The New Energy Transport electric truck - credit, released by NET
The New Energy Transport electric truck – credit, released by NET
A green-geared milestone was just set in Australia as a company saw its all-electric haul truck go from the capital of Canberra to Sydney on a single charge.
Carrying tons of toilet paper, the final mile deliveries were made with electric vehicles too, keeping emissions down, and suppliers and demanders clear of the suffocating prices of diesel.
Built by New Energy Transport (NET) the Windrose semi-trailer truck has a range of 416 miles at 49 combined tons, and boasts 1,400 horsepower.
Reporting on the maiden voyage, Australian Truck Radio wrote that the Windrose delivered an 84% reduction in fuel costs while proving that intercity routes can be greened up with a little forward planning thanks to a fast charging time of just 1 hour.
It also made the 186-mile trip 25 minutes faster because of the vehicle’s speedy acceleration during the inclined sections of the route.
It’s the second demonstration of the Windrose’s capabilities, as back in November it set a world record for the longest single-charge long haul delivery—a trip to your grocery store short of 300 miles.
“This delivery ushers in a new era for Australian road freight where electric heavy trucks are not just cheaper and faster, they unshackle Australia from volatile global oil markets, dramatically strengthening our supply chain resilience,” said Daniel Bleakley, Co-CEO, New Energy Transport.
Collecting the thoughts and comments on the achievement, Australian Truck Radio quoted John Grimes, CEO at Smart Energy Council, as saying that every liter of diesel the nation saves on highways by electrifying trucks “is one we keep for farmers.”
“Australia runs on road freight so if diesel stops, we stop and starve. Electrifying trucking strengthens our energy security, and we’re ready—we already build electric trucks and charging infrastructure, and can power it all with sun and wind.”
NET envisions completing its pilot haul fleet of Windroses by mid-2026.
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For over 20 years, the forests of central Vietnam have been missing one of their most remarkable inhabitants.
Now, an international alliance of conservation organizations, zoological institutions, and Vietnamese partners has come together with a shared goal: to return the Vietnam pheasant to the forests where it once lived.
The project represents one of the few global efforts to reintroduce a species that is likely extinct in the wild, making it both an ambitious and deeply symbolic undertaking.
The Vietnam pheasant, once native to the dense, humid forests of the region, has not been reliably recorded in the wild for decades. Among its most striking characteristics is the male’s deep dark blue plumage with a subtle metallic sheen, which, together with its vivid red facial skin, gives the species a particularly elegant appearance.
Its decline is the result of multiple pressures over time, including extensive habitat loss, agricultural expansion, illegal hunting, and the lasting ecological impacts of the Vietnam War, during which large areas of forest in its distribution range were severely degraded.
In the early 20th century, a small number of birds were brought from Vietnam to Europe. This tiny founder population became the basis of a carefully managed conservation effort across zoological institutions and private breeders. Over decades, through coordinated breeding program and international collaboration, the population grew and was maintained as a genetically viable assurance population.
Now, for the first time, that population is being used to support a return to the wild. In mid-May, a group of pheasants selected from European breeding programs will be transported from Berlin to Vietnam. Each individual has been carefully chosen based on genetic diversity, health, and behavioral characteristics, ensuring that the foundation of the future population is as strong as possible.
The selected 20 pheasants will be transported from Germany to Vietnam by cargo aircraft in specially designed transport crates that ensure safety, ventilation, and minimal stress throughout the journey. The transfer will be accompanied by experienced experts, who will monitor the birds continuously and ensure their well-being at every stage of the transport process.
Following their arrival, the birds will undergo a period of acclimatization and observation under professional care. The immediate goal is not release, but stability: to allow the pheasants to adjust to local climatic conditions, to form breeding pairs, and to establish new, locally born, parent-reared generations. Only once this foundation is secure will further steps towards release be considered.
This approach reflects the complexity of the challenge. Reintroducing a species that may no longer exist in the wild requires more than simply returning animals to their former habitat. It requires functioning ecosystems, long-term protection, and the support of local communities.
In central Vietnam, these conditions are being developed in parallel. Within the historical range of the species, protected forest areas are being prepared as potential future release sites. Conservation teams are working on the ground to safeguard these habitats, monitor biodiversity, and reduce ongoing threats such as illegal hunting.
“For Vietnam, the recovery of the Vietnam Pheasant is more than the return of a single species,” said Pham Tuan Anh, director of Viet Nature Conservation Center, which operates the Rare Pheasants Breeding Centre.
“It represents our pride and responsibility in protecting our natural heritage. This project shows how conservation practitioners, scientists, local communities, and authorities can come together to rebuild what has been lost.”
The initiative is supported by a wide network of partners, chief among which is the European Ex-situ Program (EEP) which plays a key role in ensuring the genetic health and long-term viability of 500 different wild animals which may be, or are, extinct in the wild.
“The coordinated management of the European population has been essential in preparing for this moment,” said Veronika Zahradníčková, the EEP Coordinator at Prague Zoo.
“Through careful breeding and long-term genetic planning, we have been able to maintain a healthy and viable population. Contributing individuals to this reintroduction is a significant milestone and an important step towards restoring the species in its natural habitat.”
Building on this foundation of international cooperation, partner zoos have worked closely over many years to secure the survival of the species under human care and to enable its future return to the wild.
“This project is very close to our hearts here at Zoo Berlin. It is the result of decades of international cooperation,” said Dr. Andreas Knieriem, Director of Zoo and Tierpark Berlin, which released a statement to mark the occasion. “The Vietnam Pheasant has survived because of coordinated conservation breeding, and now we have the opportunity to take the next step: returning it to the wild where it belongs.”
The return of the Vietnam pheasant represents a rare opportunity to reverse a loss that once seemed final. It highlights the role that long-term conservation breeding can play in safeguarding species, and it demonstrates the importance of international collaboration in addressing global biodiversity challenges.
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A huge area of the Everglades that was drained in an attempt to convert it to suburbia has been restored to a somewhat native ecosystem after 2 decades of reverse-landscape engineering.
Picayune Strand is a big, almost perfect rectangle of south Florida wetland located northwest of Everglades National Park, northeast of Thousand Islands Nat. Wildlife Refuge, and west of Florida Panther Nat. Wildlife Refuge.
It was part of an enormous land package bought by the real estate company Gulf American in the 1950s in the attempt to create America’s largest suburban housing development, called Golden Gate Estates.
But their effort to tame the swamp failed, even though substantial landscape alterations were made to try and dry out the area. Picayune Strand is 2 feet average lower elevation than the Golden Gate Estate land to the north, and this little difference made it virtually impossible to prevent flooding. The company went bankrupt.
One of the first projects identified and pursued by conservationists working under the Everglades Restoration Plan of 2000, Picayune Strand has changed a lot over the years. Since 1985, conservationists have been buying up all the private, often unbuilt-on land that Gulf American had managed to sell. It was tedious lawyer’s work, but by 2004, it was all consolidated into a conservation package.
Gulf American built 4 large canals to channel water off the land they wanted to develop, while the earth and stone they churned up was used to crisscross the area with causeways atop which ran roads. These were the first targets for groups like the Everglades Foundation, the Conservancy of Southwest Florida, and the US Army Corps. of Engineers.
The hydrology of the Everglades is defined by water flowing across the once-7 million square miles all in the same direction at roughly the same snail’s pace, a phenomenon described as “sheet flow” through a “river of grass.” Huge areas remained flooded all year, and plugging the canals was the first step towards restoring the natural hydrology.
To restore this, the roads were torn up and the materials were chucked back into the canals from whence they came.
One of the 3 pump stations – credit, Brigida Sanchez US Army Corps of Engineers
From macro to micro
“Picayune is as good a place in South Florida that there is, in terms of getting it back to what it was before,” Michael Duever, an ecologist who has been monitoring the Picayune project, told Yale News. “We’re feeling that we’re in the range of 90 plus-or-minus percent of restoration.”
There had to be some compromises, as people still live in Picayune Strand. Part of that 10% Duever refers to being missing includes 3 pumping stations that pull rainwater out of the closed canals on the northern boundary of the Picayune project, and dump it into large basins that will leak it out in many directions. The water level at times is higher than natural, however, and at other times dryer.
Vegetation is coming back in a big way—not always ideally, but upland plants cannot now spread further south because of the continual water bodies. More native species that have missed the continual wetness are also returning—like a native, wild sunflower.
The restored Picayune is expected to help several endangered species, including the red-cockaded woodpecker and the Florida panther, while studies have already shown that the increased insect abundance is benefitting the bonneted bat, the largest of its kind in Florida with a greater-than-footlong wingspan.
“I kind of view Picayune Strand as a microcosm of the entire [Everglades] plan,” Stephen Davis, chief science officer at the Everglades Foundation, told Richard Mertens at Yale.
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Quote of the Day: “My boy, one small breeze doesn’t make a wind storm.” – John McGraw
Photo by: Kurt Cotoaga
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94 years ago today, one of Europe’s greatest landscape engineering projects, the Afsuiltdijk, was completed in the Netherlands, proving that newly-mechanized Man could tame not only the land, but also the seas. The Afsuiltdijk closed off Zuiderzee (South Sea) Bay and converted it into a freshwater lake called IJsselmeer. In the previous 100 years, the Dutch had become experts at turning wetlands into polderland for farming, and armed with hydraulic machinery, they saw no reason why they couldn’t turn a sea into farmland either. READ how it happened… (1932)
With Europe more choked with tourists than ever amid year after year of record-setting summer heat, Italy is looking to change course: off the beaten path of luxury hotels and museums.
Antichi Cammini d’Italia, or the Antique Trails of Italy, responds to the growing demand for slow, authentic and sustainable tourist experiences, by uniting and modernizing one of the peninsula’s great unknown treasures: its long-distance hiking routes.
Everyone knows about the Camino de Santiago in Spain, but Italy’s 5 famous pilgrimage trails are far less famous. As noted by Panorama, only the Via Francigena carries some international recognition.
But Italy is crisscrossed with such routes—now united for the first time ever as an EU-funded initiative under the Cultural Routes of the Council of Europe—to make them and the cultural and historical treasures they carry, more accessible than ever.
The Cammini include the Via Francigena, the Via St. Francis, the Cammino St. Benedict, the Via Romea Germanica, and the Romea Strata, with details below.
The itineraries promoted by the project offer alternatives to traditional destinations, helping to ease pressure on the most crowded tourist circuits and to extend visitor flows across a broader calendar and into lesser-known areas.
One of the project’s most distinctive features is an integrated smart signage system deployed along the five itineraries. Sixty devices provide travelers with free Wi-Fi and Bluetooth Low Energy beacon technology connected to the Italia.it app.
When visitors enter the range of a beacon, they receive a push notification inviting them to discover the stage they are on and the surrounding tourism offerings: technical information on the route, geolocated maps, Point of Interest sheets, and multimedia content dedicated to places of historical, artistic, religious, and scenic value.
It’s a model that brings together the physical experience of walking and the digital dimension, offering travelers accessible tools for orientation and deeper interpretation in real time in a variety of languages.
Alongside this, an extensive mapping process of Points of Interest has led to the creation of more than 1,000 information sheets dedicated to churches, monuments, natural areas, squares, fountains, and other identity-defining places in the territories crossed by the routes.
More than 40% of the sites highlighted are outstanding assets that are still little represented in international tourism circuits: a heritage the project helps bring to light, promoting a more authentic and sustainable way of experiencing the territory. Italia.it is the system’s central digital hub, where all content comes together and becomes accessible to travelers.
A collection of Italian signposts for the Via Francigena – credit, Bjørn Christian Tørrissen CC 3.0. BY-SA
I Cammini
The Via St. Francis follows sites linked with the life of this famous monk and founder of the Franciscan Order, and is composed of two sections totaling 304 miles (490 km) while the similarly themed Cammino St. Benedict goes from Umbria to Rome along 16 different stops across 186 miles (304 km) following the life of St. Benedict.
This tourism offer appeals to an increasingly diverse audience: pilgrims, walkers, cultural travelers, outdoor and wellness enthusiasts, families and people seeking a more direct relationship with local territories and their communities.
The Papal Palace at Viterbo, one of the stops on the antichi cammini – credit, Claudio Caravano CC 4.0 -BY-SA
But for those made of sterner stuff there’s the Romea Strata: 2,900 miles, (4,700 km) 7 countries, 245 points of interest, and 50 UNESCO World Heritage Sites. The trail was reconstructed based on antique pilgrimage routes known from the Baltic down central-eastern Europe to Rome. The Italian portion is 620 miles (1,000 km) and passes through 47 stops.
The Via Romea Germanica passes Germany and Austria on its way to Rome, moving 1,367 miles (2,200 km).
As all of these routes go through Lazio on the way to Rome, they will inevitably bring the traveler in contact with the historic wealth of the Italian capital region, including the Holy Valley of Rieti, the medieval center of Viterbo, the first Benedictine monastery at Montecassino, the beautiful town of Vetralla, and St. Benedict’s Cave of Sacro Speco.
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Footage from the 2019 film Golden Wild Yak - credit, supplied to CGTV as a courtesy by director Ka Bu
Footage from the 2019 film Golden Wild Yak – credit, supplied to CGTV as a courtesy by director Ka Bu
China has performed the first single and multiple cloning of wild yaks in a bid to reinforce this keystone herbivore, and save one of the rarest and most beautiful animals in China.
Legend has it that when Mount Buye on the Tibetan Plateau was married to Mount Zhaxiangqian, 7 golden wild yaks were given as a dowry. This is why, locals have it, the golden yak can only be found high in these mountains.
Conservationists and geneticists studying this enigmatic and stunning creature might say that the reason they’re only found high in these mountains is because they have been hunted, outcompeted, and outbred such that today they’re considered Critically-Endangered.
Now though, a comprehensive cloning program has seen biologists produce wild yak embryos that were then delivered organically, without assistance, by wild yak females, indicating that the first step towards potentially saving this legendary creature—with the small side benefit of increasing the “Vulnerable” wild yak population—is now possible.
Native to the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (QTP), the wild yak (Bos mutus) evolved for thousands of years to thrive in the high altitude and frigid environment. It is the ancestor of the domestic yak (Bos grunniens) and most closely related to bison.
As humans domesticated the yaks, they quickly became the difference between life and death in the Himalayas. Their wool provided clothing to keep out the cold; their milk provided food and even oil for lighting; their dung provided fuel for the fire.
A genetically-distinct subspecies of the wild yak exists in the highest reaches of the QTP whose coats flush a brilliant burnished gold, and which seem to be even more well-equipped genetically speaking for their mountain home.
Ka Bu, a documentarian who filmed the golden population for a 2016 documentary called Golden Wild Yak, explains that protections for this animal are as stringent as can be provided under Chinese law, and that over 700 local herders and farmers are employed in keeping domesticated yaks away from their strongholds in Changtang National Park, and performing poaching patrols over the vast landscape.
Nevertheless, the population may number as few as 170 to 300, and genomic studies that have ruled out the golden yaks as being merely wild yaks with a case of leucism, have found that the population suffers from inbreeding.
In 2023, a partnership between Zhejiang University in China’s southeast, and the Institute of Plateau Biology of Xizang saw biologists sequence whole genomes of almost 9,000 wild yaks to create a total genetic inventory in advance of a cloning program. Cloning often gets misrepresented as duplicating a living animal, when really the infant thusly birthed carries entirely different genetics to its parents.
Cloning was successfully used in America in 2008 to keep the black-footed ferret from falling back into extinction due to limited genetics. The offspring of that animal have subsequently reproduced naturally in captivity.
Last July, the Zhejiang-Xizang team succeeded in the first yak cloning in history, a feat they then surpassed by cloning 10 at a time just recently. Their aim is to establish a new wild herd with genes taken from across the wild yak gene pool, and then turn their attention to the golden yak.
The golden wild yak subspecies has already had its whole genome sequenced, and the traits that give it its robustness and golden color are well known. The scientists that performed that work, independent of the cloning program, cited the animal as a “an Evolutionarily Significant Unit (ESU) of high conservation value.”
“Special attention should be paid to preventing genetic deterioration caused by elevated inbreeding, as well as mitigating the risk of genetic swamping through hybridization with large sympatric and neighboring populations of common wild yak,” the authors wrote, who found the golden wild yak to carry additional unique traits associated with hypoxia tolerance, reproductive function, and immune response typical of a high-elevation living.
With time and hope, this beautiful mountain ‘dowry’ just may, with the help of the most advanced biological sciences, maintain its place among the legends of its beloved mountain home.
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Samsung Electronics Executive Vice President Yeo Myung-gu, left, and Samsung Electronics labor unions leader Choi Seung-ho sign a wage agreement - credit, Samsung, released
Samsung Electronics Executive Vice President Yeo Myung-gu, left, and Samsung Electronics labor unions leader Choi Seung-ho sign a wage agreement – credit, Samsung, released
Following eye-watering Q1 performance, some 48,000 of Samsung’s semiconductor division workers are set to receive a new profit-sharing-style bonus structure that will give a bigger slice of the AI pie to those making baking it.
Samsung’s compensation package was among the country’s most generous, as the tech giant accounts for a staggering 16% of national GDP. But after last month’s Q1 revenues rose over 800%, exceeding the entirety of fiscal year 2025, 40% of Samsung’s South Korea-based staff were poised to go on strike for better terms.
The issue was resolved quickly and a preliminary agreement was reached between Samsung’s largest labor union and the company which saw the staff return to work Monday morning, and the company’s shares surge 7%.
Roughly 75% of the 62,000 unionized workers backed the preliminary deal that would see an end to the cap on bonuses of 50% of annual pay, and in its place the commitment to allocate 10.5% of operating profits from its semiconductor division to worker bonuses.
Well, the semiconductor division accounted for 94% of total operating profit in the quarter, amounting to $35.8 billion, 10.5% of which divided 48,000 striking workers would equate to around $78,000 for just this quarter alone. Multiplied by 4, a worker’s slice of the AI boom would amount to $312,000.
Samsung is the country’s largest company at over $1 trillion in market cap, and it’s also the largest semiconductor manufacturer. The standoff came 8 months after the second-largest semiconductor producer, SK Hynix, improved its own bonus terms to its employees.
“The semiconductor industry is now facing a war to secure global talent,” Samsung’s union said in a statement last month. “SK Hynix has already revised its compensation structure to retain talent, while foreign companies are luring our engineers with exceptional offers.”
Samsung and SK Hynix are direct beneficiaries of the global AI boom (or bubble, as some might say), as the wafer-thin processors are needed to supply the computing power to run the AI tools which can be found all throughout our society from E-commerce to hospitals to the front lines of the war in Ukraine.
The strike threatened to so thoroughly derail global semiconductor production that the Korean Prime Minister Kim Min-seok made mention of it on Sunday.
“Any disruption to Samsung’s semiconductor production would go far beyond losses for a single corporate group, leaving deep scars across the national economy,” said the Prime Minister, whose government actually helped step in and mediate the deal.
“The agreement came later than expected,” Samsung said in a Wednesday statement. “We will work to build a more mature and constructive labor management relationship so that such a situation does not happen again.”
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Northern gannets on Bonaventure Island - credit, CC 3.0. BY-SA Bodoklecksel
Northern gannets on Bonaventure Island – credit, CC 3.0. BY-SA Bodoklecksel
Content of several “forever chemicals” in seabird eggs were found to have sharply decreased over the last 55 years by a team of scientists.
While first rising exponentially from during the 1960s, the chemicals, classed as PFAS, peaked in the 1990s before decreasing in line with regulatory oversight by North American governments.
PFAS are a class of chemicals that form water, stain, and heat-resistant coatings in multiple products which substantially contaminate environments around the world, and are linked to multiple detrimental health outcomes.
A study published in the journal Applied Toxicology that looked at PFAS concentrations in the eggs of northern gannets on Bonaventure Island found that the content of some of the most commonly used PFAS has fallen 70% and sometimes more.
These include perfluorooctanesulfonic acid (PFOS) and perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), which fell 74% and 40% respectively. Concentrations of perfluorohexanesulfonic acid, (PFHxS) another of these chemicals, was also 70% lower from baseline.
“We see this incredible rise to a peak where concentrations seem to be higher than toxicological threshold for those birds, then it really decreases in a nice way,” Raphael Lavoie, a co-author and ecotoxicologist with Environment and Climate Change Canada, told the Guardian. “The regulations are having a good effect.”
The seabird subjects and the long study period were notable strengths. The 55 years of data spans the rise in PFAS production, and the eventual decline as the environmental groups and regulators caught on to the toxicity in the late 90s and early 2000s.
Bonaventure Island is the world’s largest northern gannet breeding colony. These pescatarian birds are directly exposed to PFAS contamination due to the island’s position near the St. Lawrence Seaway, which, being connected to the Great Lakes manufacturing centers north and south of the border, was exposed to substantial amounts of PFAS during the 20th century.
The PFAS got into the fish which got into the gannets and then into their eggs. Tom Perkins for the Guardian wrote that in the late 90s, the chemical corporation M3 dramatically scaled back its production of commercial PFAS in the face of regulatory scrutiny. In 2015, the chemical sector struck an agreement with the EPA to phase out production of PFOA and PFOS, while 6 years earlier at the United Nations’ Stockholm Convention, several of the chemicals tested for in the study were subjected to elimination.
This included PFOA and PFHxS, while PFOS was restricted in everything but firefighting foam.
The study is a comprehensive demonstration of how these regulations are working to reduce the toxic load presented by PFAS in the environment. PFAS are referred to shorthanded as “forever chemicals,” however, and so the authors stress the need for continual environmental and regulatory vigilance, since any similar chemicals entering the environment today will remain, presumably forever.
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Quote of the Day: “To a father growing old nothing is dearer than a daughter.” – Euripides
Photo by: Getty Images for Unsplash+
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96 years ago today, the Chrysler Building opened to the public in New York City. Constructed by Walter Chrysler, founder of the automotive company, the Art Deco skyscraper served as the corporation’s headquarters and lifted up the languishing East Side of Manhattan from 1930 until the 1950s. WATCH a video about the building narrated by Chrysler’s grandson… (1930)
It's unknown how the pony became stuck in the tire - credit RSPCA, supplied to BBC
It’s unknown how the pony became stuck in the tire – credit RSPCA, supplied to BBC
A wild rescue story with a mystery comes from Stoke-on-Trent, where a pony was found entirely trapped inside a tractor tire.
Neither residents nor rescuers had any clue or idea as to what had gone on which saw the pony jailed by the derelict tire, but no one waited around to find out.
Residents immediately called the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals after finding the animal trapped in a field.
Rescue officer Nicola Riley described the event to the BBC as a “delicate operation” of an “understandably very scared and uncomfortable animal.”
Opting not to use a cutting tool, the RSCPA rescuers eased the pony’s head and shoulders out of the tire, allowing it to stand up and wobblily return to its comrades in the field.
“Thankfully, everyone worked really well together and we managed to get him out without causing any injury,” Riley said, who monitored the pony for the next hour to ensure he wasn’t suffering any lasting trauma.
– credit RSPCA, supplied to BBC
The pony began feeding not long after his release. His fur was matted and very dirty, suggesting a long period stuck in the tire.
The officer said that it could have ended very differently if the residents hadn’t called, and encouraged anyone in a similar situation to do the same thing.
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Only 10 human cases of Guinea worm were reported worldwide in 2025, the lowest number ever recorded, bringing the ancient disease closer than ever to eradication.
Poised to be only the second human disease eradicated after smallpox, the 10 Guinea worm cases mark a 33% decline from the 15 cases reported in 2024.
Shared in a statement from the Carter Center, the historic number follows the one-year anniversary of the passing of former US President Jimmy Carter who campaigned tirelessly to achieve this outcome, and in the 40th year since he began to do so.
When The Carter Center embarked of its global Guinea worm eradication campaign in 1986, an estimated 3.5 million human cases occurred annually in 21 countries in Africa and Asia.
Together with partners, including the countries themselves, the campaign has reduced the waterborne, parasitic disease by more than 99.99% compared to 40 years ago. This equates to more than 100 million cases of this devastating disease averted among the world’s most marginalized and neglected populations.
“Guinea worm causes immense suffering—not just for the individual but for their family and community as well,” said Adam Weiss, director of the Carter Center Guinea Worm Eradication Program.
“Every case is a real person we know by name. They are enduring a disease we know how to prevent, and we’ve been given this rare opportunity to wipe it out completely. We’re energized by this year’s progress, but zero is the only acceptable number, and that’s why our commitment to finishing this job is unwavering.”
The scope of the achievement is difficult to understate. Guinea worm is slated to be the first parasitic disease eradicated in history and the first without a medicine or vaccine.
However, the parasite that spreads the disease can infect both humans and animals, so eradication would require zero cases in either group. Currently, hundreds of cases are still detected every year in domestic animals. Human cases were only detected in South Sudan, Chad, and Ethiopia. Mali has now recorded zero cases for the second year in a row.
The Carter Center wrote that eradication efforts are driven by strong partnerships, community-based interventions, and behavior change, with a network of hundreds of thousands of community-based volunteers trained to provide health education.
For a disease to be declared eradicated, every country in the world must be certified free of human and animal infections, even in those where transmission has never been known to occur. To date, the World Health Organization has certified 200 countries free of Guinea worm; only six have not been certified.
“This campaign reflects the values that shaped my grandparents’ lives—the conviction that hope, hard work, and respect for everyone can change the world,” said Jason Carter, Carter Center board chair and eldest grandchild of President and Mrs. Carter.
“Seeing Guinea worm cases reach historic lows is one of the clearest expressions of that legacy and our commitment to the communities where trust has been earned.”
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From China’s arid Gansu Corridor comes the story of a rural county welcoming thousands of big city volunteers after a viral call for help.
Minqin County is on the front line of China’s struggle against desertification, but it recently received a helping hand thanks to a social media campaign “Plant a Tree in Minqin.”
It has led to a staggering 30,000 people traveling to the remote area on their own dime to help the area protect farming areas and water sources with new plants.
English speakers have the English-version of the Chinese outlet The Paper to thank for this frontier reporting on the area which has combatted desertification since 1950 with mass tree and shrub planting campaigns.
The area relies on hardy crops like corn, onions, and melons, and uses sauxal, white thorn, and other desert plants to help green peripheral areas and water sources.
A local named Zhong Jin launched the Plant a Tree in Minqin initiative in 2024 who, according to the The Paper, had returned to his home there after graduating university in 2020 with a specialty in desert control.
His call for help using short video sharing platforms caught fire when Minqin became the set for a Chinese reality TV program called Become a Farmer. 10 urban youth were selected to cultivate 450 acres over 190 days, and the show was a hit.
The county’s public welfare center sought to capitalize on the publicity by opening a volunteer registration portal on its website—to let real people experience what went on in the show.
Between February and May, 30,000 people volunteered, made up of college and university age youth, parents looking to teach their children about farming and its challenges, and of course, fans of Become a Farmer.
Volunteers told the outlet that the sandstorms, rugged terrain, relentless sun, and cramped volunteer dormitories have proven a challenge, but also that they’ve brought out a spirit of frontier camaraderie as the pit-digging and tree-planting wears everyone out equally.
Local entrepreneurs have taken advantage to send the volunteers home with an experience they’ll never forget.
“A number of curated travel routes have also been launched, guiding visitors through tree-planting sites and major scenic areas, where cultural performances and live-action exhibitions showcase Minqin’s landscapes and heritage,” The Paper wrote.
The Plant a Tree in Minqin campaign aims to project vital areas for irrigation and agriculture with 1 million trees.
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Fragments of a life-sized mural depicting a larger-than-life figure of the Iliad has been found in the remains of a Roman villa near Reims, France.
The discovery included several exquisite bronze statuettes and the remains of a colonnaded facade, indicating that high artistic expression among local Roman well-to-do even was typical, and available, even when settling far from the capital.
Durocortorum is located in northern France near Reims, and was an important settlement in Roman Gaul by the 2nd century CE. While the center of Durocortorum has long been known have been a center of political life for the region, the suburbs are much less understood.
Now, France’s National Institute for Preventative Archaeology, (INRAP), has made major progress on the excavations of a Roman home known as a domus, and its contents and character suggest that Durocortorum’s importance spread well beyond its forum.
Situated more than half-a-mile from the forum, in a humid space near the main river which crosses Reims, the Vesle, the building would have faced the street with a column-lined facade, indicating wealth and status. The remains of two such columns have been found.
INRAP wrote in a statement that the building likely suffered from a fire and was demolished in the aftermath. This preserved some of the objects within under a layer of rubble and ash that protected them from the deleterious effects of moisture and oxygen.
Among this layer were fragments of a wall-to-wall fresco, with one of them bearing the name of the antihero of the Greek-Trojan War recorded in Homer’s Iliad, Achilles, and the other Deidamia, which refers to a mythological scene from Achilles’ life before the war.
The mythological story, as shared by Greek Reporter, recounts that Achilles’ mother knew of a prophecy predicting his death at Troy, and so dressed him up as a girl and sent him to live in a commune of priestesses on the island of Skyros. Here, Achilles falls in love with Deidamia, a young commune member, who bears him a son.
Eventually, as Greece prepares for war with Troy, Odysseus, who knows his country’s best hope of victory lies behind Achilles’ spear, arrives on Skyros disguised as a merchant with the intent to trick the great warrior into revealing his identity.
Spreading out his wares of clothes and jewelry, Odysseus also places a shield and spear for sale and orders one of his men to falsely raise the alarm of armed attackers. His warlike nature being irrepressible, Achilles, still dressed as a priestess, instinctively grabs the weapons Odysseus had laid out, and was subsequently removed from the commune.
INRAP reports that only 4 depictions of this event in a fresco have been recorded, with the other 3—at Aquileia, Pompeii, and Rome—all located in Italy.
Additional finds were bronze statuettes depicting Mars, the Roman god of war, a bull, and a goddess whose identify has not been ascertained.
“The eyes of the Mars statuette are enhanced with silver,” INRAP wrote. “Its shield presents a relief decoration of the Capitoline wolf nursing Romulus and Remus. The cleaning revealed a Medusa’s head on its breastplate.”
“The bull rests on a rectangular base. His eyes, also highlighted with silver, give great expressiveness to his face.”
The goddess seems to be a compositional piece. Dressed in a flowing gown, she wields the club of Hercules surrounded by a serpent and resting on a lion, bears a helmet depicting a sphynx, a crown, and a city wall, and would have clearly borne a pair of wings on her back.
The quality of the statuettes and the rare richness of the decorative repertoire of the house’s painted coatings indicate wealthy owners who were either Romans themselves, or very attached to Roman culture.
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Quote of the Day: “Nothing can bring you peace but the triumph of principles.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson
Photo by: Getty Images for Unsplash+
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100 years ago today, jazz trumpeter and composer Miles Davis, was born. One of the most influential and innovative musicians of the 20th century, Davis broke long-held musical rules and helped popularize jazz fusion with his 4-time platinum 1959 album, Kind of Blue. From 1944 to 1948, Davis played in Charlie Parker’s revolutionary hard pop quintet, an undoubtedly strong influence on his career and music making for the following decade when he would be signed to a long-term deal with Colombia Records, where Kind of Blue was recorded. MORE more about the great man… (1926)
Laughter is the best medicine, according to an old adage. Now, new research suggests it also boosts child development.
Making children laugh can help make their brains more resilient and open to learning, according to scientists.
Laughter builds deep emotional connections and soothes youngsters’ nervous systems, making them more resilient—because laughter is not frivolous, but rather a complex biological phenomenon.
Dr. Jacqueline Harding conducted extensive studies into how laughter and play contribute to healthy brain growth, emotional well-being, and social bonding.
The early childhood expert at Middlesex University in northwest London, argues in her new book The Brain That Loves to Laugh says laughter can help children navigate life’s challenges and better handle stress.
“Hope and humor, it seems, are not just the seasoning of life, but foundational to a recipe for healthy development,” said Dr Harding.
“When we see children laugh, we witness the brilliance of the brain in action: learning, connecting, and growing.”
It precedes the neural development of speech, she explained. But it also engages a distributed network of brain regions, including motor areas and the prefrontal cortex.
Laughter also “influences heart rate, respiration and production of antibodies.”
“It decreases the stress hormones cortisol and epinephrine, and increases ‘happiness chemicals’ dopamine, serotonin and endorphins.
“It can strengthen the immune system and improve memory.
“Neuroimaging studies suggest that laughter plays a significant role in brain activity, as humor is cognitively demanding and engages neuro-plasticity.
“It challenges the brain to predict and resolve tension between conflicting ideas, providing a mental workout that enhances creative thought and activates both the working memory and frontal lobes.
“On the other hand, prolonged stress negatively affects both physical and mental development. It can impair learning, increase adult stress risk, suppress immune function, and contribute to illness.”
“I believe that as we continue to wrestle with humor – this most intriguing human function – we must strive to shake off any dismissal of its frivolous nature and allow its serious contribution to human learning and life in general to shine.
“In parents and their children, laughter can boost the levels of happy chemical oxytocin and enhance neural synchrony during parent-child interactions – in other words, build emotional bonds.
“These bonds are beneficial to the child and even contribute to a reduction in parental burnout and stress.”
Credit: La Priz (CC license)
But parents don’t need to rattle off jokes
Instead of jokes, simple shared play and laughter between parents and children, with eye contact, smiles, and close proximity, can all foster connection.
“Creative, happy play does its most brilliant work at a molecular level, especially at a time when the human brain is at its most receptive,” explained Harding.
“Spontaneous joyful play is an antidote to stress, as it increases levels of endorphins released by the brain.”
As well as nurturing bonds, she suggests that “humor and hope” can improve a child’s resilience to stressful events.
“The link between co-regulation and self-regulation is now well established. Co-regulation means the way in which the baby is guided by a caring and supportive adult early in life, so that they have a working model to draw upon for their own self-regulation as they mature.”
“The immune system needs a store of positive experiences from which to draw.”
Her studies show that, in a child’s brain, the limbic system—which regulates functions such as emotion, behavior, and long-term memory—develops alongside the brain’s executive functions that help us plan, evaluate, and make decisions.
“Stated simply, the emotional state of young children directly influences how they navigate their way through the world.”
She says that carefully finding gentle ways to introduce joy and hope, and ease the burden on their nervous system, can even help youngsters who have already experienced extensive trauma.
Dr. Harding advocates integrating humor into educational settings to reduce the cognitive load, making complex information more digestible, and refresh the current educational paradigm.
An important watershed in Oakland is now a thriving Eden of native species thanks to the work of two generations of volunteers.
30 years ago last week, Mr. Michael Thilgen and his neighbors formed the Friends of Sausal Creek nonprofit dedicating to restoring the waterway from its source in the Oakland Hills down to its terminus in the San Francisco Bay.
At 3 miles long, it’s hardly the most dramatic California water source, but one that’s nevertheless important for the local environment. Today it’s one of the only urban creeks in the state to host a wild population of rainbow trout, and also maintains a delicate population of pallid manzanita, a federally endangered species of shrub.
For 30 years, Friends of Sausal Creek has led all-volunteer efforts to keep the water course in the best possible shape, by de-weeding trails, clearing invasive vegetation, planting native plants, and even monitoring local wildlife health.
“Is the water clear? Does it look like something’s been dumped?” said volunteer and board member Kristy Brady to CBS News. “We monitor fish quality and so forth, making sure it stays healthy so everyone can enjoy it.”
The organization runs a native plant nursery and organizes seed collecting hikes to ensure they can continue to support reforestation long-term. They’ve introduced tens of thousands of native plants back into both the wild and less wild parts of the creek.
The group has also been part of a special long-term restoration project at Fern Ravine, where a second-growth coastal redwood forest meets Oakland’s own backyard. Here since 2010, Friends of Sausal Creek have been working to undo decades of disturbances.
Since 1920 when the city designated Fern Ravine a park, where a tributary of the Sausal Creek babbles away far from the sounds of car horns, high volumes of recreation traffic on trails and off them has resulted in substantial undergrowth loss.
The lack of ground cover plants saw the soil dry out, followed by greater erosion and sedimentation, and the arrival of several invasive species which cemented control in Fern Ravine and began to outcompete the native vegetation.
Through the nonprofit’s tireless weeding and planting, “extraordinary progress” has been achieved there.
“Oakland’s ancient redwoods are as unique and valuable as the old-growth redwood forests in California’s state and national parks,” said board member Dr. Robert Leidy in an organization document.
“Their ability to recover from centuries of abuse with proper management is a remarkable testament to their resilience. Oakland’s redwoods deserve the same reverence…”
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Susan Young Browne celebrating her birthday - family photo
Susan Young Browne amid her family – family photo
“I grow old gracefully,” said Susan Young Browne, who just received permission to keep driving until the age of 115.
That’s a testament to Browne’s enduring aptitude (and attitude) for life; having recently celebrated her 108th Birthday in Dover, Delaware.
Browne was in Delaware in 1918 during Segregation where she worked on a farm with her family—sans water or electricity. She would eventually attend Delaware State College for Colored Students, today known as Delaware State University, and graduate in 1945, going on to teach in a one-room schoolhouse (and elsewhere) for 30 years.
Married twice, she enjoys the company of a clan of children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren.
Nowadays, she can be found three times a week at the Modern Maturity Center where she enjoys group exercise classes.
Staying active is a key to that graceful aging she talked about.
Susan Young Browne – supplied to CBS News
“When I get up in the morning, I have an exercise routine that I’ve been doing for the last 20 years,” she said. “When I retired—and I walked around that classroom for 30 years—I am not going to sit down.”
130 people attended her birthday party, including Delaware’s Governor Matt Meyer. Best of all, she was gifted a parking spot right in front of the building reserved especially for her.
That’s important, because as Ms. Browne told those assembled to celebrate her life, the state had just reissued her driver’s license until 2033.
WATCH the story below from CBS News…
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