Science & Environment

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Signs of butchery, possible cannibalism found on ancient human relative's bone
Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Mark Johnson, The Washington Post
Published Jun 26, 2023 • 5 minute read
Close-up photos of three fossils from animals show cut marks similar to those found on the hominin shinbone.
Close-up photos of three fossils from animals show cut marks similar to those found on the hominin shinbone. PHOTO BY BRIANA POBINER /Handout
Using a magnifying glass to search for signs that an animal might have bitten or chewed the bone of a 1.5-million-year-old human relative, a paleoanthropologist found something wholly unexpected: cut marks made by a stone tool.


The marks, which appear on a fossilized half-shinbone found in 1970 in northern Kenya, appear to be the oldest evidence of one hominin butchering another. The discovery raises the compelling, somewhat creepy possibility that the remains were cannibalized, according to a study published Monday in the journal Scientific Reports.


“I was floored and shocked and went, ‘No way,'” said Briana Pobiner, lead author of the study and a paleoanthropologist at the National Museum of Natural History in Washington. She recalled approaching others at the National Museums of Kenya in Nairobi where she made the discovery, saying “Come here. Come look at this. Am I crazy?”

To be certain that the cut marks resulted from cannibalism, Pobiner said, “You have to know who is doing the eating and who is being eaten, and in this case we know neither.” Cannibalism requires that both the consumer and consumed be of the same species.


Around 1.5 million years ago, at least three species of hominin existed in the region where the fossil was found: Homo erectus, Homo habilis and Paranthropus boisei. Pobiner said that to determine the species in question, experts would need more of the skeleton than the single bone.

Cannibalism is not unusual in the animal kingdom. More than 1,300 animal species feed on their own kind, including some primates. The earliest evidence of cannibalism among hominins dates back 800,000 years, and was discovered at the Atapuerca archaeological site in northern Spain.

The closer the practice gets to Homo sapiens, the more complex and uncomfortable the questions it raises.

“This behaviour connects us to our animal nature and reminds us that we are just one among millions of living beings that have existed throughout evolution,” said Antonio Rodríguez-Hidalgo, a postdoctoral researcher at the Catalan Institute of Human Paleontology and Social Evolution who did not participate in the study, but who took part in a recent workshop on human cannibalism in prehistory entitled “Feast or Famine.”


“On a more unsettling note,” he continued in an email, “cannibalism in Homo sapiens carries deeper philosophical implications. It raises questions about love versus hate, family versus enemy, war cannibalism versus mortuary cannibalism, and feast versus famine.”

Making an impression
The fossilized bone examined by Pobiner was discovered by the famed British paleoanthropologist Mary Leakey, but at the time the markings were not noted as possible signs of butchery. Nor were they noted as such by subsequent researchers who have examined the left tibia over the last half-century.

Pobiner believes researchers who examined the bone did not notice the marks because they were not looking for signs of butchery. In recent years, it has become more common to re-examine previously discovered fossils, she said.


The bone was just one of 199 hominin fossils, all between 1.5 and 2 million years old, that Pobiner examined in July 2017, but it was the only one on which she found cut marks. The marks were the same color as the rest of the bone, indicating that they were made before the bone became fossilized, she said.

While Pobiner detected the marks with a simple handheld magnifying glass, they were later analyzed using more complex technology. She took one long impression of the bone using the kind of molding clay dentists use to take impressions of teeth and check bite marks when installing crowns.

She forwarded the impression to one of her co-authors on the study, Michael Pante, of Colorado State University, telling him nothing about what it was taken from. Over the course of months, Pante used the impression to make 3D computer models of the marks, which were all between 1 and 5 millimetres long. The models were compared with a database of 898 individual tooth, butchery and trample marks that had been created through controlled experiments.


Pante determined that 9 of the 11 were cut marks; the other two, tooth marks, were probably made by a lion-like animal.

“Unfortunately, identifying tool type or raw material from a cut mark is difficult and prone to error,” Pante said by email, “so we chose not to include this comparison.” He said additional research will be needed before the marks can be reliably linked to a specific kind of tool.

No stone tools were found with the bone, though Pobiner said tools have been discovered at various dig sites, including one about 15 miles away.

Far from done
Because the cut marks and tooth marks do not overlap, the story of what precisely happened is unclear. Did the hominin scavenge remains from an individual that was first killed by a lion, or did the hominin do the initial killing and the lion the scavenging?


“It seems a bit unusual for a large feline like a lion to scavenge the remains of a [hominin] that has already had its deeper muscles exploited,” Rodríguez-Hidalgo said. “What would be left for the cats to scavenge? Only the marrow, but large cats are not known for their bone-cracking abilities, and the tibia appears to be intact. So, this scenario doesn’t seem very plausible.”

The fact that only one of the 199 fossilized bones that Pobiner examined contained cut marks suggests to her that it was unlikely hominins of this period ate one another as a regular staple of their diet. Eating other hominins was more likely a response to scarcity of other food. The hominin diet 1.5 million years ago included ancient antelopes, zebras, rhinos, hippos ― “anything you can get your hands on,” as Pobiner likes to say.

James Cole, principal lecturer in archaeology at University of Brighton in England, called the new research “a really interesting and amazing discovery,” which demonstrates the value of going back to fossil collections held in museums.

“Some of the best discoveries have already been found, but perhaps not fully recognized yet,” Cole said. “The evidence here shows that we are far from done in our understanding of our hominin ancestors and the complex and fascinating lives they lived.”
ancient-bone[1].jpg
 

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Was that a tsunami that hit Florida? Yes, but not the kind you think
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Isabella O'malley
Published Jun 26, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 1 minute read

An unexpected culprit toppled beach chairs along the sand at normally-calm Clearwater Beach, Florida last Wednesday.


West Coast surfers might snicker at the cause, but the National Weather Service confirms the rare 4-foot wave was caused by a kind of tsunami, just not the kind you usually hear about.


It was a meteotsunami, a type caused by storms with strong gusting winds, rather than the more common, dramatic tsunamis triggered by earthquakes.

WHAT IS A METEOTSUNAMI?

According to Paul Close, senior forecaster at the National Weather Service in Tampa Bay, when a line of storms tracks over the ocean, there can be 30 to 50 mile per hour winds near the leading edge. The winds push the water, increasing the wave height near the coast before it eventually crashes onto shore.

Meteotsunamis only last about an hour because once the leading edge of the storm passes onto land, the action subsides.


The meteotsunami was about 2.5 feet higher than the forecast wave height and around 4 feet higher than average sea level.

Six-foot and higher meteotsunamis have been recorded around the world.

The weather service does not issue specific advisories for meteotsunamis. If the agency forecasts that a storm will have substantial impact, it issues a coastal flood watch or warning.

WHEN DO METEOTSUNAMIS FORM?

Close said that stronger storms and squall lines — groups of storms that track in a line with intense winds and heavy rain — are more common during the winter months around Florida.

“They don’t happen that often this time of year, but the current atmospheric pattern has been kind of unusual with all the heat out in Texas and the cool and damp weather in the Northeast.” This time of year, winds from the east are more common, he said. But the winds have been from the west almost all of June.
 

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Janitor cut power to lab freezer due to 'annoying alarms,' destroying $1M of research: Lawsuit
Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Jonathan Edwards
Published Jun 27, 2023 • 3 minute read

Professor K.V. Lakshmi feared her potentially groundbreaking research was in danger in September 2020 when a super-cold freezer at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, N.Y., went on the fritz. But she and her team took measures to protect their specimens until a repair crew could come a week later.


A lock box was placed around the outlet supplying power to the freezer. And a sign was put on its door in all caps, notifying janitors they didn’t need to clean, giving anyone annoyed by the freezer’s beeping instructions on how to shut it off and pleading with everyone, “PLEASE DO NOT MOVE OR UNPLUG IT.”


Four days after the freezer started beeping, Lakshmi and her team came to the lab to find that someone had shut off power to the machine, destroying decades’ worth of research materials valued at nearly $1 million, according to a recently filed lawsuit.

Nearly three years later, the university is suing Daigle Cleaning Systems, accusing the cleaning company it had recently hired of negligence and breaching its contract.


In a lawsuit filed June 16 in New York Supreme Court in Rensselaer County, the lawyer representing the university, Michael Ginsberg, said Daigle failed to properly train a janitor who, after hearing the freezer’s “annoying alarms,” used the lab’s circuit breaker to cut its power. School officials are seeking at least $1 million, which they estimate is the cost of reproducing Lakshmi’s research on photosynthesis that had “the potential to be groundbreaking” for solar technology.

“An ounce of prevention in the employee’s training would have gone a long way here,” Ginsberg told The Washington Post.

Daigle did not immediately respond Monday to a request for comment.

In August 2020, the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, one of the oldest engineering schools in the country, contracted with Albany-based Daigle to provide janitorial services for the academic semester stretching into late November.


On Sept. 14, 2020, an alarm sounded in the laboratory where Lakshmi kept her research. The temperature of a freezer with cell cultures and specimens, which needed to stay between minus-115.6 and minus-108.4 degrees Fahrenheit to prevent “catastrophic damage,” had risen to the upper limit.

Lakshmi determined the cell cultures and samples would be fine so long as the temperature held. She contacted the freezer manufacturer to schedule an emergency service, but because of pandemic restrictions, no one could come to fix it until Sept. 21.

Lakshmi investigated several possible causes for the temperature shift by questioning university facilities officials, who told her temperature and air flow in the lab generally weren’t endangering her specimens. To try to ensure electricity kept flowing to the freezer, a lock box was installed on its outlet to prevent anyone from unplugging it. A sign was posted on the door, stating that the freezer was under repair and shouldn’t be moved or unplugged. The sign provided instructions on how to stop the freezer from beeping.


On Sept. 17, a Daigle janitor came to clean the lab, the suit states. While doing so, he heard “annoying alarms” throughout the evening, it adds. While working, he allegedly turned off the circuit breaker supplying electricity to the freezer, causing it to rise to minus-25.6 degrees, far above the limit necessary to preserve Lakshmi’s specimens.

The next day, Lakshmi’s team discovered the freezer was off and the temperature inside had risen “to the point of destruction.” Despite efforts to save them, “a majority of specimens were compromised, destroyed, and rendered unsalvageable demolishing more than twenty (20) years of research.”

During an interview with the university officials, the janitor admitted that he heard the alarms, thought “important breakers were turned off,” grew concerned and turned them on. But he misread the panel and did the opposite of what he intended, the suit alleges.

“At the end of the interview, he still did not appear to believe he had done anything wrong,” the suit states, “but was just trying to help.”
 

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Ontario starts pre-development work for new, large-scale nuclear plant
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published Jul 05, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 3 minute read

Ontario is looking to build the first new, large-scale nuclear plant in more than 30 years in order to meet the province’s growing electricity demands.


Energy Minister Todd Smith announced Wednesday that the government is looking at a new plant to generate up to 4,800 megawatts — enough to power 4.8 million homes — on the site of Bruce Power’s current generating station on the shore of Lake Huron in Tiverton, Ont.


Bruce Power will now start community consultations and conduct an environmental assessment for federal approval to determine the feasibility of another nuclear plant.

“They have the world’s largest operating nuclear facility here right now, with about 6,550 megawatts, providing clean, reliable, emissions-free power to the grid, baseload power,” Smith said in an interview.

“On a daily basis about 30 per cent of Ontario’s electricity comes from this site right now. There’s room alongside (units) Bruce A and Bruce B, potentially, for a Bruce C and that’s what this pre-development work is intended to begin today.”


The plans are part of the province’s attempts to meet rising electricity demand, which is expected to grow even more rapidly starting around 2035 due to the proliferation of electric vehicles, new EV battery manufacturing plants and electric arc furnaces for steelmaking.

“Initiating this early planning is going to ensure that the province has a reliable, low-cost and clean option ready and available here at Bruce Power to power the next major international investment, the new homes that are being built in the province and industries and sectors across the province as they grow and look to electrify,” Smith said at a news conference.

A report late last year by the Independent Electricity System Operator found that the province could fully eliminate natural gas from the electricity system by 2050, starting with a moratorium in 2027, but it will require about $400 billion in capital spending and more generation including new, large-scale nuclear plants, more conservation efforts, more renewable energy sources and more energy storage.


The province has not committed to a natural gas moratorium or phase-out, but Smith called Wednesday’s announcement “phase one of our plan on powering Ontario’s growth” and hinted that more of it would be rolled out later this week and next week.

Ontario has moved forward on procuring energy storage for the grid, often in the form of batteries that store energy at times of low demand and inject it back into the system when needed, but it has also added more natural gas generation.

The Independent Electricity System Operator has said gas is required to ensure supply and stability in the short- to medium-term, but that the amount of new natural gas Ontario needs in the next few years is expected to increase emissions by two to four per cent over previous projections.


It means that greenhouse gas emissions from the electricity sector are set to rise in order to support the economy’s broader electrification in the name of reducing emissions.

Environmental advocates have decried the increasing reliance on natural gas generation, but many also object to more nuclear power.

“Building new nuclear plants is the most expensive way possible to meet our future low-carbon energy needs,” said Keith Stewart, a senior energy strategist with Greenpeace Canada.

“Wind and solar, even with storage, are one half to one third the price with no radioactive waste or risk of catastrophic accidents.”

In terms of costs, Smith said the pre-development work could cost $80 million, depending on how long federal approvals take, and the ministry is working with the IESO and Bruce Power on a contract.

Smith also said that the work could partly be funded by revenue from a voluntary clean energy “credit” registry launched earlier this year, through which companies can pay to boast a commitment to clean energy.

The government has previously said it expects sales in the first year of the registry to generate $8 million, but hopes that amount will rise in subsequent years.
 

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How our brain tries to beat the heat - and why heatstroke is dangerous
Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Richard Sima
Published Jul 07, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 4 minute read

Our brain works hard to coordinate and regulate our body’s temperature. But rising temperatures and humidity make us increasingly susceptible to heatstroke, especially during exercise.


“When you overheat your body, you can basically cook your cells, essentially, and that will cause cell death and cell dysfunction,” said Rebecca Stearns, the chief operating officer of the Korey Stringer Institute, a nonprofit housed at the University of Connecticut dedicated to studying and preventing heatstroke in athletes.


It’s important to know the risks of heatstroke and take it seriously. Not only does heatstroke have a relatively high mortality rate, but those who recover still may face future health problems, said Orlando Laitano, assistant professor of applied physiology and kinesiology at the University of Florida. “We now believe that heatstroke is almost like concussion.”

Understanding heat stroke and heat illness

Anyone can develop a heat-related illness, though older adults and young children are especially vulnerable. High humidity, strenuous physical activity and consecutive sweltering nights also increase our risk.

Heat illness can range in severity from mild heat exhaustion to life-threatening heatstroke. Heat exhaustion is more common, and may involve symptoms such as dizziness, fatigue, nausea or headache but not a dramatic increase in body temperature.

Heatstroke is typically defined as having a core body temperature that is above 104 or 105 Fahrenheit, which causes severe dysfunction of the central nervous system, including confusion, dizziness and unconsciousness, and can lead to multiorgan injury and more.


However, there can be significant differences in individual heat tolerance and there are people who collapse below this threshold, Laitano said.

How our brain coordinates temperature regulation
The cells in our body function properly only in a relatively narrow band of temperatures, which is regulated to be between 98 and 99.5F (36.7 and 37.5C) in a healthy human. Extreme heat damages our cells, degrades proteins and harms DNA.

“Whenever you have that, you’ll see the cascade of effects that causes things to shut down and causes damage to your body,” Stearns said.

Our central nervous system works hard to coordinate control over our body’s temperature to prevent harm. Temperature sensors in our skin and internal organs, called thermoreceptors, are specially tuned to different temperature ranges and send signals to our brain’s touch cortex, which allows us to perceive the heat and respond to it, such as getting out of the sun and heading indoors.


We also have an internal thermostat located in our brain’s hypothalamus called the preoptic area. By sensing our core body temperature, it can activate automatic autonomic systems to begin cooling the body when it reaches a certain temperature, such as through sweating and dilating our blood vessels.

The primary way we cool ourselves is through sweating through our sweat glands. As the sweat evaporates, it cools our skin. This evaporative cooling accounts for about 80% of our cooling capacity during exercise, Stearns said.

Sweating, however, is a “double-edged sword,” Laitano said. “It’s very important because it will help you thermoregulate, but also leads to dehydration.”

Our brain’s internal thermostat also activates the sympathetic nervous system causing blood vessels in our skin to dilate. Our heart more than doubles its output to meet the increased demand, and pumps warm blood from our body’s core to the surface, where it should cool off – if the outside air isn’t hotter.


Hot, humid days are particularly dangerous for heatstroke because they challenge our natural abilities to thermoregulate. The hot air raises our skin’s temperature instead of lowering it, and the higher the humidity, the harder it is for our sweat to evaporate and cool us.

The two types of heatstroke
Classic heatstroke is caused by passive heating from the external environment, such as during heat waves. It typically affects children and older adults who are less able to regulate their body temperature. In young children, sweat glands may not be fully developed. And with age, we begin to lose our ability to both sense thirst and thermoregulate effectively.

Exertional heatstroke occurs when we physically exert ourselves with strenuous activity in hot weather. Physical activity heats up our skeletal muscles when it consumes energy. The more intensively the muscle contracts, the more heat is produced, which heats up our body from the inside in addition to the ambient heat of the environment.


It is estimated that the mortality rate of exertional heatstroke could reach around 27%, while mortality in classic heatstroke could be much higher, due to its predominance in already vulnerable people.

How heatstroke can damage the brain
Early data show that 10 to 28% of patients who survive heatstroke may sustain long-term cognitive or neurological damage, particularly involving dysfunction of the cerebellum, a brain region important for coordinating our movement.

Brain imaging months or years following heatstroke has also found damage to cells in the cerebellum and other brain areas, including the hippocampus, midbrain and thalamus can also be damaged.

“It’s very rare to have somebody who has long-term damage from heatstroke and survives,” Stearns said. “Most of those cases, unfortunately, perish. But there are many cases that require lifelong care that are out there.”


How to prevent and treat heatstroke
— Give yourself time to acclimate to the heat and stay hydrated.

— Don’t exercise outdoors alone. Getting out of the heat, even for a few hours, is protective during heat waves.

— If you feel unwell, weak, confused or agitated, those are all “red flags,” Stearns said. S

— Begin cooling immediately even before a full diagnosis. You can apply ice wrapped in towels to the neck, groin or the extremities.

For more health news and content around diseases, conditions, wellness, healthy living, drugs, treatments and more, head to Healthing.ca – a member of the Postmedia Network.
 

spaminator

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Ontario Power Generation, province plan 3 more small modular reactors
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published Jul 07, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 3 minute read

Ontario is planning three more small modular reactors at the site of the Darlington nuclear power plant, an announcement that comes the same week the energy minister said the province is moving forward with a new, large-scale nuclear facility.


The power generated by the small modular reactors — four in total, with one already being built at Darlington — and the large plant planned at Bruce Power on the shore of Lake Huron would be 6,000 megawatts, or enough to power the equivalent of six million homes around the mid-2030s.


That is around when electricity demand is projected to start rising even more quickly and forecasts from the Independent Electricity System Operator from before the recent spate of announcements show a supply gap of about 5,000 megawatts at that time.

Energy Minister Todd Smith pointed to electric vehicle battery plants being built in Windsor, Ont., and St. Thomas, Ont., along with battery component manufacturing facilities such as Umicore in eastern Ontario and transitioning steel production from coal to electricity in Hamilton and Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.


“These five investments alone are going to increase annual electricity demand by eight terawatt hours a year,” Smith said.

“How much is that, you say? Well, that’s the equivalent to the annual electricity consumption of the Ottawa region.”

Smith also noted that the province is working toward building 1.5 million new homes by 2031 and that electric vehicle use is expected to keep increasing.

Small modular reactors use similar technology to traditional nuclear power plants, but they are much smaller.

Building new nuclear reactors was one of the recommendations in a report late last year by the IESO, which looked at how the province could end its reliance on natural gas to generate electricity, even in the face of sharply rising demand.


It found that the province could fully eliminate it from the electricity system by 2050, starting with a moratorium in 2027, but it will require about $400 billion in capital spending and more generation including new, large-scale nuclear plants, more conservation efforts, more renewable energy sources and more energy storage.

The IESO has said that natural gas is required to ensure supply and stability in the short to medium term, but that it will also increase greenhouse gas emissions from the electricity sector.

Environmental advocates have said Ontario could meet its energy needs through renewables rather than gas, and some raise concerns about nuclear power due to its cost and the waste it generates. A group of MPs also warned in April of risks with forging ahead with small modular reactors, as they are still relatively untested, not being widely used anywhere in the world.


Smith said he is confident that Ontario Power Generation will ensure the project’s success.

“I have full faith in the team here at OPG, especially given the track record on the refurbishments that are underway,” he said of work being done on the large-scale plant at Darlington.

“(They) have brought in these multi-billion dollar refurbishments on time, ahead of schedule, under budget.”

OPG president and CEO Ken Hartwick said that with work already underway on one SMR at Darlington, a fleet is a logical next step there.

“From an economic standpoint, it just makes sense, building multiple units here, driving down regulatory, construction and operating costs, while also eliminating risk for other jurisdictions looking to deploy the same technology,” he said at the site.


“We will also be able to leverage common infrastructure — some of what you can see being built now to support four units rather than just one — and this will further reduce our costs for ratepayers.”

Subject to the regulatory approvals, the additional three SMRs could come online between 2034 and 2036. Construction on the first one is set to be complete by 2028.

Smith announced Wednesday that pre-development work was starting to build a new, large-scale nuclear plant on the site of Bruce Power’s current generating station on the shore of Lake Huron in Tiverton, Ont. He said Friday he isn’t ruling out also adding SMRs there, too.
 

spaminator

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New Zealand tour operators plead guilty to safety breaches in deadly eruption of volcano
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Published Jul 07, 2023 • 1 minute read

WELLINGTON, New Zealand — Three helicopter tour operators pleaded guilty on Friday to safety breaches when New Zealand’s White Island volcano erupted in 2019, claiming 22 lives.


Volcanic Air Safaris Ltd., Kahu NZ Ltd. and Aerius Ltd. were to go on trial in Auckland District Court next week along with six other entities and people following the tragedy at the island, which had been a popular tourist attraction.


There were 47 people on White Island, the tip of an undersea volcano also known by its indigenous Maori name Whakaari, when superheated steam erupted, leaving most of the 25 who were not killed with severe burns.

Many people question why tourists were allowed to visit the island after experts monitoring seismic activity raised the volcano’s alert level two weeks before the eruption.

The three helicopter operators admitted that they had failed to ensure the health and safety of staff and tourists.

Many of those killed and injured were tourists who had been traveling from Australia aboard the Royal Caribbean cruise ship Ovation of the Seas. Of those killed, 14 were Australian, five were American, two were New Zealanders and one was from Germany.

The judge-only trial is scheduled to start Monday and take 16 weeks.

Each of the organizations faces a maximum fine of 1.5 million New Zealand dollars ($927,000). Each individual charged faces a maximum fine of NZ$300,000 ($185,000).

The three operators that pleaded guilty will now appear in court in August.
 

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New Zealand tour operators plead guilty to safety breaches in deadly eruption of volcano
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Published Jul 07, 2023 • 1 minute read

WELLINGTON, New Zealand — Three helicopter tour operators pleaded guilty on Friday to safety breaches when New Zealand’s White Island volcano erupted in 2019, claiming 22 lives.
Dammit I TOLD 'em "Make sure you don't leave the keys in the volcano!"
 

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More than 1 billion people projected to have diabetes by 2050
The increasing prevalence of Type 2 diabetes worldwide is 'primarily due to a rise in obesity'

Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Linda Searing
Published Jul 10, 2023 • Last updated 2 days ago • 1 minute read

The number of people worldwide with diabetes is projected to more than double in the next three decades, reaching 1.3 billion by 2050, according to research published in the Lancet.


The researchers found that 529 million people had diabetes in 2021 and that the climb in diabetes numbers would increase the prevalence of the disease from 6 percent of the world’s population to nearly 10 percent by 2050. The study’s findings are based on the analysis of data from more than 27,000 sources in 204 countries and territories.


According to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 37 million people in the United States have diabetes. Diabetes is a chronic disease that develops when a person’s blood sugar (glucose) level is too high. Ideally, the body converts most of the food you eat into glucose and releases it into your bloodstream, and your pancreas releases insulin, a hormone, to help get the glucose into your cells for energy.


For people who have diabetes, however, the body may make little or no insulin (Type 1 diabetes) or may not make or use insulin properly (Type 2), leaving too much glucose in the bloodstream. Over time, this can lead to serious health problems, including heart disease, stroke, kidney disease, nerve damage and vision loss.

The researchers found that about 96 per cent of people worldwide who had diabetes in 2021 had Type 2, noting that the increasing prevalence of Type 2 diabetes worldwide is “primarily due to a rise in obesity.” They wrote that “the continued global spread of diabetes presents a massive public health challenge” for policymakers, health-care professionals and patients.

For more health news and content around diseases, conditions, wellness, healthy living, drugs, treatments and more, head to Healthing.ca – a member of the Postmedia Network.
 

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'Majestic' Southwestern Ontario poison ivy mega-plant earns Guinness World Record nod
The international organization has deemed it the tallest ever spotted

Author of the article:Vincent Ball • Brantford Expositor
Published Jul 11, 2023 • Last updated 2 days ago • 2 minute read
Robert Fedrock of Paris stands with the poison ivy plant he discovered on his property. The plant, at 68-feet tall, has been recognized by Guinness World Records as the tallest poison ivy plant in the world.
Robert Fedrock of Paris stands with the poison ivy plant he discovered on his property. The plant, at 68-feet tall, has been recognized by Guinness World Records as the tallest poison ivy plant in the world. PHOTO BY VINCENT BALL /Postmedia Network
A Southwestern Ontario man has earned a Guinness World Record after discovering a poison ivy plant on his property that the international organization has deemed the tallest ever spotted.


Robert Fedrock of Paris, near Brantford, spotted it a few years ago. The plant measures 20.75 metres, or 68 feet, which dwarfs typical poison ivy plants that are between one to four feet.


“It just looked like this great, big hairy vine growing up the tree,” Fedrock recalled in a recent interview. “The vine is about six inches in diameter and I just thought it was massive and fascinating.”

The brown vine clings to a white ash tree and stretches upwards. The leaves of the plant can be seen at about 10 feet above the ground.

When Fedrock discovered it, the plant was well-camouflaged by a patch of common buckthorn, which has since been removed.

Fedrock spends a lot of time outdoors enjoying nature and shared his discovery with friends. One of them suggested submitting the plant to Guinness, considered the worldwide authority on record-breaking achievements and oddities.


Fedrock looked into making a submission. He subsequently learned that there wasn’t a specific category for the tallest poison ivy plant.

“That’s one of the reasons why I decided to submit it,” Fedrock said. “I think it’s really kind of cool and given how much press attention there has been, a lot of other people think it’s pretty cool, too.

“I just thought there should be a record for the tallest poison ivy plant.”

As part of his submission, Fedrock had to have it confirmed as poison ivy by a botanist. Once Guinness announced it as a formal record, Fedrock found himself the subject of much more attention than he expected.

One question he’s been asked: Why didn’t he cut it down?

“A lot of people say it should be cut down or eradicated and I think that’s a very sad way of looking at the world,” Fedrock said. “If it’s in your backyard that’s one thing. But when it’s out in the woods it’s part of the habitat, it’s not hurting anybody and it’s a majestic plant.”

Vball@postmedia.com
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Tourists told to stay away from erupting volcano in Iceland due to poisonous gases
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Published Jul 11, 2023 • Last updated 3 days ago • 2 minute read
Fagradalsfjall volcano near Litli Hrutur
This handout image released by MBL on July 10, 2023 shows smoke billowing from Fagradalsfjall volcano near Litli Hrutur, south-west of Reykjavik in Iceland. PHOTO BY MBL /AFP via Getty Images
REYKJAVIK, Iceland — Authorities in Iceland on Tuesday warned tourists and other spectators to stay away from a newly erupting volcano that is spewing lava and noxious gases from a fissure in the country’s southwest.


The eruption began Monday afternoon after thousands of earthquakes in the area, meteorological authorities said. This one comes 11 months after its last eruption officially ended. The eruption is in an uninhabited valley near the Litli-Hrutur mountain, some 30 kilometers (19 miles) southwest of the capital, Reykjavik.


The area, known broadly as Fagradalsfjall volcano, erupted in 2021 and 2022 without causing damage or disruptions to flights, despite being near Keflavik Airport, Iceland’s international air traffic hub. The airport remained open on Tuesday.

The Icelandic Meteorological Office said the eruption was initially more explosive than the previous two. Aerial footage showed streams of orange molten lava and clouds of gases spewing from a snaking fissure about 900 meters (half a mile) long.


“Gas pollution is high around the eruption and dangerous,” the Met Office said. “Travelers are advised not to enter the area until responders have had a chance to evaluate conditions.”

By Tuesday morning, the fissure and the volume of the eruption had shrunk, scientists said.

“This has become a small eruption, which is very good news,” University of Iceland geophysics professor Magnus Tumi Guðmundsson told national broadcaster RUV.

He said the eruption could “certainly last a long time, but luckily we’re not looking at a continuation of what we saw in the first few hours.”

A 2021 eruption in the same area produced spectacular lava flows for several months. Hundreds of thousands of people flocked to see the sight.

Iceland, which sits above a volcanic hot spot in the North Atlantic, averages an eruption every four to five years.

The most disruptive in recent times was the 2010 eruption of the Eyjafjallajokull volcano, which sent huge clouds of ash into the atmosphere and led to widespread airspace closures over Europe. More than 100,000 flights were grounded, stranding millions of international travelers and halting air travel for days because of concerns the ash could damage jet engines.
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Tourists received no safety warnings before New Zealand eruption killed 22
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Rod Mcguirk
Published Jul 11, 2023 • 4 minute read

WEL.LINGTON, New Zealand — Tourists received no health and safety warnings before they landed on New Zealand’s most active volcano ahead of a 2019 eruption that killed 22 people, a prosecutor said Tuesday.


There were 47 people on White Island, the tip of an undersea volcano also known by its Indigenous Maori name, Whakaari, when superheated gases erupted on Dec. 9. Most of the 25 people who survived were severely burned.


The island’s owners, brothers Andrew, James and Peter Buttle; their company Whakaari Management Ltd.; and tour operators ID Tours NZ Ltd. and Tauranga Tourism Services Ltd. went on trial Tuesday in Auckland District Court for allegedly failing to adequately protect tourists and staff.

Prosecutor Kristy McDonald said in opening the prosecution case that the eruption at the popular tourist destination was not predictable but was foreseeable. The 20 tourists and two tour guides who died were given no warning of the risks, she said.


“They were not given the opportunity to make any informed decision about whether they wanted to take the risk of walking into the crater of an active and unpredictable volcano that had erupted as recently as 2016,” McDonald said.

“The business of tourism on Whakaari was a risky business. It involved tours to an active volcano, taking people to the heart of the crater in circumstances where no one could predict when an eruption might occur, and if an eruption did occur, those on Whakaari were likely to die or suffer very serious injury. And tragically, that risk was realized,” she said.

Of those killed, 14 were Australians, five were Americans, two were New Zealanders and one was German.

McDonald said the company that owned the volcano — Whakaari Management Ltd., which she called WML — failed to understand the risk, failed to consult with tour operators on the hazards, failed to ensure appropriate personal protective equipment was provided to tourists and staff, and failed to provide an adequate means of evacuation.


The company left tour operators to monitor the changing risk. An eruption on April 27, 2016, occurred at night without warning when no one was on the island. That should have prompted the owner to review the risk assessment, McDonald said.

The volcano had gone through 42 “eruptive periods” since colonial records began in 1826, McDonald said.

After the 2016 eruption, New Zealand geology agency GNS Science said its staff were banned from visiting the crater floor until further notice because of the “heightened state of volcanic unrest,” McDonald said.

Despite knowing this, several operators continued taking tourists to the crater from the day after the eruption, she said.

WHL, which made a profit of 1 million New Zealand dollars ($621,000) a year from tourists, could have paid GNS for a formal risk assessment but did not, she said.


McDonald said warning tourists of the dangers “would obviously not be good for business.”

“However, profit should never come before safety,” she said.

She blamed the Buttle brothers for the WML’s failure to assess the volcano danger.

“The Buttles knew they could obtain expert advice from GNS for a fee. They chose not to,” McDonald said. “The Buttles failed to do one of the most fundamental things required of them as officers. They failed to ensure that their company had and used sufficient resources to understand the risk of its business and to implement controls to manage that risk.”

ID Tours NZ and Tauranga Services failed to ensure 38 passengers, who had traveled from Australia aboard the Royal Caribbean cruise ship Ovation of the Seas and were on the volcano when it erupted, had been properly warned of the risk, she said.


Those 38 people “did not receive any health and safety information about volcanic activity or volcanic risk prior to the tour,” McDonald said.

If WML was going to allow tourists to visit the volcano, the company should have ensured visitors were equipped with adequate personal protective equipment and that emergency evacuation options were provided, McDonald said.

The court was shown video and photographs taken in the moments before and during the eruption.

McDonald said the only way off the island other than aircraft was a 90-year-old jetty that was too small for tourist boats to dock at. Survivors had to climb down a ladder to inflatable boats.

“A number of victims were badly burnt and this transfer was very painful,” McDonald said. “Some of them were losing the skin off their hands as they attempted to climb down the ladder. Some were unable to use the ladder and were pushed or fell into the inflatable boats.”


Defense lawyer James Cairney, representing WML and the Buttle brothers, questioned whether “one director can be liable for one failing by a company when there are multiple directors.”

David Neutze, the lawyer for ID Tours, said Royal Caribbean had probably breached safety standards but the New Zealand regulator WorkSafe had no jurisdiction over the Florida-based company.

ID Tours’ role was as a ground handler taking passengers from the cruise ship and as a booking agent for volcano tours.

“ID, we say, did not have a reasonably practical ability to cancel tours, to control the provision of health and safety information to passengers, to verify its accuracy or its adequacy or appropriateness of any health or safety information provided,” Neutze said. “Those functions were part of the work activity of others, principally Royal Caribbean, which sold the tours, and White Island Tours, which provided the tours.”

White Island Tours pleaded guilty in June to safety breaches relating to the eruption. All but one of the 22 dead were involved with that tour operator.

Three helicopter tour operators pleaded guilty last week to safety breaches.

Each of the companies faces a maximum fine of NZ$1.5 million ($927,000). Each of the brothers charged faces a maximum fine of NZ$300,000 ($185,000).

The trial being heard by Judge Evangelos Thomas without a jury will resume Wednesday. It is scheduled to run for 16 weeks.
 

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Birds using anti-bird spikes to fortify nests in 'perfect comeback'
The birds - mostly of the Corvidae type like magpies and crows - have been spotted making such nests in Scotland, Holland and Belgium

Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Adela Suliman
Published Jul 13, 2023 • 3 minute read
A magpie nest in Antwerp, Belgium.
A magpie nest in Antwerp, Belgium. PHOTO BY AUKE-FLORIAN HIEMSTRA /Photo by Auke-Florian Hiemstra
LONDON – Look up. The birds are taking charge.


The hard metal spikes that humans install to prevent birds from perching have been found in nests across Europe. The birds are masterfully subverting their intended use – stripping them from buildings and bringing them to fortify their own homes and protect their offspring.


“Just the fact their using these anti-bird spikes to protect their nests … is like the perfect comeback,” Auke-Florian Hiemstra, lead author of a study on the nests published this week, said in an interview. “These rebellious birds [are] outsmarting us.”

The birds – mostly of the Corvidae type, which includes magpies and crows – have been spotted making such nests that incorporate the “hostile” architecture in Scotland, Holland and Belgium, according to Hiemstra.


The metal spikes are believed to give “structural support” to the nests, in some instances creating dome-like roofs, he said. They also come in handy for “nest defence,” Hiemstra added, to ward off predators and protect eggs, such that “the nest is like a fortress.” His study was published in Deinsea, an online journal of the Natural History Museum of Rotterdam.

The researcher of artificial materials in animal structures at the Naturalis Biodiversity Center and Leiden University in the Netherlands said he first came across such a nest in a hospital courtyard in Antwerp, Belgium, after it was spotted by a patient. Hiemstra said that massive structure contained about 1,500 metal spikes, or around 50 meters of anti-bird pins, probably stripped from the hospital roof.


The unusual actions may show some “evolutionary advantage,” Hiemstra hypothesized, with birds seeking alternatives to natural thorny plant material for their nests, in favor of sharper, human-made objects like spikes or barbed wire. “Animals always look at materials for their own gains,” he added.

Jim Reynolds, an assistant professor in ornithology and animal Conservation at the University of Birmingham who was not involved in the study, agrees that the materials being “repurposed” is an adaptation technique for birds “living and breeding in a city.”

There could be another advantage: Shiny, spiky nest fodder could be viewed as a “quality indicator” to potential feathery mates that this bird has a nice home and would make a good partner, he said.


Reynolds said he was “not surprised at all” by the birds’ wily behavior, noting that clever Corvidae have long intrigued birdwatchers “because of their toolmaking and cognitive abilities.”

Anti-bird spikes are often laid out at railway stations, car parks or on roofs of buildings to prevent the animals from perching. Similarly hostile architecture is sometimes found in doorways and benches to stop humans from dwelling or sleeping on streets in cities around the world.

“It seems that birds might be taking revenge here somewhat on our anti-bird strategies,” he added.

Auke-Florian Hiemstra with a nest. (Alexander Schippers/Naturalis)
Auke-Florian Hiemstra with a nest. (Alexander Schippers/Naturalis) PHOTO BY PHOTO BY ALEXANDER SCHIPPERS / N /Photo by Alexander Schippers / N
Although the practice is innovative, there may be some cause for concern, warned Mark Mainwaring, an ornithologist and lecturer at Bangor University in Wales who published a separate study this week on bird species incorporating “anthropogenic materials” such as candy wrappers and plastic strings into their nests.


For instance, metal spikes may get cold at night and harm chicks. Or certain types of trash collected may be toxic or harmful to the animals, he said, although others such as cigarette butts may have some benefits in killing parasites. Colorful debris could also have the adverse consequence of attracting predators, Mainwaring said.

He encouraged more people to look in their backyards, outside the active breeding season, and share images of such mixed-material nesting. Mainwaring’s study was published in Britain’s Royal Society Journal.

For U.S. architect Joyce Hwang, the birds’ adaptive behavior is “beautiful and pretty ironic,” she said.

Modern urban buildings often have a raft of “bird deterrents,” including electric-shock wires, netting and spikes – often to prevent “bird poop” in the vicinity – but “birds are still finding a way” to perch and make homes, she noted.

Other methods may offer better solutions, such as slopes and slanted windows to prevent birds from wanting to nest, said Hwang, an associate professor of architecture at the University at Buffalo.

Fundamentally, anti-bird spikes or deterrents can signal an almost controlling human behavior over nature, she said.

“I think there is a kind of poetic justice,” Hwang said of the birds subverting the materials meant to keep them at bay. “It’s pretty remarkable.”
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Air quality study finds 'surprising' levels of carcinogen in Steeltown
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published Jul 13, 2023 • Last updated 2 days ago • 2 minute read
A University of Toronto professor says residents of Hamilton could be inhaling the chemical equivalent of one or two cigarettes per week -- at minimum -- due to elevated levels of a cancer-causing compound in the air.
A University of Toronto professor said Hamilton residents could be inhaling the chemical equivalent of one or two cigarettes per week — at minimum — due to elevated levels of a cancer-causing compound in the air.


Matthew Adams, an air contaminants researcher working on behalf of the City of Hamilton and the non-profit Environment Hamilton, said air quality monitors installed on street poles across the city and funded by Health Canada found concentrations of benzo(a)pyrene (BaP) higher or much higher than provincial criteria.


Adams said the BaP concentrations are highest in Hamilton’s industrial region, but also elevated across the municipality’s urban areas.

In urban neighbourhoods farther away from the industrial area, residents may be exposed to the equivalent of half a cigarette or one cigarette every few days, Adams said in an interview.

“But at the highest concentrations, exposure to the air you’re breathing would expose you to about the same amount of benzo(a)pyrene that’s in a cigarette,” he said.



The city has known about its BaP problem for some time, but Adams said the carcinogen’s ubiquity across the entire city is surprising.

Long-term exposure to the chemical, created by burning tobacco, wood or coal and by operating gas-powered vehicles, can increase cancer risk.

Although an individual’s risk of developing cancer is not dramatically increased from Hamilton’s air pollution, Adams said the city’s chronically exposed population would eventually see a correlation with increased cancer rates.

Determining how many cancer cases the city’s BaP levels may be responsible for is the goal of Environment Hamilton’s study.


Hamilton’s steelmakers have been known BaP emitters for years, said Adams. Reduced steel production and improved standards for pollution capture since the 1980s have been offset, however, by increased industrial traffic throughout the city, he added.

Adams said site-specific emission exemptions granted by the provincial government to Hamilton’s steel industry have encouraged air pollution and tied the hands of the local government.

“We should be abiding by regulatory concentrations and eliminating site-specific standards that (steel factories) have been given in Hamilton,” he said.

Ultimately, Adams said Hamilton residents will have to engage with the provincial government and their MPPs to see emissions standards change in Steeltown.

“The big takeaway for me is that we have regulation, but then we have site-specific standards that allow (industry) to exceed those regulations. And this is what we end up with when you do that.”
 

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Crews work to repair homes, researchers assessing damage
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Liam Fox
Published Jul 14, 2023 • 2 minute read

Researchers and contractors were combing over the site of a tornado that tore through a south-end Ottawa neighbourhood Thursday to assess its aftermath and begin cleanup.


Connell Miller, a wind impacts researcher with Western University’s Northern Tornado Project, said a team of researchers was in the area investigating the scale of the twister.


Miller said Friday that included looking at the size of its path and the extent of the damage.

Meanwhile, contractors and their cars crowded Marek Way, one of the streets in the Barrhaven neighbourhood that was hardest hit.

Some stood on roofs throwing scattered shingles to the ground. Others threw large pieces of plywood in trailers. One lifted a ragged hockey net onto a bulldozer’s front blade.

A few residents watched from their porches or driveways as debris from their torn-up homes was collected.

Basim and Aya Refat, along with their two children, were forced to vacate their house on the street due to extensive damage.


They said they are staying in hotel accommodations paid for by their landlord, and don’t expect to be able to return home for a few months.

Aya Refat said she and her two young daughters huddled under a table and barricaded themselves in with a chair as the tornado swept through. She covered her daughters with a blanket to protect them from flying glass.

“So scary. I couldn’t see anything,” she recounted on Friday. “Everything was going away. The floor was moving. The window was broken.”

Aaron Jaffe, an engineering researcher who works with Miller, said the tornado project’s research is still in its early stages.

But the tornado appears to have had a path more than 100 metres wide and several kilometres long, he said.

Jaffe said researchers are in the process of evaluating the tornado through the Enhanced Fujita Scale, which is used to measure the severity of tornadoes in Canada and the U.S.

He said the early indications suggested Thursday’s storm may have created an EF-1 or EF-2 tornado, which can produce winds between 138 and 217 km/h and cause moderate to strong damage.
 

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How hot is too hot when it comes to our health?
Author of the article:Kevin Connor
Published Jul 16, 2023 • 2 minute read
To cool down at higher temperatures, the body sweats and blood vessels move closer to the skin surface to increase heat loss.
To cool down at higher temperatures, the body sweats and blood vessels move closer to the skin surface to increase heat loss.
How hot is too hot for people?


“People can lose the ability to rid of heat and stop functioning optimally when temperatures reach beyond 40C,” according to new research from the University of Roehampton in England, Medical News Today reports.


“The thermoneutral zone is a range of temperatures in which the body doesn’t have to increase its metabolic rate or exert more energy to maintain its ideal core temperature of 37C.”

Studies show that the zone’s lower limit is 28C and at this temperature the body expends more energy to maintain its ideal temperature and shivering can start.

To cool down at higher temperatures, the body sweats and blood vessels move closer to the skin surface to increase heat loss.

The thermoneutral zone’s lower range is clear, but its upper limit is still unknown.


One study says that the upper limit is around 32C and that is when people start to sweat.

Another study says the metabolic rate starts to increase at 40C.

Further research into the upper limit of the thermoneutral zone could inform policies on working conditions, sports, medication, and international travel.

As a follow-up study of a 2021 investigation, researchers at the University of Roehampton in England conducted a second set of experiments to investigate the upper limit of the thermoneutral zone.

They found that the thermoneutral zone’s upper limit likely lies between 40C (104F) and 50C (122F).

“The findings appear to shed more precise light upon the body’s responses to sustained heat and humidity, and upon both the nature and mechanisms of enhanced metabolic rate that also arise in response to such conditions,” Dr. J. Wes Ulm, a bioinformatic scientific resource analyst, and biomedical data specialist at the National Institutes of Health, not involved in the study, told Medical News Today.


Researchers recently presented the new findings at the annual conference of Society for Experimental Biology in Edinburgh, Scotland.

For the study, the researchers recruited 13 healthy volunteers aged between 23 and 58 years old. Seven of te participants were female.

The researchers found that participants’ metabolic rate increased by 35% when exposed to 40C.

“The findings do seem likely to vary by … humidity. ”Dr. Mark Guido, an endocrinologist with Novant Health Forsyth Endocrine Consultants in Winston Salem, N.C., not involved in the study, told Medical News Today.

“In the study there was some evidence that resting metabolic rate was higher at higher humidities, even at the same temperature. It seems like humidity also plays a large role in the metabolic rate,” he added.
 
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