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Prehistoric People Created Art by Flickering Firelight, New Research Reveals

Our early ancestors probably created intricate artwork by firelight, an examination of 50 engraved stones unearthed in France has revealed.

The stones were incised with artistic designs around 15,000 years ago and have patterns of heat damage which suggests they were carved close to the flickering light of a fire, the new study has found.

The study, by researchers at the Universities of York and Durham, looked at the collection of engraved stones, known as plaquettes, which are now held in the British Museum. They are likely to have been made using stone tools by Magdalenian people, an early hunter-gatherer culture dating from between 23,000 and 14,000 years ago.

The researchers identified patterns of pink heat damage around the edges of some of the stones, providing evidence that they had been placed in close proximity to a fire.

Following their discovery, the researchers have experimented with replicating the stones themselves and used 3D models and virtual reality software to recreate the plaquettes as prehistoric artists would have seen them: under fireside light conditions and with the fresh white lines engravers would have made as they first cut into the rock thousands of years ago.

Lead author of the study, Dr Andy Needham from the Department of Archaeology at the University of York and Co-Director of the York Experimental Archaeology Research Centre said, “It has previously been assumed that the heat damage visible on some plaquettes was likely to have been caused by accident, but experiments with replica plaquettes showed the damage was more consistent with being purposefully positioned close to a fire.

“In the modern day, we might think of art as being created on a blank canvas in daylight or with a fixed light source; but we now know that people 15,000 years ago were creating art around a fire at night, with flickering shapes and shadows.”

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Working under these conditions would have had a dramatic effect on the way prehistoric people experienced the creation of art, the researchers say. It may have activated an evolutionary capacity designed to protect us from predators called “Pareidolia,” where perception imposes a meaningful interpretation such as the form of an animal, a face or a pattern where there is none.

A journey to the past

Dr Needham added, “Creating art by firelight would have been a very visceral experience, activating different parts of the human brain. We know that flickering shadows and light enhance our evolutionary capacity to see forms and faces in inanimate objects and this might help explain why it’s common to see plaquette designs that have used or integrated natural features in the rock to draw animals or artistic forms.”

The Magdalenian era saw a flourishing of early art, from cave art and the decoration of tools and weapons to the engraving of stones and bones.

CHECK OUT: Friendship Ornaments From the Stone Age Were Crafted and Worn as a ‘Symbol of connection’

Co-author of the study, published in PLUS One, PhD student Izzy Wisher from the Department of Archaeology at the University of Durham, said, “During the Magdalenian period conditions were very cold and the landscape was more exposed. While people were well-adapted to the cold, wearing warm clothing made from animal hides and fur, fire was still really important for keeping warm. Our findings reinforce the theory that the warm glow of the fire would have made it the hub of the community for social gatherings, telling stories and making art.

“At a time when huge amounts of time and effort would have gone into finding food, water and shelter, it’s fascinating to think that people still found the time and capacity to create art. It shows how these activities have formed part of what makes us human for thousands of years and demonstrates the cognitive complexity of prehistoric people.”

Source: University of York
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Ukrainian Refugees Move Into Medieval Irish Castle Owned by Good Samaritan

castle released Reuters video via Rumble license
Reuters video via Rumble license

From the bombed-out streets of Mariupol to the rustic walls of a 15th-century Irish castle, a group of eleven Ukrainians have found a safe place to stay.

Having no space in Madrid where he lives with his Spanish wife Lola, Barry Haughian decided to quickly open up their second home when shells started falling on Ukraine.

That second home just happens to be Ballindooley Castle in County Galway. Haughian (pronounced HOY-en) flew to Poland to pick up a group of eleven refugees, some from Mariupol, and others from Dnipro.

“We were emotional wrecks for probably more than a week. We weren’t sure what we were doing, and just trying to make things better for them,” Haughian told Reuters.

“So now, every week it gets better… You can see the weight coming off their shoulders. We’ve got people dropping in all the time trying to help them. It’s a real ‘céad míle fáilte’ (a hundred thousand welcomes) from the people of Ireland.”

The kids play about the castle grounds, and the group has been able to celebrate a birthday together as they gradually find their feet.

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Now one month into their new routines, five of the group have found jobs, including Maria Nazarchuk, who works at a garden center near the castle—and hopes to continue her accounting studies at the National University of Galway in September.

Ireland is proud of its contribution to the EU refugee sharing policy, and two months ago, when national registration opened via the Irish Red Cross to hosting Ukrainians, the website crashed due to the number of applicants.

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Neighbors routinely stop by to lighten the mood with whatever supplies they can offer, including everything Nazarchuk needs to continue pursuing her passion for baking outside of her studies.

(WATCH the video for this story below.)

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John Kerry’s Global Ocean Conference Raises 400+ Commitments Worth $16 Billion to Protect Ocean Health

John Kerry at Our Oceans Conference - Official Photos released by Jesse Alpert/U.S. Department of State
John Kerry at Our Oceans Conference – Official Photos released by Jesse Alpert/U.S. Department of State

The seventh annual Our Ocean Conference concluded recently with the announcement a grand tally of 410 commitments to protect the the oceans and the living beings surrounding them—pledges worth $16.35 Billion. The conference, co-hosted by the Republic of Palau and the United States, was the first to be held in a small island developing state.

Titled “Our Ocean, Our People, Our Prosperity,” the conference highlighted the importance of a healthy ocean to small island developing states—and to all communities where the ocean is a primary source of sustenance.

More than 600 participants representing over 70 foreign delegations attended—all to commit to concrete action to advance ocean issues (see the list below).

Former U.S. Senator John Kerry is not only the current Special Presidential Envoy for Climate. He started the Our Ocean Conferences in 2014—and since then they have mobilized more than 1,800 commitments worth nearly $108 billion across the issue areas of the conference, which include sustainable fisheries, sustainable blue economies, marine protected areas, maritime security, marine pollution, and climate change.

The conference highlighted the importance of ocean-based climate solutions, including shipping decarbonization, marine nature-based solutions, and offshore renewable energy, in keeping the 1.5-degree target within reach and improving global climate resilience.

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“Together, we realized extraordinary new commitments and ambition across many sectors,” said Kerry. “Our goal this week was to shine a spotlight on what is happening to our ocean – not just talk, but real commitments to take real actions and make a real difference.”

The conference also featured 22 events focusing on issues from marine protected areas and blue foods to clean shipping and ocean-climate finance.

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“We recognize the stakes, and we are committed to acting with the urgency this moment demands,” insisted Kerry.

Commitments by issue area

Climate: 89 commitments worth $4.9 billion
Sustainable fisheries:60 commitments worth $668 million
Sustainable blue economies: 89 commitments worth $5.7 billion
Marine protected areas:58 commitments worth $1.3 billion
Maritime security: 42 commitments worth $358 million
Marine pollution: 71 commitments worth $3.3 billion

Commitment videos from the range of donors—from citizen, to governmental, business, and nonprofit—can be browsed here. The full agenda is available on the conference website, www.ourocean2022.pw.

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Vermont Startup’s Electric Plane That Lifts-Off Vertically is Really Taking Off

BETA Technologies Alia aircraft
BETA Technologies Alia aircraft

A Vermont-based company pioneering electric vertical take off and landing planes, or “eVTOL” in the industry, is attracting huge investment and orders from different transportation companies.

The company, called Beta, is now the only western aviation firm to really push the envelope of what is a science-fiction standard—a vehicle that can reach the altitude and speed of a jet, but with the flexible take off and landing of a helicopter.

It’s all happening very fast for what is now the most successful fundraiser in the history of Vermont startups. Beta just achieved their airworthiness certificate for their Alia plane from the U.S. Air Force last May, which represents the first eVTOL to make it that far off the drawing board. In early March of 2022, the Air Force conducted the first test flights.

Beta also recently completing a $375 million financing round, after which Alias were ordered by United Therapeutics to rapidly transport organs, and 10 were purchased by UPS, with the option for an additional 140 planes in the future.

Blade, a private shuttle company that flies passengers from Manhattan in helicopters around New York, ordered five Aliases and reserved up to 20 additional aircraft.

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The Alia can carry either five passengers plus the pilot, or 1,400 lbs. of cargo. The real party piece in terms of advanced technologies is the charging time—one hour for a full charge. Frequent fliers will know how much time a jet can be delayed on the tarmac for refueling, especially if there’s a leak.

The company’s first financing round secured over $300 million from Amazon’s Climate Pledge Fund.

RELATED: Jet Flown by United Airlines Entirely Powered by 100% Plant-Based Fuel from Corn Stalk Waste

“Zero emissions aviation is a critical part of turning the corner on climate change, and we are thrilled that our investors see our electric aviation system as a meaningful step towards this ambitious goal,” Kyle Clark, executive director of Beta, said in a news release.

Beta has already begun construction on 65 charging stations in areas across the United States, some of which are finished. They’re filing permits for hundreds more, with plans to cover the whole country by 2025.

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“Innocence is knowing everything and still being attracted to the good.” – Clarissa Pinkola Estés

Quote of the Day: “Innocence is knowing everything and still being attracted to the good.” – Clarissa Pinkola Estés

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NASA Develops ‘Lunar Backpack’ to Aid New Moon Explorers

The prototype in Alabama released Credits- NASA_Michael Zanetti
The prototype being used in Alabama; NASA, Michael Zanetti

Imagine a mountaineering expedition in a wholly uncharted environment, where the hikers had the ability to generate a real-time 3D map of the terrain.

NASA researchers and their partners have developed a remote-sensing mapping system set to aid explorers in the most isolated wilderness imaginable: the airless wastes at the South Pole of the Moon.

The Kinematic Navigation and Cartography Knapsack (KNaCK) is a mobile lidar scanner—a remote sensing method that uses light detection and ranging laser light to measure range.

Donned like a hiker’s backpack, it makes use of an innovative type of lidar called frequency modulated continuous wave (FMCW) lidar in order to provide Doppler velocity and range for millions of measurement points per second. These measurement points instantly create a real-time navigation system, delivering to the explorer a 3D “point cloud” or high-resolution map of the surrounding terrain.

Think of it as a superpowered version of laser range finders used by surveyors or the highly sensitive proximity alarms that help smart cars avoid collisions, said planetary scientist Dr. Michael Zanetti, who leads the KNaCK project at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.

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“Basically, the sensor is a surveying tool for both navigation and science mapping, able to create ultra-high-resolution 3D maps at centimeter-level precision and give them a rich scientific context,” Zanetti said. “It also will help ensure the safety of astronauts and rover vehicles in a GPS-denied environment such as the Moon, identifying actual distances to far-off landmarks and showing explorers in real time how far they’ve come and how far is left to go to reach their destination.”

Probing shadow lands

That’s a key challenge as Artemis-era explorers prepare to undertake the first modern missions to the Moon, and the first ever to its South Pole. The Sun never rises more than 3 degrees above the lunar horizon there, leaving much of the terrain in deep shadow. That makes distances to various points of interest difficult to eyeball.

Initiated in 2020 with funding by NASA’s Early Career Initiative, the KNaCK project has partnered with Torch Technologies Inc. of Huntsville to develop the backpack prototype and associated navigation algorithms that permit accurate mapping without GPS.

Using KNaCK during rover excursions and when traveling on foot, explorers could precisely map the topography of the landscape, including deep ravines, mountains, and caves. Lidar even works in pitch blackness, relieving astronauts of the need to haul cumbersome lighting rigs everywhere they go.

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

“As human beings, we tend to orient ourselves based on landmarks—a specific building, a grove of trees,” Zanetti said. “Those things don’t exist on the Moon. KNaCK will continuously enable explorers traversing the surface to determine their movement, direction, and orientation to distant peaks or to their base of operations. They can even mark specific sites where they found some unique mineral or rock formation, so others can easily return for further study.”

LOOK: Artist’s Painting is the First to Be Curated on the Moon: ‘It Will Last Forever’

That’s vital for astronauts on a clock, their excursions limited by the oxygen supply in their suits. KNaCK’s ultra-high-resolution precision—an order of magnitude greater than conventional lunar topography maps and elevation models—makes it a vital resource for conducting science and mission operations 238,900 miles away from mission control, Zanetti said.

The hardware will get another major field test in late April at NASA’s Solar System Exploration Research Virtual Institute (SSERVI) in Kilbourne Hole, New Mexico. The team previously put the KNaCK system through its paces at that ancient volcanic crater— estimated to be 25,000-80,000 years old—in November 2021.

They also used it recently to conduct a 3D reconstruction of the 6-mile-long sea barrier dunes at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, which protect its primary rocket launch pads. Kennedy and Marshall engineers will continue to use KNaCK to assess the impact of storms on dune erosion, ensuring the safety of future flight missions as they further refine the system.

MORE: NASA Perseverance Rover Captures a Stunning Solar Eclipse Video on Mars

Next, the KNaCK team will work to miniaturize the hardware—the backpack prototype weighs about 40 pounds—and harden the sensitive electronics against the punishing effects of microgravity and solar radiation.

“Taking advantage of the latest advancements in lidar technology from Aeva, our next-generation space-hardened unit with support from Torch Technologies will be about the size of a soda can and could enable lunar surface operations like never before,” Zanetti said. He envisions mounting it on a rover or on the side of an astronaut’s helmet—which should leave plenty of room in future lunar mountaineers’ all-purpose backpacks.

Source: NASA

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Florida Chihuahua is World’s Oldest Living Dog Setting Guinness Record

Guinness World Records
Guinness World Records/Gisela Shore

A new record for the world’s oldest dog living has been official confirmed in Florida: Born on 9 January, 2001, meet 21-year-old chihuahua TobyKeith.

TobyKeith’s owner, Gisela Shore, has been with him for much of his life after adopting him from a shelter.

“I was a volunteer at Peggy Adams Animal Rescue and one of the employees told me about an elderly couple trying to surrender a puppy because they could not take care of him any longer,” Gisela told Guinness World Records.

“I met with the elderly couple and I was introduced to a tiny tan Chihuahua. They had named him Peanut Butter.  I later changed his name to TobyKeith.”

TobyKeith has a close friendship with Gisela’s 28-year-old umbrella cockatoo Coco, and often walks around with her. Otherwise, he enjoys eating slices of turkey, going on little walks, and lying next to Gisela’s work station while she works from home.

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To celebrate being named the world’s oldest dog, on the day Guinness confirmed the news, TobyKeith got a bath, he had his nails trimmed down, and then he went on a car ride—his favorite treat.

(WATCH the video for this story below.)

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New Hydrogen Fuel Cells Use Cheap Iron Instead of Costly Platinum for Green Vehicles

the fuel cell being tested in teh lab released Imperial College London
The fuel cell being tested in the lab; Imperial College London

Researchers have developed a hydrogen fuel cell that uses iron instead of rare and costly platinum, enabling greater use of the technology.

Hydrogen fuel cells convert hydrogen to electricity with water vapor as the only by-product, making them an attractive green alternative for portable power, particularly for vehicles.

However, their widespread use has been hampered in part by the cost of one of the primary components. To facilitate the reaction that produces the electricity, the fuel cells rely on a catalyst made of platinum, which is expensive and scarce.

Now, a European team led by Imperial College London researchers has created a catalyst using only iron, carbon, and nitrogen—materials that are cheap and readily available—and shown that it can be used to operate a fuel cell at high power.

Lead researcher Professor Anthony Kucernak, from the Department of Chemistry at Imperial, said, “Currently, around 60% of the cost of a single fuel cell is the platinum for the catalyst. To make fuel cells a real viable alternative to fossil-fuel-powered vehicles, for example, we need to bring that cost down.

RELATED: Scientists Develop Breakthrough Method for Recycling Industrial Plastics at Room Temperature in 20 Minutes

“Our cheaper catalyst design should make this a reality, and allow deployment of significantly more renewable energy systems that use hydrogen as fuel, ultimately reducing greenhouse gas emissions and putting the world on a path to net-zero emissions.”

An iron boost

The team’s innovation was to produce a catalyst where all the iron was dispersed as single atoms within an electrically conducting carbon matrix. Single-atom iron has different chemical properties than bulk iron, where all the atoms are clustered together, making it more reactive.

These properties mean the iron boosts the reactions needed in the fuel cell, acting as a good substitute for platinum. In lab tests, the team showed that a single-atom iron catalyst has performance approaching that of platinum-based catalysts in a real fuel cell system.

MORE: Solar Panels Built From Waste Crops Can Make Energy Without Direct Light

As well as producing a cheaper catalyst for fuel cells, the method the team developed to create could be adapted for other catalysts for other processes, such as chemical reactions using atmospheric oxygen as a reactant instead of expensive chemical oxidants, and in the treatment of wastewater using air to remove harmful contaminants.

Unique synthetic method

First author Dr Asad Mehmood, from the Department of Chemistry at Imperial, said, “We have developed a new approach to make a range of ‘single atom’ catalysts that offer an opportunity to allow a range of new chemical and electrochemical processes.

RELATED: Researchers Make ‘Giant Leap’ to Produce Affordable Renewable Hydrogen

“Specifically, we used a unique synthetic method, called transmetallation, to avoid forming iron clusters during synthesis. This process should be beneficial to other scientists looking to prepare a similar type of catalyst.”

The team, whose results are published Nature Catalysis, collaborated with UK fuel cell catalyst manufacturer Johnson Matthey to test the catalyst in appropriate systems and hope to scale up their new catalyst so it can be used in commercial fuel cells.

In the meantime, they are working to improve the stability of the catalyst, so it matches platinum in durability as well as performance. That’s an exciting development indeed.

Source: Imperial College London

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Bartender Immediately Drops Beer to Save Family Swept By Rogue Wave Into Rip Current

Tongai Matandirotya
Ayra with rescuer Tongai Matandirotya – Brass Bell Kalk Bay on FB

An ordinary shift at the bar became an exercise in heroism for one bartender in South Africa recently.

Tongai Matandirotya, who works at Brass Bell Restaurant near Cape Town left behind any thoughts of his own safety—and of the drink he was pouring for a customer—to dive into the cold Atlantic ocean to rescue a mother and daughter swept off the pier by a rogue wave.

It was a relatively calm day in the fishing village of Kalk Bay. Several people were walking by the window of Brass Bells looking out to the water. Then the scene changed dramatically.

“I saw this wave come over the harbor and it covered the people, dragging them into the ocean. I immediately ran outside, undressed myself, and dived into the water because I saw a child go in as well. I have a very soft spot for kids, and my instinct just kicked in to see if I could help,” Matandirotya told News 24 Cape Town.

37-year-old Clair Gardiner and her 8-year-old daughter Arya van Hilten were two of the people swept away. Gardiner knew they were being pulled into the water as soon as the wave rushed over them, and she managed to wrap her arms around little Arya.

RELATED: Wheelchair Tumbles into Lake, But 81-Year-old is Saved From Drowning By His Dog’s Barking

By now Matandirotya had dropped the drink he was pouring, taken off his belt and jumped into the water—followed by a tourist unnamed by the news reports.  By then the ferocity of the waves, even just a few meters from shore, had pulled Gardiner and Arya apart; he used his belt to rescue Arya who wasn’t able to stay afloat by herself.

MORE: Woman Ensures Safety of Passengers By Waving Her Red Sari to Stop a Train After Spotting Broken Track

“I recently went to the restaurant to thank him,” Gardiner told local news. “My daughter recognized him immediately, and we all embraced each other. We are so thankful to Tongai and the tourist man who risked their lives to save ours; we’ll forever be grateful to them.”

Tongai noticed he had been badly scratched up by the concrete wall of the pier, but only after finishing his heroics, and reckoned the mostly-cosmetic damage wasn’t anything to worry about.

Brass Bell congratulated their man on Facebook, saying they were “so proud” of him, and appreciative of his heroism, with several commenters adding reminders to “tip him well.”

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“Chaos in the world brings uneasiness, but it also allows the opportunity for creativity and growth.” – Tom Barrett

Markus Spiske - public domain.

Quote of the Day: “Chaos in the world brings uneasiness, but it also allows the opportunity for creativity and growth.” – Tom Barrett

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Friendship Ornaments From the Stone Age Were Crafted and Worn as a ‘Symbol of connection’

Ornamental slate rings from the Stone Age. (Image- Marja Ahola) released university of helsinki featured
Ornamental slate rings from the Stone Age; Marja Ahola, University of Helsinki

Roughly 6,000 years ago, hunter-gatherer communities in northeast Europe produced skillfully manufactured slate ring ornaments in great numbers. While these ornaments are commonly referred to as ‘slate rings’, they were rarely used as intact rings. Instead, the ornaments were fragmented on purpose, using pieces of rings as tokens. These fragments were further processed into pendants.

The fragments have most likely served as symbols of the social relations of Stone Age hunter-gatherers.

Purposeful fragmentation of ornaments

As most archaeological material is found in a fragmented state, the phenomenon has been considered a natural consequence of objects’ having been long buried underground. However, according to Postdoctoral Researcher Marja Ahola from the University of Helsinki, not all objects have necessarily been broken by accident.

Instead, it is possible some were fragmented on purpose as part of maintaining social relations, bartering, or ritual activities. The research now completed has demonstrated that a substantial number of ornaments have been found in extensive and central locations. As some of the ornaments originate in Lake Onega region and have been transported to Finland through a widespread exchange network, it is possible that they symbolize the connections established within the network.

By matching pieces of slate ring ornaments, analyzing their geochemical composition and investigating traces of use and manufacture in the objects, a research group at the University of Helsinki and the University of Turku demonstrated that the ornaments had not only been worn, but also intentionally broken.

RELATED: 10-Year-old Finds Medieval Priory Seal Within Minutes of Using Metal Detector and Gets $5,000 For it

Because fragments from the same ornament were found in two different locations, it is possible that they were worn by two different individuals. Another indication of this is the fact that one of the fragments had been worked on more finely than the other.

Handprints that tell a story

“These fragments of the same object may show the handprint and preferences of two individuals. Perhaps they wore the ornaments as a symbol of a connection established,” Ahola muses.

A similar link was found in slate ring ornaments created during the same manufacturing process, one of which was found in a settlement-site context and the other in a burial site investigated near the settlement.

RELATED: 10-Year-old Finds Medieval Priory Seal Within Minutes of Using Metal Detector and Gets $5,000 For it

“What we see here may be one way of maintaining connection between the living and the dead. This is also the first clear material connection between a certain place of residence and a burial site. In other words, the people who lived there most likely buried their dead in a site close to them,” Ahola explains.

An X-ray fluorescence analysis (XRF) of a little over 50 slate ring ornaments demonstrated that some of the ornaments or fragments thereof had been imported from Lake Onega region, Russia, hundreds of kilometers from the site where they were found. XRF analyses can be used to determine the element concentrations and raw materials of inorganic archaeological materials with a very high precision.

The technique can be applied as an entirely non-invasive surface analysis, which makes it perfectly suited to the study of archaeological objects.

MORE: Metal Detector Left Him Stunned After Unearthing Ancient Ring Belonging to the Sheriff of Nottingham

“By comparing the elemental concentrations of the objects under investigation with findings published on the basis of international datasets, we were able to demonstrate that some of the ornaments or the stone material used in them was transported to Finland through an extensive exchange network, primarily from the Lake Onega region.

There was also variation in the chemical composition of the objects, which correlates with their design. These factors indicate that the ornaments were produced at Lake Onega region in several batches, most likely in different locations and by a number of makers,” says Docent Elisabeth Holmqvist-Sipilä from the University of Helsinki, whose research on these ancient friendship ornaments has been published in the Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory.

Source: University of Helsinki

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Family’s New Puppy is Seriously a Golden – After Digging Up Rare Coins Worth $8k

SWNS
SWNS

A family’s new puppy is already worth his weight in gold, after digging up sovereign coins worth nearly £6,000 ($7,564).

51-year-old Adam Clark bought Ollie, a lagotto romagnolo, as a surprise for his nine-year-old daughter Alicia last month.

The breed is known for digging—especially for truffles—and on March 30, on his first walk around the local English fields, the young dog stumbled upon a small fortune.

To his Blackpool-based owner’s delight and utter disbelief, Ollie instinctively dug up a total of 15 gold sovereign pieces likely dating back to the 19th century.

Adam, who works in property, took the gold coins to be examined by Chards, one of the leading gold dealers in the country—who valued them at a staggering £5,943.96 ($7,564).

RELATED: Vast Majority of Dog Owners Believe They Can Read Their Pooch’s Mind

The landlord is thrilled with the return from the treasure, but believes the real prize is Ollie himself, dubbing him his very own “gold hunter.”

SWNS

Adam said, “When we got him we thought he seemed special. Alicia was over the moon and we couldn’t wait to take him out for his first walk around the gala fields.

MORE: Miracle Dog Survives 12 Days Trapped in Badger Holes After Owner Refuses to Give Up, Camping in the Woods

“We’d literally been walking for around ten minutes when Ollie suddenly stopped and started frantically digging away at the soil. That’s when he uncovered the pile of gold pieces—I couldn’t quite believe it.”

SWNS

The proud pup’s owner said, “The treasure is one thing, but, the fact is, I’ve bought myself my very own gold hunter, and I cannot wait to take him out again. He is obviously a very special pup and I’m thrilled with what he brings to the table—quite literally!”

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Dutch Visionary Helps Refugee Camp Recycling All of its Plastic Trash into New Products

Precious Plastic
Precious Plastic

A refugee camp in the northern Sahara that relies on international aid for everything has gotten their hands on small, relatively-portable plastic recycling machines to turn the camp’s waste plastic into furniture, bricks, and other useful objects.

For years, pallets of supplies containing food, water, and medicine would arrive—then they went into a sandy, makeshift landfill. Now that waste is being placed in two machines, which either presses plastic waste into sheets, or melts itinto blocks.

Far from being just another line of government aid, Precious Plastic—which was started by Dave Hakkens as part of his studies at the Design Academy in Eindhoven in 2012—is fully-intending to train a workforce at the camp. It will donate the machines, and let the people build their own business there.

Entrepreneurship goes a long way in helping alleviate poverty, and the Precious Plastic project understands this.

At the camp there is a “large refugee population there with a high unemployment rate,” Joseph Klatt, managing director at Precious Plastic, told Adele Peters at Fast Company.

“Everything is brought into the camps, so there’s not a lot of economic activity going on. And secondarily, there’s a lot of waste in the camp. [This solution helps in the creation of] a new business from processing the plastic waste and providing some economic activity for the refugees.”

RELATED: Amazon Joins the U.S. Department of Energy and MIT to Tackle Plastic Waste With New Science

The machines were packed up into a single shipping container in 2021—which included shredders, washer/dryers, smelters, and presses.

Precious Plastic

After some introductory instruction, refugees at the camp got on with making benches, chairs, and desks for the school, and tea sets to support the Sahara’s most widespread drinking habit.

Precious Plastic

Precious Plastic isn’t a humanitarian aid group though; they call themselves an open hardware plastic recycling project, and they want anyone around the world who cares about the plastic pollution problem to start their own recycling business using their machines.

MORE: Texas Researchers Use Okra to Remove Microplastics from Wastewater

They even offer business starter kits, including work sheets and logos to help kickstart operations. All Precious Plastic businesses are connected to all others via the use of open source technology, allowing entrepreneurs to share best practices and operating data.

Precious Plastic

On their website, users can expand operations by purchasing more equipment, community-made molds for making products, and even shop for final products themselves, which far from looking like they’re made of LEGO bricks, tend instead towards looking like tie-dye artworks or watercolors.

(WATCH the video for this story below.)

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Facebook, Google, Stripe, Shopify Investing a Billion Dollars in Pre-Orders for Captured Carbon

Four gargantuan tech companies have put together a $1.2 billion fund to pull carbon out of the atmosphere with a unique model that could go a long way to preventing 1.5°C of warming.

The money will be fronted by companies looking to purchase a security which guarantees a certain amount of carbon removed from the atmosphere, but rather than bidding up prices for existing methods of carbon capture, Frontier will fund additional methods.

Set up by Meta (Facebook), Alphabet (Google), Shopify, and Stripe, their fund—called Frontier—has its own motto: Build and We Will Buy.

A wholly-owned subsidiary of Stripe, Frontier will also be funded by the tens of thousands of businesses who purchase carbon removal via Stripe Climate. This will make Frontier the world’s largest coalition of carbon removal purchasers through funding and membership.

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The fund will build an eight-year, $925 million commitment to accelerate the development of permanent carbon removal technologies, by aggregating demand from buyers looking to offset the carbon emissions from their supply chain, before distributing that demand among suppliers—in this case firms with proven technology to pull carbon from the air.

Frontier, managed by McKinsey Sustainability, will focus on solutions with permanence, or the ability to store carbon for more than a thousand years; solutions which will be affordable at less than $100 per ton of carbon; can be verifiable; don’t rely on arable land, and remove carbon already in the atmosphere rather than relying on preventing carbon from entering it.

“Frontier aims to send a strong demand signal to researchers, entrepreneurs, and investors that there is a market for carbon removal,” Alphabet said in their release.

Following the recent report by the IPCC regarding the lack of progress made on carbon-cutting goals, McKinsey Sustainability joined up with the Frontier effort in support of developing carbon removal technology by offering pro-bono advisory support to carbon removal startups and businesses taking part in the initiative.

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Carbon can be pulled from the air in various ways, some more effective than others, and some are more scalable.

Among these are strategies as varied as giant fans which suck up CO2, separate it from oxygen, and then deposit it deep underground—and vodka made from ethanol created with CO2 from the air.

Other methods trap carbon in building materials like concrete made by this Richard Branson-backed startup, or into lifeforms like algae before being made into household products.

DON’T CAPTURE Good News All to Yourself; Share It With Friends…

Livin’ Good Currency – Ep 7: The Big Record Executive Who’s Setting Innocent Prisoners Free

The Lesson: In many circumstances, the U.S. government, and those governing the 50 states, will place extraordinary, ruinous sentences on men and women who are simply in a difficult period of their lives socially, or who happen to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Well these loaded convictions are not always the end of the story, as there are many people and organizations around the country, whose effort often goes unreported, working to free first-time or non-violent offenders.

Notable Excerpt: “It was Winston Churchill who said ‘we make a living by what we get we make a life by what we give,’ and it’s also true [that] at the end of the day I’ve been very fortunate in the music industry. I’ve discovered a lot of great artists, helped to launch their careers—but nobody really cares, it doesn’t matter. Nobody really cares next week. Nobody cares who discovered the Beatles! Who discovered the Beatles, do you guys even know? I don’t know, it doesn’t even matter! The Beatles matter, they’ll always matter. But what does matter is that I’ve helped so many people get out of prison, start their lives again, help put their families back together, that actually does matter.”

The Guest: Jason Flom was described by the New Yorker as one of the most successful record-men of the last 20 years, and serves as CEO of Lava Media. He held previous positions as chairman of Atlantic Records, Virgin Records, and Capitol Music Group, and played a major part in the breakouts of artists like Katy Perry, Lorde, Gretta Van Fleet, and Kid Rock. His other life is in criminal justice reform, and hosts the podcast Righteous Convictions, which features interviews of people working for change in criminal justice. His work with criminal defense attorneys has seen dozens of first-time, non-violent, or innocent convicts regain their freedom.

The Podcast: Livin’ Good Currency explores the relationship of time to our lives. It gives a simple, straight-forward formula that anyone can use to be present in the moment—and features a co-host who knows better than anyone the value of time (see below). How do you want to spend your life? This hour can inspire you, along with upcoming guests, to be sure you are ‘Livin’ Good Currency’ and never get caught running out of time.

The Hosts: Good News Network fans will know Tony (Anthony) Samadani as the co-owner of GNN and its Chief of Strategic Partnerships. Co-host Tobias Tubbs was handed a double life sentence without the possibility of parole for a crime he didn’t commit. Behind bars, he used his own version of the Livin’ Good Currency formula to inspire young men in prison to turn their hours into honors. An expert in conflict resolution, spirituality, and philosophy, Tobias is a master gardener who employs ex-felons to grow their Good Currency by planting crops and feeding neighborhoods.

Subscribe to the Pod:  On iTunes… On Spotify… On Amazon Music… Or Google Play.

“Proud-pied April, dressed in all his trim, hath put a spirit of youth in everything.” – William Shakespeare

Quote of the Day: “Proud-pied April, dressed in all his trim, hath put a spirit of youth in everything.” – William Shakespeare (Sonnet 98)

Photo by: Ali G Rashidi

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?

 

Tourists Come to See Tulips in Holland Once Again, Grabbing Incredible Photos of Spring – LOOK

Tulip fields in Lisse, Netherlands by Matt Cooper – SWNS
Tulip fields in Lisse, Netherlands by Matt Cooper – SWNS

Photographs in the last few weeks show the stunning kaleidoscope of colors bursting into bloom in Holland’s tulip fields.

Beginning in late March, millions of blooms have been delighting visitors in the Netherland with their patchwork of color.

British photographer Matt Cooper was one of those visitors. The 48-year-old from London traveled over the Easter weekend and shared his images and drone footage.

The images show Holland’s famous flower field landscapes, which have become a rich blanket of tulips with row upon of row of vivid block colors.

Tulip fields by Matt Cooper – SWNS

“I went there especially to shoot the tulips,” he said. “This is the best time to shoot them, as they flower in April and May every year.”

Cooper’s 4-day trip took him all over the country capturing the iconic fields by drone—especially the famous Keukenhof Tulip Gardens, one of the world’s largest flower gardens.

Noordoostpolder, Netherlands, by Matt Cooper – SWNS

The Garden holds an annual festival—but 2022 is the first time the festival has been open to the public since the pandemic. It runs through 15 May.

Cooper said the Dutch people take their tulips very seriously, and across the small country “there are hundreds of millions of tulips’.

By Matt Cooper – SWNS

“The weather was beautiful too.”

SEE the scenes of the resurgent Keukenhof Tulip Gardens…

SHARE a Pop of Color on Social Media – And Start Planning a Trip!

Scientists Invent De-icing Coatings to Cut Airline Delays by Lasting Longer Without Toxic Runoff

University of Illinois video

Airports delays are common, but especially during winter when jets need to be dowsed with thousands of gallons of deicing fluids to prevent ice formation and maintain the plane’s aerodynamics to avoid fatal accidents like the tragic Air Florida flight that fell into the Potomac River in Washington, DC directly after lift-off in a 1982 snow storm.

But as soon as any de-iced airplane takes off, most of the liquid slides from the surface of the aircraft and ends up polluting streams, lakes, and oceans.

Now, endeavoring to make a more efficient product immune to ice for such demanding industries, a team at the University of Illinois Chicago have developed a longer-lasting and eco-friendly alternative to conventional deicers.

“Glycols dissolve very fast and get washed away before the plane takes off, and it’s a serious problem that costs hundreds of millions of dollars—most of which literally ends up in the drain,” said Sushant Anand, assistant professor of mechanical engineering. “We thought, why not improve such chemicals themselves, and make alternatives that can last longer while being more biofriendly. And that is what we ended up doing.”

Working with Ph.D. student Rukmava Chatterjee, they accomplished their goal by developing 80 different anti-freezing coatings, which can be classified as polymeric solutions, emulsions, or gels. The formulations can be easily applied to aluminum, steel, copper, glass, plastic or any industrial surface without preconditioning or expensive surface treatments.

“Our coatings are an all-in-one package which can delay formation of frost for extended hours, and simultaneously cause any ice formed on its surface to easily shed off by a gentle breeze or simple substrate tilting,” Chatterjee said.

The anti-freezing gels are also transparent, which is critical for applications like traffic signals, runway lights that assist pilots during landings, automotive windshields, or building windows.

They worked with phase change materials because they had a melting point above the freezing point of water (0 degrees C). This means under sub-zero temperatures the materials are in their solid state, just like chocolate, butter, or water itself.

The multifunctional coatings can prevent the adhesion of ice (or bacteria) on surfaces, irrespective of their inherent material structure and chemistry. This was engineered by regulating how chemicals leach out of the material system and by creating a lubricating surface layer that is both slippery and non-freezing in nature.

Chatterjee told GNN that the idea came to him and his PhD advisor Prof. Anand back in 2016.

“It was February and I was flying out from Chicago to deliver a talk in an international conference on ice/frost protection technologies. Quite an irony! It was a frigid winter day and the flight was already delayed due to icing issues. As a plane full of frustrated passengers waited inside the aircraft for two hours, we watched the plane getting dowsed continuously with thousands of gallons to prepare it for a safe take-off. Later, I missed my next connecting flight due to this delay and had to drive overnight to the conference venue.”

“Since then we have been researching, formulating compositions & exhaustively testing them under real-life winter conditions to address this long standing issue. Being liquid, all these chemicals get easily dissolved away or sheared off, the moment the flight takes off. Our idea was to use certain materials which are solid when cold.”

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“In our latest work we identified a family of these materials and encapsulated them in a polymer matrix. The objective being to preserve their native anti-icing property but to increase their lifetime,” he continued. “We prepared more than 80 such formulations in the form of sprayable solutions, emulsions, creams & gels. They can be easily sprayed or coated on any industrial surface (metal/ glass/ plastics) without the need for any special surface treatment.”

“A key point was to use materials which are bio-friendly. For example the anti-freezing gels we prepared are made of dimethyl sulfoxide (a by-product of plant industry and having miraculous medicinal properties) and gelatin (the stuff you use in making deserts and custards): so all very safe items.”

The gels are the best performing ones and have a significant edge amongst the developed formulations. They are easy to fabricate, require only two components, they can be easily cured/sprayed/painted/coated on any surface, regardless of shape. The best part is they are optically transparent even under icing/frosting conditions.

Their research published in Advanced Materials showed that, compared to commercial coatings available in today’s market, they perform better by an order of magnitude after exhaustive testing.

Chatterjee told GNN the gels are also anti-bacterial in nature. “Imagine coating your smart-watch (or any wearable electronic) with this gel and using it in winter. It can potentially prevent your watch’s battery from dying in the cold while also preventing it from bacterial contamination, thereby precluding the need for constant sanitization.”

RELATED: This Plant-Based Jet Fuel Can Reduce Emissions by 68% – Without Displacing Crops

For aerodynamic testing, the team coated a propeller blade and tested its anti-frosting performance under sub-zero winter conditions. They also subjected the coatings to very high shear airflow, simulating the conditions of a hurricane and tested their anti-frosting performance thereafter.

Of course, more exhaustive testing on actual airplanes in wind-turbines are needed to pass industrial test requirements before adopting them for real-life usage, but they do promise significant improvement over many commercial solutions available in the market presently.

“Since our anti-icing sprays are bio-friendly and anti-bacterial, we even think there is a potential to use them in agriculture to prevent crops from being ruined by severe frost,” Anand said. “But that is a pipe dream, and we need to do more studies to see if there will be any long-term adverse effect on the plants.”

MORE: A Flying Car Just Got Certified as Airworthy to Fly

A worldwide patent application titled “Compositions and Methods for Inhibiting Ice Formation on Surfaces” has been filed by UIC’s Office of Technology Management. Watch the video below for more information…

FLY THIS Great Idea to All Your Brilliant Friends on Social Media… 

9-Year-old’s Lemonade Stand Raises $2,000 For Shelter Cats After He Saw They Had No Toys

Ben offered two kinds of lemonade including lavender - Miller family photo
Ben offered two kinds of lemonade including lavender – Miller family photo

A 9-year-old boy walked into his local animal shelter with a big plastic bag filled with cash, handing over all the proceeds he’d raised at a lemonade stand.

Ben Miller from Boise, Idaho, collected a whopping $1,150 in one weekend.

It was his third lemonade stand fundraiser since 2019, a year when he was visiting the Idaho Humane Society with his grandmother and noticed that some of the cats didn’t have toys.

So far, he’s donated a grand total $1,950 to support the cats he loves so much.

His mother helped him create an event on Facebook, which brought in people from across the valley. People also sent money without even visiting to get a drink.

“It was such a fun day meeting so many awesome people and their pets. We had a car full of people pull up saying they had just heard about it on the radio,” said Amy Miller on Facebook. And the highlight that topped off the day was Ben’s teacher coming by.

Ben says he has no plans to stop his charity work for the shelter, which makes his mother beam, even though she says he’s always had a big heart. “It really just blew me away.”

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Watch the local news coverage…

SHARE This Purr-fect Inspiration With Animal Lovers on Social Media…

“I love people who harness themselves, an ox to a heavy cart, who pull with massive patience to move things forward, who do what has to be done, again and again.” – Marge Piercy

Quote of the Day: “I love people who harness themselves, an ox to a heavy cart, who pull with massive patience to move things forward, who do what has to be done, again and again.” – Marge Piercy

Photo by: devn

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?