Sunday, 22 March 2026

AI Finally Decoded Whale Language — The First Sentence Shocked Every Scientist in the Room

Vault of Discovery, Mar 20, 2026 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=79LXkosqqXE

AI Finally Decoded Whale Language — 

The First Sentence Shocked Every Scientist in the Room In this video, we break down groundbreaking research claiming that advanced artificial intelligence systems have made major progress in decoding patterns within whale vocalizations, raising new questions about animal communication and intelligence. 

Researchers using machine learning models have been analyzing thousands of hours of whale sounds to identify structure, repetition, and possible linguistic patterns. We examine what is actually confirmed so far: how the AI models were trained, what types of whale species were studied, and whether scientists believe these vocal patterns qualify as a true “language” or a highly complex communication system. 

Experts caution that while structured patterns have been identified, translating them into human-style sentences remains a developing and debated area of research.

As studies continue, we separate verified scientific findings from sensational interpretations and explore what this breakthrough could mean for marine biology, artificial intelligence, and our understanding of non-human communication.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=79LXkosqqXE


The Life of Earth
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/


Human Evolution May Be Undergoing a Major Shift Right Before Our Eyes

21 March 2026, By M. Starr

(Volodymyr Yakimchuk/Creatas Video+/Getty Images Plus)

A seismic shift in the selection pressures acting on humans may have brought us to a major turning point in our evolutionary journey.

According to multiple teams of scientists, human culture – technology, medicine, and our remarkable collaborative problem-solving skills – may now be shaping human evolution more than environmental pressures and the limitations of our bodies.

This is because the solutions we invent to make our lives easier, from central heating to contact lenses, can solve biological challenges far faster than evolution can, reducing the pressure for genetic adaptation.

"Human evolution seems to be changing gears," said cultural evolution researcher Tim Waring of the University of Maine, who co-authored a study on the subject published in September 2025.

"When we learn useful skills, institutions, or technologies from each other, we are inheriting adaptive cultural practices. On reviewing the evidence, we find that culture solves problems much more rapidly than genetic evolution. This suggests our species is in the middle of a great evolutionary transition."

Evolution – the process by which living organisms gradually change through inherited genetic variation – is usually slow, unfolding over many generations. It's typically shaped by environmental pressures that select which genes are more likely to get passed down to future generations.

A well-known example in humans involves malaria. In tropical regions where malaria is common, sickle cell genes are also more frequent. That's because people who carry one copy of the sickle cell gene gain protection against malaria, making them more likely to survive and pass the gene to their children.

Throughout known human history, culture has also exerted selection pressures. The ability to digest lactose into adulthood likely arose in early pastoralist cultures. In the isolated French-Canadian population of Île aux Coudres, the age at which women first have babies has decreased over the course of 140 years – an evolutionary shift reflected at the genetic level.

Humans are still evolving, and environmental pressures still shape much of that evolution. But Waring and his co-author, evolutionary ecologist Zachary Wood of the University of Maine, have argued that culture has now become the dominant influence on those selection pressures.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GV5m1wNCJRg&t=1s

"Cultural evolution eats genetic evolution for breakfast," Wood said. "It's not even close."

That doesn't necessarily mean culture is producing new genetic adaptations. In many cases, it simply removes pressures that might once have shortened an individual's lifespan.

In ages past, mothers may have died in childbirth in cases where the baby was too large for the birth canal; now, cesarean sections allow such mothers to survive and perhaps even go on to have additional large babies in future.

There are now cures for diseases such as plague, but the pandemic that ravaged 14th-century Europe left a mark still discernible on the genomes of descendants of survivors.

Waring and Wood developed a testable theory proposing that because culture evolves far faster than genes, it could be driving a gradual shift in how human traits are shaped. They then developed quantitative ways to measure how quickly this shift might be unfolding.

Their results suggest that this transition may already be underway, and could even be accelerating.

"Ask yourself this: What matters more for your personal life outcomes, the genes you are born with, or the country where you live?" Waring said.

"Today, your wellbeing is determined less and less by your personal biology and more and more by the cultural systems that surround you – your community, your nation, your technologies. And the importance of culture tends to grow over the long term because culture accumulates adaptive solutions more rapidly."

Some researchers argue that this shift could have deeper consequences. If technology continues to shield humans from natural selection, it may also alter how evolution operates over the long term.

According to a paper published in June 2025, from an international team led by microbiologist Arthur Saniotis of Cihan University-Erbil in Iraq, humans have been so successful at reducing external selection pressures that we may have weakened our own evolutionary trajectory.

He and his colleagues suggest that humanity may need various medical and technological enhancements to offset what they call the "deleterious effects to human phenotypes due to relaxed natural selection."

In other words, by using culture and technology to improve our lives, we may have created a feedback loop in which we must continue using them for survival.

It's a controversial idea, touching on concepts that echo the troubling history of eugenics, and raising difficult questions about how far humans should go in using technology to shape our own biology. However, the solution may not lie in technology at all.

"Cultural organization makes groups more cooperative and effective," Waring explained. "If cultural inheritance continues to dominate, our fates as individuals, and the future of our species, may increasingly hinge on the strength and adaptability of our societies."



The birth of modern Man
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/

Gut Bacteria May Directly Enter The Brain, Study in Mice Reveals

22 March 2026, By D. Nield

(mr.suphachai praserdumrongchai/iStock/Getty Images)

Past studies have found that gut activity can have significant impacts on the brain, and vice versa.

Now, new research in mice explains how some of that communication might occur: through very small numbers of live bacteria traveling from the gut to the brain via the vagus nerve.

Researchers from Emory University in the US used a variety of mouse models designed to trigger 'leaky gut' conditions that might allow bacteria to seep into wider circulation – including mice put on high-fat diets designed to trigger atherosclerosis and genetically engineered to have Alzheimer's and Parkinson's-like diseases.

This kind of gut damage can lead to bacteria seeping out into the bloodstream and causing infection, but here the researchers found a very small amount of bacteria matching the gut microbes in the brain, without being detected in the blood.

The bacteria were found in the brain, whether the gut leakage was prompted by diet or models of disease.

And the blood didn't appear to be the main method of travel: Further tests showed that when blocks were put on the vagus nerve, the major nervous system route from the gut to the brain, the presence of bacteria in the brain was significantly reduced, suggesting this nerve may act as a route.

"This data reveals a bacterial translocation axis from the gut to the brain, impacted by environmental (diet) and genetic factors, and warrants further investigation to determine if this phenomenon also occurs in humans," write the researchers in their published paper.

The idea that bacteria can get into the brain from the gut via the nervous system is not completely new, but this study provides some of the clearest experimental evidence so far in mice.

Traces of bacteria have previously been found in the brains of people who died with Alzheimer's, for example – though that's not the same as seeing the live changes in living animals that the researchers observed here.

When certain gut microbes were transferred to mice, scientists later detected the bacteria in the gut and brain, but nowhere else in the body.


The researchers determined that bacteria were most likely traveling to the brain through the vagus nerve. 
(Thapa et al., PLOS Biol., 2026)



However, there are caveats to be aware of, besides the fact that this was a study of mice and not humans. The number of bacteria that made it to the brains of the mice was extremely low, and it's not clear yet if it would be enough to trigger inflammation or disease.

This is something that future research can look into. Multiple past studies have found connections between gut inflammation and neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's, as well as mood disorders, though causal links remain unclear.

Further down the line, it might even be possible to treat certain brain diseases and mental health issues with drugs aimed at changing the gut microbiome, though a clear cause-and-effect link would need to be established first.

"One of the biggest translational aspects of this study is that it suggests that the development of neurological conditions may be initiated in the gut," says microbiologist David Weiss.

"This may shift the focus of new interventions for brain conditions, with the gut as the new target of the therapy. That potential anatomical shift of the target could have an unbelievable impact on how people with neurological conditions benefit from therapies."

Scientists are currently investigating a host of different methods through which the gut and the brain might be talking to each other, including through the immune system, through the nervous system, and through multiple biochemical reactions. This new study suggests that the connection may be more direct, with bacteria taking a trip from one site to another under specific conditions.

One positive finding from the study is that when mice on a high-fat diet went back to eating normally, the bacteria appeared to drop below detectable levels in the brain – suggesting that whatever damage is done here could also be reversed by fixing the leakiness of the gut.

It's another reminder of how interconnected the different parts of our bodies are, and how health problems in one region can quickly have a detrimental effect on another. For the gut-brain axis, that seems to be especially true.

"This research highlights the need for further study into how dietary shifts have a huge influence on human behavior and neurological health," says immunologist Arash Grakoui.



The Life of Earth
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/

Saturday, 21 March 2026

“Shocking” Carbon Discovery in Sweden’s Forests Stuns Scientists

By Stanford U., March 21, 2026

A new study of Sweden’s old-growth boreal forests suggests these ecosystems may be far more important for climate protection than previously recognized. By examining not just trees but also dead wood, soils, and even harvested timber, researchers uncovered a striking contrast between primary forests and the managed stands replacing them. 
Credit: Shutterstock

Old-growth boreal forests may be hiding much more of their climate value underground than anyone realized.

The planet’s northern forests hold enormous amounts of carbon in spruce, pine, and thick, needle-rich soils. But a major new study led by researchers at Lund University and Stanford University found that industrial logging is rapidly weakening that climate benefit. The largest losses are taking place below ground.

In Sweden, the research team mapped old-growth forests nationwide and measured carbon at more than 200 forest sites over three years. They combined those field measurements with decades of national forest and soil carbon inventory records, along with statistical modeling. The result is a first-of-its-kind estimate of carbon stored in vegetation, dead wood, soil, and harvested timber.

The findings, published March 19 in Science, show a large divide. Undisturbed primary forests store 72% more carbon per acre than the managed forests replacing them, which are often single-species plantations. That comparison includes carbon stored in products made from harvested wood, such as bioenergy, paper, and construction materials. When harvested wood products are left out, primary forests store 83% more carbon per acre.

The gap is 2.7 to 8 times larger than current official estimates. In practical terms, bringing Sweden’s managed forests back to the carbon storage level of primary forests would keep nearly 8 billion tons of carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere. That is about equal to Sweden’s total fossil fuel emissions over the past 200 years and hundreds of times greater than the country’s current annual fossil CO2 emissions.

Boreal forests under threat

The researchers said the biggest surprise was in the soil. “There’s far more carbon in the soil than in the trees in these old-growth boreal forests,” said Rob Jackson, a senior author of the study and professor of Earth system science at the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability. He said old-growth forests do not easily regain the carbon storage capacity they lose after heavy furrow-cutting and logging. “The loss of soil carbon through industrial management is persistent and shocking.”

In lowland primary forests, the team found that the top meter (3.3 feet) of soil held about 64% of the total carbon in an average plot. Live trees accounted for about 30%, while dead wood made up 6%.

Earlier research found that from 2003 to 2019, Sweden lost unprotected old-growth forests to clear-cutting at a rate of 1.4% per year. That is six times the current rate of primary forest loss in the Brazilian Amazon.

Similar losses may be happening across boreal regions worldwide, but they are often harder to detect than tropical deforestation. Satellites can usually tell oil palm plantations apart from primary rainforest. In the north, however, native spruce, pine, and birch dominate both old-growth forests and managed stands, making them look much alike from space.

“Unfortunately, the logging of primary forests in Sweden continues,” said study author Anders Ahlström, who led the work over the past eight years, first as a postdoctoral scholar in Jackson’s lab at Stanford and later as a senior lecturer at Lund University in Sweden. “Our results show that protecting the few primary forests that remain has a much larger potential to slow climate change than previously thought. Restoring sites degraded by industrial forestry could also boost biodiversity and store even more carbon.”

Overlooked value of old-growth forests

Countries around the world are relying on forests to help meet climate goals. Many models used to map paths for stabilizing global temperatures assume northern forests will be used more heavily, especially for bioenergy.

But if managed forests and plantations store less than half as much carbon as the old-growth boreal forests they replace, as this study suggests, those models may overstate the climate value of forest-based biofuels. That concern is especially important if slow-growing boreal forests take centuries to build back those carbon gains. The models may also undervalue forest protection and better forest management.

“Some of the changes we found are intuitive, that the primary forests have larger trees and hold more dead wood. But we weren’t sure what to expect from the soils,” said lead study author Didac Pascual, a postdoctoral scholar at Lund University. “We learned that primary forests stored more carbon in their soil alone than managed forests do in trees, dead wood, and soils combined.”

Understanding what drives carbon storage

Major questions remain, including how much specific forest management practices may contribute to carbon storage capacity. Drainage ditches, plowing, and prescribed burns may all play a role, as could the loss of beneficial fungi in soil that can help trees take up nutrients. The researchers will need those answers before extrapolating the results from Sweden to other boreal regions across Canada, Russia, and Alaska.

Based on the results published in Science, Jackson and Ahlström are now working with Stanford biologist Kabir Peay to understand what drives carbon storage in old-growth forest relics in Sweden and across Scandinavia. One possibility is that old-growth forests harbor a greater variety of microbes in tree roots and soil. The team wants to know whether microbe-driven mechanisms could be transplanted elsewhere.

“Our goal is to understand what makes the fungi and bacteria in these old-growth forests unique,” Peay said. This knowledge could potentially then pave the way for using microbes to speed up the transition of managed forest soils to a state where they lock away more carbon, “without having to wait centuries for old-growth forests to develop naturally.”



The Life of Earth
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/

World's Longest Study on Happiness Still Going Strong After 88 Years

20 March 2026, By C. Cassella

(Wong Yu Liang/Moment/Getty Images)

Finding the secrets to a happy life can literally take a lifetime. After 88 years, the world's longest study on happiness is still going strong.

In 1938, scientists at Harvard University put together a study to compare the lives of two groups of young White men: one, a privileged cohort of Harvard students (including John F. Kennedy, before he was president), and the other, an underprivileged cohort of teenagers from one of Boston's poorest neighborhoods during the Great Depression.

Over the decades, the Harvard Study of Adult Development has added hundreds more participants to its roster, including women and children, and the research is still ongoing.

It is now arguably the longest study of adult life that's ever been conducted. It's taken several generations of scientists and four directors to keep the research going, and it has an extremely low dropout rate that is almost unheard of for a study this long.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8KkKuTCFvzI&t=1s

After eight decades, hundreds of peer-reviewed papers, and countless questionnaires, medical check-ups, and in-person interviews with participants, the team has accumulated important clues about what best predicts health and well-being in late life.

Across the board, the best predictors of a happy and meaningful life were not wealth, fame, hard work, intelligence, or even 'good' genes.

Instead, about 30 years ago, the research team began to find a surprising connection between close relationships and how good our lives feel to us.

The research can't prove that relationships cause happiness or good health, but the patterns are certainly suggestive.

When the researchers gathered all the data they had on their participants at age 50, they found it wasn't physical health, such as cholesterol levels, that best predicted how long someone would live; it was how satisfied they were in their relationships.

Those people most satisfied with their community of friends and family in middle age were the healthiest at age 80, less likely to have diseases, and more likely to recover from illnesses.

"We didn't believe the data at first," recalled psychiatrist Robert Waldinger, the current director of the study, in a TED Talks video from 2023, which has accrued over 1 million views.

"How could this be that relationships actually get into our bodies and shape our health?"


The consistent factor affecting happiness appears to be happy relationships.
 (Junior REIS/Unsplash)

Over and over again, however, it was clear that connection to family, friends, and community tended to lead to longer, happier, and physically healthier lives. Evidence from other studies also began to roll in, suggesting that relationships can keep people physically stronger and their brains sharper as they age.


The experience of loneliness, by contrast, has emerged as a significant risk factor for poor well-being. Some studies now estimate that loneliness and social isolation can increase the risk of premature death by more than 25 percent. Other studies suggest isolation can change the very function and structure of our brains.

Still, surrounding yourself with a huge number of people so that you are never alone isn't the answer, either. It's all about the quality of relationships you foster, Waldinger explains.

In a 2010 peer-reviewed study, Waldinger and clinical psychologist Marc Schulz, associate director of the Harvard Study of Adult Development, explored what their team had found among 47 married couples in their 80s.

Those individuals who were more satisfied in their marriages showed a stronger ability to withstand the negative effects of poor health on their happiness. Conversely, those who were dissatisfied in their marriages were more likely to experience unhappiness due to poor health.

In other words, satisfying relationships may act like protective buffers against the stresses and anxieties of life.

Critics, however, argue that the results of the Harvard Study of Adult Development are oversimplified and apply mainly to a small cohort of mostly White people in the United States during a very specific time in history.

Measuring what makes a 'good' or 'satisfying' relationship is tricky work, and it will be even more challenging to directly tie those feelings and emotions to health outcomes.

In all likelihood, there's no universal secret to health or happiness, but a decades-long study that follows hundreds of people can still provide us with real wisdom.

"The original founders of this study would never have believed that I'd be sitting here today telling you that our scientific work is still going on with these same families," Waldinger said in a 2024 interview.

For its ninth decade of life, the Harvard Study of Adult Development plans to continue "its voyage of discovery," adding new data to its "treasure trove" and enabling "people to live healthier lives filled with meaning, connection, and purpose."

That's something to smile about.


The Life of Earth
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/

Your Gut-Brain Link May Offer a New Way to Fight Cognitive Decline

20 March 2026, By C. Cassella

(inkoly/iStock/Getty Images Plus)

The human body is sometimes said to host 'two' brains – the big one in your skull and the mini version in your gut.

The bridge between the two is known as the gut-brain connection, and in recent years, this two-way street has emerged as a promising avenue to slow cognitive decline that often occurs as we age.

A recent review of 15 human studies, published between 2012 and 2025, has now laid out some of the strongest trials to date on the subject. Even combined, the results are preliminary, but they suggest that rebalancing the gut microbiome may prevent or mitigate cognitive decline in older adults.

The review of clinical trials covers 4,275 adult participants over the age of 45 across Europe, Asia, North America, and the Middle East, who were diagnosed with dementia, cognitive impairment, or conditions that increase the risk of cognitive decline.

Some of these participants underwent gut microbe interventions, either through indirect dietary strategies, like the Mediterranean diet, the ketogenic diet, or omega-3 supplements, or more direct interventions, such as probiotics, prebiotics, or poop transplants.

Comparison groups received a placebo, standard care, or alternative nutritional interventions.

Overall, those who received a gut-modulating intervention showed gut microbes with greater diversity. They also showed greater improvements to memory, executive function, and global cognition. That was particularly true for individuals with early or mild cognitive impairment, but the effects were limited for advanced Alzheimer's disease.

"The reviewed interventions appear to mediate cognitive benefits by modulating the gut microbiota and its metabolic outputs," the review authors conclude, led by researchers in Italy and Spain.

Research suggests microbiota modulation is more effective in early stages than in advanced Alzheimer's disease. 
(Libriani et al., Nutrition Research, 2026)

The findings are promising, but longer-term randomized controlled trials are needed to determine, with greater certainty, what is happening with each intervention and why.

Fecal matter transplants are cutting-edge, largely experimental procedures, but in the review, they showed some of the most striking outcomes.

In one reviewed study, five patients with Alzheimer's who received a single transplant later showed a greater richness of gut microbes in stool samples. These five participants also showed improvements on two cognitive tests that assess memory, attention, language, and problem-solving.

"Compared with dietary or probiotic interventions, FMT appears to induce more rapid and pronounced microbial shifts, though long-term stability and safety remain uncertain," explain the review authors.

Dietary changes and nutritional supplements, by comparison, come with fewer risks, and while they may take longer to take effect, they could still be useful.

Some recent twin studies, for instance, have found that certain plant-fiber prebiotics, which promote 'good bacteria' in the gut, can boost brain function in older adults.

Other studies suggest that probiotics, which directly deliver 'good bacteria' to the gut, may help with mood disorders or stress, but rigorous clinical research remains limited.

In the current review, several small randomized trials supported the idea that probiotic and other 'synbiotic' interventions "improve executive function, memory, and verbal fluency, alongside increased microbial diversity and altered neurotransmitter pathways."

What's more, older adults on a Mediterranean diet incorporating olive oil or mixed nuts showed significantly better cognition scores compared to low-fat controls.

Why certain interventions improved the gut microbiome and brain function more than others is beyond the scope of this review, but the authors have outlined several hypotheses.

It's thought that some compounds produced by gut microbes, such as short-chain fatty acids, may have anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective effects.

Boosting beneficial gut bacteria may also help restore 'leakiness' in the intestinal barrier, which otherwise allows microbes to exit the gut, triggering inflammation as they go.

Or maybe gut microbes are affecting the immune system or sleep, two other areas closely tied to dementia.

The research is limited, but what is becoming clear is that hidden rhythms in the gut can impact the brain, and rhythms in the brain can impact the gut. Some scientists now argue that this bidirectional communication is so strong that it should be considered a distinct sense, the sixth in our species' arsenal.

Knowing more about this hidden sense would open the door to treating not just dementia, but a plethora of other health conditions.



The Life of Earth
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/

Friday, 20 March 2026

Can Fungi Control the Weather? Scientists Say It’s Possible

By Virginia Tech, March 20, 2026

These are both liquid and frozen water droplets. They are at the same temperature, but the frozen droplets contain an ice nucleator.
 Credit: Boris Vinatzer

Fungi may hold a little-known key to ice formation in clouds.

Can fungi affect the weather? It may sound unlikely, but new research suggests they just might.

An international team of researchers, including Virginia Tech scientists Xiaofeng Wang and Boris A. Vinatzer, has identified fungal proteins that can trigger ice formation at relatively warm subzero temperatures. Their findings were published in Science Advances.

This discovery could open the door to new ways of influencing the weather.

Cloud seeding works by releasing particles known as ice nucleators into clouds. These particles cause water droplets to freeze into ice crystals. As more water attaches, the crystals grow larger and heavier. Eventually, they fall, melt as they pass through warmer air, and reach the ground as rain.

Silver iodide is the most commonly used ice-nucleating material, but it is highly toxic. The researchers suggest that fungal proteins could provide a safer alternative.

“If we learn how to cheaply produce enough of this fungal protein, then we could put that into clouds and make cloud seeding much safer,” said Vinatzer, professor in the School of Plant and Environmental Sciences.

An unusual evolutionary origin

The team also found evidence that the gene responsible for this ice nucleation protein likely came from bacteria. According to their analysis, a fungal ancestor acquired the gene through horizontal gene transfer at least hundreds of thousands, and possibly millions, of years ago.

“It is known that fungi can acquire genes from bacteria, but it’s not something that is common,” said Vinatzer, an affiliate with the Translational Plant Sciences Center. “So I never expected that this fungal gene had a bacterial origin.”


The Virginia Tech researchers who contributed to this research are (top row, from left) Kassaye Belay, Haijie Liu, and Mariah Rojas and (bottom row, from left) Parkesh Suseendran, Boris Vinatzer, and Xiaofeng Wang. 
Credit: Virginia Tech



Scientists have known since the early 1990s that fungi can trigger ice formation. However, only recent advances in DNA sequencing and computational analysis have allowed researchers to examine the genomes of fungi in the Mortierellaceae family and identify the specific gene responsible.

Although the exact benefit of this gene for fungi remains unclear, researchers have found that it has been refined over time, making it more effective.

That improvement may also increase its value for practical uses.

Why fungal proteins may be especially useful

Fungal ice nucleating proteins differ from bacterial ones because they are cell-free and water-soluble. These properties make them especially promising for applications in freezing technologies and weather modification.

In frozen food production, for example, fungal proteins could offer a safer option. The fungus naturally releases the ice nucleating molecule, while bacterial approaches require the use of entire cells.

“That’s a big advantage in food production because you have just this one well-defined protein and you can get rid of everything else,” said Vinatzer, who is also affiliated with the Fralin Life Sciences Center. “There is the possibility to develop a safe, effective additive that helps in the preparation of frozen food.”

Fungal ice nucleation may also improve cryopreservation methods for biological materials such as tissues, sperm, eggs, and embryos.

“Adding a fungal ice nucleator, which is a relatively small molecule, makes the water around the cell freeze much earlier before it gets very cold, to protect the delicate cell inside,” Vinatzer said. “You couldn’t do that with the bacteria because you would have to add entire bacterial cells.”

Implications for climate science

Ice formation in clouds also plays a key role in climate modeling. These models estimate how much radiation clouds reflect back into space and how much reaches Earth. The presence of ice allows more radiation to pass through the clouds to the surface.

“Now that we know this fungal molecule, it will become easier to find out how much of these kinds of molecules are in clouds,” Vinatzer said. “And in the long run, this research could contribute to developing better climate models.”

This study was funded by the National Science Foundation and the Department of Defense, and supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research.


The Life of Earth
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/

The Strange History of Ginkgo Biloba: The Evolutionary Orphan

Plantrums
Premiered on 13 Mar 2026
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IEjxj8YxyHk

Imagine a tree that outlasted the dinosaurs, survived the ice age, and even bloomed after an atomic blast. 

The Ginkgo biloba is a true living fossil, an evolutionary outlier that has remained virtually unchanged for over 200 million years. In this episode, we'll explore the incredible journey of the world’s most resilient tree. We dive deep into the ancient origins of the Ginkgo, tracing its roots back to the Permian period and its miraculous survival through the Great Dying. 

You will learn how this tree moved from the sacred temple courtyards of China to become a staple of modern urban design. We also uncover the science behind its massive genome and the unique chemical compounds that make it a powerhouse of both traditional medicine and modern supplements. From the accidental typo that gave the tree its name to the six trees that survived the Hiroshima bombing, the Ginkgo's story is one of endurance against all odds. 

We also tackle the less glamorous side of the tree, including why the female seeds smell like rancid butter and the potential dangers of unregulated supplements. 

Discover why scientists believe these trees are biologically designed to live forever and how they became a symbol of immortality in cultures across the globe.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IEjxj8YxyHk



The Life of Earth
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/


First Day of Spring 2026: The Spring Equinox

Friday, March 20, 2026
Written By: C. Boeckmann, Executive Digital Editor and Master Gardener



When does Spring start?

Welcome, vernal equinox! Are you excited about the start of spring? Learn how daylight grows longer, flowers begin to bloom, and nature awakens from its winter slumber. Embrace the season of renewal and fresh beginnings!

When Is the First Day of Spring 2026?

In 2026, the equinox happens on March 20 at 10:46 A.M. EDT. 
This falls on a Friday and is the astronomical beginning of the spring season in the Northern Hemisphere and the autumn season in the Southern Hemisphere.

If you thought that the spring equinox only ever occurred on March 21, you may be dating yourself. The civil calendar date of the equinox continues to shift every year. 

Spring Equinox Dates and Times, Year Spring Equinox (Northern Hemisphere) Spring Equinox (Southern Hemisphere)

2026 Friday, March 20, at 10:46 A.M. EDT Tuesday, September 22
2027 Saturday, March 20, at 4:23 P.M. EDT Thursday, September 23
2028 Sunday, March 19, at 10:17 P.M. EDT Friday, September 22
2029 Tuesday, March 20, at 4:02 A.M. EDT Saturday, September 22

What Is the Spring Equinox?

In the Northern Hemisphere, the spring equinox (also called the March equinox or vernal equinox across the globe) occurs when the Sun crosses the celestial equator going south to north. It’s called the celestial equator because it’s an imaginary line in the sky above Earth’s equator. Imagine standing on the equator; the Sun would pass directly overhead on its way north.

On the March equinox, the Northern Hemisphere and Southern Hemisphere receive roughly equal amounts of sunlight; neither hemisphere is tilted more toward or away from the Sun than the other.

Although in most locations (the North Pole and the equator being exceptions), the amount of daylight had been increasing each day after the winter solstice, and after the spring equinox, many places will experience more daylight than darkness in each 24-hour day. The amount of daylight each day will continue to increase until the summer solstice (in June), when the longest period of daylight occurs.

Here’s an interesting fact: Equinoxes are the only two times of year when the Sun rises due east and sets due west for all of us on Earth! While the Sun passes overhead, the tilt of Earth is zero relative to the Sun, which means that Earth’s axis neither points toward nor away from the Sun. (Note, however, that Earth never orbits upright but is always tilted on its axis by about 23.5 degrees.)

What Does Equinox Mean?

The word equinox comes from the Latin words for equal night—aequus (equal) and nox (night). On the equinox, the length of day and night is nearly equal in all parts of the world. 


Frequently Asked Questions

Does Spring Begin on March 1 or on the Equinox?

Well, both. The answer depends on your definition of spring. Both dates are accurate; they’re just from different perspectives.

Astronomically speaking, the first day of spring is marked by the spring equinox, which falls on March 19, 20, or 21. The equinox happens at the exact moment worldwide, although our clock times reflect a different time zone. And, as mentioned above, this date only signals spring’s beginning in the Northern Hemisphere; it announces Fall’s arrival in the Southern Hemisphere.

Interestingly, due to time zone differences, there hasn’t been a March 21 equinox in mainland United States during the entire 21st century! We won’t see a March 21 equinox again until 2101.

Meteorologically speaking, the official first day of spring is March 1 (and the last is May 31). Weather scientists divide the year into quarters to make it easier to compare seasonal and monthly statistics from one year to the next. The meteorological seasons are based on annual temperature cycles rather than on the position of Earth in relation to the Sun. Meteorological seasons more closely follow the Gregorian calendar since using the dates of the astronomical equinoxes and solstices for the seasons would present a statistical problem as these dates can vary slightly each year.


Are Day and Night Equal on the Equinox?

Quite close! In reality, day and night are not exactly equal on the equinox. Daytime begins the moment any part of the Sun appears over the horizon and is not finished until the last part of the Sun disappears below the horizon. If the Sun were to shrink to a starlike point—and we lived in a world without air—the spring and fall equinoxes would truly have equal nights.

According to folklore, you can stand a raw egg on its end on the Equinox. Is this true?

This egg folklore became popular in 1945 following a LIFE article about the spring practice. “The origins of this myth are attributed to stories that the ancient Chinese would create displays of eggs standing on end during the first day of spring,” according to John Millis, assistant professor of physics and astronomy at Anderson University in South Carolina. “The ancient Chinese celebrated the first day of spring about six weeks earlier than the equinox”—not just on the equinox itself.

As with most folklore, it’s only partly true. You should be able to balance an egg on its end on the equinox, but it’s possible to balance an egg on other days, too!

Folklore or not, this egg trick sounded like fun to us. One spring, a few minutes before the vernal equinox, several Almanac editors tried this trick. For a full workday, 17 out of 24 eggs stood on end. Three days later, we tried this trick again and found similar results. Perhaps 3 days after the equinox was still too near. Perhaps the equinox has nothing to do with it. Perhaps we just don’t like to take ourselves too seriously!

Try this yourself and let us know what happens. (Tip: You’ll probably have better luck balancing an egg if you try it on a rough surface—or use an egg that has a bumpy end.)



Which day has the most Sunlight in North America?



The summeror June solstice is called the longest day of the year! The date of the longest day actually varies from June 20 to June 22, depending on the year and the local time zone. By longest day, we mean the day with the most daylight (versus darkness). 

See our Summer Solstice page.



Some Ideas on How to Celebrate Spring!

The vernal equinox signals new beginnings and nature’s renewal in the Northern Hemisphere! Many cultures celebrate spring festivals, such as Easter and Passover.

Get outside! Look around. Are worms and grubs reappearing? (The March Full Moon is called the “Worm Moon” for this very reason!)

Watch the arc of the Sun across the sky as it shifts toward the north. Birds are migrating northward, along with the path of the Sun.

Are you noticing that the days are getting longer? Did you know that the increasing sunlight inspires birds to sing? Cool, eh? Enjoy our Bird Songs page.

Are daffodils poking up their heads? Trees, shrubs, and flowers are sensitive to temperature and day length, too! Since ancient days, people have used natural events as indicators of when the weather is right for planting. For example: Blooming crocus are your cue to plant radishes, parsnips, and spinach. 

Can you feel the Sun getting stronger? The longer days bring high temperatures. Both we and the animals around us discard our warm clothes and heavy coats!

Do you plan to garden? The first day of spring is a traditional day to start in the garden! There’s nothing more restorative! See which days are the best planting dates according to your local frost dates or consult our Vegetable Gardening for Beginners guide to get started!

Are you craving fresh foods after a long winter? A Spring Tonic, using the early greens of spring, may be just the thing you need! Also, find some new spring recipes using what’s fresh and seasonal!

Ancient Equinox Traditions: The Snake of Sunlight

Scientific explanation aside, our ancestors were more connected to the Sun than we are today. They observed its pathway across the sky, and they tracked how the sunrise, sunset, and day length changed, using the Sun (and Moon) as a clock and calendar.

There are many ancient sites that mark the equinoxes (and solstices). One of the most famous ancient Spring equinox celebrations took place at Chichen Itza in Mexico. The Mayans built a huge pyramid around the year A.D. 1000. Even today, the way the Sun’s light falls on it signals the beginning of the seasons. On the spring equinox, it looks like a huge snake is slithering down the steps. Mayans called this day “the return of the Sun serpent.”

Spring Verse, Quotes, and Sayings

VerseFor glad Spring has begun,
And to the ardent sun
The earth, long time so bleak,
Turns a frost-bitten cheek.
- Celia Thaxter, American poet (1835–94)

Spring-time sweet!
The whole Earth smiles, thy coming to greet.
- Unknown

Never yet was a springtime,
Late though lingered the snow,
That the sap stirred not at the whisper
Of the southwind, sweet and low.
- Margaret Elizabeth Sangster, American writer (1838–1912)

QuotesSpring is nature’s way of saying, “Let’s party!”
- Robin Williams (1951–2014)

SayingsBluebirds are a sign of spring; warm weather and gentle south breezes they bring.
One swallow does not make a spring.
In spring, no one thinks of the snow that fell last year.

When the dandelions bloom early in spring, there will be a short season. When they bloom late, expect a dry summer.

Don’t say that spring has come until you can put your foot on nine daisies.





The Life of Earth
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/


Thursday, 19 March 2026

Chuck's picture corner from the last week or so March 19, 2026

It's been a wild week of temperature swings, snow and rain.

I turned the christmas cactus around a couple of weeks ago and it decided to bloom again for me.

As soon as I heard the call I went looking, the robin seemed to be finding lots of food.

I got home from the mountains to find no heat and the basement flooded. Once the water level went down a few inches the furnace started working again.

Leaving the mountains yesterday.

March 17, 2026 and it's snowing big time.

I guess it's the beginning of maple syrup season.

our view out the dining room.

turned cold after a warmer day and of course it snowed (about March 15)

The results of a warmer day.

heading west

after a night of freezing rain



last week before leaving home I noticed the silver maple out front starting to bud out.

the lawn is beginning to appear

the morning sun is moving north a little more each morning

the beginning of this summer's garden

The ginkgo has decided it's spring.


Enjoy the day
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/

Something Else Used to Drive Climate Changes, Ancient Ice Cores Reveal

19 March 2026, By J. Cockerill

A windy day at Allan Hills in December 2022.
 (Peter Neff/COLDEX)

The rapid climate change we are experiencing today is mainly driven by the greenhouse gases we humans keep releasing into the air.

But new evidence from ancient Antarctic ice cores suggests this wasn't always the case for the past three million years of Earth's changing climate.

According to the findings of two new papers published in Nature, at certain transition points ocean temperatures could have had a greater influence over Earth's climate than greenhouse gases.

Two research teams analyzed ice cores extracted from the Allan Hills, a blue ice region of Antarctica. The Allan Hills cores are samples of some of the world's oldest ice, with some dating as far back as 6 million years ago.


A drilled core at the Allan Hills during the 2024-2025 field season. 
(Jenna Epifanio/COLDEX)



Blue ice areas like the Allan Hills make up only about 1 percent of the surface area of Antarctica's ice sheet, and they're named as such because strong winds blow away any new snow, keeping older, glacial ice exposed at the surface.

The Allan Hills region hasn't moved horizontally or vertically very much at all, making it a particularly unique site for taking cores of very, very old ice.

Ice cores are some of our best natural 'archives' of Earth's long-term climate.

They don't necessarily contain a complete, continuous record. The Allan Hills cores, for example, contain layers that are out of chronological order thanks to the way the ice was deposited across the millennia.

But each layer of ice contains a climate snapshot that can tell us a lot about what was going on at the time of freezing, and there are ways of decoding their secrets.

Certain isotopes in the ice hint at ocean temperature. Impurities like volcanic ash and other particles can indicate sources of air pollution.

And, perhaps most importantly to climate scientists, the ice can trap tiny bubbles of the air, revealing the historic gas composition of the atmosphere across millions of years.


A cut section of very old ice from Allan Hills, at the NSF Ice Core Facility in Denver, Colorado. 
(Peter Neff/COLDEX)



Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute paleoclimatologist Sarah Shackleton led an international team of researchers in the study focused on global ocean temperatures across the past 3 million years.

Dissolved xenon and krypton, two noble gases that dissolve in seawater at different temperatures, provided them with a way of estimating the ocean's heat.

These proxy measurements suggest the ocean cooled drastically around 2.7 million years ago, roughly matching up with the Plio-Pleistocene Transition, when the Earth gradually shifted from a warmer to cooler climate that led to glacier formation across large parts of the Northern Hemisphere.

The ice core data also suggests that average ocean temperatures stayed relatively stable across the Mid-Pleistocene Transition, another shift in glacial cycles that occurred between 1.2 and 0.8 million years ago.


Ice core drilling at Allan Hills in 2019. 
(Austin Carter/COLDEX)



Meanwhile, from the same ice cores, a team led by Oregon State University geochemist Julia Marks-Peterson found atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide and methane were "broadly stable" across the past 3 million years.

"Although paleoclimate archives from Antarctic blue ice areas are complex, our records show that measurements of greenhouse gases in ice cores can be extended to the late Pliocene epoch, providing snapshots of Earth's climate system over a time of global cooling and falling sea level," Marks-Peterson and team write.

As Cambridge climatologist Eric Wolff writes in an accompanying commentary article, this suggests that either ice-sheet growth and survival was "exquisitely sensitive" to minuscule changes in carbon dioxide – or past changes in Earth's climate may have been driven by something else.

The work of Shackleton and colleagues could provide further clues to the puzzle. They found an apparent decoupling of changes in sea surface and mean ocean temperatures.

Understanding the way Earth's climate worked before we started meddling with it at a large scale is important if we want to figure out how to re-stabilize this planet we call home.

But there are limitations to interpreting these ice cores, as Shackleton recently explained in a Science Sessions podcast.

"These records are still quite new, and they're more complicated to interpret than the continuous ice cores that we're used to working with," she said.

"So, with how highly compressed the ice is, especially the oldest ice, we're also probably averaging over glacial and interglacial cycles, so we're currently unable to study how the climate evolved across glacial and interglacial periods.

"Exactly what these records capture in terms of exactly how smooth or exactly how much we're averaging over a glacial versus interglacial conditions is still an outstanding question."



The Life of Earth
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/