Have fun, win prizes, participate in our contests!
Apr 16th, 2024, 1:33 am
EPA Limits Carcinogenic Emissions at 218 US Plants–Including Louisiana’s ‘Cancer Alley’


Image


The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) finalized a rule Tuesday that will require 218 chemical plants to reduce toxic and carcinogenic airborne pollutants, aiming to reduce the number of people with elevated cancer risk by 96% nationwide.

The rulings principally address chloroprene: used to make rubber products, and ethylene oxide, used primarily for sterilizing medical supplies. Long-term exposure to these chemicals and their manufacturing have been identified as possible carcinogens, or cancer-causing agents.

According to a report in the Washington Post, this can include lymphoma, leukemia, breast cancer, and liver cancer.

Across a strip of Louisiana and Texas where half of the 218 chemical manufacturing facilities set to be affected by the new regulations are located, cancer rates of these kinds are substantially higher than national averages, leading it to be colloquially called “Cancer Alley.”

EPA Administrator Michael Regan visited Cancer Alley during the open-comment period of the proposed ruling, and said that across the 85 miles dotted with communities, he failed to meet a single person who didn’t know a loved one or friend who had either developed cancer, died of it, or knew someone who had.
Apr 16th, 2024, 1:33 am
Apr 16th, 2024, 4:17 am
In World First, Scientists Share What Was Almost Certainly a Conversation with Humpback a Whale

Image

In a world first, marine biologists were able to have a discourse with a humpback whale, pushing out the boundaries of cooperation and understanding that could be possible between our two species.

An adult female humpback whale, known as Twain, in Southeast Alaska, was located along with a group of whales and called with a recording of another humpback’s “whup/throp” call.

The recording was made by whales of the same group the day before, but the team didn’t know if the calls recorded were made by the same whale or were part of an exchange between two or more whales. To find out, the researchers conducted the trial on two days, with the first to find out if the whup calls they had recorded would be socially acceptable.

It turned out that whatever the whale(s) had been saying the day before was appropriate as far as Twain was concerned, and after the team broadcast the playback, she drifted away from her group and participated both physically and acoustically in three phases of interaction with the crew and their boat including periods of engagement, agitation, and disengagement.

First she called back, then she circled the boat three times, surfaced, and dived again. After this interaction, she gradually left.

Twain’s whup calls on day 2 and the whup calls recorded on day 1 were acoustically analyzed for both spectral and temporal features, specifically the inter-call interval, or latency between calls as measured by the time difference between the preceding call’s offset and the subsequent call’s onset.

The scientists determined that this metric would be able to determine both arousal and valence, thereby allowing them to get some idea of the emotional content of the exchange. The results indicated that substantial variation was found among the latencies in Twain’s calling behavior, which they took to mean excitement or arousal.

“After playing the contact call three times, we got this huge response,” said Brenda McCowan told the BBC. “Then, to keep the animal engaged, I started trying to match the latency of her calls to our calls. So, if she waited 10 seconds, I waited 10 seconds. We ended up matching each other. We did this 36 times over a 20-minute period.”

“After playing the contact call three times, we got this huge response,” said Brenda McCowan told the BBC. “Then, to keep the animal engaged, I started trying to match the latency of her calls to our calls. So, if she waited 10 seconds, I waited 10 seconds. We ended up matching each other. We did this 36 times over a 20-minute period.”

The BBC reports that the songs of the humpback whale are thought to be among the most complex in the animal kingdom.

A strong point of the whole experiment was that the results were determined with a degree of blinding—via independent, uninformed observers reporting on surface behavior and respiratory activity of the interacting whale.
Apr 16th, 2024, 4:17 am

Image
Apr 16th, 2024, 6:44 am
Chinese Company Develops Tiny Atomic Battery That Lasts 50 Years And Doesn’t Require Recharging
012424*

Chinese company Betavolt recently unveiled its BV100 battery which is smaller than a coin in size but has a lifespan of around 50 years and doesn’t require recharging.

Atomic batteries aren’t new. Both the United States and the USSR produced such power units during the 1960s, but these nuclear batteries were large, dangerous, and expensive to make. Plutonium was used as the radioactive power source for the first atomic batteries, but science has come a long way since, and Betavolt’s revolutionary battery now relies on a much safer isotope, nickel-63, which decays to a stable isotope of copper. The diamond semiconductor material in the battery allows it to run stably in environments ranging from -60 to 120 degrees Celsius. Measuring just 15mm x 15mm x 5mm, the new Betavolt BV100 constantly generates electricity as the isotopes degrade, unlike conventional batteries which simply store energy.

Image

The Beijing-based company claims that it is the first to successfully miniaturize atomic energy, fitting 63 nuclear isotopes into a battery smaller than a coin. This breakthrough puts it “way ahead” of all other European and American academic and commercial institutions.

The phrase “atomic battery” doesn’t sound safe, but Betavolt claims that its BV100 battery is perfectly safe for consumers, as it won’t leak radiation even if its protective cover is punctured. The company plans to begin mass-producing the battery later this year, and introduce a more powerful version in 2025. In the future, Betavolt plans to target the aerospace industry, medical equipment, AI devices, small drones, robotics, and virtually any industry that needs batteries with a lifespan of 50 years.

The BV100 is considered a breakthrough on many levels, but as several tech news outlets point out, the power output of 100 microwatts at 3 volts isn’t particularly impressive. Betavoolt plans to launch a new 1-watt atomic battery in 2025, and as technology improves, we may soon see smartphone batteries that require no recharging.

Image

“The battery could enable devices like smartphones to operate indefinitely without recharging or drones to fly without landing,” the company writes on its website.

The Betavolt BV100 and its 1-watt successor are impressive enough, but the Chinese company is already looking for ways to improve the lifespan and power output of its atomic batteries. It is currently experimenting with isotopes like strontium-90, promethium-147, and deuterium, and hopes to produce batteries with a lifespan of 230 years.
Apr 16th, 2024, 6:44 am
Apr 16th, 2024, 7:13 am
Less is ... more
Here’s why you want to stress less, exercise more: study

Image

You already know that working out can make you healthier and reduce your risk of heart disease. But new research is shedding light on a surprising reason for this result — and it all comes back to stress.

People who exercise regularly may be better protected from heart disease in part because of reduced stress-related activity in the brain, investigators from Massachusetts General Hospital found in a new study published Monday. It could be one of the reasons that people with depression, a stress-related mental health condition, often see great benefits from physical activity.

“Physical activity was roughly twice as effective in lowering cardiovascular disease risk among those with depression. Effects on the brain’s stress-related activity may explain this novel observation,” Dr. Ahmed Tawakol, senior study author and a cardiologist at MGH, said in a release.

Put another way: People who exercised more stressed less, and that had a positive effect on their heart health as well.

For the study, which was published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, Tawakol and his colleagues analyzed medical records from 50,359 people who also completed a physical fitness survey. A subset of that group also underwent brain imaging scans and measurements for stress-related brain activity.

Over an average follow-up of 10 years, nearly 13% of the participants developed heart disease. But those who regularly worked out had a 23% lower risk of developing cardiovascular disease compared to those who didn’t exercise. And among those with pre-existing depression, who would be expected to have higher levels of stress-related brain activity, the cardiovascular benefits were even greater.

So while everyone benefits from exercise, those who had higher amounts of stress might get more of a heart health boost.

Researchers noted that more work was needed in this area, but that the results were very encouraging.

“Clinicians could convey to patients that physical activity may have important brain effects, which may impart greater cardiovascular benefits among individuals with stress-related syndromes such as depression,” Tawakol said.

This is hardly the first time that exercise has been shown to have profound positive physical and mental health effects. Exercise has already been shown to reduce anxiety, depression and bad moods by improving self-esteem and boosting cognitive function. And multiple studies have also shown that it doesn’t take much — walking briskly outside, cycling, doing a little yoga or going for a swim all count when it comes to mental health benefits.

Heart disease, which remains the No. 1 killer for Americans, can also be reduced through physical activity, multiple studies have shown. Staying active is also linked to lower instances of diabetes and cancer.

The latest study points to a growing body of evidence that also highlights the link between mental and physical health — and the very real effects that prolonged stress can take on people physically.

https://nypost.com/2024/04/15/lifestyle ... ess-study/
Apr 16th, 2024, 7:13 am
Apr 16th, 2024, 2:23 pm
Oxfordshire: Bird 'confuses' police officers by mimicking siren sound
Thames Valley Police posted a video of the birdsong and said the copycat call was "100% real and not a late April Fools joke".

Image

Police officers were left "confused" by a bird when it convincingly mimicked the sound of the sirens on their cars.

Thames Valley Police said staff initially thought their vehicles had developed a fault after hearing the noise at a roads policing base in Bicester.

A video filmed at the site in Oxfordshire and posted on social media shows the bird chirping in a tree - before then replicating the sound of a two-tone siren.

The force said that the copycat call was "100% real and not a late April Fools joke" and added that officers were left "a little confused".

It added: "It's so accurate, they've been left thinking the sirens were faulty on the cars!

"From our workshops that test out the two tone-tune to officers deploying to jobs, this little fella has been sat patiently observing the noise to recreate it".

Social media users speculated that the bird could be a starling, which are known for their ability to mimic man-made noises.

https://news.sky.com/story/oxfordshire- ... d-13112449
Apr 16th, 2024, 2:23 pm
Apr 16th, 2024, 2:28 pm
Image

I sometimes get REALLY DEPRESSED reviewing the news these days.
It's always about a global pandemic threatening life as we know it,
protests around the world, stupid politicians, natural disasters,
or some other really bad story.
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH

Welcome to The mobi weekly news magazine
IN OTHER NEWS
TUESDAY APRIL 16

What is it?
Here is your chance to become an "ACE REPORTER" for our weekly news magazine.
It is your job to fine weird, funny or "good feel" stories from around the world and share them with our readers in our weekly magazine

How do you play?
Just post a story that you have come across that made you smile, laugh, feel good...
BUT NOTHING DEPRESSING :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

EXAMPLE POST
Naked sunbather chases wild boar through park after it steals his laptop bag
Image
A naked sunbather was seen chasing wild boar through a park after it stole his laptop bag.
Amusing photographs from Germany show the man running after the animal to try and claim the plastic bag back.
But the cheeky boar and its two piglets appear to be too quick for the sunbather, who can't keep up with their speedy little trotters.
As the incident unfolds, groups of friends and family sat on the grass watch on and laugh.
Heads are seen turning in surprise and amusement in the hilarious photographs.
The incident happened at Teufelssee Lake - a bathing spot in the Grunwell Forest in Berlin, Germany.

Rules:
Each Edition of IN OTHER NEWS will be open for 7 days...
You can post as many stories as you like, but you will only get paid for One Story in any 24 hour period
So in other words, you can only earn WRZ$ once a day.
Each news day will start when I post announcing it
OR at:
9:00 AM CHICAGO TIME (UTC -5)
3:00 PM GMT (UTC -0)

on those days I space out and forget to post or can't due to Real Life :lol:
Stories may be accompanied with images - but No big images, please! 800x800 pixels wide maximum
Videos are allowed, but please keep them short, and post a short summary for those that don't like to click on videos
No Duplicate stories - Where a post has been edited resulting in duplicates, then the last one in time gets disallowed.
And please limit this to reasonably family friendly stories :lol: :lol: :lol:

Reward:
Each news story posted that I feel is acceptable (must be a real story, too few words or simply a headline are not considered acceptable) will earn you 50 WRZ$
If you post multiple stories on any given day, you will only earn 50 WRZ$ for the first story of the Day
All payments will be made at THE END of the weekly news cycle.
Special Bonus - Each week I will award "The Pulitzer Prize" for the best story of the week
The weekly winner of the "The Pulitzer Prize" will receive a 100 WRZ$ bonus
It's just my personal opinion, so my judgement is final

So help bring GOOD news to the members of mobi, and join our reporting team...

IN OTHER NEWS


Image
Apr 16th, 2024, 2:28 pm

Image
Image
Apr 16th, 2024, 2:29 pm
Shoppers startled after deadly find in a Queensland hardware store

Shoppers got more than they bargained for when a deadly discovery was made at a Bunnings Warehouse.

Stuart McKenzie from Sunshine Coast Snake Catchers was called to a Bunnings in Queensland after staff found something unexpected in the garden section.

After 40 minutes of searching for the red-bellied black snake, Stu found it hidden under pallets of potting mix.

Image
A red-bellied black snake was found in Bunnings.

“That’s crazy,” he said after nabbing the poisonous snake by the tail.

“He’s pretty long. He’s as long as you said – usually people over-estimate it.”

The snake was three-feet in length, and was subsequently released back into the wild.

Image
He released it into the wild.

“You naughty snake, you’re not allowed in Bunnings anymore,” he said.

A Bunnings spokesperson thanked staff for acting so quickly and Stuart for his efforts.

“Our Kawana store had an unexpected visitor earlier this week and we thank our team for the professional way they cleared the area and kept customers safe,” the spokesperson said.

“We also thank the local snake catcher for quickly arriving to the store and helping capture and remove the snake.”

As Australians often do, many took to social media to make a joke about the situation that had unfolded.

“Bunnings has everything,” one social media user commented.

Another added: “Sorry there is nothing beautiful about that, it is a very poisonous snake it’ll kill you in a matter of minutes.”

“Poor snake he only went there for a sausage sandwich,” another joked.

One social media user commented: “The snake was just looking for the best potting mix for their veggies.”

“Now this is taking things too far being allowed to take your pet to Bunnings. Once saw guy Shellharbour branch with carpet snake around neck walking around,” another added.

One simply said the video explained the exact reason they lived in New Zealand and not Australia. :lol:
Apr 16th, 2024, 2:29 pm

Image
Apr 16th, 2024, 2:41 pm
AI-generated fashion models could bring more diversity to the industry - or leave it with less

AI fashion modeling is on the rise but its use has complicated implications for diversity

Image

London-based model Alexsandrah has a twin, but not in the way you’d expect: Her counterpart is made of pixels instead of flesh and blood.

The virtual twin was generated by artificial intelligence and has already appeared as a stand-in for the real-life Alexsandrah in a photo shoot. Alexsandrah, who goes by her first name professionally, in turn receives credit and compensation whenever the AI version of herself gets used — just like a human model.

Alexsandrah says she and her alter-ego mirror each other “even down to the baby hairs.” And it is yet another example of how AI is transforming creative industries — and the way humans may or may not be compensated.

Proponents say the growing use of AI in fashion modeling showcases diversity in all shapes and sizes, allowing consumers to make more tailored purchase decisions that in turn reduces fashion waste from product returns. And digital modeling saves money for companies and creates opportunities for people who want to work with the technology.

But critics raise concerns that digital models may push human models — and other professionals like makeup artists and photographers — out of a job. Unsuspecting consumers could also be fooled into thinking AI models are real, and companies could claim credit for fulfilling diversity commitments without employing actual humans.

“Fashion is exclusive, with limited opportunities for people of color to break in,” said Sara Ziff, a former fashion model and founder of the Model Alliance, a nonprofit aiming to advance workers’ rights in the fashion industry. “I think the use of AI to distort racial representation and marginalize actual models of color reveals this troubling gap between the industry’s declared intentions and their real actions.”

Women of color in particular have long faced higher barriers to entry in modeling and AI could upend some of the gains they've made. Data suggests that women are more likely to work in occupations in which the technology could be applied, and are more at risk of displacement than men.

In March 2023, iconic denim brand Levi Strauss & Co. announced that it would be testing AI-generated models produced by Amsterdam-based company Lalaland.ai to add a wider range of body types and underrepresented demographics on its website. But after receiving widespread backlash, Levi clarified that it was not pulling back on its plans for live photo shoots, the use of live models or its commitment to working with diverse models.

“We do not see this (AI) pilot as a means to advance diversity or as a substitute for the real action that must be taken to deliver on our diversity, equity and inclusion goals and it should not have been portrayed as such,” Levi said in its statement at the time.

The company last month said that it has no plans to scale the AI program.

The Associated Press reached out to several other retailers to ask whether they use AI fashion models. Target, Kohl’s and fast-fashion giant Shein declined to comment; Temu did not respond to a request for comment.

Meanwhile, spokespeople for Nieman Marcus, H&M, Walmart and Macy's said their respective companies do not use AI models, although Walmart clarified that “suppliers may have a different approach to photography they provide for their products but we don’t have that information.”

Nonetheless, companies that generate AI models are finding a demand for the technology, including Lalaland.ai, which was co-founded by Michael Musandu after he was feeling frustrated by the absence of clothing models who looked like him.

“One model does not represent everyone that’s actually shopping and buying a product,” he said. “As a person of color, I felt this painfully myself.”

Musandu says his product is meant to supplement traditional photo shoots, not replace them. Instead of seeing one model, shoppers could see nine to 12 models using different size filters, which would enrich their shopping experience and help reduce product returns and fashion waste.

The technology is actually creating new jobs, since Lalaland.ai pays humans to train its algorithms, Musandu said.

And if brands “are serious about inclusion efforts, they will continue to hire these models of color,” he added.

London-based model Alexsandrah, who is Black, says her digital counterpart has helped her distinguish herself in the fashion industry. In fact, the real-life Alexsandrah has even stood in for a Black computer-generated model named Shudu, created by Cameron Wilson, a former fashion photographer turned CEO of The Diigitals, a U.K.-based digital modeling agency.

Wilson, who is white and uses they/them pronouns, designed Shudu in 2017, described on Instagram as the “The World’s First Digital Supermodel.” But critics at the time accused Wilson of cultural appropriation and digital Blackface.

Wilson took the experience as a lesson and transformed The Diigitals to make sure Shudu — who has been booked by Louis Vuitton and BMW — didn’t take away opportunities but instead opened possibilities for women of color. Alexsandrah, for instance, has modeled in-person as Shudu for Vogue Australia, and writer Ama Badu came up with Shudu’s backstory and portrays her voice for interviews.

Alexsandrah said she is “extremely proud” of her work with The Diigitals, which created her own AI twin: “It’s something that even when we are no longer here, the future generations can look back at and be like, ‘These are the pioneers.’”

But for Yve Edmond, a New York City area-based model who works with major retailers to check the fit of clothing before it's sold to consumers, the rise of AI in fashion modeling feels more insidious.

Edmond worries modeling agencies and companies are taking advantage of models, who are generally independent contractors afforded few labor protections in the U.S., by using their photos to train AI systems without their consent or compensation.

She described one incident in which a client asked to photograph Edmond moving her arms, squatting and walking for “research" purposes. Edmond refused and later felt swindled — her modeling agency had told her she was being booked for a fitting, not to build an avatar.

“This is a complete violation,” she said. “It was really disappointing for me.”

But absent AI regulations, it’s up to companies to be transparent and ethical about deploying AI technology. And Ziff, the founder of the Model Alliance, likens the current lack of legal protections for fashion workers to “the Wild West.”

That's why the Model Alliance is pushing for legislation like the one being considered in New York state, in which a provision of the Fashion Workers Act would require management companies and brands to obtain models’ clear written consent to create or use a model’s digital replica; specify the amount and duration of compensation, and prohibit altering or manipulating models’ digital replica without consent.

Alexsandrah says that with ethical use and the right legal regulations, AI might open up doors for more models of color like herself. She has let her clients know that she has an AI replica, and she funnels any inquires for its use through Wilson, who she describes as "somebody that I know, love, trust and is my friend.” Wilson says they make sure any compensation for Alexsandrah's AI is comparable to what she would make in-person.

Edmond, however, is more of a purist: “We have this amazing Earth that we’re living on. And you have a person of every shade, every height, every size. Why not find that person and compensate that person?”
Apr 16th, 2024, 2:41 pm
Apr 16th, 2024, 3:14 pm
Leda Bergonzi, Argentina’s Church-Backed Charismatic Faith Healer
012524*

Leda Bergonzi, the so-called Healer of Rosario, is a popular faith healer who managed to capture the attention of an entire country and even gain the backing of Argentina’s Catholic Church.

Argentina has had its share of religious faith healers throughout history, but none with a meteoric rise quite like that of 44-year-old Leda Bergonzi, a former seamstress and mother-of-five who one day realized she had received the gift of healing from God and decided to put it to good use. According to the Catholic Church, there are over a dozen faith healers throughout Argentina these days, but Leda stands out both through her wardrobe – she favors skinny jeans, T-shirts, and high-top sneakers – her charisma, and the official support of the Catholic Church. She draws tens of thousands of people from all over Argentina to her home city of Rosario and spends days at a time trying to heal them of all sorts of ailments, from paralysis to terminal cancer.

Image
Photo: Nicolas Lobos/Unsplash

Bergonzi’s gatherings seem more at home in an evangelical church, with band-backed singing, spectacular blessings that leave believers lying literally unconscious on the floor, and an entire team filming the events, making sure everything runs smoothly, and managing Leda Bergonzi’s social media presence. But this is more than just an act. Hundreds of testimonies from people who claim to have been healed after receiving Leda’s blessing, and the backing of the Argentinian Archdiocese, which called the healer’s movement a “phenomenon occurring within the Catholic Church,” give Bergonzi the strong credibility necessary to draw even non-practicing Catholics.

“We are Catholics, but the truth is that we don’t go to church regularly,” one person waiting for Leda’s blessing said. “Nowadays, you believe and don’t believe in these things. Some people reach you, and some don’t. She has a charisma that draws you in, she captures you!”

About 20,000 people have been showing up every week in Rosario every week to receive the young healer’s blessing, a phenomenon that has boosted religious tourism in the region to unprecedented levels. Queues at her events can sometimes get a mile long, and people will wait for over 12 hours to see Leda and hear her sing.

Apart from her singing, which apparently has healing properties, Leda Bergonzi will bless sufferers by touching their foreheads and whispering in their ears. The effects of this act range from an inner calmness to crying, convulsing and even fainting. In fact, the latter is so frequent that members of Leda’s staff walk around the hall covering unconscious people with white sheets for privacy.

Leda says that she rarely remembers what she tells people during blessings, and she is often heard talking in tongues, but she can always tell if a person is healed. There are people who swear by her healing powers, claiming that she healed them of partial paralysis, dysautonomia, and cancer, and these testimonies give other desperate sufferers hope that they too can be healed.

The ‘Soplo de Diós Viviente‘, or ‘Breath of the Living God,’ the religious movement that formed around Leda Bergonzi, has sparked a debate among Argentina’s Catholic Church. There are some who believe that her modern approach to healing and her incredible popularity can bring millions back to the Catholic Church, while others worry that too much focus on difficult-to-prove miracles may end up hurting the Church in the long run.



For now, the Catholic Church’s support of Leda Bergonzi is very clear. There are always priests present at her events, holding Mass, hearing confessions, and supervising her blessings.

Last year, following a spike in popularity thanks to the support of several Argentinian celebrities and an ever-growing online presence, Leda Bergonzi’s popularity skyrocketed. Her reputation as a miracle-performing faith healer transcended national borders, and she has recently begun traveling to other South American countries like Chile to perform her blessings.

It’s worth noting that Bergonzi never requests any kind of financial compensation for her blessings. She only accepts donations of non-perishable foods that are donated to those who need it most. This modest, altruistic attitude, so uncharacteristic of evangelical miracle-workers, has made her even more popular.



“I’m a normal person, just like you all, going through a call from God,” Leda said.
Apr 16th, 2024, 3:14 pm
Apr 16th, 2024, 3:20 pm
Hundreds of Strangers in Snowy North Give Free Car Rides to Southern Tourists Out of Their Element

Image

The Hong Kong South China Morning Post reports that Chinese social media is trending with stories of motorists in the farthest northern reaches of the country offering free rides to semi-tropical southerners coming to visit.

The spontaneously formed fleet of volunteer drivers cruises through the city when bad weather hits with signs on their windshields to alert lost or frozen tourists that the driver is willing to offer a free ride and ensure they feel warm and welcomed.

The northern city of Harbin and its province of Heilongjiang are only about 1,000 miles from the Arctic Circle, and decorated in snow and ice, with Russian architectural influences and a world-famous ice sculpture festival, it’s a tourist destination that offers a lot of what there’s not in southern China.

28 million domestic visitors came to Harbin over the winter season from the warm tropical southern megacities like Shenzhen, Nanjing, or Guangzhou.

SCMP reports that to the tall northern Chinese people who deal with extremely cold temperatures equivalent to those on the US Great Plains, these shorter, thinner southerners are affectionately termed “small potatoes.”

“Free rides. Please wave if any small potato fails to get a ride-hailing service, so I can offer you a lift,” the signs inside the windscreens of Harbin volunteer drivers say.

Social media in China often trends with stories of generosity and compassion, and many of the small potatoes shared their experiences in posts and videos.

On such driver, Mr. Hu, assured SCMP that “we are very happy to offer this help.”

“We do not go home until we’ve made sure there are no visitors left standing in the street,” he said, adding that it serves to demonstrate the warm and friendly hospitality of people in northeastern China.
Apr 16th, 2024, 3:20 pm

Twitter: Fatima99@fatima99_mobi
Image
Apr 16th, 2024, 4:07 pm
All inside our head...
You probably have microplastics in your brain: study

Image

Microplastics leave the gut and travel to other organs, scientists found.

This latest finding may be hard to wrap your head around.

Tiny pieces of plastic are finding their way into the brain, according to a paper published in the journal Environment Health Perspectives.

Researchers from the University of New Mexico said that microplastics from our water, food and the air we breathe make their way from our gut into other parts of the body such as the kidney, liver and brain, according to a press release from the university.

“Over the past few decades, microplastics have been found in the ocean, in animals and plants, in tap water and bottled water,” Eliseo Castillo, PhD, an associate professor in the Division of Gastroenterology & Hepatology in the UNM School of Medicine’s Department of Internal Medicine said in the release.

“They appear to be everywhere,” Castillo, who is the leading microplastic researcher at UNM added.

Castillo, an expert in mucosal immunology, and his team of researchers spent four weeks giving mice drinking water with the amount of microplastics human beings are said to ingest weekly.

Scientists previously found that humans consume five grams of microplastics each week, which is about the weight of a credit card.

They found that the microplastics move from the gut to other tissues in the body.

“These mice were exposed for four weeks. Now, think about how that equates to humans if we’re exposed from birth to old age,” Castillo warned.

Castillo said that if healthy mice exposed to tiny pieces of plastic after just a few weeks showed signs of physical changes, humans exposed over a lifetime might see their health suffer.

“Now imagine if someone has an underlying condition, and these changes occur, could microplastic exposure exacerbate an underlying condition?” Castillo said.

In a paper published in the journal Cell Biology and Toxicology, Castillo found that microplastics alter immune cells called macrophages, responsible for protecting the body from foreign particles, thereby leading to inflammation in the body.

Castillo’s next study will research how diet impacts the way microplastics are absorbed by the body.

“Everyone’s diet is different,” he said.

“So, what we’re going to do is give these laboratory animals a high-cholesterol/high-fat diet, or high-fiber diet, and they will be either exposed or not exposed to microplastics. The goal is to try to understand if diet affects the uptake of microplastics into our body.”

But no matter what you eat, there is no escaping microplastics, according to a study published in the journal

Environmental Pollution.

Scientists found that 90% of proteins, including vegan alternatives, contain microplastics, which have been linked to negative health consequences.
https://nypost.com/2021/12/23/irritable ... cs-in-gut/



https://nypost.com/2024/04/16/lifestyle ... ain-study/
Apr 16th, 2024, 4:07 pm
Apr 16th, 2024, 4:20 pm
The real-life Hogwarts Express has started running again


Image

The Hogwarts Express hasn’t been having an easy time lately. Known as the Jacobite IRL, the steam train that chugs through the Scottish Highlands, over the iconic Glenfinnan Viaduct, and starred in the Harry Potter franchise was recently forced to take time off the tracks due to safety concerns.

It was brought to a stop in March while it awaited a ruling over its doors that were deemed ‘unsafe’ by the Office of Rail and Road. It was also temporarily cancelled last summer thanks to safety concerns over its hinged-door carriages, which for the past 30 years it has been given exemption for.

But today, it was finally back in action. West Coast Railways has now fitted the train with central locking doors that comply with regulations, with services recommencing today (April 15).

Only for a bit though — it seems to have broken down within hours and a bunch of trains along the West Highland Line were cancelled as a result. On top of that, many Potter fans who had booked a trip might still miss out, as the service is running at a reduced capacity and only in the morning (rather than its usual twice a day).


src: https://www.timeout.com/uk/news/the-rea ... ain-041524
Apr 16th, 2024, 4:20 pm

Twitter @HgwrtzExprss
Join Mobilism Discord server to get instant updates on contests: https://discord.gg/JqD2wAWSGw

Image
Apr 16th, 2024, 4:24 pm
Mystery object that crashed into Florida home last month was 'discarded space junk', NASA says

The debris was a metal support used to mount batteries on a cargo pallet that was jettisoned from the International Space Station in 2021 and survived entry into Earth's atmosphere.

Image
Pic: NASA/AP

A mystery object that fell from the sky before crashing into a home in Florida last month was a piece of space junk, NASA has said.

The space agency said on Monday the cylindrical chunk of metal, which weighed 0.7kg (1.6lbs) and was 10cm (four inches) tall and around 4cm (1.5 inches) wide had been discarded from the International Space Centre in 2021.

It landed on the roof, smashing through the building and onto the floor of Alejandro Otero's home in the city of Naples on Florida's southwest coast on 8 March and was taken to the Kennedy Space Centre in Cape Canaveral for analysis.

NASA said it was a metal support used to mount old batteries on a cargo pallet for disposal.

The pallet was jettisoned from the space station three years ago, and the load was expected to eventually fully burn up on entry into the Earth's atmosphere, but one piece survived.

Mr Otero told television station WINK at the time that the object, which made a "tremendous sound", had ripped through his ceiling and torn up the flooring, narrowly missing his son.

He said he came home early from a holiday when his son told him what had happened.

Mr Otero said: "I was shaking. I was completely in disbelief. What are the chances of something landing on my house with such force to cause so much damage.

"I'm super grateful that nobody got hurt."
Apr 16th, 2024, 4:24 pm

Image
Apr 16th, 2024, 4:56 pm
Wrong couple divorced after computer error by law firm Vardag's
Source: BBC

Image

A couple were divorced by mistake after a computer error at a family law firm.

A staff member at Vardag's accidentally opened the file of a couple referred to in court papers as Mr and Mrs Williams, when trying to apply for a final divorce order for a different client.

Vardag's applied three days later to rescind the order but judge Sir Andrew McFarlane dismissed the application.

The firm's head Ayesha Vardag said the judge's decision effectively meant "the computer says no, you're divorced".

Court papers say that Mrs Williams applied for divorce in January 2023 following 21 years of marriage.

The mistake was made by solicitors acting for Mrs Williams on 3 October last year on an online divorce portal operated by HM Courts and Tribunals Service.

In his summary, Judge McFarlane noted that "with its now customary speed", the system granted the order just 21 minutes later.

Vardag's did not discover the error until 5 October, thinking the order had been made for another client, but then promptly applied for it to be rescinded.

The husband became aware of the situation only on 11 October, the same day Vardag's wrote to his solicitors to explain the situation, court papers say.

In the summary, Judge McFarlane, president of the High Court's Family Division, said the issue arose against the background of "ongoing contested financial remedy proceedings".

Ms Vardag has been nicknamed the "diva of divorce", with her firm based in London, as well as offices in Cambridge and Manchester.

The firm describes itself on its website as specialising in "high net worth and ultra high net worth family cases".

Image
Ayesha Vardag has been nicknamed the "diva of divorce"

Lawyers for Mrs Williams argued that as the order had been made by mistake it should simply be "set aside", describing the error as someone at the firm simply "clicking the wrong button".

Mr Williams' legal representatives argued a final order of divorce is a "once-and-for-all" order, which cannot be set aside by the consent of the parties and may only be rescinded by the court if found to be either void or voidable.

Judge McFarlane rejected the wife's arguments that the order should be set aside, finding it was not "rendered voidable" by her lack of consent as her solicitors were "generally authorised to act for her and the court was entitled to accept the application for the final order made by them as being validly made on her behalf".

He went on to say that even if the order was voidable, there was "a strong public policy interest in respecting the certainty and finality that flows from a final divorce order and maintaining the status quo that it has established".

Ms Vardag said Sir Andrew's verdict was a "bad decision" and that the state "should not be divorcing people on the basis of a clerical error", adding there has to be "intention" on the part of the person divorcing.

"When a mistake is brought to a court's attention, and everyone accepts that a mistake has been made, it obviously has to be undone," she said.
Apr 16th, 2024, 4:56 pm
Apr 16th, 2024, 6:00 pm
Great apes tease each other, just like people do


Click play to see these great ape pranks for yourself!

Teasing includes poking, hitting, hair-pulling
Do you play pranks for April Fools’ Day?

It turns out that a sense of humour runs in the family.

The Hominidae, or great ape, family that is.

Humans share a common ancestor with bonobos, chimpanzees, orangutans and gorillas, making us all part of the great ape family.

A study published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B on Feb. 14 found that non-human great apes prank each other, too.

Scientists at three universities in the U.S. and one in Germany conducted the research.

The scientists hope that by showing the similarities between humans and other great apes, their study will help scientists understand the evolution of humour – and encourage people to protect our primate relatives.

Image

Studying ape pranksters
Scientists recorded videos of great apes at the San Diego Zoo in the U.S. and the Leipzig Zoo in Germany from 2016 to 2019.

They paid especially close attention to the juveniles in the groups.

The researchers used behavioural criteria to identify the potential instances of pranking.

They found young great apes were involved in the majority of teasing events.

These included hitting, poking, pulling hair and waving an arm or leg in the face of the unsuspecting victim.

Overall, the researchers found 18 distinct teasing behaviours.

Image

The scientists observed a pattern of great ape pranks.

First, the teasing ape would intentionally provoke their target.

Then it would watch for a reaction.

If the target didn’t respond, the ape would repeat the prank, and sometimes even elaborate on it.

This suggests that apes, like humans, tease each other to get a reaction.

Image

Although past primatologists (people who study primates) have reported instances of ape teasing, this is the first systematic study of that behaviour.

The fact that both humans and non-human great apes tease suggests that some form of the behaviour has been around since the last common ancestor of humans and great apes, around 13 million years ago.

“We also hope that this study raises awareness of the similarities we share with our closest relatives and the importance of protecting these endangered animals,” Isabelle Laumer, the study’s lead author, said in a news release.
Apr 16th, 2024, 6:00 pm

Image