Sunday, 15 February 2026

Chuck's photo corner to Feb. 15, 2025

The cold weather has finally broken, they are calling for +3c (high) temps for tomorrow and possibly some rain,+5c on Tuesday. Then it drops below freezing till March.

Taken with my front door security cam.

out the office window this morning

plants finally getting some sunshine

after years I have finally put a covering over this small wall

Well it was sparkly to look at, lol

another short day done

water in transition

morning sky

The latest snow fall cleared about 5"



Rachelle bought me a rosemary, there are 5 in the pot, I'll separate them out.

Mat went up on the roof and lited the load, lol








Enjoy




10,000-Year-Old Symbols And Art Found in Egyptian Rock Formation

14 Feb. 2026, By AFP

New archaeological site in Egypt. 
(Egypt Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities)


Archaeologists have discovered a 10,000-year-old site with rock art in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, the country's Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities said Thursday.

The previously unknown site located at the Umm Irak Plateau has a 100-metre-long rock formation whose diverse carvings trace the evolution of human artistic expression from prehistoric times to the Islamic era.


The Supreme Council of Antiquities "has uncovered one of the most important new archeological sites, of exceptional historical and artistic value", the ministry said in a statement.


Rock art "of exceptional historical and artistic value."
 (Egypt's Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities)



Its chronological diversity makes it "an open-air natural museum", according to council secretary general Hisham El-Leithy.

The natural rock shelter's ceiling features numerous drawings in red pigment of animals and symbols, as well as inscriptions in Arabic and the Nabataean language.

Some engravings "reflect the lifestyles and economic activities of early human communities", the ministry said.

Inside, animal droppings, stone partitions, and hearth remains confirm that the shelter was used as a refuge for a long time.


Animal depictions at Egypt's new archaeological site. 
(Egypt's Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities)

These "provide further evidence of the succession of civilisations that have inhabited this important part of Egypt over the millennia", Tourism and Antiquities Minister Sherif Fathi said.

He described the discovery as a "significant addition to the map of Egyptian antiquities".

The site is located in the south of the Sinai Peninsula, where Cairo is undertaking a vast megaproject aimed at drawing mass tourism to the mountain town of Saint Catherine, a UNESCO World Heritage site and home to Bedouin who fear for their ancestral land.


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

Scientists Find a Global ‘Language’ Hidden in Bird Calls

BY CORNELL U., FEB. 14, 2026

Birds worldwide share a nearly identical warning cry to fend off nest parasites, despite being separated by millions of years. The discovery reveals how instinct and learning can merge, offering new clues to the evolutionary roots of language. 
Credit: Shutterstock

Birds across the planet share a learned warning cry that may echo the origins of language itself.

Bird species that live thousands of miles apart and diverged millions of years ago are using strikingly similar alarm calls to warn of parasitic threats near their nests, according to an international team of scientists.

The researchers found that this vocal signal is learned, yet it grows out of an instinctive reaction that appears across multiple species. It is the first documented case of an animal sound that blends an inborn response with learned use in this way.

The study, published in Nature Ecology and Evolution, sheds light on how natural selection can shape the evolution of communication. Led by researchers from Cornell University and the Doñana Biological Station in Seville, Spain, the project is among the most extensive investigations of brood parasites conducted so far.

Brood Parasitism and Nest Defense

Brood parasitism happens when birds such as cuckoos deposit their eggs in the nests of other species. The host birds then raise the intruder’s chicks, often at the expense of their own young. Because of this high cost, host species benefit from recognizing parasites quickly and preventing them from laying eggs in the first place.

The team discovered that more than 20 bird species across four continents produce almost identical “whining” calls when they detect a parasitic bird nearby.

A Global Signal With No Direct Contact

What puzzled the researchers was that birds in distant regions, including Australia, China, and Zambia, all rely on the same type of call, even though these populations have never encountered one another.

When a bird hears this alarm, it instinctively approaches to investigate. During that moment, the bird begins associating the sound with what it sees and experiences around it, a process Damián Blasi, co-author of the study and a language scientist at Pompeu Fabra University in Spain, describes as social transmission.

“It’s then, when birds are absorbing the clues around them, that the bird learns when to produce the sound in the future,” said James Kennerley, co-lead author and postdoctoral fellow at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology.

Between Instinct and Learned Language

According to William Feeney, an evolutionary ecologist at the Doñana Biological Station and co lead of the research, the whining call sits between pure instinct and complex learned speech. “The fascinating thing about this call is that it represents a midpoint between the instinctive vocalizations we often see in animals and fully learned vocal units like human words,” he said.

The study also found that species using this call tend to inhabit regions where interactions between parasites and hosts are especially intricate.

“With birds working together to drive parasites away, communicating how and when to cooperate is really important, so this call is popping up in parts of the world where species are most affected by brood parasitism,” Kennerley said. He added that the spread of this vocal signal is influencing patterns of cooperation among birds worldwide.

Clues to the Origins of Language

What makes the discovery especially notable is the connection between an innate sound and a learned response. “For the first time, we’ve documented a vocalization that has both learned and innate components, potentially showing how learned signals may have evolved from innate calls in a way first suggested by Charles Darwin,” Feeney said. “It’s like seeing how evolution can enable species to give learned meanings to sounds.”

These results challenge the long-standing view that animal communication and human language are sharply divided. The researchers suggest that sophisticated systems such as human language may have developed gradually, emerging from the combination of instinctive calls and learned meaning over evolutionary time.



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

Saturday, 14 February 2026

Did modern humans wipe out the Neanderthals? New evidence may finally provide answers.

By K. Killgrove published Feb. 14 2026

A reconstruction of a late Neanderthal from El Salt, southeastern Spain. Some of the last Neanderthals may have lived in the Iberian peninsula. Our closest human relatives may have died out thanks to a combination of factors, including isolation, inbreeding and competition from modern humans, emerging research suggests.
 (Image credit: Fabio Fogliazza)

A complex picture of how Neanderthals died out, and the role that modern humans played in their disappearance, is emerging.

About 37,000 years ago, Neanderthals clustered in small groups in what is now southern Spain. Their lives may have been transformed by the eruption of the Phlegraean Fields in Italy a few thousand years earlier, when the caldera's massive explosion disrupted food chains across the Mediterranean region.

They may have gone about their daily life: Crafting stone tools, eating birds and mushrooms, engraving symbols on rocks, and creating jewelry out of feathers and shells.

They likely never realized they were among the last of their kind.

But the story of their extinction actually begins tens of thousands of years earlier, when the Neanderthals became isolated and dispersed, eventually ending nearly half a million years of successful existence in some of the most forbidding regions of Eurasia.

By 34,000 years ago, our closest relatives had effectively gone extinct. But because modern humans and Neanderthals overlapped in time and space for thousands of years, archaeologists have long wondered whether our species wiped out our closest relatives. This may have occurred directly, such as through violence and warfare, or indirectly, through disease or competition for resources.

Now, researchers are solving the mystery of how the Neanderthals died out — and what role our species played in their demise.


A reconstruction of a Neanderthal burial unearthed in the early 20th century in Chapelle-aux-Saints, France. The skeleton found there, which had a deformed spine, inspired an early depiction of Neanderthals as "knuckle-dragging brutes."
 (Image credit: DEA / A. DAGLI ORTI/De Agostini via Getty Images)



"I think the fact is, we do know what happened to Neanderthals, and it is complex," Shara Bailey, a biological anthropologist at New York University, told Live Science.

Decades of research has revealed a complex picture: A perfect storm of factors — including competition among Neanderthal groups, inbreeding and, yes, modern humans — helped erase our closest relatives from the planet.

The rise and demise of our closest human relatives

The modern story of Neanderthals began in 1856, when quarry workers found a strange-looking, not-quite-human skull in Germany's Neander Valley.

Archaeologists gave the skull a new species name: Homo neanderthalensis. And in the early decades after the discovery, researchers assumed the creatures were knuckle-dragging brutes. This depiction was based on a flawed reconstruction of a skeleton of an old Neanderthal man, whose spine was deformed by arthritis, found at La Chapelle-aux-Saints in France.

Now, more than 150 years of archaeological and genetic evidence makes it clear that these early human relatives were much more advanced than we originally thought. Neanderthals crafted sophisticated tools, may have made art, decorated their bodies, buried their dead, and had advanced communication abilities, albeit a more primitive kind of language than modern humans used. What's more, they survived for hundreds of thousands of years in the hostile climates of Northern Europe and Siberia.

Before they met in Eurasia, Neanderthals and modern humans last shared an ancestor in the Middle Pleistocene epoch, between 600,000 and 800,000 years ago. Modern humans and Neanderthals evolved separately; Neanderthals adapted to cold climates with sturdier bodies, larger faces and different metabolic processes than the taller, thinner Homo sapiens. Neanderthals evolved in Eurasia about 400,000 years ago, and H. sapiens arrived significantly later, evolving in Africa 300,000 years ago and settling in Europe between about 55,000 and 45,000 years ago.

Based on archaeological evidence from sites from Russia to the Iberian Peninsula, Neanderthals and modern humans likely overlapped for at least 2,600 years — and perhaps as long as 7,000 years — in Europe. That overlap occurred during a bleak period in Neanderthal history that ended with their downfall — raising the question of whether modern humans were responsible for killing them off.

But the story of Neanderthal life — and extinction — is one of regional variation, said Tom Higham, an archaeological scientist at the University of Vienna.

"In some areas, for example, we see that humans arrive to empty spaces in Europe where there aren't any Neanderthals anymore, seemingly," Higham told Live Science. "And in other places, we see that there's probably an overlap that happens … we know that people are interbreeding."

The first empirical proof of that interbreeding was found in 2010, when a Neanderthal genome was sequenced. Since then, genetic analysis has shown that Neanderthals and modern humans shared much more than a geographic area — we regularly exchanged DNA back and forth, meaning there is a bit of Neanderthal in every modern human population studied to date.

Already on the brink

When modern humans and Neanderthals met tens of thousands of years ago, the latter were probably already in trouble. Genetic studies suggest that Neanderthals had lower genetic diversity and smaller group sizes than modern humans, hinting at a potential reason for Neanderthals' demise.

"Genetically, one big clue that we get is this idea of heterozygosity," Omer Gokcumen, an evolutionary genomicist at the University at Buffalo, told Live Science. An individual receives two copies, or alleles, of a gene from each parent. Individuals are "heterozygous" for a given gene if they inherit a different allele from each parent. In Neanderthals' small communities, which contained fewer than 20 adults in each group, more inbreeding occurred. That meant fewer of them inherited different versions of a gene from each parent and, therefore, had low heterozygosity.

"Neanderthals may have suffered for that — what they call a mutational burden," Gokcumen said. Genetic research suggests Neanderthals had many problematic mutations that likely affected their survival, including a rare blood type. "Because of their small population size, they couldn't actually breed these bad alleles out, and their kids may actually be sickly at the end," Gokcumen said.

Any population of animals survives into the future through successful reproduction and rearing of offspring. Researchers estimating the mortality rates of Neanderthal infants have found that a decrease of even 1.5% in the survivorship of these children could result in population extinction within 2,000 years, April Nowell, a Paleolithic archaeologist at the University of Victoria in British Columbia, told Live Science.



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

Valentine's Day: Exchanging Saliva May Help You Fall in Love

14 Feb. 2026, By C. CASSELLA

(Michael Blann/Getty Images)

Kissing a romantic partner is a nice way to share an intimate moment – not to mention a hearty dose of saliva and tens of millions of oral microbes.

Swapping spit is not the most appealing thought to spice up our Valentine's Day this year, but microbiologist Remco Kort from VU Amsterdam in the Netherlands hasn't caught the ick; he's caught the kissing bug.

He thinks that sharing our saliva and its various components may have more to do with falling in love than we ever knew, and he's laid out a whole host of questions he wants answered in a new paper.

What happens when humans swallow their partners' microbes after kissing them? Can they impact our gut? Our hormones? Our brain? Can exchanging saliva affect our very feelings of love?

Kort certainly thinks that's a possibility. In his "hypothesis-driven discussion," he frames human saliva as a potential "influencer and reflection of intimacy" that taps into a positive feedback loop – one where love and affection improve health, and health in turn nurtures love and affection.

"Unlike other forms of physical contact, deep kissing involves saliva mixing and direct tongue-to-tongue contact, effectively inoculating partners with each other's oral microbes," Kort writes.

Like an oral vaccine, that inoculation of germs may come with surprising health benefits.


A previous study led by Kort found that up to 80 million bacteria can be transferred during a 10-second kiss. 
(Tim Flach/Getty Images)



After the gut, the oral cavity is home to the body's second most diverse bacterial community, and recent studies indicate that the microbial makeup of the mouth has widespread effects on inflammation and distant organs such as the brain and the heart.

What's more, emerging evidence, including past experiments by Kort, have found that kissing between two romantic partners leads to the transfer of millions of oral microbes. With time and frequency, this leads to oral bacterial communities that look more alike.

"In turn, microbial similarity and associated sensory cues – such as taste, scent, and emotional bonding – can reinforce the desire for continued intimacy, perpetuating the cycle of kissing and microbial exchange," suggests Kort.

Besides billions of microbes, saliva also contains hormones like cortisol and adrenaline, which could impact the other person. The mouth is even home to bacteria that can sense and respond to key neural messengers like oxytocin, dopamine, and endorphins, all of which surge in the body during intimate kissing.

"These physiological changes may indirectly promote a favorable oral environment," speculates Kort.

In the past, some evolutionary biologists have also speculated that passionate kissing is advantageous because it shares key immune information via oral microbes. This may help partners build immunity to each other's germs, and to pathogens they may not have encountered before, explains Kort.

While that exchange has benefits, it could also spread disease, which is probably why open-mouthed kissing is typically reserved for trusted romantic partners.

For now, these ideas are hypothetical, though Kort has proposed a study design to test some of them.

Beware the couples that volunteer to participate: You may learn more about your saliva and your partner than you ever wanted to know.



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

Why Most of Us Go It Alone When Making Big Decisions

BY U. OF WATERLOO, FEB. 13, 2026

A sweeping international study of more than 3,500 people across 12 countries has revealed a striking pattern in how humans make tough decisions: most of us prefer to rely on our own judgment rather than seek advice.
 Credit: Shutterstock

No matter where we live, most of us look inward first when making big decisions.

A large international study spanning 12 countries has found that when people face complicated choices, they are more likely to rely on their own thinking than to ask others for advice.

The research was led by scientists at the University of Waterloo and included more than 3,500 participants. Respondents ranged from residents of major cities to members of small Indigenous communities in the Amazon rainforest. According to the team, this project represents the most extensive cross-cultural examination of decision-making styles so far.

Self-Reliance Across Cultures

The findings suggest that even in societies that emphasize close social ties and interdependence, most individuals still prefer to make up their own minds, regardless of outside opinions. Recognizing this shared tendency may help reduce misunderstandings between cultures and highlight the fact that people everywhere wrestle with similar internal questions before deciding.

“Realizing that most of us instinctively ‘go it alone’ helps explain why we often ignore good counsel, be it for health tips or financial planning, despite mounting evidence that such counsel may help us make wiser decisions,” said Dr. Igor Grossmann, professor in the Department of Psychology at Waterloo and first author on the paper. “This knowledge can help us design teamwork better by working with this self-reliant tendency and letting employees reason privately before sharing advice that they might reject.”

Challenging Assumptions About Independence

The results challenge the long-standing idea that people in Western cultures tend to decide independently while those in other parts of the world depend more heavily on others. Across every country included in the study, participants favored intuition and personal reflection over input from friends or crowds. However, the strength of that preference differed based on how much a culture values independence compared with interdependence.

“Our take-home message is that we all look inward first, yet the wisest moves may happen when solo reflections are shared with others,” Grossmann said. “What culture does is controls the volume knob, dialing up that inner voice in highly independent societies and softening it somewhat in more interdependent ones.”



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

Friday, 13 February 2026

The Secret to Youthful Skin May Be Hidden in a Microscopic Structure We Share With Pigs

BY WASHINGTON STATE U., FEB. 12, 2026

Researchers have discovered that tiny microscopic structures once believed to form before birth actually develop shortly afterward, and that a specific molecular signal drives the process. The finding opens intriguing possibilities for restoring youthful skin, improving wound healing, and even rethinking which animal models best represent human biology. 
Credit: Shutterstock

A newly uncovered feature of skin development is reshaping how scientists think about aging and repair.

A surprisingly small detail in the skin may play an outsized role in how young skin looks and how well it repairs scars. Researchers say the clue is a microscopic structure found in humans, pigs, and grizzly bears, but not in monkeys.

The structures are tiny waves at the boundary where the outer and inner layers of skin meet. They are called rete ridges, and for years scientists assumed they were built before birth during fetal development. A team at Washington State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine has now shown that these ridges appear shortly after birth instead. The researchers also pinpointed a key molecular signal that switches on the program that builds them.

Reported in Nature, the work points toward future treatments that could slow skin aging and improve wound healing and scar repair by restoring the architecture that younger skin naturally has.

“These structures degrade as we age; now we know how they form and have a blueprint to guide future work on restoring them,” said Ryan Driskell, an associate professor in the College of Veterinary Medicine’s School of Molecular Biosciences and senior author on the paper. “Most scientists assumed these skin ridges formed during early embryonic development, which explains why no one really understood their origin.”

Rete ridges function much like biological “Velcro,” Driskell said. They secure the epidermis, which is the outermost layer of skin, to the dermis beneath it and help maintain the skin’s strength and flexibility. As people grow older and these ridges gradually flatten, the skin becomes thinner, less resilient, and more likely to sag or suffer damage.

For years, progress in studying these structures was limited by a major problem: the wrong animal models.

The Problem with Traditional Animal Models

“When most people look at the skin of different animals, they see differences in fur. Rete ridges lie under the surface of skin, however, so it wasn’t until we looked closer that we discovered that animals with thicker skin, like pigs, grizzly bears, and dolphins, have rete ridges like we do,” said Sean Thompson, a doctoral student in Driskell’s lab who served as first author on the study. “In contrast, common biomedical models for humans like mice and non-human primates are furry and lack rete ridges.”

Although grizzly bears offered evolutionary clues suggesting that body size influences skin structure, their distinctive biology made it impractical to observe how rete ridges develop on a day-to-day basis. As a result, the researchers shifted their focus to pigs, whose development can be tracked more precisely.

Working with local farmers, the team gathered skin samples from pigs at different stages of development. Their analysis demonstrated that rete ridges form after birth rather than before it.

“We expected this structure to be established before birth, so seeing it emerge afterward was a surprise,” Driskell said. “That timing changes how we think skin architecture is built and why it may be possible to influence it later in life.”

A Molecular Pathway with Therapeutic Potential

Using advanced genetic mapping techniques, the team also identified a key biological pathway — bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling — that activates to form these structures. This pathway serves as a set of molecular instructions, guiding how cells communicate and organize into complex tissue. Since rete ridges disappear with age, reactivating BMP signaling could help restore youthful skin and improve scar repair, in addition to possibly leading to new treatments for conditions like psoriasis.

“That BMP signaling drives rete ridges is exciting as it holds significant translational potential,” said Maksim Plikus, a professor at the University of California, Irvine and co-author on the paper. “Use of BMP proteins has already been FDA-approved for orthodontic applications, mapping the way for their use in aged skin and scars.”

The discovery also has the potential to help improve livestock health and adaptability to different climates. By understanding how these features form, researchers can explore ways to breed pigs and other livestock with skin traits suited for different conditions.



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

We Were Wrong About Fasting, Massive Review Shows

13 Feb. 2026, By D. MOREAU, THE CONVERSATION

(Sebastian Moldoveanu's Images/Canva)


Ever worried that skipping breakfast might leave you foggy at work? Or that intermittent fasting would make you irritable, distracted, and less productive?

Snack food ads warn us that "you're not you when you're hungry", reinforcing a common belief that eating is essential to keep our brains sharp.

This message is deeply woven into our culture. We're told constant fuelling is the secret to staying alert and efficient.

Yet time-restricted eating and intermittent fasting have become hugely popular wellness practices over the past decade. Millions do it for long-term benefits, from weight management to improved metabolic health.

This raises a pressing question: can we reap the health rewards of fasting without sacrificing our mental edge? To find out, we conducted the most comprehensive review to date of how fasting affects cognitive performance.

Why fast in the first place?

Fasting isn't just a trendy diet hack. It taps into a biological system honed over millennia to help humans cope with scarcity.

When we eat regularly, the brain runs mostly on glucose, stored in the body as glycogen. But after about 12 hours without food, those glycogen stores dwindle.

At that point, the body performs a clever metabolic switch: it begins breaking down fat into ketone bodies (for example, acetoacetate and beta-hydroxybutyrate), which provide an alternative fuel source.

This metabolic flexibility, once crucial for our ancestors' survival, is now being linked to a host of health benefits.


Time-restricted eating and intermittent fasting have become hugely popular wellness practices over the past decade. 
(IvanSpasic/Canva)



Some of the most promising effects of fasting come from the way it reshapes processes inside the body. For instance, fasting activates autophagy, a kind of cellular "cleanup crew" that clears away damaged components and recycles them, a process thought to support healthier ageing.

It also improves insulin sensitivity, allowing the body to manage blood sugar more effectively and lowering the risk of conditions such as type 2 diabetes.

Beyond that, the metabolic shifts triggered by fasting appear to offer broader protection, helping reduce the likelihood of developing chronic diseases often associated with overeating.

What the data showed

These physiological benefits have made fasting attractive. But many hesitate to adopt it out of fear their mental performance will plummet without a steady supply of food.

To address this, we conducted a meta-analysis, a "study of studies", looking at all the available experimental research that compared people's cognitive performance when they were fasting versus when they were fed.

Our search identified 63 scientific articles, representing 71 independent studies, with a combined sample of 3,484 participants tested on 222 different measures of cognition. The research spanned nearly seven decades, from 1958 to 2025.

After pooling the data, our conclusion was clear: there was no meaningful difference in cognitive performance between fasted and satiated healthy adults.

People performed just as well on cognitive tests measuring attention, memory, and executive function, whether they had eaten recently or not.

When fasting does matter

Our analysis did reveal three important factors that can change how fasting affects your mind.

First, age is key. Adults showed no measurable decline in mental performance when fasting. But children and adolescents did worse on tests when they skipped meals.

Their developing brains seem more sensitive to fluctuations in energy supply. This reinforces long-standing advice: kids should go to school with a proper breakfast to support learning.

Timing also seems to make a difference. We found longer fasts were associated with a smaller performance gap between fasted and fed states. This might be due to the metabolic switch to ketones, which can restore a steady supply of energy to the brain as glucose runs out.

Performance in fasted individuals tended to be worse when tests were conducted later in the day, suggesting fasting might amplify the natural dips in our circadian rhythms.

The type of test also mattered. When cognitive tasks involved neutral symbols or shapes, fasting participants performed just as well, or sometimes even slightly better.

But when tasks included food-related cues, fasted participants slipped. Hunger doesn't create universal brain fog, but it does make us more easily distracted when food is on our minds.

What this means for you

For most healthy adults, the findings offer reassurance: you can explore intermittent fasting or other fasting protocols without worrying that your mental sharpness will vanish.

That said, fasting isn't a one-size-fits-all practice. Caution is warranted with children and teens, whose brains are still developing and who appear to need regular meals to perform at their best.

Similarly, if your job requires peak alertness late in the day, or if you're frequently exposed to tempting food cues, fasting might feel harder to sustain.

And of course, for certain groups, such as those with medical conditions or special dietary needs, fasting may not be advisable without professional guidance.

Ultimately, fasting is best seen as a personal tool rather than a universal prescription. And its benefits and challenges will look different from person to person.



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

Paleontologists Discover a Lost World: Ancient Cave Preserves Life From 1 Million Years Ago

BY SCITECH DAILY, FEB. 12, 2026

A newly discovered fossil site reveals that New Zealand’s wildlife was being transformed by extreme natural forces millions of years before humans set foot on the islands.
 Credit: Courtesy Paul Scofield (Canterbury Museum), generated by AI

Deep within a cave on New Zealand’s North Island, scientists have uncovered a long-lost record of life from a million years ago.

In a cave system near Waitomo on Aotearoa’s North Island, scientists have uncovered a packed deposit of ancient bones that captures New Zealand at a moment the fossil record rarely preserves. The find is the first time researchers have recovered such a large set of fossils from around one million years ago, and it includes a surprise: an early relative of the kākāpō, the famously hefty parrot that today cannot fly.

The site holds remains from 12 bird species and four frog species, giving researchers an unusually detailed sample of the wildlife that once lived in the region. Because caves can act like natural storage vaults, preserving fragile bones that would normally disappear in open landscapes, discoveries like this can reveal entire communities rather than isolated specimens.

The research, published in Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology, argues that New Zealand’s ecosystems were being repeatedly reshaped long before humans arrived. Instead of a stable cast of species enduring unchanged for millennia, the evidence points to dramatic turnovers linked to severe climate shifts and major volcanic events, with extinctions followed by replacements as habitats transformed.

Lead author Flinders University Associate Professor Trevor Worthy says the study changes the baseline for understanding what “natural” once looked like in New Zealand.

“This is a newly recognized avifauna for New Zealand, one that was replaced by the one humans encountered a million years later,” says Associate Professor Worthy, from the College of Science and Engineering at Flinders University.

“This remarkable find suggests our ancient forests were once home to a diverse group of birds that did not survive the next million years.”

Fossils and Extinctions Before Humans

The fossils were examined by palaeontologists from Flinders University and Canterbury Museum, working alongside volcanologists Joel Baker from the University of Auckland and Simon Barker of Victoria University of Wellington.

Their analysis suggests that roughly 33–50% of species disappeared during the million years leading up to human settlement in Aotearoa New Zealand.

According to co-author Dr. Paul Scofield, Senior Curator of Natural History at Canterbury Museum, these losses were linked to rapid environmental change and large-scale volcanic events.

“From our excavations at St Bathans in Central Otago over many years, we have a snapshot of life in Aotearoa between 20 and 16 million years ago. These new findings cast light on the 15 million-year period from then to 1 million years ago, which is largely absent from New Zealand’s fossil record,” says Dr. Scofield.

“This wasn’t a missing chapter in New Zealand’s ancient history, it was a missing volume.”

Ancient Relatives of Iconic Birds

Among the most notable discoveries is a previously unknown parrot species, Strigops insulaborealis, which belongs to the same lineage as the modern kākāpō. While today’s kākāpō is a large, ground-dwelling bird that cannot fly, its ancient relative may not have shared that limitation.

Studies of the fossil bones indicate that the extinct parrot had weaker legs than the modern kākāpō, suggesting it was less adapted for climbing. Scientists say additional research will be needed to determine whether it was capable of flight.

The cave also preserved the remains of an extinct ancestor of the takahē, offering new insight into the evolutionary history of one of New Zealand’s most recognisable birds. In addition, researchers identified a now-lost pigeon species closely related to Australian bronzewing pigeons.

“The shifting forest and shrubland habitats forced a reset of the bird populations,” adds Dr. Scofield.

“We believe this was a major driver for the evolutionary diversification of birds and other fauna in the North Island.”

Dating a Million-Year-Old Cave

The fossils could be accurately dated as they were between two layers of volcanic ash preserved in the cave. One layer was from an eruption 1.55 million years ago, while the other was from a massive eruption 1 million years ago.

The more recent eruption would have blanketed much of the North Island in meters of ash. Most of it would have been washed away, but some would have been preserved in caves. The older layer found at this fossil site proves it is the oldest-known cave in the North Island.

Associate Professor Worthy says the fossils “provide a critical, missing baseline for New Zealand’s natural history.”

For decades, the extinction of New Zealand’s birds was viewed primarily through the lens of human arrival 750 years ago. This study proves that natural forces like super-volcanoes and dramatic climate shifts were already sculpting the unique identity of our wildlife over a million years ago.”



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

Thursday, 12 February 2026

A Roman-Era Stone Baffled Experts. AI May Have Solved The Mystery.

12 Feb. 2026, By AFP

A smooth, white stone dating from the Roman era and unearthed in the Netherlands. 
(Antiquity/AFP)

A smooth, white stone dating from the Roman era and unearthed in the Netherlands has long baffled researchers.

Now, with the help of artificial intelligence, scientists believe they have cracked the mystery: the stone is an ancient board game and they have even guessed the rules.

The circular piece of limestone has diagonal and straight lines cut into it.

Using 3D imaging, scientists discovered some lines were deeper than others, suggesting pieces were moved along them, some more than others.

A visualisation (left) of the depth map of the stone (right), demonstrating lower surfaces (pink).
 (Antiquity/AFP)



"We can see wear along the lines on the stone, exactly where you would slide a piece," said Walter Crist, an archaeologist at Leiden University who specialises in ancient games.

Other researchers at Maastricht University then used an artificial intelligence programme that can deduce the rules to ancient games.

They trained this AI, baptised Ludii, with the rules of about 100 ancient games from the same area as the Roman stone.

The computer "produced dozens of possible rule sets. It then played the game against itself and identified a few variants that are enjoyable for humans to play," said Dennis Soemers, from Maastricht University.

They then cross-checked the possible rules with the wear on the stone to uncover the most likely set of movements in the game.


A smooth, white stone dating from the Roman era and unearthed in the Netherlands has long baffled researchers.
 (Antiquity/AFP)



However, Soemers also sounded a note of caution.

"If you present Ludii with a line pattern like the one on the stone, it will always find game rules. Therefore, we cannot be sure that the Romans played it in precisely that way," he said.

The aim of the "deceptively simple but thrilling strategy game" was to hunt and trap the opponent's pieces in as few moves as possible.

The research and the possible rules were published in the journal Antiquity.



The birth of modern Man
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/
Michael Button, 3 Feb 2026

For decades, scientists told us the Amazon Rainforest was a pristine wilderness.

That it could never support large civilisations because the soil was too poor, and the jungle was too dense.

But new technology has just revealed something extraordinary beneath the trees. LiDAR scans are revealing massive, lost ancient cities.

And if they're right, it means we've been wrong about South America's ancient past this entire time...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DffB7hYddH8



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


The Secret to One of Peru's Most Powerful Kingdoms Came Out of Birds

12 Feb. 2026, By J. OSBORN ET AL., THE CONVERSATION

(cocoparisienne/pixabay/Canva)

In 1532, in the city of Cajamarca, Peru, Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro and a group of Europeans took the Inca ruler Atahualpa hostage, setting the stage for the fall of the Inca Empire.

Before this fateful attack, Pizarro's brother, Pedro Pizarro, made a curious observation: other than the Inca himself, the Lord of Chincha was the only person at Cajamarca carried on a litter, a carrying platform.

Why did the Lord of Chincha occupy such a high position in Inca society? In our new study published in PLOS One, we find evidence for a surprising potential source of power and influence: bird poop.

A potent and precious resource

Chincha, in southern Peru, is one of several river valleys along the desert coast fed by Andean highland waters, which have long been key to irrigation agriculture. About 25 kilometres out to sea are the Chincha Islands, with the largest guano deposits in the Pacific.

Seabird guano, or excrement, is a highly potent organic fertiliser. Compared to terrestrial manures such as cow dung, guano contains vastly more nitrogen and phosphorus, which are essential for plant growth.

On the Peruvian coast, the Humboldt/Peru ocean current creates rich fisheries. These fisheries support massive seabird colonies that roost on the rocky offshore islands.

Seabirds nest on Peruvian coastal islands and feed in the rich fisheries nearby.
 (Jo Osborn)



Thanks to the dry, nearly rainless climate, the seabird guano doesn't wash away, but continues to pile up until it is many meters tall. This unique environmental combination makes Peruvian guano particularly prized.

Our research combines iconography, historic written accounts, and the stable isotope analysis of archaeological maize (Zea mays) to show Indigenous communities in the Chincha Valley used seabird guano at least 800 years ago to fertilise crops and boost agricultural production.

We suggest guano likely shaped the rise of the Chincha Kingdom and its eventual relationship with the Inca Empire.

Lords of the desert coast

The Chincha Kingdom (1000–1400 CE) was a large-scale society comprising an estimated 100,000 people. It was organised into specialist communities such as fisherfolk, farmers, and merchants. This society controlled the Chincha Valley until it was brought into the Inca Empire in the 15th century.

Given the proximity of historically important guano deposits on the Chincha Islands, Peruvian historian Marco Curatola proposed in 1997 that seabird guano was an important source of Chincha's wealth. We tested this hypothesis and found strong support.

A biochemical test

Biochemical analysis is a reliable way to identify the use of fertilisers in the past. One experimental 2012 study showed plants fertilised with dung from camelids (alpacas and llamas) and seabirds show higher nitrogen isotope values than unfertilised crops.

Archaeological maize cobs from sites in the Chincha Valley. 
(C. O'Shea)



We analysed 35 maize samples recovered from graves in the Chincha Valley, documented as part of an earlier study on burial practices.

Most of the samples produced higher nitrogen isotope values than expected for unfertilised maize, suggesting some form of fertilisation occurred. About half of the samples had extremely high values. These results are so far only consistent with the use of seabird guano.

This chemical analysis confirms the use of guano on pre-Hispanic crops.

Imagery and written sources

Guano – and the birds that produce it – also held broader significance to the Chincha people.

Our analysis of archaeological artefacts suggests the Chincha people had a profound understanding of the connection between the land, sea, and sky. Their use of guano and their relationship with the islands were not just practical choices; they were deeply embedded in their worldview.

A wooden object from Chincha, interpreted as a ceremonial paddle or a digging stick, depicts seabirds, fish, and human figures.
 (The Met Museum, 1979.206.1025.)



This reverence is reflected in Chincha material culture. Across their textiles, ceramics, architectural friezes, and metal objects, we see repeated images of seabirds, fish, waves, and sprouting maize.

These images demonstrate the Chincha understood the entire ecological cycle: seabirds ate fish from the ocean and produced guano, guano fed the maize, and the maize fed the people.

This relationship may even be reflected today through local Peruvian place names. Pisco is derived from a Quechua word for bird, and Lunahuaná might translate to "people of the guano".

Poop power

As an effective and highly valuable fertiliser, guano also enabled Chincha communities to increase crop yields and expand trade networks, contributing to the economic expansion of the Chincha Kingdom.

We suggest fisherfolk sailed to the Chincha Islands to acquire guano and then provided it to farmers, as well as to seafaring merchants to trade along the coast and into the highlands.

Chincha's agricultural productivity and growing mercantile influence would have enhanced its strategic importance for the Inca Empire. Around 1400 CE, the Inca incorporated the Chincha after a "peaceful" capitulation, creating one of the few calculated alliances of its kind.

Although the "deal" made between Chincha and Inca remains debated, we suggest seabird guano played a role in these negotiations, as the Inca state was interested in maize but lacked access to marine fertilisers. This may be why the Lord of Chincha was held in such high esteem that he was carried aloft on a litter, as Pedro Pizarro noted.

The Inca came to value this fertiliser so much they imposed access restrictions on the guano islands during the breeding season and forbade the killing of guano birds, on or off the islands, under penalty of death.

Our study expands the known geographic extent of guano fertilisation in the pre-Inca world and strongly supports scholarship that predicted its role in the rise of the Chincha Kingdom. However, there is still much to learn about how widespread it was and when this practice began.


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

Wednesday, 11 February 2026

Ancient Romans Really Did Use Poop as Medicine. We Just Got The First Real Proof.

11 Feb. 2026, By C. CASSELLA


(Atila et al., Journ. Arch. Sci. Rep., 2026)



Stool transplants are cutting-edge experimental procedures, but using poop as medicine is hardly a modern idea.

Ancient Romans knew their… feces – or at least they liked to think they did. According to historical documents, influential doctors in Rome were advising folks to brew up healing poultices and therapeutic fragrances using animal and even human dung.

At last, we have the cold, hard evidence.

Archaeologists in Türkiye have now found the first chemical traces of human poop in a 1,900-year-old bottle.


Glass unguentarium with preserved ancient pharmaceutical residue. 
(Atila et al., Journ. Arch. Sci. Rep., 2026)



This long, thin vessel looks sort of like a glass candlestick with a splayed base. In ancient Roman times, it was known as an unguentarium, and was typically reserved for perfume or makeup.

When researchers scraped the insides of the artifact, housed in the Bergama Archaeology Museum, dark brownish flakes of an unknown material fell away.

Grinding up the sample and analyzing its chemistry, the research team of three discovered markers that strongly indicate the presence of human poop.

Plus, there was a sprinkling of aromatic compounds from thyme, probably to mask the smell.


In ancient Rome, it was not unusual for prominent physicians, like Hippocrates, Pliny the Elder, or Galen of Pergamon, to advise using poop as medicine.

In fact, excrement or dung, usually from animals, was recommended in medical texts for a plethora of health issues, such as inflammation, infection, and even reproductive disorders.

Galen alone refers to fecal medicines in his writings at least two dozen times. While the famed Greek physician rarely recommends human feces, he does make sure to mention the therapeutic value of children's poop (so long as they are fed a very specific diet, of course).

To find remnants of human poop in an ancient Roman vessel, dated to the 2nd century CE, is telling. It suggests that human excrement really was used as a form of topical treatment or 'olfactory pharmacology', as historical documents indicate.

"Ancient sources make clear that the boundaries between cosmetic and medicinal usage were fluid, and that unguents often blurred distinctions between healing, hygiene, and magic," archaeologist Cenker Atila, of Sivas Cumhuriyet University, and colleagues write in their published paper.

Similar poop treatments seem to have persisted through the Middle Ages, but they were then lost in the 18th century.

Back then, using dung as medicine was probably quite risky, as feces can transmit dangerous pathogens.

But today, when fecal transplants are properly screened, the stool and its various microbes have the potential to address a whole variety of ailments, from depression and bipolar disorder to diabetes, heart disease, and drug-resistant superbugs.

Scientists may know more about the gut microbiome than ever before, and yet we still have so much to learn about the millions of microbes that reside in our intestines and how they might impact our health.

While clinical trial reviews suggest that fecal transplants can improve the gut microbiome and symptoms of those with certain illnesses, such as irritable bowel syndrome, the effects seem to diminish after about six months.

Because this experimental procedure carries its own health risks and can, on rare occasions, be lethal, there is every reason to tread cautiously, and yet there are promising signs.

In a recent study on mice, for instance, older animals who received a poop transplant from younger ones showed signs of a more youthful gut.

Plus, in 2021, another study on mice found that poo transplants from younger individuals reversed signs of aging in older animals.

Perhaps using young people's poop as medicine is not such a laughable idea, after all; Galen might have been on to something.


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