Monday 22 April 2024

Archelogy News: Egypt reclaims 3,400-year-old stolen statue of King Ramses II

Egypt reclaims 3,400-year-old stolen statue of King Ramses II


Egyptian authorities spotted the artifact when it was offered for sale in an exhibition in London in 2013, after it was stolen more than three decades ago.


By Reuters, April 22, 2024


The coffin of Ramses II is seen during the press visit of the exhibition "Ramses the Great & the Gold of the Pharaohs" at the Grande Halle de la Villette in Paris, France, April 6, 2023. 
(photo credit: STEPHANIE LECOCQ/REUTERS)

Egypt welcomed home a 3,400-year-old statue depicting the head of King Ramses II after it was stolen and smuggled out of the country more than three decades ago, the country's antiquities ministry said on Sunday.

The statue is now in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo but not on display. The artifact will be restored, the ministry said in a statement.

The statue was stolen from the Ramses II temple in the ancient city of Abydos in Southern Egypt more than three decades ago. The exact date is not known, but Shaaban Abdel Gawad, who heads Egypt's antiquities repatriation department, said the piece is estimated to have been stolen in the late 1980s or early 1990s.

Discovering the stolen artifact

Egyptian authorities spotted the artifact when it was offered for sale in an exhibition in London in 2013. It moved to several other countries before reaching Switzerland, according to the antiquities ministry.


A section of a limestone statue of Ramses II unearthed by an Egyptian-U.S. archaeological mission in El Ashmunein, south of the Egyptian city of Minya, Egypt in this handout image released on March 4, 2024. (credit: The Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities/Handout)

"This head is part of a group of statues depicting King Ramses II seated alongside a number of Egyptian deities," Abdel Gawad said.

Ramses II is one of ancient Egypt's most powerful pharaohs. Also known as Ramses the Great, he was the third pharaoh of the Nineteenth Dynasty of Egypt and ruled from 1279 to 1213 B.C.

Egypt collaborated with Swiss authorities to establish its rightful ownership. Switzerland handed over the statue to the Egyptian embassy in Bern last year, but it was only recently that Egypt brought the artifact home.     




Southern China storms kill four, force mass evacuations

APRIL 22, 2024

Heavy rains have hit southern China, prompting tens of thousands to be evacuated, including in Qingyuan (pictured).

Four people are dead and 10 others missing following storms that battered southern China, state media said Monday, with tens of thousands evacuated from areas hit by torrential downpours.

Heavy rain has descended upon the vast southern province of Guangdong in recent days, swelling rivers and raising fears of severe flooding that state media said could be of the sort only "seen around once a century".

"Three deaths were reported in Zhaoqing City while the remaining one is a rescuer in Shaoguan City," state news agency Xinhua reported, citing local authorities.

Ten others remain missing as search and rescue efforts in the area continue to be carried out, said Xinhua.

China is no stranger to extreme weather but recent years have seen the country hit by severe floods, grinding droughts and record heat.

More than 110,000 people have been relocated across Guangdong, according to Xinhua.

Of those, more than 45,000 were evacuated from the northern city of Qingyuan, which straddles the banks of the Bei River, a tributary in the wider Pearl River Delta, state media reported Sunday.

Heavy rain is expected to continue on Monday, with meteorological authorities forecasting "thunderstorms and strong winds in Guangdong's coastal waters"—a stretch of sea bordering major cities including Hong Kong and Shenzhen.

Map of China showing 3-day accumulated rainfall as of April 20, according to NASA data.

Yellow alert

Neighboring provinces, including parts of Fujian, Guizhou and Guangxi, will also be affected by "short-term heavy rainfall", the National Meteorological Centre said.

"It is expected that the main impact period of strong convection will last from daytime until night," it added.

Authorities on Monday issued a yellow alert for rainstorms—the second-lowest in its four-tier system—with high levels of precipitation expected to continue across large swathes of the country.

Guangdong province is China's densely populated manufacturing heartland, home to around 127 million people.

In the town of Jiangwan, six people were injured and a number were trapped in landslides caused by heavy rain on Sunday, state media reported.

Photographs published by state broadcaster CCTV showed waterfront homes destroyed by a wall of brown mud, and people sheltering in a soaked public sports court.

CCTV reported Sunday that floods as high as 5.8 meters (19 feet) above the warning limit would strike in Pearl River tributaries on Monday morning.

Climate change driven by human-emitted greenhouse gases makes extreme weather events more frequent and intense, and China is the world's biggest emitter.


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Experiment Prepares to Test a Possible Second Purpose For Stonehenge

22 April 2024, By F. SILVA ET AL., THE CONVERSATION

(D. Lentz/Getty Images)

When it comes to its connection to the sky, Stonehenge is best known for its solar alignments.

Every midsummer's night tens of thousands of people gather at Stonehenge to celebrate and witness the rising Sun in alignment with the Heel stone standing outside of the circle. Six months later a smaller crowd congregates around the Heel stone to witness the midwinter Sun setting within the stone circle.

But a hypothesis has been around for 60 years that part of Stonehenge also aligns with moonrise and moonset at what is called a major lunar standstill. Although a correlation between the layout of certain stones and the major lunar standstill has been known about for several decades, no one has systematically observed and recorded the phenomenon at Stonehenge.

This is what we are aiming to do in a project bringing together archaeologists, astronomers and photographers from English Heritage, Oxford, Leicester and Bournemouth universities as well as the Royal Astronomical Society.

There is now an abundance of archaeological evidence that indicates the solar alignment was part of the architectural design of Stonehenge. Around 2500 BC, the people who put up the large stones and dug an avenue into the chalk seemed to want to cement the solstice axis into the architecture of Stonehenge.

Archaeological evidence from nearby Durrington Walls, the place where scientists believe the ancient people who visited Stonehenge stayed, indicates that of the two solstices it was the midwinter one that drew the largest crowd.

But Stonehenge includes other elements, such as 56 pits arranged in a circle, an earthwork bank and ditch, and other smaller features such as the four station stones. These are four sarsen stones, a form of silicified sandstone common in Wiltshire, that were carefully placed to form an almost exact rectangle encompassing the stone circle.

Only two of these stones are still there, and they pale in comparison to their larger counterparts as they are only a few feet high. So what could their purpose be?

Only two of the station stones are still there.
 (Drone Explorer/Shutterstock)
Lunar standstill

The rectangle that they form is not just any rectangle. The shorter sides are parallel to the main axis of the stone circle and this may be a clue as to their purpose. The longer sides of the rectangle skirt the outside of the stone circle.

It is these longer sides that are thought to align with the major lunar standstill. If you marked the position of moonrise (or set) over the course of a month you would see that it moves between two points on the horizon. These southern and northern limits of moonrise (or set) change on a cycle of 18.6 years between a minimum and a maximum range – the so-called minor and major lunar standstills, respectively.

The major lunar standstill is a period of about one and a half to two years when the northernmost and southernmost moonrises (or sets) are furthest apart. When this happens the Moon rises (and sets) outside the range of sunrises and sets, which may have imbued this celestial phenomenon with meaning and significance.

The range of Moonrise positions on the horizon during minor and major lunar standstills. (Fabio Silva, CC BY-NC)

The strongest evidence we have for people marking the major lunar standstill comes from the US southwest. The Great House of Chimney Rock, a multi-level complex built by the ancestral Pueblo people in the San Juan National Forest, Colorado, more than 1,000 years ago.

It lies on a ridge that ends at a natural formation of twin rock pillars – an area that has cultural significance to more than 26 native American tribal nations. From the vantage point of the Great House, the Sun will never rise in the gap between the pillars.

However, during a major standstill the Moon does rise between them in awe-inspiring fashion. Excavations unearthed preserved wood that meant researchers could date to the year episodes of construction of the Great House.

Of six cutting dates, four correspond to major lunar standstill years between the years AD1018 and AD1093, indicating that the site was renewed, maintained or expanded on consecutive major standstills.

Returning to southern England, archaeologists think there is a connection between the major lunar standstill and the earliest construction phase of Stonehenge (3000-2500 BC), before the sarsen stones were brought in.

Several sets of cremated human remains from this phase of construction were found in the southeastern part of the monument in the general direction of the southernmost major standstill moonrise, where three timber posts were also set into the bank. It is possible that there was an early connection between the site of Stonehenge and the Moon, which was later emphasised when the station stone rectangle was built.

The major lunar standstill hypothesis, however, raises more questions than it answers. We don't know if the lunar alignments of the station stones were symbolic or whether people were meant to observe the Moon through them. Neither do we know which phases of the Moon would be more dramatic to witness.
A search for answers

In our upcoming work, we will be trying to answer the questions the major lunar standstill hypothesis raises. It's unclear whether the Moon would have been strong enough to cast shadows and how they would have interacted with the other stones. We will also need to check whether the alignments can still be seen today or if they are blocked by woods, traffic and other features.

The Moon will align with the station stone rectangle twice a month from
about February 2024 to November 2025, giving us plenty of opportunities
to observe this phenomenon in different seasons and phases of the Moon.

To bring our research to life, English Heritage will livestream the southernmost Moonrise in June 2024, and host a series of events throughout the year, including talks, a pop-up planetarium, stargazing and storytelling sessions.

Across the Atlantic, our partners at the US Forest Service are developing educational materials about the major lunar standstill at Chimney Rock National Monument. This collaboration will result in events showcasing and debating the lunar alignments at both Stonehenge and at Chimney Rock.

Fabio Silva, Senior Lecturer in Archaeological Modelling, Bournemouth University; Amanda Chadburn, Member of Kellogg College, University of Oxford and Visiting Fellow in Archaeology, Bournemouth University, and Erica Ellingson, Professor in Astrophysics, Emeritus, University of Colorado Boulder


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Sunday 21 April 2024

Scientists discover forests that may resist climate change

APRIL 18, 2024, by L. Milideo, U. of Vermont

Cold-air pooling is a phenomenon where cold air drops from mountaintops into valleys below. Credit: Melissa Pastore, U.S. Forest Service

While it's common knowledge that mountaintops are colder than the valleys below, a new University of Vermont (UVM) study is flipping the script on what we know about forests and climate.

The study, published in Ecology and Evolution, explores forests that experience "cold-air pooling," a phenomenon where cold air at higher elevations drains down into lower-lying valleys, reversing the expected temperatures—warm at the bottom, cold at the top—that typically occurs in mountainous areas. That is, the air temperature drops with descent from mountain to valley.

"With temperature inversions, we also see vegetation inversions," says lead study author and former UVM postdoctoral researcher Melissa Pastore. "Instead of finding more cold-preferring species like spruce and fir at high elevations, we found them in lower elevations—just the opposite of what we expect."

And the effect on these ecosystems is substantial: "This cold-air pooling is fundamentally structuring the forest," says study co-author and UVM professor Carol Adair.

This insight "can help forest managers prioritize and protect areas with frequent and strong cold-air pooling to preserve cold-loving species as the climate warms," says Adair.

The researchers looked at three forested sites in New England, ranging from the shallow, crater-like Nulhegan Basin of Vermont's Northeast Kingdom, to the higher peaks and deeper valleys of the Green Mountains, over two years. They collected data on the types of trees present across elevation transects and monitored temperature hourly.

The researchers found that, far from being the occasional nighttime, seasonal phenomenon it's historically been thought to be, cold-air pooling happens frequently, year-round, well into daylight hours, Adair says. The phenomenon occurred at every site they studied, but was strongest at the site with the shallowest elevation change.

Refuge in a changing climate

Locations experiencing this phenomenon might prove essential to conservation efforts aimed at preserving cold-adapted species, even as the larger climate warms, Pastore notes. "These cold-air-pooling areas could be valuable targets for small areas that provide a refuge from climate change; they're areas that might be buffered from, or even decoupled from, climate change, and they're harboring cold-adapted species that we know are vulnerable."

She adds that conserving such locations may provide enough time for species to adapt to climate change by either migrating, or by mixing genes with neighbors to assume traits needed for survival in a hotter world.

In this way, Pastore says, "These pockets of cold habitat can act as steppingstones for some species—can buy them that time."

Conserving such locations may have practical applications, as well, says Adair, "including carbon storage and small-scale recreational opportunities," adding that cold-loving coniferous tree communities tend to store more carbon than deciduous trees, and forest soils may also hold onto moisture longer—important during periods of extreme rain.

Cold-air pooling has been historically and anecdotally observed elsewhere, Adair says, but this study is the first to quantify it to this degree across many sites beneath the forest canopy, and more research is planned to explore its temporal and geographic extent.

Cold-air pooling is not a panacea, Pastore warns. These forests are "still going to warm—I definitely don't want to say these are complete safe havens, because climate change will happen there, too—but it might be slower, and maybe species that might otherwise disappear in a warmer climate will remain longer in these locations."

The research is highly relevant in a changing climate, as ecologists seek to model what may happen to species that require cold conditions. "If you don't have this process in your model," Adair says, "you're going to miss that there are these areas where cold-loving species can persist and are persisting."

The work has been a hopeful change of pace, Adair says. "I'm excited about the fact that this is good news, in a way. These areas can help cold-adapted species persist." She adds, "A lot of my research is telling people why bad things are happening, so this is nice. It's not all good news, but it's some good news. These places exist. We can use them. They're important. They're clearly structuring forests."



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Remarkable Findings – New Research Reveals That the Spinal Cord Can Learn and Memorize

By FLEMISH INST. FOR BIOTECHNOLOGY,  APRIL 18, 2024


New research demonstrates that the spinal cord can independently learn and remember movements, challenging traditional views of its role and potentially enhancing rehabilitation strategies for spinal injury patients.

New research reveals that spinal cord neurons possess the capability to learn and retain information independently of the brain.

The spinal cord is often described as merely a conduit for transmitting signals between the brain and the body. However, the spinal cord can actually learn and remember movements on its own.

A team of researchers at the Leuven-based Neuro-Electronics Research Flanders (NERF) details how two different neuronal populations enable the spinal cord to adapt and recall learned behavior in a way that is completely independent of the brain. These remarkable findings, published in the journal Science, shed new light on how spinal circuits might contribute to mastering and automating movement. The insights could prove relevant in the rehabilitation of people with spinal injuries.

The spinal cord’s puzzling plasticity

The spinal cord modulates and finetunes our actions and movements by integrating different sources of sensory information, and it can do so without input from the brain. What’s more, nerve cells in the spinal cord can learn to adjust various tasks autonomously, given sufficient repetitive practice. How the spinal cord achieves this remarkable plasticity, however, has puzzled neuroscientists for decades.

One such neuroscientist is Professor Aya Takeoka. Her team at Neuro-Electronics Research Flanders (NERF, a research institute backed by imec, KU Leuven, and VIB) studies how the spinal cord recovers from injuries by exploring how the nerve connections are wired, and how they function and change when we learn new movements.

“Although we have evidence of ‘learning’ within the spinal cord from experiments dating back as early as the beginning of the 20th century, the question of which neurons are involved and how they encode this learning experience has remained unanswered,” says Prof. Takeoka.

Part of the problem is the difficulty in directly measuring the activity of individual neurons in the spinal cord in animals that are not sedated but awake and moving. Takeoka’s team took advantage of a model in which animals train specific movements within minutes. In doing so, the team uncovered a cell type-specific mechanism of spinal cord learning.

Two specific neuronal cell types

To check how the spinal cord learns, doctoral researcher Simon Lavaud and his colleagues at the Takeoka lab built an experimental setup to measure changes in movement in mice, inspired by methods used in insect studies. “We evaluated the contribution of six different neuronal populations and identified two groups of neurons, one dorsal and one ventral, that mediate motor learning.”

“These two sets of neurons take turns,” explains Lavaud. “The dorsal neurons help the spinal cord learn a new movement, while the ventral neurons help it remember and perform the movement later.”

“You can compare it to a relay race within the spinal cord. The dorsal neurons act like the first runner, passing on the critical sensory information for learning. Then, the ventral cells take the baton, ensuring the learned movement is remembered and executed smoothly.”

Learning and memory outside the brain

The detailed results, published in Science, illustrate that neuronal activity in the spinal cord resembles various classical types of learning and memory. Further unraveling these learning mechanisms will be crucial, as they likely contribute to different ways in which we learn and automate movement, and may also be relevant in the context of rehabilitation, says Prof. Aya Takeoka: “The circuits we described could provide the means for the spinal cord to contribute to movement learning and long-term motor memory, which both help us to move, not only in normal health but especially during recovery from brain or spinal cord injuries.”



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Saturday 20 April 2024

New compound from blessed thistle may promote functional nerve regeneration

APRIL 19, 2024, by A. Euteneuer, U. of Cologne

Dried blessed thistle (Cnicus benedictus). 
Credit: Dietmar Fischer



Researchers from the University of Cologne have found a new use for cnicin, a substance produced in blessed thistle. Their article "Cnicin promotes functional nerve regeneration" features clinical studies and is published in Phytomedicine.

Blessed thistle (Cnicus benedictus) is a plant in the family Asteraceae and also grows in our climate. For centuries, it has been used as a medicinal herb as an extract or tea, e.g. to aid the digestive system.

Researchers at the Center for Pharmacology of University Hospital Cologne and at the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Cologne have now found a completely novel use for cnicin under the direction of Dr. Philipp Gobrecht and Professor Dr. Dietmar Fischer. Animal models as well as human cells have shown that cnicin significantly accelerates axon (nerve fibers) growth. The study was published in Phytomedicine.

Regeneration pathways of injured nerves in humans and animals with long axons are accordingly long. This often makes the healing process lengthy and even frequently irreversible because the axons cannot reach their destination on time. An accelerated regeneration growth rate can, therefore, make a big difference here, ensuring that the fibers reach their original destination on time before irreparable functional deficits can occur.

The researchers demonstrated axon regeneration in animal models and human cells taken from retinae donated by patients. Administering a daily dose of cnicin to mice or rats helped improve paralysis and neuropathy much more quickly.

Compared to other compounds, cnicin has one crucial advantage: it can be introduced into the bloodstream orally (by mouth). It does not have to be given by injection.

"The correct dose is very important here, as cnicin only works within a specific therapeutic window. Doses that are too low or too high are ineffective. This is why further clinical studies on humans are crucial," said Fischer.

The University of Cologne researchers are currently planning relevant studies. The Center for Pharmacology is researching and developing drugs to repair the damaged nervous system.



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Cosmic rays streamed through Earth's atmosphere 41,000 years ago: New findings on the Laschamps excursion

APRIL 19, 2024, by European Geosciences Union

Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Earth's magnetic field protects us from the dangerous radiation of space, but it is not as permanent as we might believe. Scientists at the European Geosciences Union General Assembly present new information about an 'excursion' 41,000 years ago where our planet's magnetic field waned, and harmful space rays bombarded the planet.

Earth's magnetic field cocoons our planet from the onslaught of cosmic radiation streaming through space while also shielding us from charged particles hurled outward by the sun. But the geomagnetic field is not stationary. Not only does magnetic north wobble, straying from true north (a geographically defined location), but occasionally, it flips. During these reversals, north becomes south, south becomes north, and in the process, the intensity of the magnetic field wanes.

But there's also something called magnetic field excursions, brief periods in which the intensity of the magnetic field wanes and the dipole (or two magnetic poles) that we're familiar with can disappear, replaced with multiple magnetic poles. The Laschamps excursion that occurred around 41,000 years ago is among the best studied. It features a low magnetic field intensity that implies less protection for Earth's surface from harmful space rays. Periods of low magnetic field intensity could correlate to major upheavals in the biosphere.

To see when cosmic rays were heavily bombarding Earth's surface, scientists can measure cosmogenic radionuclides in cores from both ice and marine sediment. These special isotopes are produced by the interaction between cosmic rays and Earth's atmosphere; they are born of cosmic rays, hence they are cosmogenic.

Times of lower paleomagnetic field intensity—less shielding—should correlate to higher rates of cosmogenic radionuclide production in the atmosphere. Sanja Panovska, a researcher at GFZ Potsdam, Germany will present her findings about the relationship between paleomagnetic field intensity and cosmogenic nuclides during the Laschamps excursion, with a focus on space climate, next week during the European Geosciences Union (EGU) General Assembly 2024.

Variations in cosmogenic radionuclides like beryllium-10 provide an independent proxy of how Earth's paleomagnetic intensity changed. Indeed, Panovska found that the average production rate of beryllium-10 during the Laschamps excursion was two times higher than present-day production, implying very low magnetic field intensity and lots of cosmic rays reaching Earth's atmosphere.

To wring more information from both cosmogenic radionuclide and paleomagnetic data, Panovska reconstructed the geomagnetic field using both datasets. Her reconstructions show that during the Laschamps excursion, the magnetosphere shrank when the field dramatically decreased, "thus reducing the shielding of our planet," she said.

"Understanding these extreme events is important for their occurrence in the future, space climate predictions, and assessing the effects on the environment and on the Earth system."


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Archaeology News: Gigantic marine reptile's fossils found by British girl and father

Gigantic marine reptile's fossils found by British girl and father


British girl finds fossil of massive ancient marine reptile in Somerset, England. Jawbone suggests creature rivaling blue whales, named Ichthyotitan severnensis.


By Reuters, April 18, 2024

Researchers said on Wednesday the bone, called a surangular, was from a type of ocean-going reptile called an ichthyosaur. Based on its dimensions compared to the same bone in closely related ichthyosaurs, the researchers estimated that the Triassic Period creature, which they named Ichthyotitan severnensis, was between 72 and 85 feet (22-26 meters) long.

That would make it perhaps the largest-known marine reptile and would rival some of the largest baleen whales alive today. The blue whale is considered the largest animal ever on the planet, and it can reach about 100 feet (30 meters) long.


An assistant compares a fossilised tooth of a giant whale called Leviathan against the whale's fossilised jaw at the Natural History Museum in Lima June 30, 2010. The fossil of a giant whale called Leviathan for having teeth bigger than a grown man's forearms has been found in Peru by palaeontologists
(photo credit: REUTERS/PILAR OLIVARES)

Marine reptiles ruled the world's oceans when dinosaurs dominated the land. Ichthyosaurs, which evolved from terrestrial ancestors and prospered for about 160 million years before disappearing roughly 90 million years ago, came in various sizes and shapes. They ate fish, squid relatives, and other marine reptiles and gave birth to live young.

Ichthyotitan is known only from two jawbones, the one found by Ruby Reynolds and her father, Justin Reynolds, in 2020 at Blue Anchor, Somerset, and another from a different Ichthyotitan individual found in 2016, along the Somerset coast at Lilstock.

Gigantic Ichthyosaurs of Triassic UK


A journalist views an exhibit during a media preview for the reopening of the Smithsonian’s Natural History Museum dinosaur and fossil hall after undergoing $110-million renovation in Washington, US, June 4, 2019 (credit: KEVIN LAMARQUE/REUTERS)

"It is quite remarkable to think that gigantic, blue whale-sized ichthyosaurs were swimming in the oceans around the time that dinosaurs were walking on land in what is now the UK during the Triassic Period," said paleontologist Dean Lomax, affiliated with the University of Manchester and the University of Bristol, lead author of the study published in the journal PLOS ONE.

Ruby Reynolds, who was 11 at the time and is now 15, was fossil hunting on the beach with her father when they spotted a piece of the surangular. Ruby continued to search the area and found a second piece - much larger than the first - partly buried in a mud slope. They subsequently contacted Lomax, an ichthyosaur expert, and additional sections of the bone were unearthed.

The role of Ruby Reynolds in the discovery has led to comparisons with Mary Anning, the 19th-century British fossil hunter and anatomist who, among other things, discovered ichthyosaur fossils when she was 12.

"I think Mary Anning was an incredible paleontologist and it's amazing to be compared to her," Ruby Reynolds said.

Fossil collector Paul de la Salle found the 2016 remains now attributed to Ichthyotitan.

Ichthyotitan's sheer size was awe-inspiring.

"Discoveries like this create incredible moments where we become humbled at our size and place in the world. To learn that an animal of this magnitude once swam our oceans, felt the same warmth of the sun, breathed our air, and then vanished gives us an opportunity to see how important each species is to the fragile yet resilient fabric of life," Florida-based paleontologist and study co-author Jimmy Waldron said.

Ichthyotitan was a member of a family of giant ichthyosaurs called Shastasauridae and lived 13 million years later than any of the others known to date. This suggests that these behemoths survived until a global mass extinction event doomed numerous types of animals about 201 million years ago at the end of the Triassic.

No fossils of the rest of Ichthyotitan's skeleton have been discovered. Still, the researchers have been able to discern its appearance based on other members of its family, including Shonisaurus from British Columbia and Canada.

The surangular is a long, curved bone at the top of the lower jaw, just behind the teeth. It is present in nearly every vertebrate living or extinct, except mammals. Muscles attached to this bone generate bite force.

"In T. rex, the surangular measures over half a meter (1-1/2 feet) in length. The surangular Ruby and her father found stretched more than two meters (7 feet.) This translates to not only the scope of how truly enormous the animal was but also the indication that it had a lot of boost behind its bite," said Waldron, who founded the Dinosaurs Will Always Be Awesome mobile dinosaur museum.     


Friday 19 April 2024

Health and Wellness News: US study suggests that pretzel size affects eating behavior

 

US study suggests that pretzel size affects eating behavior


If you have hypertension, how big the salty snack is should be different than if you want to lose weight.  


Deadly bacteria show thirst for human blood: Research outlines the phenomenon of bacterial vampirism

APRIL 16, 2024, by J. Babcock, Washington State U.

Washington State University researcher Arden Baylink holds a petri dish containing salmonella bacteria. Baylink and Ph.D. student Siena Glenn have published research showing that some of the world's deadliest bacteria seek out and eat serum, the liquid part of human blood, which contains nutrients the bacteria can use as food.
 Credit: Ted S. Warren, Washington State University College of Veterinary Medicine

Some of the world's deadliest bacteria seek out and feed on human blood, a newly-discovered phenomenon researchers are calling "bacterial vampirism."

A team led by Washington State University researchers has found the bacteria are attracted to the liquid part of blood, or serum, which contains nutrients the bacteria can use as food. One of the chemicals the bacteria seemed particularly drawn to was serine, an amino acid found in human blood that is also a common ingredient in protein drinks.

The research finding, published in the journal eLife, provides new insights into how bloodstream infections occur and could potentially be treated.

"Bacteria infecting the bloodstream can be lethal," said Arden Baylink, a professor at WSU's College of Veterinary Medicine and corresponding author for the research. "We learned some of the bacteria that most commonly cause bloodstream infections actually sense a chemical in human blood and swim toward it."

Baylink and the lead author on the study, WSU Ph.D. student Siena Glenn, found at least three types of bacteria, Salmonella enterica, Escherichia coli and Citrobacter koseri, are attracted to human serum. These bacteria are a leading cause of death for people who have inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), about 1% of the population. These patients often have intestinal bleeding that can be entry points for the bacteria into the bloodstream.

Siena Glenn, a Washington State University Ph.D. student uses a high-powered microscope. Glenn, working with Assistant Professor Arden Baylink and colleagues, has published research showing that some of the world's deadliest bacteria seek out and eat serum, the liquid part of human blood. 
Credit: Ted S. Warren, Washington State University College of Veterinary Medicine

Using a high-powered microscope system designed by Baylink called the Chemosensory Injection Rig Assay, the researchers simulated intestinal bleeding by injecting microscopic amounts of human serum and watching as the bacteria navigated toward the source. The response is rapid—it takes less than a minute for the disease-causing bacteria to find the serum.

As part of the study, the researchers determined Salmonella has a special protein receptor called Tsr that enables bacteria to sense and swim toward serum. Using a technique called protein crystallography, they were able to view the atoms of the protein interacting with serine. The scientists believe serine is one of the chemicals from blood that the bacteria sense and consume.

"By learning how these bacteria are able to detect sources of blood, in the future we could develop new drugs that block this ability. These medicines could improve the lives and health of people with IBD who are at high risk for bloodstream infections," Glenn said.

Scientists Zealon Gentry-Lear, Michael Shavlik, and Michael Harms of the University of Oregon, and Tom Asaki, a mathematician at WSU, contributed to the research.



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There Could Be a Strange Link Between Menstrual Cycles And The Moon After All

16 April 2024, By J. COCKERILL

(Seventy Four/Getty Images)



People from many different cultures have long associated the human menstrual cycle with the phases of the Moon. Yet as uncanny as the similarities in average cycle time and the month might be, there's been little evidence of a link.

Now a research team from France and the US has found menstrual cycle rhythms are likely governed by the body's internal clock, rather than being a sum of processes intrinsic to the cycle itself.

What's more, there is a weak but significant association with the Moon's orbital period, hinting at a more fundamental biology once reliant on the timing of the tides.

It makes sense that so many cultures associate lunar and menstrual cycles; the Moon's phases repeat every 29.5 days, give or take about seven hours, while menstrual cycles have a mean length of 29.3 days, albeit with much variation between individuals.

Skeptics argue this perceived synchronicity is a mere coincidence, convenient to timekeeping, or perhaps just magical thinking. Though he never referred to menstruation specifically, in 1871 Charles Darwin proposed that lunar links may have an evolutionary origin: "In the lunar or weekly recurrent periods of some of our functions we apparently still retain traces of our primordial birthplace, a shore washed by the tides."

There's been evidence this is the case for species that rely on high tides for reproduction, like some fish and bivalves.

The researchers examined data on almost 27,000 menstrual cycles representing 2,303 European women and 721 North American women. Their analysis revealed something called 'phase jumps', in which menstrual phases 'jump' ahead to match up to a body clock external to the process.

"If the cycle lengthens, for any reason, this clock-based process adapts to quickly shorten it," neuroscientist Claude Gronfier, from The University of Lyon in France, told BBC Science Focus.

If the Moon did have any role in the length of human menstrual cycles, either as an evolutionary relic or in an ongoing influence, it would be more of a backseat driver with the body's own internal clock firmly at the wheel, the new study suggests.

The human body's 'clock' has a period of just over 24 hours, regardless of external factors such as the amount of time exposed to sunlight. Although it varies slightly between individuals, this circadian rhythm is highly stable for each person.

In the absence of sunlight – which resets the body clock to the 24-hour day – it can drift out of sync, as anybody with jetlag can attest to.

The researchers suggested that if an internal clock was involved in the menstrual cycle, then cycle lengths would be similarly stable within individuals, and have a narrow spread across a population.

While the study suggests this is the main mechanism behind menstrual timing, they did find a weak but statistically significant relationship between menstrual and lunar cycles, which varied depending on geography.

"The menstrual cycle began more often at the waxing crescent in Europe, whereas it was at the full moon in North America," the authors write.

While they don't have a clear explanation for this difference, they suggest it might be due to lifestyle differences (like sleep-wake cycles) between people from these continents.

"There is a lot of work ahead of us, and we hope that our colleagues embark with us on what could be a future area of circadian medicine," Gronfier told BBC Science Focus.

The team thinks their results could lead to potential fertility treatments, and says learning more about how genes regulate the menstrual cycle is key to understanding its chronobiology. A previous study found a specific gene variant linked to a hormone that affects cycle length.

However, this doesn't explain why cycles can phase jump based on previous cycles' duration, or how the body's internal clock could affect cycle length. More research with larger groups is needed to confirm these new findings and understand the underlying mechanisms.

"If the existence of an internal clock that controls the menstrual cycle is confirmed in further studies, then the medical treatment of ovulation disorders could use the chronobiological approaches," the authors write.


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Report finds high levels of pesticides in 20% of fruits, veggies

APRIL 18, 2024, by R. Foster


Nearly 20% of fresh, frozen and canned fruits and vegetables that Americans eat contain concerning levels of pesticides, a new report finds.

Pesticides posed significant risks in popular choices such as strawberries, green beans, bell peppers, blueberries and potatoes, the review from Consumer Reports found.

"One food in particular, green beans, had residues of a pesticide that hasn't been allowed to be used on the vegetable in the U.S. for over a decade," the report authors said in a news release. "And imported produce, especially some from Mexico, was particularly likely to carry risky levels of pesticide residues."

How likely? Sixty-five of 100 samples of the most contaminated produce were imported, with 52 of those samples originating from Mexico, the review found.

The majority of the highly contaminated produce were strawberries, typically the frozen variety, the report said.

Why? Because they grow low to the ground and are therefore more accessible to bugs, strawberries often top lists of foods contaminated with insecticides, CNN reported.

Meanwhile, nearly all the tested green beans were contaminated with acephate, an insecticide that is considered a "possible human carcinogen." The Environmental Protection Agency prohibited the chemical for use on green beans in 2011.

In response to the report, the Food Industry Association told CNN that "all pesticides go through an extensive review process by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency [EPA] to ensure they are safe for human consumption and to establish tolerances, the maximum residue limit permitted on or in a food."

And the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is responsible "for monitoring and enforcing EPA's tolerances for pesticides in food, including foods imported into the U.S.," Hilary Thesmar, the association's chief science officer and senior vice president of food and product safety, told CNN.

Pesticides have been linked in studies to preterm births and neural tube defects. Exposure to pesticides has also been associated with heart disease, cancer and other illnesses.

Critics point to the EPA's lack of action as a key reason why pesticides are frequently found on produce, despite a growing amount of evidence that even low levels could be harmful, CNN reported.

"The EPA could certainly be doing a better job of setting more accurate safe limits based on the latest science," Alexis Temkin, senior toxicologist at the Environmental Working Group, told CNN. "Some of these pesticides require immediate, swift action by the EPA to consider these potential health risks more strongly."

Not all the news was bad, according to the report, which analyzed seven years of testing data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture on 59 common fruits and vegetables.

Pesticide levels were of little concern in nearly two-thirds of the foods included in the review, including nearly all of the organic ones, Consumer Reports said.

What can consumers do to reduce their risk of pesticide exposure?

Cleaning fruits and vegetables before eating does reduce pesticide levels, but there is "no method of washing produce that is 100% effective for removing all pesticide residues," according to the National Pesticide Information Center.

Starting with clean hands, wash and scrub produce under running water instead of soaking to remove the most pesticide residue, the center recommends.

Don't use soap, detergent or a commercial produce wash, however, as they have not been proven to be any more effective, FDA says. Dry the produce with a clean cloth or paper towel.

To reduce your risk of exposure even further, switch to organic produce whenever possible, Consumer Reports advised.


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