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9-Year-old Hero Unlocks Dad’s Phone With His Face to Call 911 as Carbon Monoxide Fills Home and Overtakes Parents

After hurricane-force winds hit New England last week, one-half million homes were without power.

Many people turned to generators to supply electricity, and one such instance almost turned deadly, were it not for the actions of a 9-year-old hero.

In Brockton, Massachusetts, Jayline Barbosa Brandao heard her father screaming and saw her mother unconscious, passed out from breathing too much carbon monoxide coming from the generator.

Soon, her father was overtaken, too, as the odorless gas continued to fill the home.

Jayline jumped into action, trying to use her father’s phone to call for help—but it was locked.

Staying calm, she told a Boston WFXT-TV reporter what happened next.

“I unlocked it by using my dad’s face.”

She then dialed 911—and she even called neighbors.

Paramedics arrived in time, and her mom credits her young daughter’s quick action for saving her life.

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Generators—which emit a poisonous gas like the combustion engine of a car — should only be used in a ventilated area.

The family thought they had it in a safe place, but it turns out Jayline was definitely in the right place.

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“My happiness grows in direct proportion to my acceptance, and in inverse proportion to my expectations.” – Michael J. Fox

Quote of the Day: “My happiness grows in direct proportion to my acceptance, and in inverse proportion to my expectations.” – Michael J. Fox

Photo: by McFotoSFO

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One of Britain’s Last D-Day Veterans Returns From France Completing His ‘Final Mission’ – and 68 Years of Charity

SWNS
SWNS

One of Britain’s last surviving D-Day heroes returned home from France after completing his ‘final mission’—and got straight back out collecting for the 68th consecutive year.

96-year-old Harry Billinge has completed what he described as his ‘last duty’ to pay tribute to his fallen friends who died on the Gold Beach during the landings in 1944.

He traveled back across the Channel to support a tribute recording the names of all 22,442 service personnel who died under British command on D-Day and the Battle of Normandy.

And after collecting at least £50K ($67k) towards the construction of the memorial, he said he was incredibly moved to see the names of his fallen friends carved in stone during the unveiling last month.

But instead of coming home to St Austell, Cornwall, to put his feet up—Harry has already been out collecting again to help maintain it and build an education center on the site.

He has now spent an incredible 68 years raising money for military charities—and said his new-found ‘celebrity status’ meant people were queuing this week to put money in his tin.

SWNS

Harry was a former chair of the Cornwall branch of the Normandy Veterans Association, President of the Royal Engineers Association, and collected for the Royal British Legion Poppy Appeal for 64 years.

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In 2018, he turned his support to The Normandy Memorial Trust where he has since raised more than £50k through collecting at his local market.

Having returned from France, Harry described himself as ‘tired’ but happy.”

He added, “I don’t think I could give you words to it, about how I felt.

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“It was very, very moving for me, and it still moves me now. I had a wonderful time because everyone there knows me now in Normandy.”

Harry was just 18 in 1944, serving with the 59th Independent Squadron of the Royal Engineers when he was part of the first wave on Gold Beach.

SWNS

At the memorial—which cost nearly £30 million ($40 million) and was funded by the British government and private benefactors—Harry recounted how overwhelmed he was to see the name of his friend, a brother in arms who died on Gold Beach that day.

“I found a couple of my mate’s graves there, namely a man called Leeds, he had a three-week-old baby at the time when he died.

“He died in my arms.

“My generation saved the world”.

“Everything I’ve done has been for the memorial… I’m not a proud man,” he said, “pride is a deadly sin, but I am very happy that I was able to collect money and do my bit.”

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World’s Longest Undersea Cable to Send Clean Energy From Morocco to the UK – Powering 7 Million Homes

Morocco-UK Power Project
Morocco-UK Power Project

A tiny English village is to become the center of a ”revolution” in the global energy industry and be connected to Morocco—with the world’s longest undersea cable.

The scheme will see Alverdiscott in Devon, population 286, at the end of a line attaching it to North Africa.

The Xlinks Morocco-UK Power Project says it will import enough sun and wind-generated energy to the UK to supply seven million homes by 2030.

The plan would see 3,800km (2,361 miles) of subsea cabling connect Morocco’s renewable energy-rich Guelmim Oued Noun region with little Alverdiscott, near Barnstaple.

An agreement has already been reached with the National Grid for voltage source convertor stations to be set up in the English village, which has a population of 286.

The man behind the huge project is former Tesco groocery store chain boss Sir David Lewis.

The new electricity generation facility, entirely powered by solar and wind energy combined with a battery storage facility, would cover about 1,500 square kilometers (579 square miles) in Morocco and then be connected to Britain via four HVDC (high voltage direct current) sub-sea cables.

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These would plug into Alverdiscott which would host two 1.8GW connections.

Convertor stations in Morocco will change the high voltage alternating current (HVAC) power at the generation site to HVDC (High Voltage Direct Current).

Solar panels in Morocco -SWNS

This is then sent through the subsea cable to the converter station in North Devon which changes it back to high voltage power, ready to be injected into the British transmission network.

In total, four cables will form the twin 1.8GW HVDC subsea cable systems.

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They will follow the shallow water route from Morocco to Alverdiscott, passing Spain, Portugal, and France.

A technical feasibility study has already been completed to validate the reliability and cost of the project.

The former Tesco boss is also raising £800 million ($1,080 million) to build three UK production facilities to tap into growing demand for the electric cables used for offshore wind farms and undersea interconnectors.

A spokesman for Xlinks said, “This ‘first of a kind’ project will generate 10.5GW of zero carbon electricity from the sun and wind to deliver 3.6GW of reliable energy for an average of 20+ hours a day.

LOOK: This Carbon-Negative Perfume is Made from Captured CO2 – And it Smells Like Figs and Orange Peel

Once complete, the project will be capable of supplying 8% of Great Britain’s electricity needs.

“Alongside the consistent output from its solar panels and wind turbines, an onsite 20GWh/5GW battery facility provides sufficient storage to reliably deliver each and every day, a dedicated, near-constant source of flexible and predictable clean energy for Britain, designed to complement the renewable energy already generated across the UK.” That’s exciting news indeed.

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Meditation Training Reduces Long-Term Stress, Hair Analysis Shows

Meditation training does reduce long-term stress; that’s what scientists in Germany have discovered by analyzing hair.

The amount of cortisol in hair provides information about how much a person is burdened by persistent stress. Earlier positive training effects at Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences (MPI CBS) had been shown in acutely stressful situations or on individual days—or were based on study participants’ self-reports. The current study thus provides the first objective evidence that mental training reduces physical signs of long periods of stress.

According to a study, 23 percent of people in Germany frequently suffer from stress. This condition not only puts a strain on the well-being of those affected, but it is also linked to a number of physiological diseases, including diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, and psychological disorders such as depression, one of the world’s leading causes of disease burden.

Therefore, effective methods are being sought to reduce everyday stress in the long term.

One promising option is mindfulness training, in which participants train their cognitive and social skills, including attention, gratitude, and compassion, through various meditation and behavioral exercises.

Various studies have already shown that even healthy people feel less stressed after a typical eight-week training programme. Until now, however, it has been unclear how much the training actually contributes to reducing the constant burden of everyday stress.

The problem with many previous studies on chronic stress is that the study participants were usually asked to self-assess their stress levels after the training. However, this self-reporting by means of questionnaires could have distorted the effects and made the results appear more positive than they actually were.

The reason for such a bias: The participants knew they were training their mindfulness, and a reduction in stress levels was a desired effect of this training. This awareness alone has an impact on subsequent information.

“If you are asked whether you are stressed after a training session that is declared as stress-reducing, even addressing this question can distort the statements,” explains Lara Puhlmann, doctoral student at MPI CBS and first author of the study.

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Factors such as social desirability and placebo effects played a role here. Unlike pharmacological studies, for example, in which the study participants do not know whether they have actually received the active substance or not, so-called blinded studies are not possible in mental training. “The participants know that they are ingesting the ‘antidote’,” says Puhlmann. “In mindfulness research, we are therefore increasingly using more objective, i.e. physiological, methods to measure the stress-reducing effect more precisely.”

The answer in hair

The concentration of cortisol in hair is considered a suitable measure of exposure to prolonged stress. Cortisol is a hormone that is released when we are confronted with an overwhelming challenge, for example. In that particular situation, it helps put our body on alert and mobilize energy to overcome the challenge.

The longer the stress lasts, the longer an increased concentration of cortisol circulates around our body—and the more it accumulates in our hair. On average, hair grows one centimeter per month. To measure the study participants’ stress levels during the 9-month training, the researchers, in cooperation with the working group of Clemens Kirschbaum at the University of Dresden, analyzed the amount of cortisol every three months in the first three centimetres of hair, starting at the scalp.

READ: Are You a Master of Distractions, Rather Than Devoting Time to Your Passions? Here’s How to Change

The mental training itself was developed as part of a large-scale longitudinal study on the effects of mental training. This 9-month mental training programme consisted of three 3-month sessions, each designed to train a specific skill area using Western and Far Eastern mental exercises.

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The focus was either on the factors of attention and mindfulness, on socio-affective skills such as compassion and gratitude, or on so-called socio-cognitive skills, in particular the ability to take perspective on one’s own and others’ thoughts. Three groups of about 80 participants each completed the training modules in different order. The training lasted up to nine months, 30 minutes a day, six days a week, and the corresponding paper was published in Psychosomatic Medicine.

Less stress, less cortisol

And it really showed: After six months of training, the amount of cortisol in the subjects’ hair had decreased significantly, on average by 25 percent. In the first three months, slight effects were seen at first, which increased over the following three months. In the last third, the concentration remained at a low level. The researchers therefore assume that only sufficiently long training leads to the desired stress-reducing effects. The effect did not seem to depend on the content of the training. It is therefore possible that several of the mental approaches studied are similarly effective in improving the way people deal with chronic everyday stress.

MORE: How Meditation Can Help You Make Fewer Mistakes, According to Largest Study of Its Kind

In an earlier study from the ReSource project with the same sample, the researchers had investigated the effects of training on dealing with acute stressful situations. In this study, the participants were placed in a stressful job interview and had to solve difficult maths problems under observation. The results showed that people who had undergone socio-cognitive or socio-affective training released up to 51 percent less cortisol under stress than those who had not been trained. In this case, they did not measure the amount of cortisol in the subjects’ hair, but instead acute cortisol surges in their saliva.

Overall, the researchers conclude that training can improve the handling of acute particularly stressful social situations as well as chronic everyday stress. “We assume that different training aspects are particularly helpful for these different forms of stress,” says Veronika Engert, head of the research group “Social Stress and Family Health” at MPI CBS.

“There are many diseases worldwide, including depression, that are directly or indirectly related to long-term stress,” explains Puhlmann. “We need to work on counteracting the effects of chronic stress in a preventive way. Our study uses physiological measurements to prove that meditation-based training interventions can alleviate general stress levels even in healthy individuals.”

Source: Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences 

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Largest Anglo-Saxon Gold Coin Hoard Discovered in English Field

British Museum
British Museum

It’s official: 131 gold coins found in a field in Norfolk, England represent the largest Anglo-Saxon gold coin hoard ever discovered, a find which is being described as one of “international importance.”

With the first coin found in 1991, and the rest found in 2014, the hoard was long undergoing “Treasure Review” by the appropriate antiquities authority. A stamped pendant, gold ingot, and two unidentified pieces accompanied the coins, which shed golden light on not only the wealth enjoyed by pre-Viking East Anglian society, but the reach and value of their trade routes, and the development of widespread minting in Europe.

Dated to around 610 CE, it’s thought they were buried together in a funeral barrow, and scattered across a field through centuries of plowing. Ten of the coins arrived in England from the Byzantine Empire, or at least someone who had trade with them, while the other 120 were made in France during the Merovingian Dynasty.

“It may well be that the hoard was assembled by someone traveling through Frankia in the course of trade,writes numismatist Dr. Adrian Marsden, who told the BBC, “all the coins were minted on the continent, as we didn’t have gold coins of our own then.”

Indeed, Anglo-Saxon hoards of multiple thousands have been found containing silver coins, but as the yellow metal is extremely rare in English earth, the find is of unique importance. The marks of 54 separate “moneyers” or mints, were found on the coins by Marsden.

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The Norfolk hoard gained some fame in 2017 when one of the two amateur detectorists who found it was handed a 16-month jail term after it was found he had sold ten of the coins to an antique dealer.

Norfolk Identification and Recording Service

Today, having been declared officially as treasure, the Norwich Castle and Museum hopes to acquire it for their collection.

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Norwich Castle and Art Gallery curator Tim Pestell described the hoard as a globally important find that “reflects the wealth and continental connections enjoyed by the early Kingdom of East Anglia.”

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It Started With 5 Families, Now Hundreds are Biking to School Together With The ‘Bike-bus’

eleased Mireia Boix_Bicibús
Mireia Boix/Bicibús

Every Friday morning in Barcelona, a special kind of bus collects kids on their way to school in the Eixample district.

Dubbed the “Bicibus” or Bike Bus, it’s more like a caravan or an escort, one which started when five families decided to ride their bikes to school to advocate for bike lanes and safer, quieter roads. More and more families joined in until it became a weekly event.

“It all started with a group of five families, a lot of determination and a deep sense of the greater good,” Mireia Boix, a parent of a 5-year-old son who takes the Bicibus, told NPR in an email.

Three “stops” along the way allow kids and their parents to join the Bicibus, and all modes of pedal-powered transport are welcomed, whether that’s a scooter or roller blades.

The parents are hoping their ever-growing convoy of kids will lead the authorities to construct a school-friendly bike lane away from the main traffic flow. The route the Bicibus takes every Friday goes down Entença Street, a busy thoroughfare where three schools are located. The ride takes 25 minutes from start to finish, but 20,000 cars pass along Entença every day, and as the Bicibus grew, it acquired its own police escort.

It’s a relief, Boix details, to know that her son has a safe way to get to school, as plying the road as a solo cyclist is more dangerous than going by bus or car.

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“Bicycles are a means of transportation and if a 5-year-old can ride a bike to school it means that every one else could. If the population uses their bikes, there will be a healthier, quieter and overall better city to live in,” Boix said.

Social media is filled with pictures and videos of the petit peloton, and some of the kids even sport Bicibus jerseys.

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“Champions have the courage to keep turning the pages because they know a better chapter lies ahead.” – Paula White

Quote of the Day: “Champions have the courage to keep turning the pages because they know a better chapter lies ahead.” – Paula White

Photo: by Kourosh Qaffari

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To Cut Religious Tension Bangladesh is Removing Islam as State Religion, Embracing Original Secular Constitution

Fatih Yürür

In an attempt to diffuse religious tensions in the country, the Bangladeshi parliament plans to amend the constitution so they can return to a secular framework, removing Islam as the state religion.

Fatih Yürür

Originally designed to be a secular nation, not tied to any one holy book, the Constitution of Bangladesh was meant to establish a state based on a melting pot of liberal culture with Bengali-distinct linguistic traditions.

That goal was undermined, as is so often the case in fledgling states, through a military junta by Ziaur Rahman. Islam was then introduced as the state religion to dominate Hindus, Buddhists, and Christians using military dictatorships, established first in 1975.

But the current government is ready to turn (back) the page.

“Bangladesh is a secular country; people of all religions shall live together in Bangladesh,” said Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who controls 280 of 300 seats in parliament.

She added, “Religion may be personal, but festival is universal. And people in Bangladesh have always celebrated such festivals together.”

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Hasina, who brought down the last military regime (which had killed her father), has survived 19 assassination attempts. Now, the longest serving prime minister of the South Asian country, her latest action is expected to face little resistance beyond street agitations.

The decision to secularize the nation is not only a response to attacks on Hindus, but is meant to return equilibrium to religious freedoms for residents in the country—the right to choose to attend any church or mosque or temple with equal dignity for all.

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When Negotiating, How Tough Should Your First Offer Be? Scientists Reveal What Works Best

In a negotiation, how tough should your first offer be? New research shows the first offer can have a significant impact on the eventual outcome, and if you try to drive too hard a bargain, it could backfire.

Whether you’re buying a house, a car, or second-hand furniture, it’s likely you will need to negotiate the price, so being able to negotiate effectively could save you significant cash.

Behavioral economist Professor Lionel Page from the University of Technology Sydney (UTS) said opening offers in real-world negotiations are sometimes intended to signal the “toughness” of the buyer—but whether this strategy actually works was not known.

“This experiment allowed us to study whether and how the level of the opening offer influences the beliefs of buyers and sellers, their actions and the final bargaining outcome,” said Professor Page.

The researchers conducted the experiment using a bargaining game where players exchanged offers for a split of $10. The aim was to mimic the start of a typical negotiation process.

They found that the success or failure of a negotiation depended not only on the final offer on the table but also on the emerging dynamics of the bargaining process.

“The intermediary offers made during a negotiation can be interpreted as suggesting either kind and compromising intentions, or unkind and uncompromising ones,” said Professor Page.

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“And the perception of these intentions can, in turn, influence the final outcome. Low offers are perceived as disrespectful, so players react negatively and can be spiteful in their counter-offers.

“In a substantial number of cases, the responder chose a ”punishing” counter-offer that was lower than what he believed was the buyer’s minimum acceptable amount,” he said.

This means it is not the best strategy to always be as tough as possible in a negotiation.

Previously there has been two conflicting views on first offers in negotiations, said Professor Page.

One view is that a low opening offer works as an “anchor” that moves the final offer in the direction of the first offer.

The second is that a more reasonable initial offer achieves a better outcome because it doesn’t sour the atmosphere and endanger the agreement.

Professor Page said their study—published in Theory and Decision—showed support for both these ideas.

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“We found that there is a small window where an offer is lower than an equal split, but not so low that it triggers negative emotions. It was viewed as ‘fair game’ to start the negotiation at this point.”

So in summary to strike a good bargain your opening offer needs to be not too hard, or you risk a spiteful counter-offer, but not too soft either, or you might be taken for a ride.

Source: University of Technology Sydney

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Here’s All the Good News From the COP26 Global Climate Summit Thus Far

COP26
COP26

At COP26, many of the parties to the Paris Climate Agreement have doubled-down on their commitments to reducing forest-loss and emissions.

Three days into the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference, and fortunately most of the major stories of real note are positive ones. So far there have been commitments to conservation and indigenous people’s rights that deserve mention—including an expansion of the Galapagos Marine Reserve.

Let’s take a look at the good news so far in more detail.

Green energy and financing

  • South Africa, a major carbon emitter, has signed a financing deal with some G7 countries worth $8.5 billion to help end its reliance on coal, as it’s the 12th largest consumer in the world.
  • 40 parties including the US, India, Australia, Turkey, the EU, and China have signed onto a UK-led initiative to increase worldwide access to affordable renewable energy by 2030.
  • UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak said that by 2023 the island nation will be the first to force all publicly traded companies to release plans on how they intend to achieve net zero.
  • Japan, a major coal and oil consumer, has announced an additional $10 billion in climate financing over the next few years.
  • 450 global firms will form the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero, and announce membership on Wednesday, while the managers of 40% of the world’s total investable assets have signed up to 2050 net-zero goals including limiting global warming to 1.5C.

RELATED: Biden Restores National Monuments Shrunk Under Trump

Conservation

  • A Lake Michigan-sized area of ocean, connecting the Galapagos and the Cocos Islands off Costa Rica, has been added to the Galapagos Marine Reserve, totaling 23,000 square miles, about 8-times the size of Yellowstone, and protecting a “marine superhighway” of transiting sharks, rays, tuna, turtles, and whales.
  • World leaders who control roughly 85% of the world’s forests have pledged to end forest-loss in this decade, for which they have apportioned $19.2 billion in private and public money.
  • $1.7 billion has been apportioned by the UK, US, Germany, Norway, and the Netherlands to give directly to indigenous peoples to aid in their substantial contribution to forest and land conservation.

MORE: Italy is Protecting its Giant Trees Forever – Monumental Trees that Can Live for Centuries

Emissions

  • President Biden joined 100 nations in the signing of a plan to cut methane emissions by 30%, which will be accomplished through the scaling back of fossil fuel production. Though CO2 is the principle warming agent, methane, which is more potent but lasts only 12 years in the atmosphere, is being considered as a way to buy time for CO2, which can stay in the atmosphere for up to 1,000 years, to be reduced or captured.
  • Right at the start of the conference India, which has up until this point been without a major emissions reduction target, committed to zeroing national emissions by 2070. Experts speaking with The Guardian said that “this demonstrates real leadership from a country whose emissions per capita are about one-third of the global average.”

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The COP has routinely disappointed activists and green politicians in the past, but there’s a sense from the pledges undertaken that this year has generally gotten off to a solid start.

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

If you’re like me, you never learned how to spell “sous chef” in school. Sean Sherman, on the other hand, has an altogether different meaning for the words.

Known on social media as The Sioux Chef, Sherman, who grew up on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation and is a member of the Oglala Lakota, is reconnecting the denizens of North America with native flavors and ingredients, and working to inspire a generation of indigenous chefs to reclaim their culinary past.

Pine Ridge in South Dakota contains some of the poorest communities in the country, and its out of that environment that Sherman got his first job in the restaurant industry as a dishwasher at a local steakhouse.

As he fostered a love of cooking, which saw him move to Minneapolis to study Japanese and French cuisines, Sherman realized he didn’t know indigenous recipes.

“What were my Lakota ancestors eating and storing away? How were they getting oils and salts and fats and sugars and things like that?” Sherman remembered asking himself in an interview on PBS News Hour. “So it took me quite a few years of just researching, but it really became a passion.”

These years of researching, talking to tribal elders, and consulting written material produced The Sioux Chef’s Indigenous Kitchen, which in 2018 won Sherman the coveted James Beard Award for Best American Cookbook.

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“Part of our challenge to ourselves was to cut out colonial ingredients, so we stopped using dairy, wheat flour, cane sugar,” he said.

Following the book, Sherman opened his restaurant Owamni in Minneapolis, and created the North American Traditional Indigenous Food Systems (NATIFS), a professional Indigenous kitchen and training center that seeks to create an educational space for native chefs to hone and develop their skills, and reconnect with their cooking heritage.

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He cooks with ingredients like hyssop, a shrub similar to thyme or marjoram, cedar, dandelion, mushrooms, native squashes, corn ash, sunchokes, sassafras leaves, bergamot, wild rice, and berries.

His choices of meats mirror those hunted by his ancestors—bison and deer species, river fish, and game birds.

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

“For Indigenous people who went through intense assimilation, we lost a lot of our food culture,” Sherman told Food and Wine.

“But we’re at a point now where we can reclaim it and evolve it for the next generation. To be able to share culture through food will be really healing.”

(MEET Sherman in the video below.)

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A New Species of Human Ancestor was Just Named Homo Bodoensis – A Direct Line from Africa to Modern Man

Artist rendering of Homo bodoensis. Credit- Ettore Mazza. released
Artist rendering of Homo bodoensis/Ettore Mazza; University of Hawai’i

An international team of researchers has announced the naming of a new species of human ancestor, Homo bodoensis. This species lived in Africa during the Middle Pleistocene, around half a million years ago, and was the direct ancestor of modern humans.

The Middle Pleistocene (now renamed Chibanian and dated to 774,000-129,000 years ago) is important because it saw the rise of our own species (Homo sapiens) in Africa, our closest relatives, and the Neanderthals (Homo neanderthalensis) in Europe.

However, human evolution during this age is poorly understood, a problem which paleoanthropologists call “the muddle in the middle.” The announcement of Homo bodoensis hopes to bring some clarity to this puzzling, but important chapter in human evolution.

The new name is based on a reassessment of existing fossils from Africa and Eurasia from this time period. Traditionally, these fossils have been variably assigned to either Homo heidelbergensis or Homo rhodesiensis, both of which carried multiple, often contradictory definitions.

“Talking about human evolution during this time period became impossible due to the lack of proper terminology that acknowledges human geographic variation” according to Roksandic, lead author on the study.

Recently, DNA evidence has shown that some fossils in Europe called H. heidelbergensis were actually early Neanderthals, making the name redundant. For the same reason, the name needs to be abandoned when describing fossil humans from east Asia according to co-author, Xiu-Jie Wu (Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Beijing, China).

CHECK OUT: Once Thought to Be Extinct, First Ever Photograph of the Tree-Kangaroo Proves Its Survival

Further muddling the narrative, African fossils dated to this period have been called at times both H. heidelbergensis and H. rhodesiensisH. rhodesiensis is poorly defined and the name has never been widely accepted. This is partly due to its association with Cecil Rhodes and the horrendous crimes carried out during colonial rule in Africa—an unacceptable honor in light of the important work being done toward decolonizing science.

The name “bodoensis” derives from a skull found in Bodo D’ar, Ethiopia, and the new species is understood to be a direct human ancestor. Under the new classification, H. bodoensis will describe most Middle Pleistocene humans from Africa and some from Southeast Europe, while many from the latter continent will be reclassified as Neanderthals,

The co-first author Predrag Radovic (Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade, Serbia) says of the research, published in Evolutionary Anthropology, “Terms need to be clear in science, to facilitate communication. They should not be treated as absolute when they contradict the fossil record.”

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The introduction of H. bodoensis is aimed at “cutting the Gordian knot and allowing us to communicate clearly about this important period in human evolution,” according to one of the co-authors Christopher Bae (Department of Anthropology, University of Hawai’i at Manoa).

Lead author Dr. Mirjana Roksandic at the University of Winnipeg agrees, saying, “Naming a new species is a big deal, as the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature allows name changes only under very strictly defined rules. We are confident that this one will stick around for a long time, a new taxon name will live only if other researchers use it.”

Source: University of Winnipeg

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“It’s not that some people have willpower and some don’t… It’s that some people are ready to change and others are not.” – James Gordon

Quote of the Day: “It’s not that some people have willpower and some don’t… It’s that some people are ready to change and others are not.” – James Gordon

Photo: by Ricardo Rocha

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Scientists Discover Baby Seals Can Change Their Tone of Voice – And Mimic Sounds Like Parrots

SWNS
SWNS

Seals are one of the very few mammals to change the tone of their voices, allowing them to mimic humans like a parrot, scientists have found.

The sea creatures change the pitch of their calls depending on the sounds of their surroundings, according to a new study.

Seals can be taught to copy human speech like parrots, barking catchphrases in gruff accents like “come over here.”

But while vocal learning, the ability to mimic sounds, is a rare trait among mammals, only a few species can adjust their voice’s pitch to sound higher or lower.

Now scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics have found seal pups are on the short list of animals with volume control.

Senior author Dr Andrea Ravignani said, “By looking at one of the few other mammals who may be capable of learning sounds, we can better understand how we, humans, acquire speech, and ultimately why we are such chatty animals.”

Eight harbor seal pups aged one to three weeks old who were being held in a Dutch rehabilitation center before being released back into the wild were studied by the researchers.

They recorded noises from the nearby Wadden Sea before playing them back to the pups at volumes ranging from no sound to 65 decibels, but keeping the same tone height as the animal’s calls.

They then recorded the pup’s spontaneous calls to see whether they changed their tone of voice to match the sea sounds.

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Seal pups lowered their tone of voice and kept a more steady pitch when hearing louder sea noises, the researchers found.

But one of the animal’s displayed the so-called Lombard effect, producing louder calls when the noise got louder.

This is also typical of human speech, as people generally raise their voices to be better understood in noisy situations.

Dr Ravignani said, “Seal pups have a more advanced control over their vocalizations than assumed up until now.

“This control seems to be already present at only a few weeks of age.

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“This is astonishing, as few other mammals seem capable of that.”

Pups did not however produce more or longer calls when exposed to different levels of sea sounds.

Dr Ravignani said of the findings, published in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, “To date, humans seem to be the only mammals with direct neural connections between the cortex—the outer layer of the brain, and the larynx—what we use to produce tone of voice’.

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“These results show that seals may be the most promising species to find these direct connections, and unravel the mystery of speech.”

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4 Common Medicines Have Reversed Alzheimer’s in Mice

A study has managed to reverse the symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease in mice by administering drugs currently used to treat hypertension and inflammation in humans.

In this study, scientists at IRB Barcelona led by Dr. Aloy have characterized three stages of Alzheimer’s disease, namely initial, intermediate, and advanced.

For each of these stages, they have analyzed the behavior of the animals, studied the effects on the brain (specifically the hippocampus at the tissue level), and performed a molecular analysis to measure gene expression and protein levels.

The approach adopted has allowed them to describe the development of the disease at a level of detail hitherto unknown and also compare it with healthy aging.

“What we have observed is that, although Alzheimer’s disease shares some features of accelerated ageing, it is also affected by totally different ageing processes,” says Dr. Aloy. “This disease is caused by the abnormal accumulation of certain proteins, and we have seen that, in some cases, this is not caused by overproduction but by an error in their removal,” he adds.

Chemical Checker: detection of the most promising molecules

Having characterized the disease, the scientists used the Chemical Checker, a computational tool developed by the same research group to find drugs already on the market with the capacity to reverse the effects at the cellular level.

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This tool has allowed them to identify a series of possible candidates, which were tested in various mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease.

Four drugs—two non-steroidal anti-inflammatories, dexketoprofen and etodolac, along with two anti-hypertensives, penbutolol and bendroflumethiazide, proved effective at reversing the disease and neutralizing symptoms in these mice. They published the study in Genome Medicine.

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“Epidemiological studies already indicated that people who regularly take antiinflammatories show a lower incidence of Alzheimer’s disease, but this had not been correlated with a specific medication or mechanism.

“The results that we are publishing are most promising, and we hope that further research can be done on them because they could give rise to a paradigm shift in the treatment of this disease,” says Dr. Aloy.

Early diagnosis of the disease

In addition to paving new avenues of research for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease, the characterization of the distinct stages of this condition published in this study favors early diagnosis.

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Diagnosing Alzheimer’s disease at an early stage, when damage to the brain is still minimal, is one of the main research focuses to tackle this condition and to reduce symptoms.

Source: Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB Barcelona)

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Implanted Electrodes Could Offer Improved Vision for 148 Million Blind People

n-paper-gomez-cc9d2ff6458703857a4775cd2ecac4a2c29ac54c-s1600-c85 Moran Eye Center, the University of Utah (1)
Moran Eye Center, the University of Utah 

A “long-held dream” of science was realized when a team of researchers from Spain and Utah coordinated to restore basic vision to a blind women by connecting a camera to an array of microchips to her brain.

Sightless for 16 years, 57-year-old Berna Gomez was able to identify letters and the edges of objects, as well as play basic video games, and was so instrumental in proving both safety and efficacy of the treatment that the scientists named her a co-author in the corresponding paper.

If vision could be bypassed by technology, it would represent one of the largest developments in the history of prosthesis, potentially restoring the sight of 148 million blind people worldwide.

Rather than one’s eyes observing the environment, a camera would map the information onto the visual cortex. The camera was (it’s still early days) duct-taped to a pair of glasses, and a microchip with 96 electrodes was implanted through a procedure called a minicraniotomy. After, and during a 6-month series of experiments in Spain, Gomez was able to differentiate between the letters “I” and “L” as well as “O” and “C.”

“These results are very exciting because they demonstrate both safety and efficacy,” said one of the lead researchers, Eduardo Fernández of Miguel Hernández University, in a statement.

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Blindness is the tenth-most common disability worldwide. Some macular generation like glaucoma can be reversed using stem cells. But for trauma of the eye or optic nerve, a prosthesis is the only chance. Scientists have so far used small retinal implants, including artificial cornea, but a camera-cortical-implant combo would represent a simpler option.

“One goal of this research is to give a blind person more mobility,” said Dr. Richard Normann Ph.D. one of the study leads. “It could allow them to identify a person, doorways, or cars easily. It could increase independence and safety. That’s what we’re working toward.”

The electrode array stimulated neurons to produce phosphenes which in turn produced white points of light in Gomez’ vision.

A critical feature of the breakthrough—published in The Journal of Clinical Investigation—was the complete lack of observed side-effects of sticking a microchip on a part of the human brain, which was not found to interfere at all with normal functioning of the neurons in the cortex.

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She was able to play a small video game, in which the baby character from The Simpsons, Maggie Simpson, appears for a moment with a gun in either her left or right hand, disappearing shortly after and leaving Gomez to press a button regarding which hand held the firearm. Gomez observed the offending infant correctly almost every time.

“We have taken a significant step forward, showing the potential of these types of devices to restore functional vision for people who have lost their vision,” Hernandez said.

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Forget Gold and Fine Art: Startup Finds Investors to Put Their Money into Rewilding the Land

Peter Mulligan, CC license

The UK’s fancy with re-wilding has taken a corporate turn, as a green investment company looks to generate long-term capital appreciation for investors, through re-wilding programs and the jobs they create.

By taking advantage of the growing carbon capture market, businesses looking to offset or reduce their emissions, and the new Environmental Land Management schemes from the British government, the fund hopes to pair the financial power of the corporate world with the inestimable value of the natural one.

Working in three areas of the UK, The Real Wild Estates Company (RWE) hopes to create 100,000 acres of re-wilded country by 2030, in traditional southern English estate country, the Scottish Highlands, and the North English Moors.

RWE will be hired by landowners and investors looking to turn degraded “marginal land” back into wild area for profit, with the help of Tamworth hogs, beavers, and wild cattle. By using marginal land, jobs through ecosystem recovery are created where there were no jobs before and the fund will not target farmland.

Additionally, they will claim earnings through the UK’s recently-released Environmental Land Management Fund, that will pay rural Brits for a wide variety of services to the land on their property, including ensuring clean air and drinking water, restoring heritage buildings, storing carbon, protecting and improving populations of native species, and more.

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RWE is backed by the L’Oreal Fund for Nature Regeneration, which is managed by Mirova Natural Capital, a leading sustainable investment fund.

The charity Rewilding England recently released a report that details a 54% increase in full-time employment across 33 rewilding projects totaling 80,000 acres.

“Localized nature-based economies could be transformative for reversing nature loss, tackling climate breakdown, and ensuring prosperous and revitalized communities across rural and coastal areas,” said Rebecca Wrigley, Chief Executive of Rewilding Britain.

The report looks at the example of the the Isle of Arran in Scotland, where rewilding the offshore marine environment has led to two kayak businesses opening up, and 12,000 visitors to its education center; while on Wild Knepp, a grand rewilding project on a 3,500 acre estate reached an annual turnover of around $1.2 million (£800,000) from camping, safaris, and a wild produce shop.

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“We all think this is new but it’s been happening around the globe very successfully for a long time,” Julian Matthews, founder of the Real Wild Estates Company, told the Guardian. “My goal with the Real Wild Estates Company is to make restoring nature profitable and viable.”

Having launched last Friday, it will be interesting to see the company’s first earnings report—a key calendar date for investors to survey whether a potential investment is profitable or not. In the wake of the COP26 summit, not far from where RWE plans to restore Scottish wildland, positive accounts could draw a massive capital influx.

(WATCH the Rewilding Britain video below to learn more about the rewilding process.)

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After Senior Had No Candy For Trick-or-Treaters the Kids Returned With Gifts for Her

Danny Parker
Brenda Burdon

During spooky season in Italy, you’ll often hear people say, “Dolcetta or Scherzetta,” meaning “a little sweet or a little joke.” Well, a great-grandmother in the UK recently had three little sweeties arrive at her door, and they gave her the best Halloween of her life.

When three children by the names of Jessie, Olivia, and Walter arrived at the Newcastle home of 86-year-old Brenda Burdon, she said with regret that she didn’t have any treats to give them.

The children replied, “It’s okay, because sometimes making people happy and getting a nice big smile is reward enough.”

They went to the shop, bought some chocolates, a card, a pack of muffins, and a £10 note—which they brought to her door the very next day.

The kids addressed their card to “The Kind Lady.”

Alongside doodles of pumpkins and smiley faces, they wrote, “Thank you for being so kind. Hope your life gets better as you go on… “

Danny Parker

Burdon’s family said they’ve been amazed at the kindness of the kids, and that the senior has been “lost in happiness” since meeting the trio.

Danny Parker

Danny Parker, Brenda’s grandson, told the BBC the family has bought the kids some presents in exchange for their generosity—and are keen to return the money so the children can spend it on something nice for themselves. That’s a sweet move indeed.

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“It doesn’t matter what we are. It matters what we do.” – Michelle Hodkin

Quote of the Day: “It doesn’t matter what we are. It matters what we do.” – Michelle Hodkin (The Evolution of Mara Dyer)

Photo: by Nghia Le

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