaking up 175 million years ago—with different segments drifting into those we see today.

POPULAR: DNA Sequencing of Viking Bones ‘Will Rewrite History’: They Weren’t All Scandinavian

A giant impact around 3.6 billion years ago would have triggered massive mantle melting to produce a thick nucleus, he explained. Data related to other areas of ancient continental crust on Earth appears to show patterns similar to those discovered in Western Australia. The researchers suspect their model is “widely applicable” and will continue testing in other areas.

“Earth is the only planet known to have continents, although how they formed and evolved is unclear,” added Johnson. “However, all along it seems the evidence was right beneath our feet.”

BREAK Up Boredom on Social Media By Sharing This Fascinating News…

“It’s never overreacting to ask for what you want and need.” – Amy Poehler

Quote of the Day: “It’s never overreacting to ask for what you want and need.” – Amy Poehler

Photo by: Milada Vigerova

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?

Frequent Aspirin Use is Linked to Lower Risk of Ovarian Cancer in Women Most Likely to Develop the Disease

Hal Gatewood
Hal Gatewood

An aspirin a day cuts the risk of ovarian cancer in women most likely to develop the disease, according to new research.

It could protect those with a family history of the disease and carriers of the ‘Angelina Jolie gene,’ say scientists.

The painkiller is believed to block triggering proteins. It also douses inflammation, which plays a key role in ovarian cancer—the most fatal gynecologic cancer.

“Most known risk factors of ovarian cancer—such as family history, mutations in the BRCA1 and 2 genes, and endometriosis—can’t be modified,” said lead author Dr. Britton Trabert, of the University of Utah.

The US team described the findings as “promising.” It is an “actionable step” that vulnerable individuals may take.

Daily, or almost daily, aspirin use was associated with a 13% reduction in ovarian cancer risk and they found that aspirin benefitted most subgroups.

“Importantly, this research provides further evidence that ovarian cancer chemo-prevention with frequent aspirin use could benefit people in higher-risk subgroups,” Dr. Trabert added.

RELATED: Vitamin D Could Help Protect Women Against and Even Reverse Ovarian Cancer

Four years ago, a Harvard University analysis of more than 200,000 women found
a daily low dose 75mg pill slashed case rates of the cancer by about a quarter. But individual studies have not been able to look at whether the drug benefits those with a higher risk of disease.

The Utah team pooled data from 17 studies, nine prospective cohort studies from the Ovarian Cancer Cohort Consortium, and eight case control studies from the Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium that included more than 8,300 cases.

“This gave us a more detailed and accurate look than if we used published data.”

They were defined by specific risk factors like family history of breast or ovarian cancer, endometriosis where womb tissue grows around the ovaries, obesity, pregnancy, oral contraceptive use, and sterilization where the fallopian tubes are tied.

“Aspirin use has been linked with major adverse events, including internal bleeding and stroke,” says Trabert. “Since aspirin helped people who had two or more risk factors, we hope patients and clinicians can use this research to have an informed conversation when it comes to potential preventive measures.”

POPULAR: Large Study Suggests Doing Chores May Be Linked to a 21% Reduced Risk For Alzheimer’s Disease

She earned a Department of Defense Investigator-Initiated Research Award for work on aspirin use and lower ovarian cancer rates. Ovarian cancer is known as ‘the silent killer’ because there are few distinct symptoms until it is advanced.

Currently around a third of women are diagnosed early, and nine-in-10 women with early-stage disease survive. It drops to just one in ten if picked up late—one of the highest death rates of all cancers.

Aspirin has been used as a painkiller for thousands of years, since the Ancient Egyptians found an extract of willow bark helped mothers cope with child birth. But in recent years scientists have found the cheap drug has many more applications. It is commonly prescribed by doctors in lower doses to prevent heart problems, because it stops platelets in the blood clumping together to form clots.

But, low dose aspirin has also been found to significantly reduce the risk of bowel cancer—as well as skin, colon, lung and prostate cancer.

CHECK OUT: Starch in Green Bananas May Slash Risk of Some Cancers by Over 60%, Study Finds

Aspirin is a blood thinner. It comes with a risk of internal bleeding – particularly among people with certain conditions such as an abnormal heart rhythm. In can cause stomach bleeds and ulcers that may require hospital treatment, and in rare instances a stroke or a life-threatening hemorrhage. So, individuals should consult their health care providers before beginning new medication to balance any potential risks with these potential benefits.

The study was published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

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

An 81-year-old stunned everyone with his note perfect rendition of ‘Unchained Melody’, by The Righteous Brothers, after asking to take the microphone at a nursing home party.

Guests at Park View Nursing Home in Liverpool had enjoyed a performance from local vocalist Toni Nesbitt, when Dave Williams asked if he could sing a song himself.

Dave then stood up and blew the entire room away.

“When I got up my daughter was begging me to sit back down,” admitted Dave. “But I’m glad I didn’t!”

“Someone in the audience was a patient with dementia—and after my performance I saw her singing the song to herself, which was brilliant.”

The performance would have come as no shock to those who know Williams, because he had sung with The Beatles a couple times.

RELATED: Listening to Music With a Groove Actually Boosts Brain Function

As a teen, Dave played with his band called The Dices, and in 1958 they appeared alongside soon-to-be Beatles drummer Ringo Starr at the Morgue Skiffle Cellar in Liverpool, though the 18-year-old Ringo was not yet a superstar.

Dave decided to go solo when he was 17 and secured a gig singing on weekends for £3 a night at a small club. He then sang with The Beatles at Knotty Ash Village Hall in Liverpool in 1961—after his friend asked the band members if he could get up and join them.

He also performed in front of hundreds of people, including Mel C. of the Spice Girls, at Paul McCartney’s 58th Birthday in 2000 at the Linda McCartney Centre, in the Royal Liverpool University Hospital.

“It was all surreal and something I will never ever forget. The gig at Knotty Ash was a bit awkward. I may have been a bit out of key but I got a good clap! But, at Paul’s birthday, people from around the world came to be there.”

KINDNESS: Anonymous Shopper Buys Iconic Pantera Guitar For Young Rocker Who Always Came in the Shop to Play it

An employee at the nursing home described how stunned audience members were at his incredibly passionate performance and powerful voice.

“Words can’t explain how we all felt after his performance—and he has said he would love to perform for us again.”

She shared the video of Dave singing (see it below) to the Park View TikTok profile, where it amassed over 500,000 views. The incredible online reaction has been astounding for Dave—who doesn’t use social media, and had never heard of TikTok before.

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

The octogenarian, who retired as a medical assistant for the UK’s National Health Service after nearly 50 years, was dumbfounded when he went into his favorite local shop the following day and the whole place was clapping and cheering for him.

HAIL a Silver Senior By Giving His Viral Video a Lift on Social Media…

Simply Wearing a Fitness Tracker Makes You Walk 40 Extra Minutes a Day – And Lose 2 Pounds

Photo by Tyler Nix (cropped)
Photo by Tyler Nix (cropped)

Simply wearing a fitness tracker encourages you to walk up to 40 minutes more every day, which results in shedding 2.2 pounds in weight in just a few months, according to a large study.

The new analysis looked at studies involving 164,000 people across the world who used the devices—and the data shows the relatively low-cost intervention had many benefits.

The team from the University of South Australia reviewed almost 400 studies and demonstrated wearable activity trackers (WATs) could prevent a host of health conditions caused by lack of exercise.

The lead researcher of the study published in Lancet Digital Health said there is widespread skepticism about WATs’ efficacy, accuracy and whether they fuel obsessive behaviors and eating disorders. But the actual evidence for WATs is overwhelmingly positive.

“Wearable activity trackers are effective across all age groups and for long periods of time,” said doctoral candidate Ty Ferguson. “They encourage people to exercise on a regular basis, to make it part of their routine—and to set goals to lose weight.”

“The other reported benefit is that WATs improved depression and anxiety through an increase in physical activity.”

RELATED: First Effective Treatment for Back Pain Changes How Brain and Back Communicate

Professor Carol Maher, co-author of the paper, added, “Bearing in mind these were not weight loss studies, but lifestyle physical activity studies, so we wouldn’t expect dramatic weight loss.

“The average person gains about 0.5 kg a year in weight creep so losing 1kg (2.2 lb) over five months is significant, especially when you consider that two-thirds of Australians are overweight or obese.”

Between 2014 and 2020, the number of wearable activity trackers shipped worldwide increased by almost 1500 percent, with purchases in 2020 alone worth $2.8 billion.

POPULAR: 7 Healthy Habits Can Almost Halve Our Risk of Dying From Stroke and Protect Against Alzheimer’s

As well as weight loss, there is evidence fitness trackers help lower blood pressure and cholesterol, too.

Fitness wearables on Amazon.com currently show prices between $21 and $160.

WALK Some Encouragement Over to Friends and Family on Social Media…

“We need to remember that failure is not the opposite of success… Failure is part of success.” – Arianna Huffington

Quote of the Day: “We need to remember that failure is not the opposite of success… Failure is part of success.” – Arianna Huffington

Photo by: Gezy Pics, CC license

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?

Green Bay Packers Football Stars Join Young Fan’s Impromptu Tea Party on Sideline – WATCH

Ashley Rubens
Ashley Rubens

Training Camp for these big, burly football players is serious business, as athletes condition their bodies for the NFL season ahead.

But, these sweet superstars are winning hearts, too, with their spontaneous playfulness—especially when a wee lass sets up a tea party on the sidelines.

Dressed in her green and gold cheerleader outfit, Aria Rubens lifted her empty tea cup to each player as they entered Lombardi Stadium, asking, “Would you like some tea?”

The little pink cups decorated with a Disney princess had not a drop of liquid in them, but each player lifted their head, gulping down a pretend sip, and thanked their young fan.

“You make the best tea!” said one player. Little Aria always answered with “Go Pack, go!”

Mom Ashley Rubens posted the videos on social media and the cuteness went viral.

“It’s just crazy how many people just want a good story about people being kind to each other,” Ashley said. “Ultimately, I think that’s what the Packers community is about.”

LOOK: 2 Paramedics Can’t Stop Laughing During Promotional Video That Went Viral

The Wisconsin team is the only organization in the NFL that is owned by the citizens of its city, rather than wealthy individuals. The Green Bay Packers quarterback, Aaron Rodgers, has won back-to-back League MVP titles from 2020 to 2022.

Watch the sweet video below…

CONTINUE the Tea Party – Share With Packers Fans on Social Media…

Americans’ Advice is Clear: College Teaches Important Life Lessons Beyond Coursework

Trinity College by Hernán Piñera, CC license
Trinity College by Hernán Piñera, CC license

Almost three-quarters of Americans believe college isn’t just about school—it also teaches important life lessons.

That’s according to a new poll of 2,000 adults, which revealed 73% agree that college educates you about adult life beyond coursework and the classroom.

While doing well in school and getting good grades was found to be the hardest part of college (46%), time management (45%), having more responsibilities (44%) and living on your own (43%) also were some of the top challenges.

Conducted by OnePoll on behalf of Texas Tech University, results also revealed that 44% of respondents are currently considering returning to college or going for the first time—with 42% saying they are interested in learning new skill sets or changing career paths.

Of the respondents who have attended college, 85% believe college prepared them for adult life, but 80% agree if they could go back, they would change some things about their college experience.

RELATED: Top Skills American Teens Want to Learn and Do After School

42% cited ‘helping with job interviews and applications’ as an area where colleges could improve. Being more affordable also ranked high on the list (39%).

When it comes to choosing a school, 41% of those surveyed are looking for classes or seminars that teach about life beyond the classroom.

“We all hear the national conversations about the costs of attending college, asking whether the experience is worth it,” said Texas Tech vice president for enrollment management Jamie Hansard. “While what students learn in the classroom can be foundational for the goals and careers they want to pursue, it’s important to understand that the value of college goes far beyond a person’s academic achievements.”

Of the life skills those respondents picked up during their time in college, organizational skills (53%) and discovering their passions (47%) ranked as the top two.

When asked what skills college taught them that they still apply to adult life, respondents highlighted, “how to be independent,” “how to arrive when instructed” and “how to approach people in the correct way.”

MORE: 73% of These Women Who Started Businesses During Pandemic Say It’s Easier Than Ever to Be Successful

Nearly a third of respondents who attended college said the highlight of their experience was making friends.

Seventy percent of those who attended college work in the field associated with their degree, and agreed that their career goals are more attainable if they attend college.

“It’s nearly impossible to assign a dollar amount to the value of college,” Hansard said. “How do you put a number on discovering your passion? How do you put a value on the friendships you make in college, many that last a lifetime and may help you reach your goals later in life? How do you put a number on the personal growth and development you experience along the way? College can help you do all these things and give you an education. If you take advantage of those opportunities, it’s absolutely worth it.”

WATCH: Teacher Shares Brilliant Band-Aid Lesson to Teach Kids About Fairness – And it Goes Viral

SHARE the Advice on Social Media With Those Considering College…

Enormous Underground City Uncovered in Turkey

- TRT World News
– TRT World News.

An enormous underground city has been discovered in Turkey that was created by persecuted Jews and Christians in Imperial Rome.

At 74 acres, the ancient city is believed to have been inhabited as early as the 1st century, and acted as a home and synagogue for 70,000 people.

It all started when workers found what appeared to be a small cave while conducting restoration work on nearby houses in the town of Midyat, southeast Turkey, in 2020. Midyat is often called an open air museum, as the city is just riddled with ancient stone structures.

Preliminary surveys found it was in fact not a cave, but a series of galleries, silos, chambers, and even areas of worship.

RELATED: They Found World’s Largest Intact Mosaic at Site of Turkish Hotel – Where it’s Now a Stunning Feature

Excavations have only mapped 5% of the total area, which Gani Tarkan, director of the Mardin Museum in Midyat, explained has been named “Matiate” which means homeland, in ancient Assyrian.

Of that 5%, there have been dozens of silos for storing grain, olive oil, wine, and other foodstuffs. Artifacts have included wine and olive oil making equipment, coins, and lamps, as well as evidence that the area had begun at some point to be used as catacombs, possibly during the Byzantine period.

High on the vaulted stone ceiling of one chamber, archeologists found the Star of David engraved into the wall, with other carvings including human figures nearby.

Tarkan believes it could be the biggest underground city in all of Turkey, and even after it was abandoned as a living center, it continued to serve as a wine making center and burial catacombs.

POPULAR: Ancient Tomb Found Beneath Notre Dame is ‘Remarkable Scientific Discovery’ of Sealed Sarcophagus

Midyat and the Mardin Museum, along with the national government, intend to finish archeological work and turn the city into part of the city’s wealth of archeological tourist attractions.

Take a tour of the city with the TRT World News video below.

REVEAL This Hidden City On Social Media By Sharing It With Friends…

Giving Bits of Farmland Back To Nature Does Not Reduce Crop Yields, Landmark Study Shows

By Tomasz Filipek
By Tomasz Filipek

Contrary to what some people will say, nature-friendly methods of farming can significantly increase biodiversity without damaging food production, a long-term research project has found.

In the post-Brexit era, the Johnson government in England had focused a lot of its farming and nature policies on creating a situation where farmers and landowners would be rewarded for increasing biodiversity by returning some land to wilder states.

Now, after a massive study, it’s been shown that giving some land on the farm back to nature does not decrease the amount of food produced—and provides huge benefits to nature.

Scientists from the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (UKCEH) spent a decade monitoring the impacts of the large-scale government-funded experiment at Hillesden, a  2,400 acre (1,000-hectare) commercial farm in Buckinghamshire.

Beginning in 2005, researchers created several wildlife habitats, including seed-bearing plants for birds, wildflowers for pollinators, and tussocky grass margins to support a range of birds, insects, and small mammals.

POPULAR: Irish Metalhead Turns His Ancestral Estate into Model of Rewilding: It Naturally Grew Into Biodiverse Eden

The experiment assessed the effectiveness of these agri-environmental measures in reducing biodiversity losses caused by the intensification of UK farming practices since WWII—including declines in species that are essential for agricultural production such as pollinators and predators of crop pests.

In the longest-running monitoring study of its kind, researchers found numbers of the majority of species did better at Hillesden than in other comparable farmed landscapes without agri-environment measures over the same timeframes.

More Pollinators and Birds

There were increases of a third across populations of all bird species between 2006 and 2016, compared to an average of just under 13% at other monitored sites, and 40% among all butterflies between 2009-2017, compared to 21% elsewhere.

CHECK OUT: Startup Finds Investors to Put Their Money into Rewilding the Land

previous UKCEH study of six years found overall yields at Hillesden were maintained—even enhanced for some crops—despite the loss of agricultural land for habitat creation.

Butterflies that did particularly well at Hillesden over the period studied included the gatekeeper, which feeds on grasses and the green-veined white, which feeds on wildflowers in field margins. The numbers of both species doubled over the period studied.

Large blue butterfly photo by PJC&Co

Numbers of insect-eating birds like the great tit and blue tit rose around 80% on average.

Populations of 12 bird species and nine butterfly species rose significantly.

RELATED: Couple Turns Barren English Estate into Conservation Eden, Rewilding to Attract Rare Species of Astonishing Biodiversity

“Investigating changes in populations over a significant period of time, and comparing these with other sites, means we can be confident that agri-environment options can bring long-term term benefits for bird and butterfly populations,” said Dr. John Redhead of UKCEH, lead author of the new research paper.

“Hillesden is a typical, large arable farm with conventional agricultural practices, in an ordinary landscape with no large patches of natural habitat. Therefore, it is likely that the results of our long-term study indicate what can be achieved on other commercial farms with good planning, implementation and management of agri-environment measures.”

There are always parts of a farm that are less productive, or more prone to pests or flooding. The areas of land taken out of food production for the experiment at Hillesden were chosen because they were unprofitable or difficult to farm.

The new habitats also encouraged natural pest control, thereby boosting crop yield in those parts of the farm. Jake Fiennes, the head of conservation at the Holkham estate in Norfolk, explained why to the Guardian.

“Take a field. If on the southern edge of that field you have a woodland, invariably the first 15 to 20 meters of that edge won’t produce the average yield, it’ll produce anything up to 50% of average,” Fiennes said. “But when you have all the species that would benefit from that edge of woodland, it’s a no-brainer to give it to nature.”

MORE: If Left to Regrow, Brazil’s Atlantic Forest Could Recover Faster and Store More Carbon Cheaper Than Tree Planting

CULTIVATE Some Good News On Social Media With This Story…

“One cannot divine nor forecast the conditions that will make happiness. One only stumbles upon them by chance, in a lucky hour.” – Willa Cather

Quote of the Day: “One cannot divine nor forecast the conditions that will make happiness. One only stumbles upon them by chance, in a lucky hour.” – Willa Cather

Photo by: Dale de Vera

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?

Couple’s Love Still Blooms 40 Years On, As They Recreate First Photo Posing Alongside 12ft Sunflower

Paul and Sandy Szewc - SWNS
Paul and Sandy Szewc – SWNS

A couple has proved their love is still blooming 40 years on by recreating a photo they took when they first got together posing alongside a 12ft sunflower.

Paul Szewc and his wife Sandy met in 1982 when Sandy asked Paul to dance in a bar. He believed flowers were the key to a woman’s heart and felt his gigantic sunflower could be the key to wooing his new acquaintance.

He invited Sandy to his mom’s backyard to show her the plants he’d grown from seed, and one particularly impressive flower which towered 12ft above the young lovers.

Keen to impress, he got Sandy to stand on his shoulders and his mom, Marjorie, snapped a picture of the pair in 1984. The couple married two years later on 20 September 1986.

“I really wanted to woo her, and it clearly worked,” Paul said. “We both love gardening and sunflowers in particular—they bring back such happy memories.”

CONTINUE READING: Watch Photographer Stumble Onto Sunset Marriage Proposal and Excitedly Give Amazing Pics to the Couple

The couple who have two sons, Jason and Kyle, continued to grow sunflowers over the years and were delighted when another giant one appeared in July 2021.

In total it was 38 years since the gardening enthusiasts took the photo of the first whopper, and they decided to recreate the photo they took when they first got together.

“One of our sunflowers just so happened to shoot up again,” said Paul, a furniture maker, from Guelph, Canada. They decided to recreate the photo they took when they first met, with their son Jason, snapping them in the exact position four decades later.

“Paul lifted me onto his shoulders as if to say ‘look what I can do,'” Sandy recounted. “He charmed me as he didn’t have a car at the time but cycled to my work at a telecommunications company to deliver me a home-grown packed lunch.”

Health-conscious Paul, who learned from his grandma and mom, enjoyed growing his own food and encouraged Sandy to get into gardening.

SIMILAR: Couple Finds Large Pearl Worth Thousands After Ordering Clams on 34th Anniversary With Favorite Restaurant

“Sandy was a junk food addict before meeting me, but I sent her off to work with nutritious packed lunches and the rest is history,” said Paul. ”I got her hooked on my home-grown fruit and veg.”

Paul said lockdown got him and Sandy back out in the garden—after their busy lives took over.

“As soon as lockdown hit, and we had nothing to do I was reminded of the joys of gardening,” he said. “I’m so glad I re-found my love for gardening, and I hope my grandchildren will develop our green fingers too.”

RECREATE This Story On Your Social Media Feeds…

San Francisco Will Consider Ending All Prosecution of Psychedelic Drug Use

Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS)
Photo by Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies

City lawmakers of San Francisco have introduced legislation that would significantly move forward the decriminalization of psychedelic substances.

The bill will hopefully reduce non-violent drug prosecution, and make it easier for health practitioners to utilize the powerful therapeutic benefits which substances like psilocybin, ketamine, and DMT have been proven to have.

It’s not a total legalization of use and possession, nor even a total decriminalization of use and possession. The exact text of the bill is as follows.

“City resources not be used for any investigation, detention, arrest, or prosecution” related to use of “Entheogenic Plants listed on the Federally Controlled Substances Schedule 1 list.”

Supervisors Dean Preston (District 5) and cosponsor Supervisor Hillary Ronen (District 9) introduced the resolution on July 26, but with the state senate in recesses until September 1st, they will have plenty of time to consider the benefits amid an epidemic of mental health problems in America.

RELATED: Another Study Shows Psychedelic Psilocybin Mushrooms Offering Long-Term Relief From Depressive Symptoms

“We’re not in a position to turn away old and new healing modalities that are effective,” Marjorie Sturm, an advocate for Decriminalize Nature San Francisco, told Filter. “We know the set and setting matters, so this threat of persecution and illegality is really overbearing.”

Much of the nation’s pioneering research on psychedelics goes on in San Francisco, through institutes like the Translational Psychedelic Research Program, and the California Institute of Integrative Studies.

Decriminalize Nature hopes that if the law were to pass, it would score a major victory for decriminalization all over the country. It includes a call on the state of California to decriminalize state-wide and join cities like Oakland (and potentially San Francisco) who have already passed such legislation.

SIMILAR: U.S. DEA is Finally Allowing Companies to Grow Their Own Cannabis for Scientific Research

It also makes the rather noticeable if small change that the Speaker of the House, the third highest political office in the country, would come from a decriminalized district.

SHARE This Good Legislation With Your Friends On Social Media…

Solar Company Gets Bright Idea to Cover Storage Facilities in Solar Panels—Brings Power to 1,400 Homes

Solar landscape - released.
Solar landscape – released.

New Jersey’s largest community solar owner and operator had the bright idea to cover storage space with solar panels.

The project was seen through to its conclusion, and now an Extra Space Storage site in Neptune, NJ, boats a 6.5-megawatt (MW) community solar array totaling 800,000 square feet that will power over 1,400 nearby homes.

Solar Landscape, the solar operator, finished the project on August 1st, and it’s one of 10 sites owned by the company and the first completed one of 46 “community solar projects” approved by the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (NJBPU) in year 2 of the Community Solar Energy Pilot Program.

“Partnering with Solar Landscape on this project aligns perfectly with our commitments to be good corporate citizens and to participate in environmental initiatives that are positive for our communities, customers, employees, and shareholders,” said McKall Morris, Senior Manager of Communications and Sustainability.

RELATED: Hundreds of Solar Farms Built Atop Closed Landfills Are Turning Brownfields into Green Fields

Community solar allows residents to subscribe to a nearby solar installation that is often hosted on a commercial property. The residents receive the electricity generated at a discounted rate, with extra savings for low-to-moderate income households.

NJBPU’s Community Solar Energy Pilot Program expands access to renewable energy for those who previously could not install solar panels for reasons such as high costs, lack of roof control, or a shaded property.

As part of the community solar program, Solar Landscape has partnered with dozens of schools, nonprofits and community organizations. Along with Sustainable Jersey City, an environmental education nonprofit, the company awarded $20,000 in scholarships to high school seniors Through its Community Sustainability Challenge scholarships.

READ ALSO: Delaware Will Install Free Solar Panels For Low-income Residents and Paying 70% For Moderate-incomes

“The promise of community solar in New Jersey has arrived, and it’s bringing guaranteed savings to residents at a time when many other costs are increasing,” said Solar Landscape CEO Shaun Keegan. “We’re proud to be partnering with Extra Space Storage on this project, which connects business leaders with the local community and saves residents money.”

LIGHT UP Your Friends’ Social Medias With This Good News…

“If there is anything that links the human to the divine, it is the courage to stand by a principle when everybody else rejects it.” – Abraham Lincoln

Quote of the Day: “If there is anything that links the human to the divine, it is the courage to stand by a principle when everybody else rejects it.” – Abraham Lincoln

Photo by: Jared Rice

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?

Ukraine Photo of Nesting Storks Returned Home Becomes a Symbol of Hope for Country

This picture from Ukraine of two stork eggs nested by its 'sacred' bird after thousands were killed by Russian bombs has become a 'symbol of hope' for the country. See SWNS story SWLSstork; The new nest comes as the species has repeatedly faced missiles and artillery strikes in the shell-shattered outskirts of Kyiv. Putin launched his invasion just as they were arriving to deliver their chicks - forcing some to abandon their young or nest elsewhere. But ten miles outside Kyiv in the shattered town of Moshchun images show one set of storks that have set up home among the ruins. Storks are a 'sacred' bird in Ukraine where they nest in the spring after wintering in Africa.
Ukrainian Society for the Protection of Birds / SWNS

This picture from Ukraine of a stalwart mother stork nesting her two chicks has become a ‘symbol of hope’ for the country.

The new nest was photographed on the outskirts of Kyiv—months after a violent invasion interrupted the normal arrival of the majestic species for annual mating here.

Storks are a ‘sacred’ bird in Ukraine, where they nest every spring after wintering in Africa.

Of the 224,000 storks that visit Europe every year, 16 percent build new nests or return to established ones in Ukraine, and raise chicks through the end of summer.

Some birds have begun to return to their usual nesting areas now, bringing hope to Ukrainians living with the aftermath of the Russian invasion.

Pictures of the nest were taken by the Ukrainian Society for the Protection of Birds. Their director, Oleg Dudkin, explained that the explosions, shelling, and roar of tanks frightened the storks away.

Ukrainian Society for the Protection of Birds / SWNS

However, these new images captured in the town of Moshchun, 10 miles from Kyiv, show the return of storks is underway—at least for this couple that set up a home.

WATCH: Eagle Decides He Wants This Hawk For a Sibling, Rather than a Meal

According to local tradition, storks are seen as a symbol for the arrival of spring, and as an age-old symbol of fertility. They also symbolize “a big harvest, as well as family happiness, procreation, cessation of conflicts and love for the homeland.”

“She has come to symbolize not merely a mother’s devotion to her young but also the great love and devotion of Ukrainians to their motherland and a readiness not to leave,” said Dudkin.

“The storks returned a few days after the Russian troops left the village and immediately began to rearrange their usual nesting place.”

“Storks will always be amulet birds for Ukrainians, strengthening the hope for peace and the inevitable victory of spring over winter and good over evil.”

LOOK: Rare ‘Dinosaur Bird’ Patiently Awaits a Lifelong Mate to Populate the Magnificent Species

FLY THIS Hopeful Story to Bird Lovers on Social Media…

Switzerland’s Brilliant Plan For Underground Cargo Delivery Tunnels to Reduce Traffic is Now Underway

Cargo Sous Terrain
Cargo Sous Terrain

The dream of a new and ambitious mode of freight transportation just took a big leap towards reality in Switzerland.

On August 1st, planning stages commenced to build an automated tunnel network that would ship cargo in shipping pods on a self-charging rail system.

Cargo Sous Terrain (CST), or ‘Underground Cargo,’ will begin with a 46-mile (70 kilometer) stretch between Zurich and a major logistics hub in Härkingen/Niederbipp. It could grow to as many as 310 miles of tunnels (500 km) connecting all the Swiss cantons.

Run on renewable energy, the project is estimated to be able to take 40% of all freight-bearing traffic off the roadways in a sustainable way that doesn’t involve clearing any land for additional roads. The electric pods would receive ongoing electric charges as they move along the induction rails.

A similar set of tracks would run on the tunnel ceilings for transporting baskets of smaller parcels.

SIMIALR: World’s First Electric Self-Propelled Container Ship Launches in Oslo to Replace 40K Diesel Truck Trips

The tunnels are designed to be around 20 feet in diameter, and the pods will be big enough for a pallet or two, with refrigerated ones to carry temperature-sensitive goods. At the terminals, large elevators will pull the pods and podlets out of the gloom and up into fulfilment centers. Dynamic tracks will prevent the elevator stations from jamming the railways of the system.

CST

Federalism is strong in the Swiss governmental structure, and each canton will deal with the project as they wish. However, in this time of rapid inflation across Europe, the Swiss have maintained their fiscal discipline and ruled out using public money for the project.

“No subsidies are being used in building the infrastructure and operating the tunnel,” parliament ruled.

Switzerland’s Federal Council has ruled out co-financing CST with public funds, but thanks to some new legislation from the Swiss government, the company has been armed with US$100 million in private investment that was sourced pre-emptively.

RELATED: Detroit Getting First Public EV-charging Road in the US to Power Electric Vehicles Wirelessly

The project seems very similar to various hyperloop ideas for American passenger transport, but if billions are to be spent, and the Swiss will have to find $35 billion in investment to finish the whole project by 2045, freight seems a much smarter use of underground rails since, to a certain degree, safety, comfort, and aesthetics won’t factor into the design.

So far, two other Swiss cantons in addition to Zurich—St. Gallen and Thurgau—have expressed interest and called it “economically feasible”.

WATCH The Concept Video From Cargo Sous Terrain

SEND This Cool Innovation Down The Line On Social Media To Your Friends…

First Effective Treatment for Back Pain Changes How Brain and Back Communicate

Back Pain-CC Esther Max
Back Pain-CC Esther Max

The first effective treatment for back pain which changes how the brain and back communicate has been developed by scientists.

The 12-week course which focuses on the nervous system rather than pain killers and manipulation leaves twice as many people pain-free as conventional treatment.

The basic principle comes from a simple concept that sometimes mind can overcome matter, and since back pain has been the number one cause of the Global Disability Burden for the last 30 years, even it bears looking into.

Researchers say the system, called sensorimotor retraining, changes how people think about their body in pain, process sensations from their back and how they move their back as they go about daily lives.

People who did it said they were happier, their backs felt better and they reported having a better quality of life, and improvements were still felt a year later, even while most existing treatments for back pain do not help people for long.

The findings were published in the Journal of the American Medical association.

KEEP READING: Mindfulness Meditation Reduces Pain by Separating it From the Self

The main difference is that sensorimotor retraining sees back pain as a problem in the nervous system that can be changed, rather than a disc, bone or muscle problem.

The treatment is based on research that shows the nervous system of people who suffer from chronic back pain actually behaves in a different way to people who have had a recent injury to their lower back, and includes this education as part of the 12 weeks.

The team say that, because people are told their back is vulnerable and needs protecting, this changes the way the back and brain communicate so their back is given messages that it is vulnerable.

It becomes weaker in the process and the team hope their treatment can stop this self-fulfilling pattern by correcting two problems common in back pain: a hypersensitive pain system, and bad communication between the brain and back.

The authors say people can see their back and brain are not communicating well and slowly learn to train their brain and body to fix the problem.

Normally back therapies focus on fixing something in the back straight away—such as injecting a disc, loosening up joints or strengthening muscles.

SIMILAR: New Study Finds Reading Can Help With Chronic Pain

For the study, 276 people were split into two groups- one who did the therapy for 12 weeks and another who were given bogus therapies for the same amount of time, both of which were delivered by trained physiotherapists, exercise psychologists and other experts.

“If you compare the results to studies looking at opioid treatment versus placebo, the difference for that is less than one point out of 10 in pain intensity, and it is only short term and there is little improvement in disability,” said study author Professor James McAuley from the University of New South Wales.

“We see similar results for studies comparing manual therapy to sham (therapy) and exercise to sham (therapy).”

Their findings are similar to those published earlier this year in PAIN, which detailed 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 of the PAIN paper, 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.”

It’s an exciting new line of inquiry into an age old problem.

Put Your BACK Into Sharing This Exciting Trend In Health News…

“It’s a sad day when you find out that it’s not accident or time or fortune, but just yourself that kept things from you.” – Lillian Hellman

Quote of the Day: “It’s a sad day when you find out that it’s not accident or time or fortune, but just yourself that kept things from you.” – Lillian Hellman

Photo by: Tor Lindstrand, CC license

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?

This Hero Dog-Lover Keeps Seniors and Their Pets Together With ‘Peace of Mind’

Carie Broecker, founder of Peace of Mind Dog Rescue.

A dog rescue program specialized to help the dogs of the elderly has allowed hundreds of dogs to stay with their owners who could no longer physically take care of them.

The program also takes in and finds homes for dogs who have to be put up for adoption in the case that an elderly person has to enter a care home or hospice.

This often heart-breaking, more often heart-fortifying work is done by Peace of Mind Dog Rescue, and has so far helped find new permanent homes and families for 3,000 dogs, each with their own little stories of life alongside a senior citizen.

The heart-brain-child of dog rescue worker Carie Broecker, Peace of Mind was started when a woman with impaired movements had needed Broecker to walk her dog Savannah, but eventually was forced to part with the canine entirely.

“I said I promise I will make sure that Savannah finds a good home,” Broecker said. “She was so relieved that I could make that promise to her.”

SIMILAR: Till Death Do Us Bark: Watch Inseparable Shelter Dogs Get Married in Adorable Ceremony

That was in 2009, and now Broecker runs a senior citizen dog walking service, a foster program to help return the idea of a family change into dogs’ minds, and a rescue shelter for elderly dogs and dogs from the elderly.

“It blows us away over and over again how somebody will fall in love with a silly-looking blind chihuahua with a tongue hanging out and all kinds of medical issues,” Broecker said.

Often the elderly dogs need vet care, paid for by donations, which you can make here.

Broecker says that elderly dogs, like elderly people, often get overlooked in society. She’s working to change that, and provide a safety net for owners who want to make sure their best friends find a home after they’re gone.

WATCH The CNN Heroes Video HERE And SHARE This Vital Work On Social Media.