Tuesday, 31 December 2019

China launches probe into mysterious viral pneumonia amid rumors of SARS 2.0

31 Dec, 2019, published on RT news

© Pixabay / Gerd Altmann

Dozens of patients have been quarantined and several hospitals put on alert in central China amid an outbreak of a viral pneumonia of unknown origin.

There have been a total of 27 confirmed cases since the start of December in Wuhan, with the majority appearing to come from a single seafood market in the city. Health workers are still working to pinpoint the source, while also disinfecting the marketplace as a precaution.

Seven patients are critically ill, 18 others are in stable condition, and two are recovering and are expected to be released shortly, according to the Wuhan health department. So far no human-to-human infection has taken place and no medical staff have contracted the illness.

Experts from the National Health Commission have been dispatched to determine both the cause and scope of the outbreak and whether there is any truth to the rumors online that this may be the next SARS.

Comparisons to Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) were drawn on social media after the city's health department posted a notice online Monday which instructed hospitals to report any and all new cases of the as yet unidentified viral pneumonia.

SARS was a respiratory illness which killed hundreds of people in China at the turn of the millennium, with some 5,300 infections leading to 349 deaths between 2002 and 2003. A further 299 were killed in Hong Kong.

The World Health Organization (WHO) criticized China at the time for downplaying and underreporting the rate of infection. The WHO later declared China free of the virus in May 2004.

However, local health experts have dismissed rumors that the current outbreak could be related, saying it is unlikely to be SARS, or a similar mutation, or offshoot, given how confined the outbreak has been.

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Monday, 30 December 2019

Terracotta Warriors receive reinforcements as 220 additional soldiers discovered, including new ranks (PHOTOS)

30 Dec, 2019, by RT news

© Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor

Archaeologists working on the tomb of Emperor Qin Shi Huang have announced the discovery of an additional 220 soldiers in the world-famous Terracotta Army after almost a decade of painstaking excavation.

The team has been excavating the tomb since 2009, covering an area of ​​about 500,000 square meters. The site is riddled with a vast array of artifacts including pottery, bronze, jade, a small amount of gold, silver, and iron and the aforementioned Terracotta Warriors.

© Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor

Amid the well-preserved artifacts, including military tripods, crossbows, golden sabers and everyday items such as spoons, plates, tinctures and kettles, the researchers also discovered the earliest-known golden camel excavated in China.




© Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor




Further study of this artifact in particular may provide important information about trade between the West and the Chinese Empire predating the Silk Road.

screen shot

All told, the past decade has yielded the discovery of some 220 pottery figurines and 12 pottery horses, as well as a large number of weapons and architectural relics belonging to previously unseen military officers nestled among the ranks. 

© Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor


The discovery of new officer ranks may force a rethink of our current understanding of the army’s formation.

© Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor


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Sunday, 29 December 2019

NIH Considering New Recommendations on Sexual Harassment Policies

Dec 16, 2019, EMILY MAKOWSKI
https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/nih-considering-new-recommendations-on-sexual-harassment-policies-66850

A working group has put forth suggestions for cracking down on misconduct, such as requiring grant applicants to disclose sexual harassment findings.


An advisory group of US National Institutes of Health officials, researchers, and victims of sexual harassment issued a report Thursday (December 12) that calls for a crackdown on sexual harassment in NIH-funded labs, according to Science.

Recommendations put forth by the Working Group on Changing the Culture to End Sexual Harassment include requiring NIH-funded institutions to notify the agency within two weeks when a grant recipient is found guilty of sexual misconduct, barring confirmed harassers from serving on NIH advisory councils, and mandating that grant applicants report sexual harassment findings against them.

“It’s a very comprehensive document, which clearly they spent a lot of time on. It really addresses sexual harassment at all levels, from institutional leadership to protecting the safety and careers of targets of harassment,” Heather Pierce, the senior director of science policy for the Association of American Medical Colleges in Washington, DC, tells Science.

NIH director Francis Collins says in a statement that the agency “will make every effort to adhere to the vision of the working group by seeking to implement the recommendations provided.” However, he added that while the NIH will work to implement some of the recommendations starting early next year, others may take longer, and the agency currently does not have legal authority to require that people report sexual harassment convictions.

The NIH received allegations of professional misconduct, including sexual harassment, from 105 people between January and November 2019. After reviewing the allegations, the agency replaced 12 principal investigators and removed 55 people from grant application review committees, reports the working group. An NIH staff survey also published Thursday revealed that nearly 40 percent of women NIH trainees polled between January and March 2019 reported being sexually harassed at work, according to Nature.

“I’ll be satisfied when harassment is as intolerable as pulling out a cigarette in front of the NIH director and asking if it’s ok to smoke,” neuroscientist and activist BethAnn McLaughlin tells Nature.

Sexual harassment policy overhaul is also taking place within other government agencies as the US Department of Education nears the completion of a year-long process of drafting Title IX legislation changes. US universities are divided over a proposed rule by President Donald Trump’s administration that would force campus sexual assault victims to be questioned by representatives of their alleged attackers, with opponents saying it would discourage traumatized victims from reporting harassment, according to Times Higher Education.

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Saturday, 28 December 2019

Stoned Ape Theory: Could Magic Mushrooms Be Responsible for Human Evolution?

CONSCIOUSNESS | OPINION | PARADIGM SHIFT, | DEC 21, 2019 By 
John Vibes,  TruthTheory.com
https://themindunleashed.com/2019/12/stoned-ape-theory-magic-mushrooms-human-evolution.html

This hypothesis remains unproven, but recent scientific findings seem to support the fundamentals of the theory.


There are many mysteries about human evolution, and many questions about how we became the thinking species that we are today.

One of the most interesting potential explanations for the development of our mental capacities is the “Stoned Ape Theory,” which suggests that our ancient primate ancestors stumbled upon psychedelic mushrooms and integrated them into their diet, creating a massive jump in the evolution of the brain.

Scientists and anthropologists tend to agree that the brain size of our hominid ancestors rapidly doubled sometime in our distant past, but they disagree about exactly when this could have happened. Other researchers suggest that there were multiple periods of rapid brain growth in the history of our species.
Some anthropologists believe that somewhere between 2 million and 700,000 years ago, the brain of the average Homo erectus doubled in size, while others point to a possible tripling of brain volume in the Homo sapiens between 500,000 and 100,000 years ago.

The theory was first proposed by Terrence McKenna and his brother Dennis, who were pioneers of the counter-culture, and the once-anonymous authors of the first manual for at-home mushroom cultivation. The McKenna brothers suggested that psychedelic mushrooms would have been an obvious source of food for our primate ancestors. If this was the case, the theory asserts that the psychedelic mushrooms could have rewired their brains in a way that allowed for the development of language and more complex thinking. As to be expected, the mainstream scientific community has been largely dismissive of this theory.

However, the idea has recently gotten a new push from mycologist Paul Stamets, who says that the Stoned Ape Theory is a “very, very plausible hypothesis for the sudden evolution of Homo sapiens from our primate relatives.”

“What is really important for you to understand, is that there was a sudden doubling of the human brain 200,000 years ago. From an evolutionary point of view, that’s an extraordinary expansion. And there is no explanation for this sudden increase in the human brain,” Stamets says.

This hypothesis remains unproven, but scientific findings in recent years do seem to support the fundamentals of the theory, or at the very least have shown us that it is possible for psychedelics to “rewire” the brain and accelerate brain growth.

In a study last year from the University of California, researchers showed that psychedelic compounds can rewire a person’s brain, and even increase in neuron branches, dendritic spines, and synapses.

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Scientists Say Aliens Should Have Already Visited Earth

MANUEL GARCÍA AGUILAR,  DEC 27, 2019

The Earth could have already been visited by an alien civilization many times.


The debate about the existence of alien life has been a topic that has interested humans for a long time and the scientific community has had split opinions regarding our solitude in this amazingly big universe.

Now, new research published in the Astronomical Journal provides further information that invites us to rethink our mindset on this topic.

During the summer of 1950, physicist Enrico Fermi posed a question to his colleagues over lunch:

“Don’t you ever wonder where everybody is?”
He was referring to alien life.

The Earth is 4.5 billion years old, and we could say that that was roughly the time it took a “kind of life” to be capable of space travel. Our universe is approximately 13.8 billion years old.

Fermi proposed that during this time, the galaxy should have been overrun with intelligent, technologically-advanced aliens. Yet, we have no evidence of this despite decades of searching. This postulate became known as the Fermi Paradox.

Briefly, some of the main points of this paradox, formalized by Michael H. Hart, are:
There are billions of stars in the Milky Way similar to the Sun.
With high probability, some of these stars have Earth-like planets, and if the Earth is typical, some may have already developed intelligent life.
Some of these civilizations may have developed interstellar travel.
Even at the slow pace of currently envisioned interstellar travel, the Milky Way galaxy could be completely traversed in a few million years
And since many of the stars similar to the Sun are billions of years older, this would seem to provide plenty of time

Now, you can have a clearer view of why this paradox is so interesting for scientists and further investigation is being done, the odds seem to be really high.

The expectation that the universe should be teeming with intelligent life is linked to models like the Drake equation, which suggests that even if the probability of intelligent life developing at a given site is small, the sheer multitude of possible sites should nonetheless yield a large number of potentially observable civilizations.

This new study offers a different perspective on the question: maybe aliens are just taking their time and being strategic.
“If you don’t account for the motion of stars when you try to solve this problem, you’re basically left with one of two solutions,” Jonathan Carroll-Nellenback the study’s lead author said.

“Either nobody leaves their planet, or we are in fact the only technological civilization in the galaxy.”

Stars orbit the center of the galaxy on different paths at different speeds. They occasionally pass each other, so, aliens could be waiting for their next destination to come closer, Caroll-Nellenback’s study says.

Researchers have formulated different theories trying to answer the Fermi Paradox, including the possibility that all alien life forms in oceans below a planet’s surface and there’s even the “zoo hypothesis” which imagines that societies in our galaxy decided to not contact us to “preserve” us in a way analogical to how we preserve some natural places—or even to prevent them from getting some kind of “disease” from us.

A crucial fact to this new study is the fact that, as previously mentioned, the galaxy moves. So, aliens could be waiting for an optimal travel distance to explore new territories.

“If long enough is a billion years, well then that’s one solution to the Fermi paradox,” Carroll-Nellenback said.

Another important thing to notice is that the research team did not attempt to guess at the alien’s motivations or politics, something that usually delayed the attempts to solve the Fermi Paradox.

We have to consider also that our consciousness and our perception of the “civilization” concept may play a crucial part in this kind of studies. So, our predictions may be based on our own behavior.

“We tried to come up with a model that would involve the fewest assumptions about sociology that we could,” Carroll-Nellenback said.

So far, we’ve detected about 4,000 planets outside of our solar system and none have been shown to host life. But we haven’t looked that hard—there are at least 100 billion stars in the Milky Way and even more planets, so we still have a lot more to explore.

Maybe, merging philosophy and science together for a moment, we could believe that at some point, if there is in fact alien life out there in the universe, we (or our kids, grandkids, or great grandkids) will get to know them and make really close contact, assuming all of this in basis of some of the ideas exposed in Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, where he says that if something can happen, and there is enough time for that to happen, it will happen.


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Demographic Armageddon: Japan's Births Drop To Lowest Since 1874 As Deaths Hit Highest Since World War II

by Tyler Durden, Fri, 12/27/2019


Japan's demographic Armageddon made another entry in the history books this week when Japan's welfare ministry estimated that in 2019, Japan's population organically shrank by 512,000 people this year compared to 2018. That’s a drop of more than the entire population of the city of Atlanta.

While Japan's demographic doom is well-known, its severity has taken on a breathless haste in recent years with births in the country — which are expected to drop below 900,000 this year — are at their lowest figure since 1874 according to the NYT, when the population was about 70% smaller than its current 124 million.

Meanwhile, as Japan's birthrate collapses, the total number of deaths is accelerating with every passing year, and in 2019 the figure is expected to reach almost 1.4 million, 60% more than the number of births, and the highest level since the end of World War II, a rise driven by the country’s increasingly elderly population.


That gap between births and deaths, which has risen above half a million for the first time ever, has put Japan on the path to demographic destruction and deflationary doom, because in a country that shrinks by over half a million people each year, economic concepts such as resource scarcity become increasingly quaint.

Japan is not the only country having to cope with a shrinking society. It’s not even the country with the lowest birthrate: That title, according to the NYT, goes to South Korea. Meanwhile, other countries — including China and the United States — also face declining birthrates, which could spell demographic trouble down the road.

But Japan stands out in one specific way: it is the world’s grayest nation, with almost 28% of its residents over the age of 65.


Japan reached it demographic tipping point over a decade ago, giving Tokyo ample opportunity to find a solution and address the effects of its declining population. The country has been consistently shrinking since 2007, when the country’s population dipped by around 18,000 people. Since then, however, the losses have accelerated, crossing the half-million mark this year for the first time. Across the nation, whole villages are vanishing as young people choose not to have children or move to urban areas in search of better employment opportunities (or they just happen to be close to the Fukushima radioactive wasteland).

Unfortunately for Japan, it's only going to get worse as there is no end to the decline in sight. The government estimates that the population could shrink by around 16 million people, nearly 13%, over the next 25 years.

In seeking to stave off demographic armageddon, Japan has made efforts to push up its fertility rate defined as the average number of births per woman, from its current level of around 1.4 to a target of 1.8, although still short of the 2.1 considered necessary to hold the population steady. The government has moved to encourage births by increasing incentives for parents to have more children and reducing obstacles that might discourage those who want to.

But like every other failed attempt by the state or economists to dictate behavior, the incentives have proved woefully insufficient as more people in Japan are putting off childbirth — or not having children at all — either to take advantage of economic opportunities or because they worry that economic opportunities do not exist and feel that they cannot afford children. Even for those who do want to be parents, the hurdles remain daunting.

Demand for day care in the country far outstrips supply, making it difficult for working women to juggle careers and children. Meanwhile, working men who want to take advantage of the country’s generous paternity leave can find themselves stigmatized by an entrenched cultural belief that a man’s place is in the office, not in the home.

If this wasn't enough, the NYT also notes that adding to the government’s worries, marriage is also on the decline. The number of marriages dropped by 3,000 year-on-year to 583,000, according to the data released on Tuesday, part of a steep decline over the last decade.

Ironically, the most practical solution, if only from a labor standpoint, is also a terminal one for Japan as a society: as births continue to drop, Japan has tried to promote robots as a supplement for its shrinking work force. The only problem: robots don't vote, don't pay taxes, and don't have little robot children of their own.

Finally, in an attempt to succeed where Germany, and Merkel's "Open Door" policies failed, Japan has also committed to accepting limited numbers of immigrants to handle vital work such as caring for the elderly. This year the country began issuing more than a quarter-million visas to immigrants who will do such work. The only problem: the Japanese are notorious nationalists and tend to ostracize, mock and ridicule and gai jin to the point where nobody actually wants to stay in the notoriously closed-off society.


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Friday, 27 December 2019

Sweden Makes Shift To 6 Hour Work Day

by AnonWatcher


According to the University of Massachusetts Medical School and Environmental Health Sciences Institute, “Studies have associated overtime and extended work schedules with an increased risk of hypertension, cardiovascular disease, fatigue, stress, depression, musculoskeletal disorders, chronic infections, diabetes, general health complaints, and all-cause mortality.” To support their claim, the University also cited another 18 different health and medical studies.
The eight or twelve hour work day, which is becoming more common over Western and European nations, has become a topic of re-evaluation after it was discovered that employees are likely to be less productive, especially once compared the the productivity of employees who work a shorter six hour day.

App-development company Filimundus, based in Stockholm, has decided to embrace the six hour day for their employees. It is expected that the reduced working hours will promote less procrastination and more work-driven focus.


CEO, Linus Feldt told Fast Company that since the change, the office has drastically improved, with a notable increase in workplace happiness, health, and productivity. “The biggest response that I couldn’t foresee was the energy level I felt with my colleagues. They were happy leaving the office and happy coming back the next day. They didn’t feel drained or fatigued. That has also helped the work groups to work better together now, when we see less conflicts and arguments, people are happier.”


“I think the eight-hour workday is not as effective as one would think,” Feldt continues, “To stay focused on a specific work task for eight hours is a huge challenge. . . . In order to cope, we mix in things and pauses to make the workday more endurable. At the same time, we are having it hard to manage our private life outside of work. We want to spend more time with our families, we want to learn new things or exercise more. I wanted to see if there could be a way to mix these things.”

Sweden is making the shift to six hour days in the public sector, a trend that is also expected to move quickly throughout the private sector. Feldt sees this as a priority to a company’s fundamental success. “If your staff is happy, your company is happy.”

Source: anonhq.com


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Michigan Hunters Donate More Than 50 Thousand lbs of Meat and $100,000 to Feed 232,000 Hungry People

By Elias Marat
https://realfarmacy.com/michigan-hunters-donate-homeless/



Deer hunters in the state of Michigan have donated a record amount of venison and dollars to hungry families across the state this year, making a powerful contribution to food banks and shelters.

The campaign by non-profit group Michigan Sportsmen Against Hunger (MSAH) puts meat—a costly item that is typically rare in food pantries—on dinner tables across the state in working-poor communities just in time for the holidays in a partnership with the Michigan Department of Natural Resources and the Food Bank Council of Michigan.

According to the Rapidian, the organization has already smashed records this year with contributions of wild game to charities. Hunters have donated over 58,000 pounds of venison—roughly enough to serve 232,000 meals—and $100,000 to the group.

The amount surpasses last year’s record of 52,135 pounds of meat, or 208,580 meals, and $99,629, according to the all-volunteer organization.

Matt Pedigo, the chair of the Michigan Wildlife Council, said:

“These donations of meat and money are some of the many ways Michigan sportsmen and sportswomen make a positive impact on the quality of life in our state.

Sportsmen not only help protect and enhance our beautiful forests, waters and wildlife, they often support their neighbors in need.”

Since MSAH was founded in 1991, hunters have given almost 750,000 pounds of ground venison to charity, an amount equal to roughly 2 million meals’ worth of wild game.

The lean meat can be served in myriad ways—either made into sausage or hamburgers, served with rice or pasta, or prepared in any number of delicious ways.

The donations also provide a helping hand in the fight against hunger and malnutrition in the Great Lakes state. According to the Food Bank Council of Michigan, 16 percent of residents and 18 percent of all children in Michigan are currently experiencing high levels of insecurity—largely because of the high cost of food.

Kath Clark, director of food programs for the Food Bank Council, said:

“I am continuously amazed and grateful for the hunters helping us work toward a more food-secure Michigan. Venison is a great source of lean protein, which is so important to a healthy lifestyle.”

Food programs in the state typically enjoy their biggest boosts in late November, when over half a million hunters take to the wild with their guns during firearm deer season.

And deer hunting doesn’t only provide food banks with donations—it also supports nearly 136,000 jobs every year, according to Michigan United Conservation Clubs, while adding $8.9 billion to the state’s economy ever year.

Dean Hall, the executive director of MSAH, is proud of the contribution that hunters are making in the fight against hunger. He explained:

“Meat is something food banks, food pantries and shelters can never get enough of because it’s so costly.

Thanks to the generosity of hunters—whether they donate several pounds or a whole deer—we’re able to help fill thousands of hungry bellies every year.”


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Thursday, 26 December 2019

Modern Living - The Sleigh Ride sex position is the perfect way to heat up your Christmas

The Sleigh Ride sex position is the perfect way to heat up your Christmas


By Lucy Devine ,  The Sun , December 25, 2019

celebrating Christmas in bed, Shutterstock photo 

When you’re a Christmas dinner, bottle of mulled wine, 10 mince pies and a portion of Christmas pudding in, having sex can be an effort.
But fear not, because there’s a new sex position on the rise and it’s perfect for when you’re too full to actually move.
Say hello to the Sleigh Ride sex position, perfect for Christmas Day thanks to its festive theme.
The lazy style describes sex with very little movement and can be achieved very simply.
For the ultimate “Sleigh Ride”, lie face-down on the bed with legs straight and hips slightly raised (not too much impact on the stomach is obviously, a huge plus).
Your partner lies over you (a little bit like the doggy sex position) but without any vigorous thrusting on a full stomach.
If you don’t fancy the Sleigh Ride, the Stuffed Bird sex position is also perfect for Christmas Day.
According to tried and tested couples, it’s also great with a hangover.
To master the Stuffed Bird, lie down on your side and get your partner to lie behind you as big spoon.
Both sex positions are great for burning off some Christmas calories, so what are you waiting for?

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Is mental health a gut feeling? How your microbiome may or may not affect your mental health

Dec. 17, 2019, AUTHOR, Mike Fisher
https://explore.ucalgary.ca/microbiome-and-mental-health




Is mental health a gut feeling? How your microbiome may or may not affect your mental health

While it's too early to draw any definite conclusions, research shows significant connections between the gut and mental health, as well as promising new avenues for microbe-based treatment.

Only recently, the idea that your gut could be shaping your mental health was considered far-fetched, more science fiction than actual science.

Now, UCalgary researchers are at the vanguard of worldwide research into what’s known as the gut-brain axis and how it may affect the way you think and feel, hoping their work will hold clues to causes of illness and perhaps novel new treatments.

As we gain a better understanding of how microbes in the gut play a role in our health, researchers are examining whether this information could also yield new therapies for psychiatric illness.

So, can our microbiome, which is the genetic material of the trillions of microbes (bacteria, fungi and viruses) that live in and on our body, influence our mental health?

“I’d say that really is the million-dollar question,” says Dr. Valerie Taylor, MD, PhD, a professor and head of the Department of Psychiatry in UCalgary’s Cumming School of Medicine, and a member of the school’s Mathison Centre for Mental Health Research & Education and the Hotchkiss Brain Institute.

"We’re doing research but the jury is still out on whether we can actually leverage what seems to be a gut-brain connection into the next generation of therapies. There is reason to be excited and to pursue this work and that's what fuels us — the possibility.”

Microbial therapies hold the promise of leveraging the gut-brain axis in ways that could shape cognition, behaviour and emotion.

It’s exciting, though key aspects of why and how it may work have yet to be determined. The mechanisms by which the microbiome may shape brain function are unclear, and we have not conclusively determined how they might influence conditions such as anxiety.

The gut-brain axis is a two-way, biochemical signaling system between the gastrointestinal tract and the central nervous system. The gut is considered by some researchers to act as a “second brain,” given that the enteric nervous system in the gut can operate independently of the brain and spinal cord.

Researchers are exploring if it is possible to manipulate this system to boost health and treat disease.

UCalgary's International Microbiome Centre is coordinating efforts in Canada to understand how the microbiome works and if it can be harnessed to improve human health. This centre represents the biggest academic germ-free facility in the world.

Evidence in studies around the world seem to indicate that not only is the gut linked to mental health, but the microbiome of healthy people appears to differ from those who have a mental illness.

Still, despite the promise, Taylor cautions against unproven treatments that have not been rigorously tested and explained, as the field of research exploring the microbiome and its potential links to mental health is still new.

So far, the study of the gut-brain axis in humans has been limited, though more clinical studies are being undertaken than ever before, with Taylor leading three of them.

“At this point, we do not have a magic microbiome associated with wellness and we don’t want people thinking that this will be a panacea cure-all that will allow them to stop taking other therapies,” she says.

Further confounding the issue is the growing understanding that what works for one person may not work for another, or may even be problematic, although this area of research may offer unique opportunities for the application of precision medicine.

The role of the fecal transplant

Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is a technique where stool from a healthy donor is transferred to a patient who is ill, the goal being to introduce or restore certain gut bacteria with the aim of modifying disease and health.

With an FMT, the assumption is that the introduction of microflora from a healthy person will help recolonize the system with a microbial pattern more in keeping with wellness, says Taylor. This would happen either by establishing a new, healthy microbiota or by allowing the host to reset their own microflora to a pre-illness state.

Taylor is using a fecal transplant pill developed at UCalgary in a current study.

“Right now, the most robust findings are from the pre-clinical work (animal models),” she says. “There is research looking at the microbiome in animal models and whether manipulation can help treat illnesses such as anxiety and depression.”

Germ-free mice are used in studies as researchers try to determine the cause-and-effect relationship between the microbiome and disease, as well as the basis through which microbes influence the host.

One of Taylor’s studies, in the clinical trial stage, is testing if transplanting fecal matter from a healthy person to a person with bipolar depression can have positive results. Another looks at depression in the context of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS).

She wants to see if symptoms improve in the person who receives the transplant, and examine participants' microbiomes to try and understand how any changes prompted by the procedure actually work.
Depression under the microscope

The GI system (gastrointestinal tract) plays a role in terms of modulating inflammation, which has been linked to mental illness. Taylor says this is an ongoing area of research.

A 2015 study into fecal microbiota composition in patients with major depressive disorder found that particular bacteria (Bacteroidetes, Proteobacteria and Actinobacteria) are increased and the bacteria Firmicutes is decreased in depression.

Most of the body’s serotonin, a neurotransmitter that sends messages among cells and which can influence emotions, is produced in the gut. A study in mice led by UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles) biologists and published in the journal Nature Microbiology suggests that serotonin and drugs such as anti-depressants that target serotonin affect microbiota in the gut.

There are more serotonin receptors in the gut than the brain.
If brain activity can be modulated by changes in the gut microbiome, we need to determine which specific brain mechanisms are affected.

“Antidepressants can change the level of neurotransmitters such as serotonin and we know there are more serotonin receptors in the gut than the brain,” says Taylor. “Certain bacteria also produce or impact the levels of many neurotransmitters, so, some of the bacteria could directly impact, or be related, to mental illness.”

This isn't as far-fetched as you might think.

“There has been research that shows if you take bacteria from depressed mice and put it into non-depressed mice, they become depressed,” says Taylor. “Microbiota are not benign, and we want to ensure people are aware of that.”

The brain-gut connection is a growing industry

There is much to learn about the mechanisms of the gut-brain axis, including whether microbiota in the gut can prompt disease or if it's the other way around. Regardless, research is ramping up as probiotics and other health supplements increasingly find their way onto market shelves.

“Patients are desperate for new treatments,” says Taylor. “Sometimes the current treatments don’t work for everyone or have side effects that are not tolerable. So, people are looking for anything that will help them.”

As the financial potential for therapies rises, so do claims about what probiotics, containing certain kinds of live bacteria, may be able to do for consumers.

Patients are desperate for new treatments.

The growing global wellness industry had a $4.2-trillion market in 2017, according to a Global Wellness Industry report; even so, there have been class-action lawsuits for claims that probiotic-enriched foods can boost the body’s defences and enhance the immune system, says Taylor.

Questions continue to arise about how various gut-related therapies may work and the potential consequences of using them. Something that might aid gut health in the short-term doesn't necessarily benefit a person’s overall health.

New methods being used to manipulate the gut microflora are not without risk, says Taylor. Earlier this year, two people in the United States who had undergone fecal transplants developed drug-resistant infections from bacteria in the stool that they were provided. One patient died.

“If someone says they're going to cure your mental illness by changing your gut microbiome, at this stage of the science, beware,” says Taylor. “I don’t want my patients taken advantage of, and that’s why I'm really invested in doing this work. By doing the right research in the right way, we can inform people so they can make the right choices.”

So, when it comes to the potential links between the microbiome and mental health, asks Taylor, are we looking at hope or hype?

Exploring the potential of the gut-brain axis

Using FMT to improve health operates on the assumption that dysbiosis in the gut microbiome predisposes a person to disease. Dysbiosis, also known as intestinal or gastrointestinal dysbiosis, is a condition in which there is an imbalance of micro-organisms within our intestines.

The exact mechanisms through which dysbiosis occurs have not yet been established, but even so, several potential direct and indirect pathways exist through which the gut microbiota can modulate the gut-brain axis, says Taylor.

These pathways include endocrine (cortisol), immune (cytokines) and neural (vagus and enteric nervous system) pathways.

If we consider that changes can be made to improve health using FMT, then it follows that introducing the wrong microbiota from a particular donor could result in adverse health, says Taylor. It highlights the need to ensure that fecal transplant donors are rigorously screened for gut disorders and other conditions.
Need to define goals for wellness and treatment

Despite ongoing research in the microbiome and the gut-brain axis, there is as yet no clearly defined gold-standard profile associated with wellness. There is the effect of the environment on the body and a person’s microbiome to consider, as well. Factors such as diet, smoking and age can all affect the microbiome.

“There is still a lack of understanding of what we're trying to change with treatment, as there is no microbial profile clearly associated with wellness, or vice versa, from a behavioural perspective,” says Taylor.

Creating new targets for treatment is important as the research moves forward, she says. “We need to manage expectations with respect to the therapeutic potential of microbial manipulation.”

Given the growth of studies focusing on the microbiome and connections between the gut and brain, it isn't surprising to see conflicting viewpoints and research evidence.

Two recent meta-analyses indicated that probiotic supplementation has an overall insignificant effect on both mood symptoms and the symptoms of schizophrenia, says Taylor.

In contrast, she says, another systematic review and meta-analysis that looked at prebiotics (a form of dietary fibre that acts as a fertilizer for bacteria in the gut) and probiotics for depression and anxiety found no difference over the prebiotic but a small, significant effect for the probiotic. Researchers are aiming to discern the most precise differences among effects that could impact human health.

Even the diagnostic categorizations for mental health and illness can pose problems in determining what may work for whom.

The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) provides more than 200 different symptom profiles, all of which fit the major depressive disorder (MDD) diagnosis, says Taylor.

“It may be, then, that probiotics are helpful for some, but not all, types of MDD,” she says.

In the future, we would need to identify what type of depression responds to changes in the gut microflora, as well as what type of probiotic should be used as an intervention — and what the timing of the treatment should be.

“It’s not like we know that you need to just take these particular bacteria and not that one, or that we just need to replace certain ones,” says Taylor. “It's not that simple. Part of what we're doing is analyzing the microbiome so we can identify patterns that seem to be associated with illness or wellness.”

Eating for better gut health
If changing gut microflora can impact us for good or ill, what’s a good strategy for eating right to ensure microbiome health?

“The gut microbiome is impacted by food and environment but in a stable environment, it stays relatively stable,” says Taylor. “If you eat, say, a pound of turkey and cheesecake and this is something that you don’t usually do, it will affect your microbiome -- but it will reset itself when your diet changes again.”
Taylor recommends that you cook a wide variety of foods, get proper sleep and exercise to be healthy. Aim to eat a diet that is lighter on processed food, and more food you cook yourself.

As for the future of treatments based on the gut-brain axis that could impact your mental health, Taylor says it's too early to know for sure.

“Do I think that someday someone will use this as a defence in the court system saying, ‘My microbiome made me do it?’ No, but do I think that it is modifiable for mental health? I certainly hope so.”

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Experimental Cultivation of Seed Crops Lost to History Reveals Much Higher Yields Than Expected

TOPICS:  Agriculture, Anthropology, Archaeology, Plant Science, Washington University In St. Louis
By WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY IN ST. LOUIS DECEMBER 23, 2019

NATALIE MUELLER GREW AND CALCULATED YIELD ESTIMATES FOR TWO ANNUAL PLANTS THAT WERE CULTIVATED IN EASTERN NORTH AMERICA FOR THOUSANDS OF YEARS — AND THEN ABANDONED. CREDIT: NATALIE MUELLER

‘Lost Crops’ Could Have Fed As Many as Maize

Make some room in the garden, you storied three sisters: the winter squash, climbing beans and the vegetable we know as corn. Grown together, newly examined “lost crops” could have produced enough seed to feed as many indigenous people as traditionally grown maize, according to new research from Washington University in St. Louis.

But there are no written or oral histories to describe them. The domesticated forms of the lost crops are thought to be extinct.

Writing in the Journal of Ethnobiology, Natalie Mueller, assistant professor of archaeology in Arts & Sciences, describes how she painstakingly grew and calculated yield estimates for two annual plants that were cultivated in eastern North America for thousands of years — and then abandoned.


Growing goosefoot (Chenopodium sp.) and erect knotweed (Polygonum erectum) together is more productive than growing either one alone, Mueller discovered. Planted in tandem, along with the other known lost crops, they could have fed thousands.

Archaeologists found the first evidence of the lost crops in rock shelters in Kentucky and Arkansas in the 1930s. Seed caches and dried leaves were their only clues. Over the past 25 years, pioneering research by Gayle Fritz, ​professor emerita of archaeology at Washington University, helped to establish the fact that a previously unknown crop complex had supported local societies for millennia before maize — a.k.a. corn — was adopted as a staple crop.

But how, exactly, to grow them?

The lost crops include a small but diverse group of native grasses, seed plants, squashes and sunflowers — of which only the squashes and sunflowers are still cultivated. For the rest, there is plenty of evidence that the lost crops were purposefully tended — not just harvested from free-living stands in the wild — but there are no instructions left.

“There are many Native American practitioners of ethnobotanical knowledge: farmers and people who know about medicinal plants, and people who know about wild foods. Their knowledge is really important,” Mueller said. “But as far as we know, there aren’t any people who hold knowledge about the lost crops and how they were grown.

“It’s possible that there are communities or individuals who have knowledge about these plants, and it just isn’t published or known by the academic community,” she said. “But the way that I look at it, we can’t talk to the people who grew these crops.

“So our group of people who are working with the living plants is trying to participate in the same kind of ecosystem that they participated in — and trying to reconstruct their experience that way.”

That means no greenhouse, no pesticides, and no special fertilizers.

“You have not just the plants but also everything else that comes along with them, like the bugs that are pollinating them and the pests that are eating them. The diseases that affect them. The animals that they attract, and the seed dispersers,” Mueller said. “There are all of these different kinds of ecological elements to the system, and we can interact with all of them.”

Her new paper reported on two experiments designed to investigate germination requirements and yields for the lost crops.

Mueller discovered that a polyculture of goosefoot and erect knotweed is more productive than either grown separately as a monoculture. Grown together, the two plants have higher yields than global averages for closely related domesticated crops (think: quinoa and buckwheat), and they are within the range of those for traditionally grown maize.

“The main reason that I’m really interested in yield is because there’s a debate within archeology about why these plants were abandoned,” Mueller said. “We haven’t had a lot of evidence about it one way or the other. But a lot of people have just kind of assumed that maize would be a lot more productive because we grow maize now, and it’s known to be one of the most productive crops in the world per unit area.”

Mueller wanted to quantify yield in this experiment so that she could directly compare yield for these plants to maize for the first time.

But it didn’t work out perfectly. She was only able to obtain yield estimates for two of the five lost crops that she tried to grow — but not for the plants known as maygrass, little barley and sumpweed.

Reporting on the partial batch was still important to her.

“My colleagues and I, we’re motivated from the standpoint of wanting to see more diverse agricultural systems, wanting to see the knowledge and management of indigenous people recognized and curiosity about what the ecosystems of North America were like before we had this industrial agricultural system,” Mueller said.

Reference: “Experimental Cultivation of Eastern North America’s Lost Crops: Insights into Agricultural Practice and Yield Potential” by Natalie G. Mueller, Andrea White and Peter Szilagyi, 20 December 2019, Journal of Ethnobiology.

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Falcons See Prey at Over 200 MPH – Speed of a Formula 1 Race Car

TOPICS: Birds:  By LUND UNIVERSITY,  DECEMBER 20, 2019


Extremely acute vision and the ability to rapidly process different visual impressions – these two factors are crucial when a peregrine falcon bears down on its prey at a speed that easily matches that of a Formula 1 racing car: over 350 kilometers per hour (~220 MPH).

The visual acuity of birds of prey has been studied extensively and shows the vision of some large eagles and vultures is twice as acute as that of humans. On the other hand, up to now researchers have never studied the speed of vision among birds of prey, i.e. how fast they sense visual impressions.

“This is the first time. My colleague Simon Potier and I have examined the peregrine falcon, saker falcon and Harris’s hawk and measured how fast light can blink for these species to still register the blinks,” says Almut Kelber, professor at the Department of Biology, Lund University.

The results show that the peregrine falcon has the fastest vision and can register 129 Hz (blinks per second) provided the light intensity is high. Under the same conditions, the saker falcon can see 102 Hz and the Harris’s hawk 77 Hz. By comparison, humans see a maximum of 50-60 Hz. At the cinema, a speed of 25 images per second is sufficient for us to perceive it as film, and not as a series of still images.

The speed at which the different birds of prey process visual impressions corresponds with the needs they have when hunting: the peregrine falcon hunts fast-flying birds, whereas the Harris’s hawk hunts small, slower mammals on the ground.

Even though the vision speed of birds of prey has never been measured before, there are studies about the speed at which small insect-eating birds such as flycatchers and blue tits can take in visual impressions.

“They also have fast vision. Therefore, we draw the conclusion that bird species that hunt prey that flies fast have the fastest vision. Evolution has provided them with the ability because they need it,” says Almut Kelber.

“It is something of a competition. A fly flies quite fast and has fast vision, therefore the flycatcher must see the fly quickly in order to catch it. The same applies to the falcon. To capture a flycatcher, the falcon must detect its prey sufficiently early in order to have time to react”, says Simon Potier.

The new knowledge can hopefully contribute to better conditions for birds held in captivity.

“Those who keep birds in cages must take care with the lighting and use cage lighting that does not shimmer, flicker or blink, because the birds will not feel well,” concludes Almut Kelber.

Reference: “How fast can raptors see?” by Simon Potier, Margaux Lieuvin, Michael Pfaff and Almut Kelber, 10 December 2019, Journal of Experimental Biology.

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Seasons Greetings

Tuesday, 24 December 2019

Lost City Discovered Beneath Ethiopia Was Once a Pillar of The Legendary Aksum Empire

CARLY CASSELLA, 24 DEC 2019

(Ioana Dumitru)

Excavations in Ethiopia have uncovered a lost city from one of the least documented major civilisations of the ancient world.

Back in its heyday, from 1st to 8th century AD, the African kingdom of Aksum was a force to be reckoned with. Sitting along the northern edge of the Red Sea and encompassing Ethiopia, Eritrea, Djibouti, Somalia and Somaliland, this flourishing and complex society played a major role in trade between the Roman Empire and ancient India.

It was the first sub-Saharan African state to mint its own coins and also the first to adopt Christianity, but we still know very little about it.

Now, archaeologists have discovered one of Aksum's most important sites yet: a bustling trade and religious centre, tucked between the capital city - also named Aksum - and the Red Sea, in a region called Yeha.

Named Beta Samati, which means "house of audience" in the local Tigrinya language, remnants of this settlement could help to reveal some of the mysteries surrounding the rise and fall of this ancient African empire.

"This is one of the most important ancient civilisations, but people [in the Western world] don't know it," archaeologist Michael Harrower from Johns Hopkins University told New Scientist.

"Outside of Egypt and Sudan, it's the earliest complex society or major civilisation in Africa."

Back in the 1970s, several important sites from the Aksum civilisation were surveyed near Yeha, although the surrounding areas were left altogether unexplored.

It wasn't until 2011, when archaeologists were tipped off by local residents, that they started looking in the surrounding hills. Here, they ultimately found the ancient settlement of Beta Samati, hiding more than three metres (10 feet) below the surface.

While more investigations of the new site are needed, preliminary findings challenge a common notion about the ancient empire. Previous to the Aksumite civilisation, societies in this region were thought to have collapsed, leaving only a few "small rural settlements" behind.

But archaeologists now think there was far greater continuity between Pre-Aksumite and Aksumite governments.

"Our work demonstrates that Beta Samati was a large, densely populated settlement located 6.5 kilometres (90 minutes by foot) north-east of Yeha, the centre of political power for sub-Saharan Africa's earliest (Pre-Aksumite) complex polity," the authors write.

"Our findings also demonstrate that, contrary to the supposed abandonment of the Yeha region following the Pre-Aksumite period, Beta Samati continued to function as a major node on trade routes that linked the Mediterranean to Adulis and Aksum during the Classic, Middle and Late Aksumite periods."
Four seasons of excavation between 2011 and 2016 have now yielded results that indicate this ancient town was occupied for some 1,400 years and played a crucial role in the region's socio-political and economic structure.

Between a grid of stone walls, experts found several stone buildings, coinage, inscriptions, a gold intaglio ring clearly influenced by the Romans, and a basilica, which was built during the 4th century, according to radiocarbon dating.

The layout of this building is similar to other basilicas found in the late and middle stages of the Aksum civilisation, although certain aspects of it suggest an earlier date. Inside, archaeologists uncovered evidence of rituals, administration, international trade, and high-value foods.

Several figurines of cattle and bull were also found in the basilica, which is quite unusual and suggests a mixing of pagan and early Christian traditions.

"In Ethiopia," the authors explain, "the basilica form seems to have first appeared in conjunction with Christianity. The basilica at Beta Samati, however, shows a complex blurring of secular trade and administration (tokens and stamp seals), pagan rituals (figurines and bucrania) and early Christian traditions (incense burners and crosses) that warrants further investigation."

Perhaps the most remarkable finding, however, is a black stone pendant, inscribed with a Christian cross and the motto "venerable" in Ethiopia's own ancient scrip Ge'ez, which is still used today.
"This is about the size that you could hang around your neck," Harrower told Live Science, "so maybe a priest would have worn this."

Towards the end of this civilisation's reign, Islam arrived in the region. In AD 615, the King of Aksum actually granted refuge to early Muslims, and one of the hypotheses is that the civilisation began to decline along with the conquest of Islam and its control over the Red Sea trade.

"Future research at the site has the potential to clarify a range of topics, including the rise of one of Africa's first complex polities, the development of Aksum's trade connections, the conversion from polytheism to Christianity, and the eventual decline of the Empire of Aksum," the authors write.

The study was published in Antiquity.

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