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High School Athletes Shovel Snow For Their Neighbors as Special Weightlifting Assignment for Football Team

Courtesy of Bethel Park HS football coach / YouTube
Courtesy of Bethel Park HS football coach

Students in Western Pennsylvania had a snow day on Monday, but instead of staying home or meeting for an indoor workout, these teens on a high school football team were instructed by their coach to get outside and help their neighbors.

Coach Brian DeLallo at Bethel Park High School near Pittsburgh, took to Twitter to announce that Monday’s weightlifting session in the gymnasium was cancelled—but he had an alternative assignment for the young men.

“Due to the expected severe weather, Monday’s weightlifting workout has been cancelled. Find an elderly or disabled neighbor and shovel their driveway… that’s our Monday workout.”

He also told the boys not to accept any money.

By mid-morning more than 27 of the athletes were texting photos to the coach, with some saying they were on their 6th driveway.

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One of the students even reported that his elderly neighbors were not accepting their non-payment requirement, insisting on a donation.

“What better workout than shoveling driveways,” said Braedon Del Duca, a junior on the team who went from house to house offering their services with teammate Colton Pfeuffer.

“It’s just nice getting out here, helping out the community, just helping out others that need help,” Pfeuffer told WTAE-TV News in Pittsburgh.

“We’d love to do it for everybody that we can,” echoed Del Duca.

WATCH the video from WTAE…

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Diego Rivera’s Dream of a ‘City of Arts’ in Mexico Turns to Reality 80 Years Later

Diego Rivera murals at the Palacio Nacional by Kgv88 - CC license
Museo Diego Rivera Anahuacalli

Diego Rivera created many masterpieces, but he envisioned a magnum opus that never came to be in his lifetime—a city of art, where Mexican practitioners of all ages and disciplines could come to study, showcase, and celebrate the art of their diverse cultural heritage.

Frida Kahlo’s husband and mentor, Rivera is famous for his use of Cubism in large public murals like The History of Mexico, The Allegory of California, and the Man at the Crossroads, commissioned by the Rockefellers—but it was after a long and storied career that he bought land in a suburb of Mexico City to built his utopian City of Art.

Diego Rivera murals at the Palacio Nacional by Kgv88, CC license

Now 65 years after his death, River’s Ciudad de las Artes has finally come to life.

A 64,000 square-foot complex south of the capital, the City of Arts centers around an Aztec temple-inspired museum built of volcanic rock from Xitle Volcano which erupted in 400 B.C.—in which Rivera’s personal collection of more than 50,000 pre-Hispanic artifacts are housed.

In 1941, back from a trip to San Francisco, Rivera undertook the construction of the Anahuacalli Museum, which sought to generate continuity between modern art and pre-Columbian aesthetics.

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Opened in 1964 as the centerpiece of his imagined City of Arts, it is now finally surrounded by 13 additional structures which were built over six years at a cost of more than a million dollars, completing Rivera’s original scheme.

The spaces include galleries, performance spaces, workshops ,and new offices, all built by one of Mexico City’s most-renowned architecture firms, Taller de Arquitectura, “to bring together the artist of the school and the academy with the potter, with the weaver, with the basket maker, with the stonemason, with everything that is a pure expression of the people of Mexico”, according to the Rivera’s own words.

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“The idea is that, as in pre-Columbian cities, the buildings gradually connect and allow the relationship between the parts. The buildings are built of volcanic stone walls… [and] lattices; light atmospheres that already existed in Diego’s main building,” Mauricio Rocha, the chief architect behind the project, told El País. “In addition, with the new technologies that we use, it seems that the buildings sail in a kind of sea of ​​lava.”

The openings of the new areas, including the experimental space The Piedra, took place in October last year to coincide with the Day of the Dead festival, and hosted an earth festival that focused on pottery, and other outdoor installations and concerts.

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Mysterious Purple Coating Found on Mars Rocks in Every Direction

purple coating mars perseverence released NASA, JPL-CALTECH, MSSS
 NASA; JPL-CALTECH, MSSS

A presentation on data gathered from the Perseverance rover is trying to explain the ubiquitous coatings of unknown, dark grey, almost purple material on Martian rocks.

Having been observed everywhere the rover has trundled, more details on the coating’s composition could come with clues about Mars’ past, including whether it hosted microbial life.

On Earth, rock coatings, called varnishes, tend to be excellent places to find unusual microbes like cyanobacteria. The nooks and crannies of the surface of a stone are havens if you’re a microbe, and often offer moisture and shelter. Some species have even been known to metabolize minerals like manganese on the surface of rocks in order to create a coating to protect themselves from UV-rich sunlight.

A study in South Tryol, Italy, found 55 species of bacteria living under rock varnishes in five sample locations, all of which were rich in iron and manganese.

On Mars, the Perseverance rover’s science kit has researchers believing the near-purple coating found everywhere in Jezero Crater is rich in iron.

MORE: Watch Our Biggest Moments From Mars in 2021: Riding on the Shoulders of NASA’s Perseverance Rover

The rover’s laser-breakdown-induced spectroscopy tool blasts rock with laser beams until bits of it explode, and then measures the elemental composition of the gas created.

Purple coating in the top right of the frame/NASA; JPL-CALTECH,

Microphones can also measure the “clack” sound of the rocks when they break, with softer sounds indicating softer rock.

While this tool didn’t detect any manganese in the Jezero samples, other samples taken in Gale Crater with a similar tool aboard the Curiosity rover, did; findings which were also published as an investigation into “rock coatings.”

The samples which Perseverance took auditorily pointed to the coating being separate from the rocks below, and the spectroscopy found iron-oxides and hydrogen; in other words, rust.

The presence of hydrogen would suggest that water played a role in the coating’s creation, but the rover is currently investigating old solidified magma and isn’t really anywhere near the lake sediments of Jezero.

RELATED: NASA Launches James Webb Telescope to See First Galaxies and Distant Worlds With its Giant Sunshield

It’s a mystery that requires more investigation, and maybe before the end of the mission Perseverance will come across varnishes with both iron and manganese like the Italian ones.

But for now the rover has been caching samples in tubes for its future return to Earth. Scientists are hoping the purple coatings can survive the journey intact enough to be studied in a proper laboratory.

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See 1,000 Glorious Fin Whales Feeding Together: Share Their Comeback From Near Extinction

Twitter/@conorryan
Twitter/@whale_nerd

Sailors and scientists aboard four krill fishing boats and a research vessel were treated to the majestic sight of 1,000 fin whales congregating near Antarctica to feed.

Second only in size to the blue whale, fin whales were once one of the chief targets of whaling vessels—and were driven to near extinction by the practice; they haven’t been seen in these numbers for over a century.

It may be, estimates researcher Conor Ryan, the largest congregation of fin whales ever recorded, and the sea was so dense that day with the 81-foot (27-meter) long slender baleens, their breaching created what Phillip Hoare described as a “misty forest of spouts, as tall as pine trees.”

Ryan, a zoologist aboard the National Geographic Endurance, filmed the whales going about their business as the boat passed around 375 miles north of the Antarctic Peninsula, near the South Orkney Islands.

Hoare, a whale expert reporting for the Guardian, states that science has discovered fin whales can live 140 years, meaning they could only just now be recovering from the whaling industry of the 1800s, and that gatherings such as these could become a lot more commonplace.

RELATED: Incredible Video Shows a Husband and Wife’s Amazing Encounter With a Group of Humpback Whales

The winter months of Europe and North America are the summer months down in the Southern Ocean, which means as the sea ice recedes, the waters become flush with food for many species of whale.

MORE: A Real Moby Dick: Mythic White Sperm Whale Captured on Film Near Jamaica

It’s already known that humpbacks and blue whales also gather in the summer near Antarctica as part of their long global migrations.

The fin whale is currently classified as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List, but also their populations worldwide are increasing, and could have passed 100,000 individuals.

(WATCH the whales in the video below.)

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“Once you realize how valuable you are and how much you have going for you, the smiles will return, the sun will break out, the music will play.” – Og Mandino

Quote of the Day: “Once you realize how valuable you are and how much you have going for you, the smiles will return, the sun will break out, the music will play.” – Og Mandino

Photo: by Michael Kroul

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Drone Helps Save the Life of a 71-Year-old Man Who Has Cardiac Arrest While Shoveling Snow

Delivering an AED defibrillator – Everdrone

A 71-year-old Swedish man “can’t put into words” how thankful he is for the new technology that quickly flew him into the small category of only ten percent of people who survive sudden cardiac arrest.

The man has now made a speedy recovery, after the speedy delivery of a defibrillator—via autonomous drone.

The company behind the drone pilot project says it’s the first time in medical history, a drone has played a crucial part in saving a life during a cardiac arrest.

He was in his driveway shoveling snow in the Swedish city of Trollhättan in December, when the attack occurred.

Normally, you have about ten minutes to get help in such a situation and ambulance response times are often too long to save the life of the patient.

Luckily, a telephone call was immediately placed requesting emergency services and he lived in a region that had partnered with Everdrone’s innovative life-saving program called EMADE (Emergency Medical Aerial Delivery service).

RELATED: Invading Rats Were Finally Eradicated on 2 Galapagos Islands Thanks to Drone Partnership

Delivering an AED defibrillator – Everdrone

EMADE drones deliver an automated external defibrillator (AED) to the scene—and the amount of time from the alarm until the AED was safely delivered at the doorstep of the incident address was just over three minutes.

Even more fortuitous, a doctor happened to be driving by and stopped to see if he could help.

“I was on my way to work at the local hospital when I looked out the car window and saw a man collapsed in his driveway and I immediately rushed to help”, says Dr. Mustafa Ali. “The man had no pulse, so I started doing CPR while asking another bystander to call 112 (the Swedish emergency number). Just minutes later, I saw something flying above my head. It was a drone with a defibrillator!”

WATCH: Filipino Inventor Flies His Hoverboard For 2 Miles, Setting World Record For Longest Flight

After the initial treatment on site, the ambulance arrived, the patient was rushed to the hospital.

“This is a truly revolutionary technology that needs to be implemented all over,” said the patient who now has made a full recovery and returned home. “If it wasn’t for the drone I probably wouldn’t be here.”

The drone carries an ultralight Schiller FRED easyport defibrillator, which can be used by any bystander.

The drone delivery system in Region Västra Götaland was developed and is operated by Everdrone, a world-leading company in autonomous drone solutions, in close collaboration with Center for Resuscitation Science at Karolinska Institutet and SOS Alarm.

MORE: Uganda Joins African Nations Using Drones to Deliver Life Saving Medical Supplies to More Than 22 Million People

“This is an excellent real-world example of how Everdrone’s cutting-edge drone technology, fully integrated with emergency dispatch, can minimize the time for access to life-saving AED equipment”, says Mats Sällström, CEO of Everdrone.

275,000 patients in Europe and 350,000 in the US, suffer from OHCA annually. Approximately 70% of OHCAs occur in private homes without AEDs on site. The company says the chance of survival decreases by 7–10% with each minute following the collapse—and consequently, the current survival rate among OHCA patients is merely 10%.

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Everdrone’s service can currently reach 200,000 residents in Sweden and is expected to expand to more locations in Europe during 2022.

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Rainbow Village: 84-Year-Old Saves Neighborhood From Bulldozer By Painting Every Street With Joyful Colors

ainbow Village alley-cc-Steven Barringer
Steven Barringer/Flickr; CC license

14 years ago in Taiwan, an 84-year old military veteran painted an entire government village to prevent it from being torn down. Now aged 98, the painter is still there, as is the village—and it’s since become a famous travel stop.

A series of small one-story homes, Rainbow Village is now a city park where painted animals and human figures sit happily in every color imaginable upon a grid of rainbow boulevards.

Steven Barringer/Flickr; CC license

When Huang Yung Fu started painting the occasional wall in the exceedingly drab Caihong Military Dependents’ Village in Taichung City, it was originally to relieve boredom.

But when Huang learned that the ghost town he and his wife lived in was to be levelled, he kicked into artistic overdrive, covering every paving stone, gutter, and door in pictures and paint.

Now an internationally-recognized tourist attraction, Huang and his wife are the only residents of the Rainbow Village—where they welcome visitors and live their lives.

MORE: Wildlife Photographer Captures Charming Portraits of the Creatures That Visit Her Garden

“In 2010, professors and students from Ling Tung and Hungkuang Universities chanced upon the paintings and were struck by their cute and expressive nature,” writes the Ministry of Cultural Heritage.

Steven Barringer/Flickr; CC license

“Student Charles Tsai brought together students and faculty to appeal to the Taichung City Government to preserve this unexpected piece of cultural heritage, leading the “Save Rainbow Village” campaign. As the news spread, Huang himself began to be known as ‘Grandpa Rainbow.'”

The campaign was a success, and the area is preserved in Taichung as an art park. Lonely Planet ranked it as one of the “secret marvels of the world,” and Culture Trip put it as the most “Instagrammable spot” in Taiwan.

Steven Barringer/Flickr; CC license

Because of the cost of maintaining the village, the government created the Rainbow Cultural and Creative Co. which produces the tourist infrastructure and helps supply the paint to expand and repair the murals.

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Watch the Path of a Raindrop From Anywhere in the World

RIVER RUNNER GLOBAL SAM LEARNER RELEASED
River Runner Global

Have you ever wondered how far raindrops travel after they fall upon the heights of Kilimanjaro? On the off chance you’re dying to know, some curious cartographers have created a mapping tool that visualizes the path a raindrop will take to the sea from anywhere on Earth.

River Runner Global is a free, open-source tool for visualizing how interconnected we are, and can be used quickly for rough-draft water management planning, or for educational purposes.

Data analyst Sam Learner built the project using data from the U.S. Geological Survey, along with help from Kyle Onda, a data architect for the water data and management consultancy Internet of Water.

“There’s something really interesting about ending up in little pockets of the country or world that you don’t know about at all, in interesting terrain,” Learner told Fast Company. “What we put in a river or stream ends up in someone else’s water.”

There’s plenty of surprises following the path of a raindrop, for example all the water that feeds Washington D.C. comes from rainfall and upwelling springs on the western-side of the Appalachians, and before any snowmelt on Mount Everest can reach the Ganges, it has to flow eastward across the top of India for more than 300 kilometers to find a point where the Himalayas split.

The mechanism for processing and displaying the data using bulk topographical info didn’t exist, and so Learner had to built it himself.

MORE: Check Out This Interactive Map Showing All the Conservation Land Near You in the U.S. 

The tool is still in beta, and so place and river names often won’t appear. It’s subject to lag and occasional bugs as well, but Learner says the same back-end data could be used to create another tool, such as a ‘River Climber’ page that follows a path upriver to show the the source of what needs protecting.

RELATED: Map Lets You See How Your Hometown has Moved Across 750 Million Years of Continental Drift

The team have found some pretty famous and interesting waterways so far, which the developers have shared in a Google doc for anyone to quickly take a look at.

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Cat Reunited With Family After It Got Stuck in an Armchair They’d Donated to a Thrift Store

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SWNS

A family cat has been reunited with its owners after getting stuck in a reclining armchair that was donated to a thrift store.

The family were having a clear out of old furniture while preparing to move out of their home in Denver, Colorado.

They donated an old recliner to a local charity shop, but little did they know that ginger cat Montequlla had tucked himself away in the mechanism.

Employees from the shop discovered him meowing, and called Denver Animal Shelter to come and pick him up on New Year’s Eve.

Officer Jenna Humphreys scanned four-year-old Montequlla but unfortunately his microchip hadn’t been updated, so remained at the shop hoping his family would return.

RELATED: Why Cats Love to Sit in Boxes – Even Fake Ones, According to Science

Fortunately, the family quickly noticed their kitty was missing and called the store to see if he’d hitched a ride in the armchair.

SWNS

Just a few hours later, a grumpy Montequlla was reunited with his family at their home.

Officer Humphreys said, “The owners were crying with joy to have their cat returned.

MORE: Young Woman Makes a Special Pouch For Her Cat to Take Him Traveling Around Italy – His Favorite Hobby

“Montequlla appeared relieved to be home.”

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Denver Animal Shelter posted the reunion photos on Facebook, and said, “We are so happy for the ending to this story and are thankful to everyone involved in getting this sweet cat home safely.”

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“Never give up on what you really want to do. The person with big dreams is more powerful than one with all the facts.” – H. Jackson Brown Jr.

Quote of the Day: “Never give up on what you really want to do. The person with big dreams is more powerful than one with all the facts.” – H. Jackson Brown Jr.

Photo: by Alina Grubnyak (color enhanced)

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

Photo by Anglian Water

A fossil of a giant sea reptile found in England is being called the greatest find in the history of British paleontology.

The ichthyosaur skeleton unearthed in Rutland Water Reserve. Credit Anglian Water.

A complete ichthyosaur skeleton from tooth to tail was discovered in the mud of a lagoon in Rutland Water Nature Reserve. It’s in such pristine condition that it looks as if it could have died recently.

At nearly 30-feet long with a 7-foot skull, it’s the biggest and most complete skeleton of its kind found to date in the UK and is also thought to be the first ichthyosaur of its species (Temnodontosaurus trigonodon) found in the country. The discovery recently made headlines after the broadcast of a BBC 2 special called Digging for Britain.

During a routine draining of the lagoon in the Rutland Water Nature Reserve in February 2021, Conservation Manager Joe Davis noticed what appeared like a set of clay pipes while he was walking across the exposed mudflats

“They [the pipes] looked organic. I worked out on the Hebrides, so I’ve found whale and dolphin skeletons before. This appeared similar and I remarked to [Reserve Officer] Paul Trevor that they looked like vertebrae,” Davis recounts in a statement. “We followed what indisputably looked like a spine and Paul discovered something further along that could have been a jawbone. We couldn’t quite believe it.”

“The find has been absolutely fascinating and a real career highlight, it’s great to learn so much from the discovery—and to think that this amazing creature was once swimming in seas above us.” (Watch the video below…)

LOOK: Fossil Found by Kids in New Zealand Turns Out to Be 27 Million-Year-old Giant Penguin

Ichthyosaurs first appeared around 250 million years ago and went extinct 90 million years ago. They were an extraordinary group of marine reptiles that varied in size from 1 to more than 25 meters in length, and resembled dolphins in general body shape.

Anglian Water, a water management company that owns the Reserve and co-runs it with the Rutland Wildlife Trust, says it wants to secure heritage funding, which would ensure the precious treasure could remain in Rutland where its legacy can be shared with the community and visitors.

Weighing more than a ton

Photo by Anglian Water

National Geographic, reporting on the find, claims that this particular species was the largest marine carnivore on the planet during the early Jurassic period. They could get even bigger than the Rutland ichthyosaur as well, which was found with several ichthyosaur teeth next to a part of its tail that had been pulled at, suggesting a bigger specimen had been scavenging the carcass.

RELATED: Researchers Identify a ‘Fearsome Dragon’ With 23-ft Wingspan That Soared Over Australian Outback

Weighing more than a ton, the fossil had to be wrapped in plastic with wooden splints and then caked in plaster of Paris in order to ensure it survived the hoist onto the truck that took it away to be studied and preserved.

“Despite the many ichthyosaur fossils found in Britain, it is remarkable to think that the Rutland ichthyosaur is the largest skeleton ever found in the UK,” said Dr. Dean Lomax, a paleontologist and renowned expert in the species.

“It is a truly unprecedented discovery and one of the greatest finds in British paleontological history.”

WATCH the fantastic video taken at the site by Anglian Water…

 

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Birdwatchers Flock to See Rare 8-ft Raptor After ​Huge Russian Eagle Takes Detour into Maine

The Steller’s sea eagle. It’s ripped, royal, and rare. To see the world’s heaviest eagle, with its eight-foot wingspan, an American would normally have to visit Korea, Japan, or eastern Russia. Never had one of the sea eagles ever been spotted in the lower 48 states—until now.

@ManByTheSea/Instagram

Five days before Christmas, one of the majestic birds flew into Boothbay Harbor, Maine, and it’s pulling birdwatchers from all over the east coast to see it.

Members of the Massachusetts Audubon Society first spotted the raptor known for its huge golden bill.

NPR reports that the unique tail feather arrangement suggests this is the same bird that was spotted in summer in Canada and Alaska. Straying outside of its native range, it’s known as a “vagrant”.

As of January 16th, the wayward bird was still in Maine, having first been documented as a vagrant in Alaska’s Denali National Park, 4,700 miles away, in August.

The chance to see this eagle would normally involve a plane ride anywhere from 6-12 hours and a passport, so the bird’s appearance in the US is pulling amateur ornithologists from their nests in places like New Jersey for a spontaneous road trip known as “chasing.”

When a rare species, especially a rare vagrant, is spotted, intrepid birders chase reported sightings around the region using apps like eBird, or through various Facebook groups.

POPULAR: A Talking Crow Befriending a School Has a Foul-Mouth But is Still Beloved by Kids in Oregon

John Putrillo recently photographed this celebrity bird of prey. His Instagram, Manbythesea, is now filled with beautiful images showcasing its dark brown feathers and a bill that’s built to tear fish like salmon into bitesize pieces.

The eagle has given Putrillo a new passion: “I want to learn about all bird species now,” he says. “I want to find every bird I can from the smallest to the largest.”

(WATCH Putrillo’s Instagram video below for a taste of the birding action.)

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

Michael Frese
Michael Frese

Hundreds of immaculately preserved fossils recently found in Australia offer a view into the continent’s early Miocene period as clearly as in a family photo album.

Set in an iron oxide mineral known as goethite, there are leaves belonging to more than 50 species of plants, fossilized flowers, fish, insects, arachnids, even a fossilized feather.

There are fossils so clear scientists were able to make out nematode worms, parasitic mussels, and the scale of a butterfly wing.

For years, farmer Nigel McGrath struggled to work on a part of his land in Gulgong, New South Wales, that was particularly stony.

Aiming to right the problem for good, McGrath began to work loose the rocks and stones by hand, and in doing so began to notice rusty-red fossils of remarkable clarity.

Taking Mr. Nigel’s name, the site is now known as McGraths Flats, and is one of the only prehistoric fossil beds in the world that preserves the ecosystem of a Miocene rainforest.

Dr McCurry with ancient fossils found in Australia; Australian Museum

Before Australia was hot, scrubby, and dry, it was covered in rainforests between 13 million and 5.3 million years ago.

Atmospheric CO2 concentrations were high, creating the perfect conditions for wet and humid forests and the critters that prefer to dwell within such places. It’s thought the forests gave rise to a richness of species equal to that of modern day Borneo. 

Revealed in their full extent in a recent paper, scientists studying McGraths Flats believe them to be the muddy remains of a dried-up oxbow lake, formed when the long horseshoe bend of a waterway was cut off from the main flow.

MORE: 70 New Species Were Discovered in 2021 – Including 2 Guitarfish and a Pink Pygmy Pipehorse

Among the notable finds is evidence of several animal behavior models we see today. A fly was turned to goethite with 12 particles of pollen attached to his head.

The first ever instance of freshwater mussel parasitism was found in the form of mussel stuck to a fish’s tail fin.

Ancient feather; Michael Frese

Also researchers were able to see the predatory behaviors of the fish inside the lake, as their stomach contents of dragonfly wing and midges were preserved.

As lucky as the studying paleontologists have been, they are hungry for more discoveries, National Geographic reports.

Spider fossil; Michael Frese

LOOK: Check Out the Greatest Snowflake Photos Ever Taken With Vividly High Resolution

“We know that a feather of a bird preserves really well—but we want the whole bird, and when we do find a bird, we know that it’ll be immaculately preserved,” said study lead author Dr. Matthew McCurry. “We’ve literally got a decade’s worth of work ahead of us.”

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New Illinois Law Allows Women to Get Birth Control Pills from a Pharmacist Without a Doctor Involved

Photo by BruceBlaus, CC license

A new law passed on the first of January provides easier access to birth control in Illinois, with women able to quickly complete screenings from new trained pharmacists and walk out with self-administered contraception the same day.

The law provides for birth control pills, vaginal rings, and skin patches, which were previously available only with a prescription from a physician.

The purpose behind the legislation is to cut back on unplanned pregnancies, which one state newspaper claims is 31% of all pregnancies in the state, but also to give women cheaper methods to prevent a myriad of health complications, of everything from greater-than-normal menstrual pain to osteoporosis and ovarian cancer.

“There are a lot of things that pharmacists are capable of doing that we’re not allowed to do,” Audrey Butler, a pharmacist at Alwan Pharmacy, tells Chicago Magazine. “Pharmacists have specialized training in all drugs, we’re drug experts, but we’re not seen as providers.”

MORE: HPV Vaccine Reduced Cervical Cancer Rates by 87% in Women

As with reduced presence of proper grocery stores leading to some disadvantaged communities living in food deserts, those far from the necessary physicians can live in contraceptive deserts, whereas pharmacies are much more commonplace.

RELATED: More Than Half of Women Were Seven Months Into the Menopause Before Realizing What It Was

The new legislation certainly makes Illinois one of the most liberal states in terms of access to birth control, as not only can one now receive a health screening in a private room at a pharmacy, but there’s no age restrictions on its access.

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“You cannot take responsibility for how well another accepts your truth; you can only ensure how it is communicated.” – Neale Donald Walsch

Quote of the Day: “You cannot take responsibility for how well another accepts your truth; you can only ensure how it is communicated.” – Neale Donald Walsch

Photo: by Terry Vlisidis

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Man Who Tells the Queen He Engineers Solar Panels is Stunned When She Orders Some Installed on the Castle

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SWNS

A man who told the Queen he was a solar panel engineer when she asked him ‘what do you do?’ was stunned when she later got in touch—and paid him to install some on Balmoral Castle.

Businessman George Goudsmit met the Queen at an event and had a quick ’20 second’ conversation with her.

She asked the 80-year-old what he did and he replied that he made solar panels.

The Managing Director at AES Solar recalls, “As she walked away she turned around and said, ‘maybe I should have solar panels at Balmoral’.”

He was shocked when he was later commissioned to install panels at Balmoral.

George was attending a function on the Isles of Scilly to celebrate the success of his daughter’s business, Little Island Chocolate.

George, who recently received a lifetime achievement award at the Solar and Storage Awards, then wrote to The Royals as a follow up. They later replied and he was asked to carry out the work.

RELATED: Queen is Opening Buckingham Palace Gardens to Picnickers for the First Time This Summer

Businessman George Goudsmit – SWNS

“This was such big thing for me and our company,” he said.

He and his team soon carried out a survey and put the panels on a large estate house on the property in Royal Deeside, Aberdeenshire, in the heart of the Scottish Highlands.

RELATED: The Queen has Launched Her Own Gin Featuring Botanicals Grown on Her Country Estate

George, of Forres, Scotland, whose goal is to get as much renewable energy into the world as possible, says there is now even discussions of installing them at Buckingham Palace.

Solar Panels at Balmoral Estate – SWNS

It all came to a halt when the pandemic worsened, he said.

“Hopefully this will be something to discuss in the future now that we have already worked with the Royal Family.”

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Most Parents Say They Develop ‘Superpowers’ After Having a Baby, According to New Poll

SWNS license
SWNS licensed

Mom reflexes–dad reflexes, sudden strength, and speaking kid-language are some of the ‘superpowers’ people have developed after becoming a parent.

And, they wouldn’t have it any other way, according to a new poll which found that more than 4 in 5 Americans say becoming a parent is the most rewarding thing they’ve ever done.

The survey of 2,000 parents who have children aged 6 or younger also revealed that three in five parents learn what “dad/mom reflexes” are within the first two months of parenthood.

63% said they found the ability to understand “kid language”—and 53% of all parents formed “super strength.”

In a ‘Dynamic Duo,’ the mother was the most likely to develop ‘eyes in the back of her head, with 53% of women unlocking this ability compared to only 42% of men.

The survey, conducted by OnePoll on behalf of Stokke, also found that 43% of respondents believe that ‘becoming a role model’ was the biggest change they had to adopt after becoming a parent. (For instance, not eating so many sweets yourself, after preaching to your kids.)

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When it comes to the baby’s development, and their important milestones, more than two-thirds of parents (67%) said that learning how to walk was the most rewarding—for their child and themselves.

Seven in ten respondents (71%) said the ‘little things’ are the best parts of becoming a parent—kisses, hugs, and jokes are what truly matter—and they soothe any adjustments to a new parenting lifestyle.

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Almost half of moms and dads polled said their least favorite part about becoming a parent was the long nights without sleep.

For all their sleep lost, more than 83% are happy to exchange their Friday date nights on-the-town for a cuddle session at home with their baby, and they’re eager to do just that.

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Researchers Find the Key to Fixing Human Allergies to Dogs

There have been many research efforts describing the progression of dog allergies, but very few studies to try to cure people of them.

Now, researchers looking to artificially induce immune tolerance have for the first time identified candidates for those parts of the molecules that make up dog allergens—which could give us a ‘dog allergy vaccine’.

Being allergic to dogs is a common malady and one that is growing worldwide. Over the years, scientists have been able to identify seven different dog allergens — molecules or molecular structures that bind to an antibody and produce an unusually strong immune response that would normally be harmless.

These seven are named Canis familiaris allergens 1 to 7 (Can f 1-7). But while there are seven, just one, Can f 1, is responsible for the majority (50-75 percent) of reactions in people allergic to dogs. It is found in dogs’ tongue tissue, salivary glands, and their skin.

Researchers have yet to identify Can f 1’s IgE epitopes — those specific parts of the antigens that are recognized by the immune system and stimulate or ‘determine’ an immune response (which is why epitopes are also called antigen determinants). More specifically, epitopes are short amino acid sequences making up part of a protein that induces the immune response.

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Epitopes bind to a specific antigen receptor on the surface of immune system antibodies, B cells, or T Cells, much like how the shape of a jigsaw puzzle piece fits the specific shape of another puzzle piece. (The part of the receptor that binds to the epitope is in turn called a paratope). Antibodies, also known as immunoglobulin, come in five different classes or isotypes: IgA (for immunoglobulin A), IgD, IgE, IgG, or IgM. The IgE isotype (only found in mammals) plays a key role in allergies and allergic diseases. There is also an IgE epitope that is the puzzle piece that fits the IgE isotype’s paratope.

“We want to be able to present small doses of these epitopes to the immune system to train it to deal with them, similar to the principle behind any vaccine,” said Takashi Inui, a specialist in allergy research, professor at Osaka Prefecture University and a lead author of the study. “But we can’t do this without first identifying the Can f 1’s IgE epitope.”

So the researchers used X-ray crystallography (in which the diffraction of x-rays through a material is analyzed to identify its ‘crystal’ structure) to determine the structure of the Can f 1 protein as a whole — the first time this had ever been done.

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They found that the protein’s folding pattern is at first glance extremely similar to three other Can f allergens. However, the locations of surface electrical charges were quite different, which in turn suggest a series of ‘residues’ that are good candidates for the IgE epitope.

Their findings were published in the Federation of European Biochemical Societies journal in 2021.

Further experimental work needs to be performed to narrow the candidates down, but the findings suggest the development of a hypoallergenic vaccine against Can f 1 — a dog-allergy vaccine — is within our grasp.

The production of a ‘hypoallergenic vaccine’ by use of such epitopes would not just be a world-first with respect to dog allergies but is rare with respect to any allergic reaction.

Furthermore, if the researchers’ work is indeed used to develop a dog allergy vaccine, the principles behind it could be used much more widely against various allergies.

Source: Osaka Prefecture University

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Baby Has the Sweetest Reaction to Gift From His Auntie – WATCH

An adorable baby got the perfect present from his auntie.

Not just any blanket available to buy in a store, this gift was made from a photo.

Ashlyn McCullum became a new user on Rumble just to share the sweet moment.

Check out the spontaneous reaction when he saw the picture on it…

Priceless!

Watch the video below…

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“It is worth living long enough to outlast whatever sense of grievance you may acquire.” – Marilynne Robinson

Quote of the Day: “It is worth living long enough to outlast whatever sense of grievance you may acquire.” – Marilynne Robinson

Photo: by Mathias P.R. Reding

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