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They Shared Their Deepest Insecurities in Public: Best Therapy Ever (WATCH)

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It may be counterintuitive to stand up on a chair and talk about your deepest insecurities for all to hear in public – but that’s exactly what this gang of friends wanted to do.

Derin Emre is part of Yes Theory, a group of four friends from four different countries, who believe that getting out of your comfort zones is one of the most important elements of growing as a person.

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In order to drive that message home, the Yes Theory gang stood on a chair on the Santa Monica Pier and explained their deepest insecurities to pedestrians. Dozens of people responded – the group even got several strangers to tell the public about their own insecurities, leading them to receive advice and consolation from passersby.

“Even in the comment board of their video, people online shared their insecurities and found a crowd who would listen and respond with their own stories,” Derin told the Good News Network. “In these times of polarization, it was a very refreshing message for all.”

(WATCH the video below)

 

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Scientists Can Use Wires 3 Atoms Wide to Create Fabric That Generates Electricity

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This team of researchers used diamonds to create the tiniest wires ever – and the possibilities for their use are endless.

Scientists at Stanford University and the Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory have discovered a way to use diamondoids – the smallest possible bits of diamond – to assemble atoms into the thinnest possible electrical wires, just three atoms wide.

By grabbing various types of atoms and putting them together LEGO-style, the new technique could potentially be used to build tiny wires for a wide range of applications, including fabrics that generate electricity, optoelectronic devices that employ both electricity and light, and superconducting materials that conduct electricity without any loss.

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“What we have shown here is that we can make tiny, conductive wires of the smallest possible size that essentially assemble themselves,” said Hao Yan, a Stanford postdoctoral researcher and lead author of the paper. “The process is a simple, one-pot synthesis. You dump the ingredients together and you can get results in half an hour. It’s almost as if the diamondoids know where they want to go.”

The needle-like wires have a semiconducting core – a combination of copper and sulfur known as a chalcogenide – surrounded by the attached diamondoids, which form an insulating shell.

Their minuscule size is important, Melosh said, because a material that exists in just one or two dimensions – as atomic-scale dots, wires or sheets – can have very different, extraordinary properties compared to the same material made in bulk. The new method allows researchers to assemble those materials with atom-by-atom precision and control.

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For this study, the research team took advantage of the fact that diamondoids are strongly attracted to each other, through what are known as van der Waals forces. (This attraction is what makes the microscopic diamondoids clump together into sugar-like crystals, which is the only reason you can see them with the naked eye.)

They started with the smallest possible diamondoids – single cages that contain just 10 carbon atoms – and attached a sulfur atom to each. Floating in a solution, each sulfur atom bonded with a single copper ion. This created the basic nanowire building block.

The building blocks then drifted toward each other, drawn by the van der Waals attraction between the diamondoids, and attached to the growing tip of the nanowire.

“Much like LEGO blocks, they only fit together in certain ways that are determined by their size and shape,” said Stanford graduate student Fei Hua Li, who played a critical role in synthesizing the tiny wires and figuring out how they grew. “The copper and sulfur atoms of each building block wound up in the middle, forming the conductive core of the wire, and the bulkier diamondoids wound up on the outside, forming the insulating shell.”

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The cadmium-based wires are similar to materials used in optoelectronics, such as light-emitting diodes (LEDs), and the zinc-based ones are like those used in solar applications and in piezoelectric energy generators, which convert motion into electricity.

“You can imagine weaving those into fabrics to generate energy,” Melosh said. “This method gives us a versatile toolkit where we can tinker with a number of ingredients and experimental conditions to create new materials with finely tuned electronic properties and interesting physics.”

(Source: DOE/SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory)

Click To Share This Big News With Your FriendsPhoto released by Stanford’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

Hero Patron Delivers Choking Baby in McDonald’s Bathroom

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Newborn baby boy Parker Jordan may now be alive and well, but his birth certificate doesn’t say that he was delivered in a hospital – he was delivered in a California McDonald’s.

Cathy Jordan went to use the bathroom while her husband Sean ordered pancakes from the cashier for breakfast. When she was in one of the restroom stalls, however, she felt the baby’s head and let out a scream of pain.

The mother was only 8-months pregnant when she went into labor, even though the baby was scheduled to be delivered by C-section in a month.

One of the cashiers, Nancy Jones, had been eating breakfast with her daughter April when they heard the scream. April, who happened to be a nurse at the Sarasota Memorial Hospital, dashed into the bathroom behind Sean.

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Since the couple didn’t have any time to waste calling for an ambulance, April started delivering the baby right in the stall.

The delivery was finished in just 20 minutes, but things took a turn for the worst when the child arrived with the umbilical cord wrapped around his neck.

April was able to loosen it just as paramedics arrived so they could resuscitate the baby with an oxygen mask.

“I had oxygen on the baby’s face, and he gave a gulp of air … Best sound of my life,” Sean told WTSP “To be sitting there, thinking going to lose your child and to hear the baby breath … the best feeling … changed my life.”

(WATCH the video below)

 

Click To Share This Heroic Story With Your FriendsPhoto by WTSP

More Than 800 Animals Find Loving Homes Thanks to One Woman Paying All Adoption Fees

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This Sacramento animal shelter had people lining up for adoptions thanks to a local real estate agent intent on giving all cats and dogs a home for the holidays.

Kim Pacini-Hauch volunteered to pay for all adoption fees at the Front Street Animal Shelter from mid-November through to December 31st. Since her promotion – “Home For The Pawlidays” – began, over 800 animals have found loving homes.

In fact, the event has had so much success, the shelter has started importing cats and dogs from other shelters in order to meet growing demand.

“My greatest hope is that this simple concept has created a heightened awareness that you can find the pet of your dreams at any local shelter across the country,” Kim told TODAY.

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Since the fees usually range from $65 to $100, Kim’s final bill is estimated at $20,000. She hopes that her act of kindness, however, will inspire others to follow in her footsteps. A couple in Roseville, California has reportedly already made an offer similar to Kim’s at the Placer SPCA.

Some readers have criticized the safety of letting people take advantage of the waived fees and adopting pets without a price – but the Front Street Animal Shelter insists that they use the same screening process for everyone planning to adopt, with or without the fees. Studies also show that 94% of the owners report having strong relationships with their new pets even after the initial adoption.

Click To Share The Pawesome News With Your Friends (Photo by Mbtrama, CC)

Here Are Your Ten Favorite Acts of Kindness from 2016

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10. Girl Hailed for Using Google Translate to Befriend New Student

In this day and age, you don’t have to speak each other’s language to make new friends – you just need a phone. That’s how Amanda Moore befriended a transfer student who wasn’t able to speak English.

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9. WATCH: Suspect Weeps When Judge Remembers Him as “Nicest Kid in Middle School” –It Changed His Life

When a Miami judge recognized a defendant in her courtroom as a childhood friend, the burglary suspect broke down sobbing. Courtroom cameras revealed the moment when Judge Mindy Glazer announced that Arthur Booth had been “the nicest kid in middle school” and they used to play football together.

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8. Dying Man’s Last Wish Fulfilled 45 Minutes Before He Passes Away

73-year-old Paddy Lawler has always been a lifelong Manchester United fan – and after a four year battle with prostate cancer, he only held on long enough to meet some of his heroes.

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7. Watch Deer Go Limp In Hunter’s Arms When It Realizes It’s Being Rescued

This deer was about to have a heart attack when he saw an advancing man dressed in the dreaded hunting colors of orange and camouflage – but this kind passerby only wanted to help free the creature’s hoof.

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6. Subway Passengers Come Together to Prepare Anxious Man For Job Interview

When a nervous man entered a Canadian subway train, his fellow passengers rose to the occasion with fruit boxes and hair ties.

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5. Ex-Homeless Man Gives $10K to High School After 2 Teens Buy Him Ticket Home

The generosity and compassion shown to Wade Herter by a pair of high school boys was never forgotten. Herter was a homeless drifter, freezing and alone in a blizzard three years ago when the two seniors helped him.

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4. Grandma Accidentally Invites Stranger to Thanksgiving, Tells Him to Come Anyway

Jamal was sitting in class at Desert Vista High School in Mesa, Arizona when his phone started blowing up with texts from a group chat. One of the texts read “Thanksgiving dinner is at my house on November 24th at 3:00pm. Let me know if you’re coming. Hope to see you all.”

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3. Grieving Man Can Sleep Again After Girl Reaches Out in the Grocery Store

Kids are taught in schools not to talk to strangers – but little Norah Woods did the exact opposite and was able to heal a grieving man in need.

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2. School Sends Boy With Autism Touching Letter After He Fails Exams

Every child enrolled in school must face the difficulty of passing tests, but for Ben Twist, that difficulty was multiplied by his autism.

So, when the 11-year-old didn’t get the grade that he was hoping for, his assistant headteacher Ruth Clarkson went out of her way to remind him that test scores aren’t everything.

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1. Mom Adopts Hospice Babies No One Else Wants

A former nurse has found a new calling — caring for the terminally ill children that no one wants.

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Woman Turns Cubicle Into Log Cabin, Wins First Place In Decorating Contest

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It may be cold outside, but inside of this cubicle turned log cabin, it’s cozy enough for any frostbitten bystander.

The Toll Brothers, Inc. mortgage offices in Horsham, Pennsylvania hosted an office decorating contest earlier last week – and Melissa O’Neill was determined to win.

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Using supplies from a carpet store, Melissa and her boyfriend built a prototype of the cabin in their basement. Then, Melissa took two hours to reassemble the nine by seven foot cabin in the office.

The masterpiece clinched her first prize in the contest as well as the admiration of all her fellow coworkers – in fact, the office is so impressed with the design, they plan on leaving the cabin up until after New Years.

(WATCH the video below to check out the design)

 

Click To Share The Cozy News With Your Friends (Photo by Melissa O’Neil)

Nutrition Linked to Brain Health – and Intelligence – in Older Adults

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A study of older adults links consumption of a pigment found in leafy greens to the preservation of “crystallized intelligence,” the ability to use the skills and knowledge one has acquired over a lifetime.

Lutein (pronounced LOO-teen) is one of several plant pigments that humans acquire through the diet, primarily by eating leafy green vegetables or cruciferous vegetables such as broccoli, cauliflower, etc. It accumulates in the brain, embedding in cell membranes, where it likely plays “a neuro-protective role,” said University of Illinois graduate student Marta Zamroziewicz, who led the study with Illinois psychology professor Aron Barbey.

The study enrolled 122 healthy participants aged 65 to 75 who solved problems and answered questions on a standard test of crystallized intelligence. Researchers also collected blood samples to determine blood serum levels of lutein and imaged participants’ brains using MRI to measure the volume of different brain structures.

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The team focused on parts of the temporal cortex, a brain region that other studies suggest plays a role in the preservation of crystallized intelligence.

The researchers found that participants with higher blood serum levels of lutein tended to do better on the tests. Serum lutein levels reflect only recent dietary intakes, Zamroziewicz said, but are associated with brain concentrations of lutein in older adults, which reflect long-term dietary intake.

Those with higher serum lutein levels also tended to have thicker gray matter in the brain region that, like crystallized intelligence, is preserved in healthy aging, the researchers report.

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“Our analyses revealed that gray-matter volume of the parahippocampal cortex on the right side of the brain accounts for the relationship between lutein and crystallized intelligence,” Barbey said. “This offers the first clue as to which brain regions specifically play a role in the preservation of crystallized intelligence, and how factors such as diet may contribute to that relationship.”

“We can only hypothesize at this point how lutein in the diet affects brain structure,” Barbey said. “It may be that it plays an anti-inflammatory role or aids in cell-to-cell signaling. But our finding adds to the evidence suggesting that particular nutrients slow age-related declines in cognition by influencing specific features of brain aging.”

The study was reported in the journal Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience(Source: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)

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4-Year-Old Fighting Brain Cancer Holds Toy Drive for Friends Still in Hospital

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Jillian Massey may have been released from hospital treatment back in October, but she hasn’t forgotten all the children who needed to stay.

This brave little 4-year-old was diagnosed with medulloblastoma in April and started undergoing treatment at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. During her six months as a patient, Jillian made lots of friends with other children who were hospitalized.

When she was released, she asked her mother Janelle if they could start a toy drive for all her buddies who had not yet been given a green light to go.

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Though they started out with a modest goal of 50 toys, an outpouring of generosity from friends, family, and strangers on her Facebook page raised over 3,000 gifts.

“It’s pretty cool to see how excited she is,”  Janelle told ABC News. “She checks the front porch and brings them in, it’s her little job each day,.”

(WATCH the video below)

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Airline Uses Wonderful Holiday Ad to Surprise Wildfire Victims in Canada (WATCH)

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Every year, Canadian airline WestJet creates a special holiday advertisement to spread yuletide cheer as part of their Christmas Miracle series.

For their fifth annual video, they wanted to do something especially significant for the community – they decided to center the film on 1,000 Fort McMurray wildfire victims.

The short film called Christmas Miracle: Fort McMurray Strong tells the story of how WestJet created a magical experience for those residents still dealing with the trauma of the mass evacuation and fire – and the results will pluck at your every heartstring.

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On November 26th, the company threw a Snowflake Soirée for the afflicted families at the Fort McMurray’s MacDonald Island Park. After providing food, photoshoots, and music to the attendees, employees surprised the guests with personalized gifts.

Among the Snowflake Soiree guests were seven families who were presented with heartwarming presents from WestJetters who heard the families’ stories and wanted to show they cared by giving their own irreplaceable items. These included an heirloom watch from the Second World War, a special snowboard and a childhood book with an encouraging message.

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“This year, we wanted Christmas to mean just a little bit more for the residents of Fort McMurray,” said Richard Bartrem, WestJet Vice-President, Marketing Communications. “We were at the airport the day the fire hit town, and several WestJetters also lost their homes. This year’s Christmas miracle was an opportunity for WestJet to do what we do best – help connect a community, celebrate the season and bring a smile to peoples’ faces.”

(WATCH the video below)

Share Some Holiday Cheer With Your Friends (Photo by CNW Group/WestJet)

How A Boy’s Small Gift Changed Thousands of Lives

This is a story of how an award-winning musician was inspired as a disadvantaged child by an anonymous gift that became the catalyst for a bright future—all thanks to the Angel Tree founders.

Charles and Shirley White worked for the Salvation Army in a Lynchburg, Virginia shopping Mall. They helped provide clothing and toys for children at Christmas time.

The Whites listened to the Christmas wishes of children who might not otherwise get gifts. Then the couple wrote the kids’ gift wishes on cards that featured angels. The cards would hang on a Christmas tree in the mall, and shoppers could take a card to provide gifts for a child. More than 700 kids were served the first year of that program (1979).

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When the Whites were transferred to Tennessee, they established an Angel Tree Program in Memphis. Shortly thereafter, press coverage and momentum lead to the establishment of the Salvation Army’s Angel Tree Program across the country.

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Jimmy Wayne’s introduction to music came in the form of a guitar he received through the Angel Tree Program when he was eight-years-old – a random act of kindness from a caring person. The guitar, the first gift he ever received, ignited Wayne’s love of music. That love took Wayne down the path of becoming a musician, and eventually, an award winning country music star.

(Read the rest of the story at Brad Aronson’s website)

Pregnant Waitress in Dire Straits Sees Christmas Miracle With $900 Tip (WATCH)

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After falling on hard times with a baby on the way and her fiancé out of work because of a knee injury, Sarah Clark was struggling to make ends meet.

That is, until one of her regular customers tipped the waitress $900 during one of her shifts at Pita Jungle in Phoenix, Arizona.

Although the woman left before Sarah was able to thank her,  the customer’s gift came with a note reading: “This is God’s money. He gave it to us so we could give it to you. God bless.”

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The server reportedly began crying with joy after she looked at the bill, as the money couldn’t have come at better time. Once the baby is born next month, the gift will help finance the new family, as Sarah goes on maternity leave, giving up her regular tips.

(WATCH the video below)

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Scientists Build Battery on Single Sheet of Paper Powered by Bacteria

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In the future, instead of ordering batteries by the pack, we might get them by the ream.

Researchers at Binghamton University – SUNY (State University of New York) have created a bacteria-powered battery on a single sheet of paper – a design that could revolutionize the use of bio-batteries as a power source in remote, dangerous, or resource-limited areas. The simple manufacturing technique also reduces the fabrication time and cost.

The stand-alone and self-sustained, paper-based batteries can generate enough power to run biosensors that can monitor glucose levels in diabetes patients, detect pathogens in a body, or perform other life-saving functions.

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On one half of a piece of chromatography paper, Assistant Professor Sean Choi and PhD candidate Yang Gao placed a ribbon of silver nitrate beneath a thin layer of wax to create a cathode. The team then made a reservoir out of a conductive polymer on the other half of the paper, which acted as the anode. Once properly folded and a few drops of bacteria-filled liquid were added, the microbial cellular respiration powers the battery.

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Different folding and stacking methods can significantly improve power and current outputs. Scientists were able to generate 31.51 microwatts with six batteries in a three parallel series and 44.85 microwatts in a 6×6 configuration.

It would take millions of paper batteries to power a common 40-watt light bulb, but on the battlefield or in a disaster situation, usability and portability of power sources is paramount.

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“Among many flexible and integrative paper-based batteries with a large upside, paper-based microbial fuel cell technology is arguably the most underdeveloped,” said Choi. “We are excited about this because microorganisms can harvest electrical power from any type of biodegradable source, like wastewater, which is readily available. I believe this type of paper biobattery can be a future.”

The innovation is the latest step in paper battery development by Choi. His team developed its first paper prototype in 2015, which was a foldable battery that looked much like a matchbook. Earlier this year they unveiled a design that was inspired by a ninja throwing star.

(Source: Binghampton University)

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Grieving Man Dresses as Santa Claus to Bring Gifts to Homeless New Yorkers

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Mike Connell has been struggling with grief since his wife of 25 years passed away from cancer. Although they were not married at the time she died, the two remained close over many years.

In an effort to reclaim his Christmas spirit, the Queens resident dressed up as Santa Claus and handed out ‘blessing bags’ to homeless New Yorkers.

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Mike raised the money for the gifts by soliciting donations from pedestrians in exchange for a photo with Santa. Then he wrapped up several packages containing non-perishable food, toiletries, and warm clothing.

Santa was assisted by a little elf as well: the filmmaker’s 7-year-old son, Seamus McGuire, helped to organize, package and wrap the presents, as well as write heartfelt messages inside the Christmas cards.

(WATCH the video below)

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Hawaii’s Newest Species Named in Honor of President Obama

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As a gesture of appreciation for his administration’s conservation achievements, Hawaiian scientists have named a new species of coral-reef fish after President Barack Obama.

The fish, which now bears the formal scientific name Tosanoides obama, displays a colorful spot reminiscent of the Obama campaign’s famous logo. The species was discovered during a June 2016 NOAA expedition to Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument in the remote Northwestern Hawaiian Islands.

“We decided to name this fish after President Obama to recognize his efforts to protect and preserve the natural environment, including the expansion of Papahānaumokuākea,” said scientist Richard Pyle of the Bishop Museum. “The expansion adds a layer of protection to one of the last great wilderness areas on Earth.”

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On August 26 of this year, at the urging of Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii), and many conservationists and marine scientists, the Obama administration expanded Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument to 582,578 square miles, making it the largest permanently protected marine area on Earth.

During the president’s September trip to Midway Atoll within the Monument, deep ocean explorer Dr. Sylvia Earle gave him a photograph of the fish that now bears his name. The exchange will be featured in the National Geographic global broadcast special, “Sea Of Hope” scheduled for January 15, 2017.

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The small pink and yellow fish is a kind of basslet, a group that includes many colorful reef fishes popular in the marine aquarium fish trade. There are two other species in the genus Tosanoides, both from the tropical northwestern Pacific Ocean. Males of the new species have a distinctive spot on the dorsal fin near the tail, which is blue around the edge and red with yellow stripes in the center.

“The new fish is special because it is the only known species of coral-reef fish endemic to the Monument (meaning that the species is found nowhere else on Earth). Our research has documented the highest rate of fish endemism in the world — 100% — living on the deep reefs where we found this new species,” said NOAA scientist Randall Kosaki, chief scientist of the research cruise, and co-author on the study.

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However, unlike all the other Hawaiian endemic species, which also occur in the main Hawaiian Islands, this new species is special because it is the only one that is limited to within the Monument itself. “Endemic species are unique contributions to global biodiversity. With the onslaught of climate change, we are at risk of losing some of these undiscovered species before we even know they exist.”

The new fish was first discovered and collected on a dive to 300 feet at Kure Atoll, 1,200 miles northwest of Honolulu. Kure is the northernmost of the Hawaiian Islands, and is the highest latitude coral atoll in the world. Deep coral reefs at depths of 150 to 500 feet, in the so-called “Twilight Zone” (also known as mesophotic coral ecosystems), are among the most poorly explored of all marine ecosystems. Located deeper than divers using conventional scuba gear can safely venture, these reefs represent a new frontier for coral-reef research. Pyle and co-authors Brian Greene and Randall Kosaki pioneered the use of advanced mixed-gas diving systems known as closed-circuit rebreathers for Twilight Zone research, and have been documenting the previously unexplored deep reefs throughout Hawai’i and the broader Pacific for the past three decades.

This is the second new species of fish from Papahānaumokuākea named this year. In August, Pyle and Kosaki published the description of a new species of butterflyfish (Prognathodes basabei) based on specimens collected on deep reefs at Pearl and Hermes Atoll earlier this year. President Obama also has several species from other locales named after him: a trapdoor spider, a speckled freshwater darter (fish), a parasitic hairworm, and an extinct lizard. (Source: Pensoft)

Yes We Can… Share This News – Photo by Brian Skerry, National Geographic

Adoption Rates Up, Euthanasia Down in Canadian Animal Shelters

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According to a recent survey of Canadian animal shelters in 2015, adoption rates have risen while euthanasia has dropped.

The report, conducted by the Canadian Federation of Humane Societies, surveyed 89 different shelters across the country. A ‘shelter’ in this survey is described as “humane society and SPCA operating facilities for transitional housing of homeless animals.”

The study showed that cat adoption rates have almost doubled from about 38% in 2007 to 61% in 2015. Canine adoption, on the other hand has maintained a fairly consistent trend at 50%.

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Euthanasia showed an exciting drop from 4,358 dogs and 22,908 cats in 2014, to 2,820 dogs and 15,341 cats.

Shelter intake of cats and dogs has dropped slightly. Shelter intake numbers spiked dramatically in 2011 from about 90,000 to over 120,000. Over the course of the last five years, the rate has returned to a new low of about 80,000. Since 90% of SPCA shelters require animals to be spayed and neutered before adoption, the decline could be due to more diligent population control.

Click To Share This Pawesome New With Your Friends –OR, (Photo by Douglas M. Weston, CC)

France Opens World’s First Solar Road

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A 0.6 mile stretch of roadway running through a small Normandy town was inaugurated on Thursday as the Wattway: the first solar road in the world.

The route – which leads through the small village of Tourouvre-au-Perche – is covered with roughly 30,000 square feet of solar panels. Though the panels are reportedly less effective when laid flat, rather than tilted, the road is just the beginning in a series of solar projects spearheaded by Colas, the energy company responsible.

In the future, however, Colas plans on reducing solar road cost from the hefty $5.2 million price tag that came with the Normandy installation.

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It will be used by an estimated 2,000 motorists a day over a two-year period to test out the Wattway’s ability in powering the village’s streetlights.

In addition to the Wattway, the Missouri Department of Transportation is currently working with Idaho energy company Solar Roadways, famously crowdfunded last year with $2.25 million, to pave parts of Interstate 70 and the iconic Route 66 with super strong interactive solar panels. The project was kicked off earlier this summer when the company installed a small amount of panels at the Route 66 Welcome Center in Conway, Missouri.

(WATCH the video below)

 

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Terminally Ill 6-yo Raises $1Mil For Medical Research: “Some kids don’t even make it to 5”

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Tijn might not have much longer to live due to his terminal brain cancer. His only mission with the time he has, however, is to raise money for medical research so that other children can get a better shot at living than him.

The Dutch radio station 3FM hosts an annual charity event called the Serious Request. 3FM works alongside the Red Cross to raise money for a different ‘unknown illness’ – this year’s affliction is pneumonia.

Though pneumonia is still a preventable disease, it is one of the most dangerous illnesses to children under 5 years old.

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That’s why this brave little 6-year-old arrived at the event and announced that he was issuing a challenge to help raise money for the cause: he asked people to donate one euro for every time he painted someone else’s nails. Anyone on the internet could participate as well just by painting their nails, donating to his page, and then challenging three of their friends to do the same by tagging them.

“Most of the poor kids infected with pneumonia don’t even live to be five years old. That is why we’re standing up to fight,” said Tijn’s father.

Tijn’s courageous story went viral and in just 2 days, he had raised over one million dollars for pneumonia research – and still counting.

(WATCH the video below)

 

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Traffic Fatalities Decline in States with Medical Marijuana Laws

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States that enacted medical marijuana laws, on average, experienced a decline in traffic-related fatalities.

According to a study conducted by researchers at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health, states that passed medical marijuana laws saw an 11% reduction in traffic fatalities, on average, after enacting the laws, and had 26% lower rates of traffic fatalities compared with states without the laws. The findings are published online in the American Journal of Public Health.

Reductions in traffic fatalities greatly impacted those between the ages of 15 and 44 and were especially striking among those aged 25 to 44 years, a group representing a high percentage of those registered patients for medical marijuana use.

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Specifically, the researchers observed an 11% reduction of among those aged 15 to 24 years, 12% for ages 25 to 44, and 9% for those 45 years and older. Operational dispensaries were also associated with a significant reduction in traffic fatalities in those aged 25 to 44 years at 5%.

Lacking was strong evidence suggesting reductions among those aged 45 years and older, which is also a group overrepresented in the population of patients registered in state medical marijuana programs. “This finding suggests that the mechanisms by which medical marijuana laws reduce traffic fatalities mostly operate in those younger adults, a group also frequently involved in alcohol-related traffic fatalities,” said Julian Santaella-Tenorio, a doctoral student in Epidemiology at the Mailman School of Public Health. In 2004 and 2013, 47% of fatally injured drivers with a blood alcohol content of 0.08 or greater were 25 to 44 years old.

The researchers based their findings on data for 1985-2014 from the Fatality Analysis Reporting System, a nationwide census of traffic fatalities information maintained by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. The association between medical marijuana laws and traffic fatalities for drivers, passengers, cyclists, and pedestrians was examined for each state enacting the laws. They also evaluated the link between marijuana dispensaries and traffic fatalities. Overall, a total of 1.22 million deaths were attributed to traffic crashes occurring in the 50 states during the study period.

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“It is also possible that states with medical marijuana laws and lower traffic fatality rates may be related to lower levels of alcohol-impaired driving behavior in these states,” noted Silvia Martins, MD, PhD, associate professor at the Mailman School and senior author. “We found evidence that states with the marijuana laws in place compared with those which did not, reported, on average, lower rates of drivers endorsing driving after having too many drinks. We can also point to other characteristics such as the strength of public health laws related to driving, infrastructure characteristics, or the quality of health care systems, as a partial explanation for these findings.”

“The evidence linking medical marijuana laws and traffic fatalities lays the groundwork for future studies on specific mechanisms,” said Santaella-Tenorio. “We also expect another area of study will be the association between the laws and nonfatal traffic injuries.”

(Source: Colombia University’s Mailman School of Public Health)

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Spicy Molecule Inhibits Growth of Breast Cancer Cells

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Capsaicin, an active ingredient of pungent substances such as chili or pepper, inhibits the growth of breast cancer cells.

The experiments were carried out with the SUM149PT cell culture, a model system for a particularly aggressive type of breast cancer, i.e. the triple-negative type. Chemotherapy is currently the only available treatment for this type of cancer.

In the cultivated cells, the team detected a number of typical olfactory receptors. One receptor occurred very frequently; it is usually found in the fifth cranial nerve, i.e. the trigeminal nerve. It belongs to the so-called Transient Receptor Potential Channels and is named TRPV1. That receptor is activated by the spicy molecule capsaicin as well as by helional – a scent of fresh sea breeze.

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In collaboration with Dr. Gabriele Bonatz from the Augusta clinics in Bochum (Brustzentrum), a German-based team of researchers confirmed the existence of TRPV1 in tumor cells in nine different samples from patients suffering from breast cancer.

The researchers activated the TRPV1 receptor in the cell culture with capsaicin or helional, by adding the substances to the culture for a period of several hours or days. As a result, the cancer cells divided more slowly. Moreover, the treatment caused tumor cells to die in larger numbers. The surviving cells were no longer able to move as quickly as heretofore; this implies that their ability to form metastases in the body was impeded.

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“If we could switch on the TRPV1 receptor with specific drugs, this might constitute a new treatment approach for this type of cancer,” says Hanns Hatt. An intake via food or inhalation is insufficient for this purpose.

Earlier studies had demonstrated that the chemical arvanil – with a chemical make-up similar to that of the spicy molecule capsaicin – was effective against brain tumors in mice; it reduces tumor growth in the animals. Due to its side effects, however, this substance is not approved for humans. In addition to capsaicin and helional, the endovanilloids, produced naturally in the body, also activate the TRPV1 receptor.

(Source: Ruhr-University Bochum)

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The Most Impressive Health and Wellness Developments of 2016

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10. Cancer Treatment Shows “Remarkable” Ability to Reverse Multiple Sclerosis Symptoms

A medical treatment intended for cancer patients appears to be able to reverse the effects of multiple sclerosis (MS), as well–and some people paralyzed by the condition have been able to walk again.

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9. Dr. Saves Baby’s Life With $20 Google Cardboard Virtual Reality Glasses

Teegan Lexcen was born with only one lung and half a heart. Doctors told her parents that surgery was impossible–and the little girl wouldn’t live long.

But thanks to Google Cardboard, doctors at Nicklaus Children’s Hospital in Miami were able to load images from MRI scans into an app called Sketchfab and put on the Google Cardboard goggles. By turning their heads and moving around inside the images with the goggles, doctors could see the heart from all angles — and devise a strategy to repair the damage.

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8. Cardiac Arrest Victims Get Warnings Weeks Ahead – Know The Signs

Sudden cardiac arrest may not be so sudden after all. Doctors have discovered that early warning signs may be experienced up to a month before the condition hits–and knowing them could save hundreds of thousands of lives.

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7. Researchers Develop ‘Holy Grail’ Eye Drop to Prevent, Treat Cataracts Without Surgery

For millions of people whose vision is clouded by cataracts, surgery has been the only option. Soon, they may be able to treat–and even prevent–the debilitating condition with simple eye drops.

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6. Simple Blood Test Could Detect Cancer Ten Years Before Symptoms Show

Now getting tested for cancer at the doctor’s could be as simple as a little prick of the finger – and it could save your life up to ten years in advance, before symptoms even start to show.

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5. FDA Finally Bans Antibacterial Soaps Containing Triclosan and 18 Other Chemicals

Companies will no longer be able to market antibacterial wash products with any of 19 specific active ingredients because manufacturers have not demonstrated the safety of long-term daily use or show that they are any more effective than plain soap and water in preventing illness or the spread of infections.

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4. What Do You Get When You Cross a Segway With a Wheelchair? Brilliant.

This revolutionary technology combines the hands-free interface of a segway with a wheelchair, giving paraplegics groundbreaking levels of free movement.

White toilet bowl in a bathroom
White toilet bowl in a bathroom

3. I Cured My Hemorrhoids in a Week Without Spending a Dime (It’s All About That Pee!)

The doctor told her that the only cure for her hemorrhoids was a painful, invasive surgery – but after doing a bit of research, she found that all she needed was a little 7-inch step stool.

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2. Bold Trials to Kill Vicious Cancer Type is So Successful, FDA Will Fast Track to Patients

A bold cancer therapy that uses the polio virus to attack a form of brain cancer has been so successful, it’s been given “breakthrough status” from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

The status means hundreds of patients can receive the treatment, before testing is even completed, or the FDA has finally given its approval— a process that can normally take years.

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1. First Ever Quadriplegic Treated With Stem Cells Regains Motor Control in His Upper Body

For the first time ever, neuroscientists from Keck Medical Center of USC have treated a total quadriplegic with stem cells, and he has substantially recovered the functions of his upper body only two months into the process.

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