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Jun 25th, 2021, 10:27 pm
The UK announced a ban on junk food ads

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Daytime junk food ads will be banned in the UK from 2022, it was announced this week. The news was welcomed by obesity campaigners and many parents.

Under the rules, TV commercials for unhealthy foodstuffs – including sweets, chocolate, sugary drinks, cereals, biscuits, pizza, chips and burgers – will be outlawed between 5.30am and 9pm.

The rules will not affect companies with fewer than 250 employees, nor will they apply to foods that are naturally sweet or fatty, such as honey, avocados or olive oil.

Pressure has been mounting on the government to address soaring levels of obesity in the UK. According to the NHS, more than 60 per cent of the adult population is overweight or obese.

Charmaine Griffiths, chief executive of the British Heart Foundation, said: “These plans are a bold and very positive step forward in protecting children from being inundated with junk food advertising.”
Jun 25th, 2021, 10:27 pm

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Jun 26th, 2021, 8:21 am
Dutch Con Man Gets Caught After Prostitutes Beat Him Up
Posted on June 25, 2021*

• How a prostitute did what global companies and international police couldn’t.

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A globally wanted con artist getting arrested after prostitutes kick his butt sounds like something from Ocean’s Eleven or some other Hollywood heist comedy. But it turns out once again that reality is weirder than fiction.

Bernio Jordan Enzo Verhagen is a Suriname-born con man with a Dutch citizenship. He’s apparently very much into what he does – though only 27, Verhagen has amassed an impressive list of charges for fraud and scam.

However, it seems that he’ll finally be brought to justice. When trying to impersonate a famous European soccer player in Colombia, a group of prostitutes ended up calling his bluff.

When Verhagen couldn’t produce the kind of riches he claimed to have, the sex workers started pummeling him to the point that cops were called to save his life. And you can probably guess how the whole thing ends when the police get their hands on a famous scammer.

But let’s take a deeper look at how it all ended this way.

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Playing People Like a Ball

Verhagen had made his name as a grifter in Europe and Africa before jumping over the pond to the Americas. His modus operandi was defrauding soccer teams by creating fake agents who would sell him as a professional footballer.

Maybe things got a bit too hot in the Old World, because in early June, Verhagen decided a change of scenery was in order. So, he hopped on a plane and zoomed across the Atlantic.

After he arrived in the city of Cartagena in northern Colombia, he fell back into his grifting ways. Pretending to be a soccer star had worked well for him in the past, so he decided to try the same thing with a new twist.

Posing as a famed European soccer player, Verhagen rented hotel rooms, hired yachts, and dined in high-class restaurants. When it came time to pay the bill, he would send the funds through a fake electronic wire transfer.

Verhagen would tell the companies that money was totally on its way, but since it was an international transfer, it might take a few days to clear. Not wanting the bad publicity from pissing off a soccer celebrity, his victims took his words at face value.

‘Where’s Our Money?’

Of course, the tourism companies would never get their money because it didn’t exist. After a while, the atmosphere in Cartagena started getting too hot for Verhagen and he skipped town again.

This time, he headed to tourist trap of Santa Marta, some 100 miles northeast from Cartagena. There, he continued the soccer star act.

Established businesses kept falling for the scam. But then Verhagen ran into the fateful group of prostitutes.

He had hired the prostitutes for one more night of fun and games before leaving Santa Marta for another location. But when it came time to pay the women for their… Services, Verhagen ran into an issue.

The prostitutes didn’t accept a wire transfer. They wanted to paid in cash, and they wanted to paid now.

If there’s any moral to this story, let it be this – don’t mess around with Colombian hookers. Enraged that Verhagen couldn’t produce the money he’d promised them, the prostitutes charged him.

As they beat Verhagen on Santa Marta’s Rodadero Beach, a crowd gathered around them. At the women’s coaxing, some of the onlookers joined them in opening a can of whoop-ass on the con man.

Others, however, felt the whole situation was getting out of hand. To prevent Verhagen from getting straight-up lynched, they called the cops.

The police arrived and dispersed the crowd. They then took Verhagen to custody.

Almost Got Away With It

So, now Verhagen – a foreigner – was in the hands of the police. And it just happened that the Colombian cops learned something interesting from the Interpol.

Verhagen had been convicted of fraud in Denmark and he’d been charged with kidnapping in Chile. Looking at his unpaid financial records, it was clear to the cops that he was a grifter.

Unfortunately for them, Verhagen didn’t have any active international arrest warrants. They had no choice but to let him go, although Santa Marta’s police commander invited any companies Verhagen had defrauded to contact him.

It seemed Verhagen had gotten off scot free. His luck wasn’t to last, though – just a couple days later, Dutch authorities issued an international warrant for his arrest.

The cops had been keeping an eye on Verhagen, so they knew just where he was. Colombia’s immigration authorities arrested him at a luxury apartment in Barranquilla, which he had also acquired through fraud.

This guy just doesn’t learn, does he? Verhagen is currently awaiting extradition to the Netherlands to get his just desserts.
Jun 26th, 2021, 8:21 am

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Jun 26th, 2021, 12:07 pm
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I sometimes get REALLY DEPRESSED reviewing the news these days.
It's always about a global pandemic threatening life as we know it,
protests around the world, stupid politicians, natural disasters,
or some other really bad story.
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH

Welcome to The mobi weekly news magazine
IN OTHER NEWS
SATURDAY JUNE 26

What is it?
Here is your chance to become an "ACE REPORTER" for our weekly news magazine.
It is your job to fine weird, funny or "good feel" stories from around the world and share them with our readers in our weekly magazine

How do you play?
Just post a story that you have come across that made you smile, laugh, feel good...
BUT NOTHING DEPRESSING :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

EXAMPLE POST
Naked sunbather chases wild boar through park after it steals his laptop bag
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A naked sunbather was seen chasing wild boar through a park after it stole his laptop bag.
Amusing photographs from Germany show the man running after the animal to try and claim the plastic bag back.
But the cheeky boar and its two piglets appear to be too quick for the sunbather, who can't keep up with their speedy little trotters.
As the incident unfolds, groups of friends and family sat on the grass watch on and laugh.
Heads are seen turning in surprise and amusement in the hilarious photographs.
The incident happened at Teufelssee Lake - a bathing spot in the Grunwell Forest in Berlin, Germany.

Rules:
Each Edition of IN OTHER NEWS will be open for 7 days...
You can post as many stories as you like, but you will only get paid for One Story in any 24 hour period
So in other words, you can only earn WRZ$ once a day.
Each news day will start when I post announcing it
OR at:
9:00 AM CHICAGO TIME (UTC -5)
2:00 PM GMT (UTC -0)

on those days I space out and forget to post or can't due to Real Life :lol:
Stories may be accompanied with images - but No big images, please! 800x800 pixels wide maximum
Videos are allowed, but please keep them short, and post a short summary for those that don't like to click on videos
No Duplicate stories - Where a post has been edited resulting in duplicates, then the last one in time gets disallowed.
And please limit this to reasonably family friendly stories :lol: :lol: :lol:

Reward:
Each news story posted that I feel is acceptable (must be a real story, too few words or simply a headline are not considered acceptable) will earn you 50 WRZ$
If you post multiple stories on any given day, you will only earn 50 WRZ$ for the first story of the Day
All payments will be made at THE END of the weekly news cycle.
Special Bonus - Each week I will award "The Pulitzer Prize" for the best story of the week
The weekly winner of the "The Pulitzer Prize" will receive a 100 WRZ$ bonus
It's just my personal opinion, so my judgement is final

So help bring GOOD news to the members of mobi, and join our reporting team...

IN OTHER NEWS


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Jun 26th, 2021, 12:07 pm

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Online
Jun 26th, 2021, 12:25 pm
Snoopy the dog found at airport after three weeks on the run

An adorable little dog called Snoopy, who went on the run from Hobart Airport for three weeks has come to a welcome end for his frantic owners.

An adorable little dog, who went on the run from Hobart Airport after running away from Qantas freight staff, has been found after a frantic three week ground search found the cheeky pooch.

Snoopy, a two-year-old male Maltese mix, ran away from Qantas freight staff at Hobart airport earlier this month, leaving his owners “devastated” that they’d lost their little dog for good.

“Please help us to find our beautiful boy Snoopy,” owner Loreta Choobe wrote on her missing dog post, which circulated on social media.

It is understood Snoopy went missing after landing in Hobart on a Qantas freight flight from Perth. Once the plane landed and Snoopy disembarked inside his enclosure, his cage was put on the ground by Qantas freight staff.

“The cage was put on the ground in an open area and not an enclosed area,” Ms Choobe told 7News.

“The staff member opened the cage and unfortunately Snoopy ran out.”

Despite numerous ground searches and pleas on social media to help find Ms Choobe’s beloved dog, days and weeks passed without a sign of little Snoopy.

Ms Choobe said Snoopy was an important part of her family, as he provided crucial support to her daughter who has autism.

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Snoopy the dog has been reunited with family. The little dog went missing after a flight from Perth to Hobart.

“She likes to feel the comfort of his softness,” Ms Choobe explained.

“He is a very calming dog.”

Ms Choobe said she was disappointed in how Qantas had handled Snoopy’s disappearance, and that if it were a famous celebrity’s pet the response would’ve been far different.

“If it was the Queen’s corgi they [Qantas] would be running and doing whatever they need to do to find this dog.”

Lisa Green, who became the search co-ordinator to find little Snoopy, confirmed on Tuesday that he was “now safe and sound” after three weeks on the run.

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Snoopy the dog went missing from Hobart airport

Her post of the good news was met with celebration, with some saying the announcement was the best news they’d heard all week.

“What wonderful news,” one posted. “Well done everyone looking out for him.”

“This makes me so happy!” another added.

“His owners must be over the moon! Snoopy brought a tear to the eyes reading this awesome news.”

In a message sent to news.com.au, Ms Choobe said her family were “overwhelmed with joy” at the return of their beloved dog.

Source
Jun 26th, 2021, 12:25 pm

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Jun 26th, 2021, 12:26 pm
Terrible kitchen design 'nightmare for burglars' as doors only open in certain order

A TikTok user has shared a video of his find, in which he reveals you have to open the oven to open the dishwasher, and both of them to open a cupboard that sits between

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A man has shared a terrible kitchen design which has been dubbed a 'nightmare for burglars' where more than half the doors don't open unless you have opened corresponding cupboards and covers.

TikTok user Josh shared a video of the find he filmed when he was staying in a rented house, after discovering the glitch when trying to open the dishwasher.

He found that he couldn't open it as the oven was in the way unless he opened the oven door - in which case he could open both at the same time.

Then, he noticed a drawer in between the dishwasher and the oven so he tried to open that - and found that he couldn't open it unless both the dishwasher and the oven were open.

"But you can't open the dishwasher because the oven door is in the way, so I opened the oven door so I could open the dishwasher.

"I closed those and said oh, let me check this drawer right here - but you can't open that either.

"So you have to open the oven, you must open the dishwasher, then you can open the drawer."
Jun 26th, 2021, 12:26 pm

Twitter: Fatima99@fatima99_mobi
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Jun 26th, 2021, 12:43 pm
UFO Report: USA Cannot Explain 143 of 144 Mysterious Flying Objects

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A UFO as photographed by the US Navy off its base in San Diego, California. Credit: US Navy

The UFO report released Friday says the U.S. government can’t explain 143 of the 144 cases of unidentified flying objects reported by military planes.

That report, released by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, was meant to shed light on the mystery of those dozens of flying objects, spotted from 2004 to 2021, but instead said it didn’t have adequate data to put all but one of them into a category.

That one UAP — shorthand for “unidentified aerial phenomena” — was a large, deflating balloon, the report said.

“The others remain unexplained,” the report, which was required by Congress, added. In 143 of the reported cases, they “lack sufficient information in our dataset to attribute incidents to specific explanations”.

Crucially, it said there were “no clear indications that there is any non-terrestrial explanation” for the aircraft, but also did not rule it out.

Congress demanded the report after the US military reported numerous instance of objects seen moving erratically in the sky.

The Pentagon then established the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force last August to look into the reports.

The group’s job was to “detect, analyze and catalogue” these events, as well as to “gain insight” into the “nature and origins” of UFOs, the Pentagon said.

Former US President Barak Obama opened up about the existence of UFOs and alien life in an interview on CBS late in May. “When it comes to aliens, there are some things I just can’t tell you on air,” Obama said, smiling. Obama told CBS that he was eager to find out about UFOs and real alien encounters when he became President.

“Truth is that when I came into office, I was like, ‘Alright, is there a lab somewhere where we’re keeping the alien specimens and spaceships?’ And they did a little bit of research and the answer was no,” Obama explained regarding the subject.

UFO Report does not mention aliens
While the report explicitly stated that “unusual” activity had been reported on multiple occasions, it also did not rule out that those incidents were the result of errors or “spoofing.”

“In a limited number of incidents, UAP reportedly appeared to exhibit unusual flight characteristics. These observations could be the result of sensor errors, spoofing, or observer misperception and require additional rigorous analysis,” the report said.

The report does not mention aliens or even vaguely hint at an extraterrestrial explanation for the reported sightings, but makes clear that much of the phenomena may be beyond the existing means the government has to identify such objects.
Jun 26th, 2021, 12:43 pm
Jun 26th, 2021, 1:09 pm
An Italian museum is using flesh-eating bacteria to clean Michelangelo's statues — because they're full of corpses
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Nearly 500 years ago, Duke Alessandro de Medici was lured with the promise of spending the night with a beautiful widow, but instead met the end of a knife from an assassin — hired by his cousin — who stabbed him to death. The ruler of Florence's body was placed in his father's tomb.

Now? He's leaking.

Italian art historians and restorers noticed in 2019 that the marble statues in the Medici Chapel, which was commissioned entirely by Michelangelo, were starting to appear dirtier than usual. Staining had been recorded as early as 1595, but the tools to remove it didn't exist then.

In November 2019, Italy's National Research Council figured out what was behind the grime: Bodily fluids leaking from the improperly embalmed corpse of Alessandro de Medici, along with other compounds accumulated over time from glue and plaster. Alessandro's fluids had seeped into the statues of Dusk and Dawn that adorned his father's tomb.

Anna Rosa Sprocati, a biologist at the Italian National Agency for New Technologies, hand-picked from her catalog of more than 1,000 bacteria to test against the stains. They had successes and failures, with some of the bacteria eating not just the human remains, but the delicate Carrera marble, too. But the chapel's museum believed that bacteria would be more effective than harsh chemicals or abrasives.

After a brief pause due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the team released their best flesh-eating bacteria, Serratia ficaria SH7, by way of a microbial gel onto the tomb that was becoming stained. There were even button-shaped deformations.
Jun 26th, 2021, 1:09 pm
Jun 26th, 2021, 1:39 pm
Montana couple rescues horse from drowning in river

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A western Montana couple were able to save a horse from drowning in the Bitterroot River on Father's Day, and may have made a new friend in the process.

Matthew and Christina Eickholt of Hamilton were floating down the river on Sunday with Matthew's parents at a spot called Bell Crossing north of Victor when they noticed some splashing near the shore.

They soon realized it was a horse that was fighting the current as it tried to get out of the river near a steep bank in a spot where the water was about 10 feet (3 meters) deep.

“He was breathing super heavy,” Matthew Eickholt told the Ravalli Republic. “Its eyes were all bugged out. At times, all we could see was its teeth above water. It was snorting. I think it may have been 30 seconds to a minute from going under.”

The Eickholts pulled to shore at a shallower spot in the river just downstream from the horse.

“We started clapping and yelling,” Matthew Eickholt said. “We were able to coax him to come downstream. When he saw us, I think he knew we were there to help him. Once he got to us, he was able to pull himself out of there.”

“He was a super nice horse,” he said. “We were all so happy that it turned out the way it did."

Two days later, the couple was floating the same stretch of river with Christina's parents when they spotted the horse and pulled over to say hello.

“The horse remembered us and came running up to us with his two friends,” Christina Eickholt said.

The Eickholts haven't yet learned who the horses belong to.

In a Facebook post on Tuesday evening Christina wrote: “Hoping to visit the horse every time we float our favorite route!”
Jun 26th, 2021, 1:39 pm

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Online
Jun 26th, 2021, 3:22 pm
Chinese monk rescues 8,000 dogs and finds them new homes

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As his forehead glistens with sweat, Zhi Xiang peers into the eyes of a stray dog whose coat has become matted in heavy rain and says soothingly: "Let me cut your hair, cutie."

The bedraggled pooch is among scores of dogs hauled off the streets of Shanghai by police and packed in metal cages in a foul-smelling holding area.

More than 20 puppies are also crammed into a yellow plastic crate; one dog is dragged in while inside a tied bag.

If it wasn't for Zhi's intervention, they will all be put down in a matter of days.

But Zhi is no ordinary animal rescuer, he is a Buddhist monk and will give these dogs a new life either at his ancient monastery or at a shelter he runs in the Chinese city.

He cares for thousands of animals

He already has nearly 8,000 dogs to feed and care for. A few hundred will eventually be resettled in Europe or North America.

Driven by his faith, the 51-year-old has been rescuing animals, mostly dogs but also cats and other strays, since 1994.

"I have to rescue them because if I don't, they will die for sure," Zhi said.
Jun 26th, 2021, 3:22 pm
Jun 26th, 2021, 6:26 pm
Chirps’ in space: new album captures the sound of black holes colliding

Scientists have turned electromagnetic and gravitational waves – which, unlike sound waves, can travel in a vacuum – into musical tracks

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If two black holes collide in the vacuum of space, do they make a sound?

Sound waves can’t travel in the almost perfect vacuum of space – no one can hear you scream, as the tagline from Alien goes. But electromagnetic and gravitational waves can, and a new album has turned these signals from space into musical tracks.

The album, Celestial Incantations, incorporates cosmic “sounds” from within and beyond our solar system, such as the oscillations of a comet, radiation from a galactic pulsar and the merger of two black holes.

The album is a collaboration between Kim Cunio, an associate professor and convenor of musicology at the Australian National University, UK artist Diana Scarborough and Dr Nigel Meredith from the British Antarctic Survey.

Cunio said the trio selected the sounds together which he used alongside acoustic instruments to compose each track.

“We’ve had things like theramins and ondes martenot that have made the science-fictiony sound for nearly 100 years now,” he said. “[I thought] wouldn’t it be great if we could acoustically accompany something that is naturally occurring, rather than making it synthetic?”

The first few tracks begin on Earth and include the sound of compressed air bubbles escaping from a Stone Age ice core collected from Antarctica, and the pops and pings generated by lightning activity.

The track Cataclysm incorporates a “chirp” of gravitational waves – ripples in spacetime – emitted by the merger of two black holes, which took place 1.3 billion light years away and was detected for the first time in 2016.

“This is so much grander than even what I can conceive as a person,” said Cunio.

“We can’t actually even see what has created the ripple, we can only just feel the ripple. It’s almost impossible to come to terms with, and I thought it needed something that is more than I or any other pianist I know could actually play.”

Cunio set up a virtual piano with a switch to trigger a note doubler, causing each note to be played twice as the piece progresses.

Other tracks incorporate sounds from space exploration, such as Nasa’s Voyager 1 space probe leaving our solar system, and the first acoustic recording of the atmosphere of Mars, recorded at the Jezero crater in February.

“There’s a role for art to really support science and to show what science can achieve for all of us – all the things we take for granted,” said Cunio. “Art can make the meaning of this incredible legwork that scientists do.”

Celestial Incantations is free to stream and download.

https://www.theguardian.com/science/202 ... -colliding
Jun 26th, 2021, 6:26 pm
Jun 26th, 2021, 7:45 pm
Patch of dirt hits Toronto market for almost $1 million

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TORONTO -- A piece of land in Toronto with nothing on it but grass and dirt has hit the market for nearly $1 million.

The property, is located at 172 South Kingsway just west of High Park, is being sold for $985,000.

According to the listing, the piece of land is "an opportunity not to be missed."


The 50 by 95 foot lot backs onto a ravine, offering privacy to a buyer who decides to build a home there. It is also located next to the South Kingsway Parkette.

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"Ideal opportunity to land bank, build your dream home or investment property," the listing says.

Property taxes for the home will cost the buyer $3,922 annually.

According to the real estate agent, the land is in a desirable location and catchment for highly ranked schools.

It is also just a short walk to Bloor West and the waterfront.

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According to the Toronto Real Estate Board, the average selling price for a home is nearly $1.1 million.

While this land is under the average selling price of a home, the buyer will obviously need to invest quite a bit more to construct their own home from scratch.
Jun 26th, 2021, 7:45 pm

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Jun 26th, 2021, 8:15 pm
Did the ancient Maya have parks?

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The ancient Maya city of Tikal was a bustling metropolis and home to tens of thousands of people.

The city comprised roads, paved plazas, towering pyramids, temples and palaces and thousands of homes for its residents, all supported by agriculture.

Now researchers at the University of Cincinnati say Tikal's reservoirs—critical sources of city drinking water—were lined with trees and wild vegetation that would have provided scenic natural beauty in the heart of the busy city.

UC researchers developed a novel system to analyze ancient plant DNA in the sediment of Tikal's temple and palace reservoirs to identify more than 30 species of trees, grasses, vines and flowering plants that lived along its banks more than 1,000 years ago. Their findings paint a picture of a lush, wild oasis.

"Almost all of the city center was paved. That would get pretty hot during the dry season," said paleoethnobotanist David Lentz, a professor of biology in UC's College of Arts and Sciences and lead author of the study.

"So it would make sense that they would have places that were nice and cool right along the reservoir," he said. "It must have been beautiful to look at with the water and trees and a welcome place for the kings and their families to go."

The study was published in the Nature journal Scientific Reports.

Lentz and his research team offered four hypotheses about what, if any, plants might have grown along the all-important reservoirs: Did the Maya grow crops such as maize or squash there? Or did they plant fruit trees like those found at a similar reservoir at Mexico's Purron Dam?

Maybe they lined the reservoirs with cattails in keeping with their nickname people of the reeds? Lentz noted that water lilies often adorn ancient Maya paintings.

"Throughout Maya iconography, water lilies represent continuity between the water world and the above world," Lentz said. "It was part of their mythology."

But researchers found little evidence to support any of these hypotheses. Instead, they found evidence bolstering a fourth idea: That the Maya allowed the embankments to remain undisturbed forest. This would have helped to prevent erosion and provided medicinal or edible plants and fruits.

Researchers found evidence of a variety of plants living along the aquifers, including trees like cabbage bark and ramón that tower 100 feet high. Lentz said ramón is a dominant rainforest species in Guatemala.

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"Why you would find ramón around the reservoir is a curiosity. The answer is they left this forest intact," Lentz said. "Tikal has a harsh climate. It's pretty tough to survive when you don't get rain for five months of the year. This reservoir would have been the font of their lives. So they sometimes would protect these places by not cutting down the trees and preserving a sacred grove."

Among dozens of plants native to the region, they found evidence of wild onion, fig, wild cherry and two types of grasses. Lentz said grass seeds might have been introduced to the reservoir by visiting waterfowl. Grass would have proliferated at the edges of the reservoirs during dry seasons and droughts.

"Tikal had a series of devastating droughts. As the water levels dropped, they saw blue green algae blooms, which produces toxic substances," Lentz said. "The droughts were great for the grass but not so much for the forest plants that lived along the reservoir's banks."

Were these wild areas the equivalent of a park?

"I think they were. I don't know how public they would have been," Lentz said. "This was a sacred area of the city surrounded by temples and palaces. I don't know if the commoners would have been that welcome."

Tikal was a flourishing seat of power, religion and trade for Mesoamerica in what is now northern Guatemala, reaching its peak of influence more than 1,200 years ago. Today, the cultural and archeological site is a scenic national park surrounded by primary rainforest.

But more than 1,000 years ago, the area would have looked dramatically different. Instead of rainforest, the city center would have been surrounded by homes and farm plots of corn, beans and squash needed to support 60,000 people or more. At its peak, Tikal was bigger in population than Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania; Atlantic City, New Jersey; or Pensacola, Florida.

Given the documented and widespread deforestation that occurred around Tikal during the city's rise and fall, the presence of an intact forest in the city would have stood out, said Nicholas Dunning, a UC geography professor and study co-author.

"It would not have been much of a park—maybe 50 meters by 50 meters," Dunning said. "But it would have been in vivid contrast to the surrounding area of the city's central precinct, which was essentially entirely paved with plaster with many of the buildings colored red."

The reservoirs would have held significance beyond their value as an important source of water, he said.

"Given that the Maya were a forest culture whose cosmology included many forest elements (for example, certain sacred trees that held up the sky) having a sacred grove adjacent to the sacred spring and pool at the heart of the city was an extremely potent symbol—kind of like parts of the cosmos in miniature," Dunning said. "On the other hand, ancient Maya cities as a whole were very green."

Tikal put today's urban gardens to shame.

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"Away from the central precinct of Tikal, most of the land was either managed trees or crops," Dunning said. "Just about every household complex had significant gardens. A great deal of the food consumed by the residents of Maya cities was probably grown within the city itself or its immediate hinterland. Nothing much like a modern Western city."

Previously, researchers learned about the crops and wild plants that grew in ancient Tikal by studying ancient pollen or charcoal, Lentz said. For their study, UC turned to next-generation DNA sequencing that can identify plants and animals with even small strands of DNA.

"Typically, high-quality, high-concentration DNA is needed for next-gen work," UC botanist and study co-author Eric Tepe said. "The Tikal samples were both poor quality and very low concentration."

Microbiologists Alison Weiss, a professor in UC's College of Medicine, and Trinity Hamilton, now with the University of Minnesota, took up the task of analyzing ancient microbial DNA from the reservoir's sediment samples.

Weiss studies pathogenic E. coli and human microbiomes in her lab. Her latest work examined how chemotherapy in cancer patients impairs the protective lining of their digestive systems. But she likes all science, she said, and was eager to accept a new challenge.

"The DNA is ancient so it tends to be degraded with short little sequences," Weiss said.

With the help of the Florida company Rapid Genomics, UC's scientists developed a novel probe to select plant DNA in the sediment samples. And they were able to amplify small strands of DNA from chloroplasts, the plant structures where photosynthesis takes place. Then researchers could match the ancient Tikal samples with the DNA of known plant species in much the same way scientists amplify ribosomal DNA to identify species of bacteria.

"The analysis was quite challenging because we were the first to do this," Weiss said. "Bacterial ribosomal DNA has a database. There was no database for this. We had to take sequences one by one and search the general database to find the best match."

"This project was a bit of a shot in the dark," Tepe said. "We half-expected to get no results at all. The fact that we were able to get an idea of the vegetation surrounding the reservoirs at Tikal is, in my opinion, a spectacular success and a proof of concept that we hope to apply to other Mayan sites."

UC researchers can now study the ancient world in a promising new way.

"We're delighted we had success," Weiss said. "It took a long time to figure out how to do it and make sure it wasn't junk data in, junk data out. Now to be able to learn more about ancient people from these sediment studies is very exciting."

https://phys.org/news/2021-06-ancient-maya.html
Jun 26th, 2021, 8:15 pm

Book request - An Idyll in Sodom by Georges de Lys [7000 WRZ$] Reward!
https://forum.mobilism.org/viewtopic.php?f=72&t=5459036
Jun 26th, 2021, 8:35 pm
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Anything but a scaredy-cat! Man takes his beloved eight-year-old rescue cat with him on thrill-seeking adventures - from skiing to skydiving

Rémy Vicarini from Besançon, France, takes cat Cathode on motorcycle rides
Eight-year-old pet has tried biking, mountain climbing and skydiving with owner
First took cat on motorbike month after adopting her and said she was used to it

By Nicole Conner

Published: 06:37 EDT, 26 June 2021 | Updated: 06:37 EDT, 26 June 2021

Many of us love taking our pets on an adventure to the beach or out for a long walk, but one cat owner has taken his trips with his four-legged friend to new extremes.

In a gallery compiled by Bored Panda, various snaps show Rémy Vicarini from Besançon, France, taking his beloved cat Cathode, on several thrill-seeking activities - including biking, mountain climbing and skydiving.

Rémy, who rescued his eight-year-old pet six years ago from an animal shelter, first took 'curious' Cathode on his motorbike a month after adopting her, and said she got used to it straight away.

Rémy, who is an engineer, said: 'Cathode is very endearing, obedient and gluey. She is very curious and at the same time a little fearful. That's how I manage to take her and that's why she stays with me, she trusts me.'

Here FEMAIL explores some of the cutest snaps of the adventurous duo...
Rémy Vicarini, from Besançon, France, has shared snaps with his beloved cat showing their crazy adventures together. Pictured, Cathode with her safety helmet on

The gallery compiled by Bored Panda shows various snaps of Rémy and Cathode on thrill-seeking adventures - including skydiving (pictured)
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Rémy rescued his four-legged friend, eight, six years ago from an animal shelter and now they enjoy various trips together. Pictured, on a bike ride

Cathode joins her owner on all of his adventures. Pictured, resting in a small basket on his back while he climbs mountains
The furry feline has even embarked on a ski trip with her owner. Pictured, strapped to a basket which Rémy safely secures across his shoulders and torso
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Paddle boarding may not be the first thing cat owners think of doing with their beloved pet, but Cathode appears to be enjoying herself as she dons a life jacket and perches at the front of the board
Rémy, who is an engineer, says Cathode is 'endearing' and 'obedient' but added that she is sometimes 'fearful.' Pictured, on a bike ride together
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Rémy, who is an engineer, says Cathode is 'endearing' and 'obedient' but added that she is sometimes 'fearful.' Pictured, on a bike ride together
Rémy first took his furry friend pet on his motorbike a month after adopting her. Pictured, in her safety helmet on his motorbike
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Sitting in her spacious basket, Cathode enjoys her time in the great outdoors as her owner takes her on bike rides through the mountains
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Cathode is equipped with all necessary apparatus to enjoy the adventures and has harnesses and helmets to keep her safe
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Rémy says that he manages to take Cathode on adventures because she 'trusts' him. The pair are pictured enjoying a zip line ride together with Cathode strapped to his stomach
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Jun 26th, 2021, 8:35 pm
Jun 26th, 2021, 10:21 pm
Guinea’s Ebola outbreak was declared over

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The Ebola outbreak that emerged in Guinea in mid-February was declared over this week. It claimed 12 lives. While each death is a tragedy, the toll highlights the progress that has been made tackling the virus in West Africa (more than 11,000 people died during the 2013-16 epidemic).

After infections were first detected, health authorities mounted a swift response, vaccinating the most at-risk groups with support from the World Health Organization (WHO).

“Thanks to new innovations and lessons learned, Guinea managed to contain the virus in four months,” said Dr Matshidiso Moeti, WHO regional director for Africa. “We are getting faster, better and smarter at fighting Ebola. But while this outbreak is over, we must stay alert for a possible resurgence and ensure the expertise in Ebola expands to other health threats such as Covid-19.”
Jun 26th, 2021, 10:21 pm

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Jun 27th, 2021, 3:57 am
UK neighbors cut tree in half over bird poop dispute: ‘We were absolutely distraught’

Bharat Mistry and his family have had the tree in their front yard in Sheffield, UK, for 25 years

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When words fail, sometimes you just have to cut down half a tree – at least, that’s what one couple did.

The couple, in Sheffield, U.K., called in an arborist to cut down half of the branches of a 16-foot-tall fir tree that were hanging over their driveway, according to reports. The rest of the tree is in their neighbor’s yard.

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Their neighbor, Bharat Mistry, told SWNS that the tree has been in his front yard for 25 years. However, during the coronavirus pandemic lockdown last March, Mistry’s neighbors reportedly asked to have the tree removed, BBC reported.

More recently, the neighbors complained about birds in the tree making too much noise and pooping on their driveway, so Mistry told SWNS that he tried to work on a solution.

"We had asked if we could get it trimmed back and put a net in it so it would stop birds getting in, but there was no compromise with them," Mistry told SWNS.

"Last weekend he said he was going to get a tree surgeon to cut it down and we asked him not to but they came on Friday and did it," Mistry added.

Mistry told BBC he and his family -- including his wife and two daughters -- were angry when it first happened, but they’ve since "calmed down a bit."

"We were absolutely distraught," Mistry told SWNS. "We pleaded and pleaded with them not to do it, but their mind was made up. That tree was coming down."

"I believe he has the right to cut down anything that is overhanging onto his property," Mistry added. "But you have to ask, why after 25 years would you do that?"

He continued: "It is really sad to look at because the tree has been there for so long and it's a really pretty tree."

"I believe he has the right to cut down anything that is overhanging onto his property," Mistry added. "But you have to ask, why after 25 years would you do that?"

He continued: "It is really sad to look at because the tree has been there for so long and it's a really pretty tree."

Mistry also said that he had previously agreed with his neighbor to trim the tree into a ball shape and make sure it wasn’t otherwise in his neighbor’s way.

"It must have been no more than 3 feet onto his land," Mistry told SWNS. "It is above head height, the bottom of the branches start at about 8 feet high and we have cut off the branches lower down to be amiable with them."

Photos of the odd tree have been posted on social media and have been turned into memes, SWNS reported.

The oddity has even become something of a tourist attraction.

"We've had a lot of people walking past to look at it, people you can just tell have come out of their way to walk their dog on a different route to have a look," Mistry told SWNS.

"People have stopped to take pictures, there has been a lot posted on social media," he added. "You think we'd probably do the same if it was another house, but it does feel a bit like an invasion of privacy."

https://www.foxnews.com/lifestyle/cut-tree-branches-half-bird-dispute
Jun 27th, 2021, 3:57 am

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