Tag Archives: Havent

Pauly Shore ‘Was Up All Night Crying’ After Richard Simmons Said ‘I Don’t Approve’ of Biopic, Asks for Meeting as ‘You Haven’t Even Heard the Pitch’ – Variety

  1. Pauly Shore ‘Was Up All Night Crying’ After Richard Simmons Said ‘I Don’t Approve’ of Biopic, Asks for Meeting as ‘You Haven’t Even Heard the Pitch’ Variety
  2. Pauly Shore ‘Was Up All Night Crying’ After Richard Simmons Said ‘I Don’t Approve’ of Biopic, Asks for Meeting as ‘You Haven’t Even Heard the Pitch’ Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Jordan Allen-Dutton To Script Richard Simmons Biopic Starring Pauly Shore Deadline
  4. Pauly Shore is very sad Richard Simmons doesn’t like his Richard Simmons movie The A.V. Club
  5. Pauly Shore Responds to Richard Simmons Saying He Doesn’t Approve Biopic PEOPLE

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Ultra-rare merging of two lifeforms sparks exciting evolutionary prediction: ‘We just haven’t noticed’ – Yahoo News Australia

  1. Ultra-rare merging of two lifeforms sparks exciting evolutionary prediction: ‘We just haven’t noticed’ Yahoo News Australia
  2. Scientists Discover First Nitrogen-Fixing Organelle – Berkeley Lab – Berkeley Lab News Center Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (.gov)
  3. The Once-In-An-Eon Event That Gave Earth Plants Has Happened Again IFLScience
  4. Two lifeforms merge in once-in-a-billion-years evolutionary event New Atlas
  5. Scientists discover once-in-a-billion-year event — 2 lifeforms merging to create a new cell part Livescience.com

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Kevin Costner Would “Love” To Return For ‘Yellowstone’ Final Episodes But So Far “We Haven’t Been Able To” – Deadline

  1. Kevin Costner Would “Love” To Return For ‘Yellowstone’ Final Episodes But So Far “We Haven’t Been Able To” Deadline
  2. Kevin Costner Discusses Son Hayes’ Acting Debut in ‘Horizon’ and Final Season of ‘Yellowstone’ (Exclusive) Entertainment Tonight
  3. Kevin Costner would ‘like to’ return to ‘Yellowstone’ after drama: I’d have to ‘feel really comfortable’ New York Post
  4. Kevin Costner is a “maybe” on more Yellowstone The A.V. Club
  5. ‘Yellowstone’ star Kevin Costner finally addresses if he’ll be on hit show’s final season Fox News

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Mauricio Umansky Says Kyle Richards and Morgan Wade Haven’t Had Sex, No Relationship – TMZ

  1. Mauricio Umansky Says Kyle Richards and Morgan Wade Haven’t Had Sex, No Relationship TMZ
  2. Mauricio Umansky Says He and Kyle Richards Are ‘Not Separated’ but Are ‘Quietly’ Fighting for Their Marriage Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Despite ‘Rough Year,’ Kyle Richards Came Out To Support Mauricio Umansky At The Dancing With The Stars Premiere CinemaBlend
  4. Mauricio Umansky INSISTS Kyle Richards and rumored lover Morgan Wade have ‘not slept or cheated’ amid separati Daily Mail
  5. Mauricio Umansky’s Latest Update on Kyle Richards Marriage Troubles Will Give RHOBH Fans Hope E! NEWS
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Angelina Jolie Started Acting Less in 2016 Because She ‘Had a Lot of Healing to Do,’ Only Took Jobs ‘That Didn’t Require Long Shoots’: I Haven’t ‘Been Myself for a Decade’ – Variety

  1. Angelina Jolie Started Acting Less in 2016 Because She ‘Had a Lot of Healing to Do,’ Only Took Jobs ‘That Didn’t Require Long Shoots’: I Haven’t ‘Been Myself for a Decade’ Variety
  2. Angelina Jolie reveals why she stepped away from film: ‘I don’t feel like I’ve been myself for a decade’ Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Angelina Jolie says founding new fashion studio has been “therapeutic” CNN
  4. Angelina Jolie: My kids and I had ‘a lot of healing to do’ after Brad Pitt split Page Six
  5. Angelina Jolie Says She Could’ve Gone a “Much Darker Way” Had She Not Wanted to “Live” for Her Children Yahoo Life
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‘I haven’t been the same since’: This TikToker was shocked to find out that Buc-ee’s pays janitors the same wage as her office job — why the demand for blue collar work is soaring – Yahoo Finance

  1. ‘I haven’t been the same since’: This TikToker was shocked to find out that Buc-ee’s pays janitors the same wage as her office job — why the demand for blue collar work is soaring Yahoo Finance
  2. Woman Joins Burger King Because It Pays $16/Hr, Finds Out She’ll Earn Almost $3 Less A Week After Bored Panda
  3. This Woman Says Her “Daily Pay” System at Work Is a Trap and She’s Getting Less Money Than She Thought Twisted Sifter
  4. ‘im going to work at 3’: Worker says she was let go at 9am. Then she got another interview at noon. She went straight to her new job from there The Daily Dot
  5. TikToker Was Shocked to Find Out That Buc-Ee’s Pays Janitors the Same Wage As Her Office Job — Why The Demand For Blue Collar Work Is Soaring MoneyWise

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Bud Light, Budweiser haven’t tweeted in over a month as backlash over transgender influencer continues – Fox Business

  1. Bud Light, Budweiser haven’t tweeted in over a month as backlash over transgender influencer continues Fox Business
  2. Bud Lite backs Cincinnati Pride Parade with sponsorship The Cincinnati Enquirer
  3. YouTuber plasters massive ‘BUTT LIGHT’ billboard trolling Bud Light Finbold – Finance in Bold
  4. Bud Light 24-pack sells for $3.49 in at least one store as sales tank: report Fox Business
  5. ‘Shark Tank’ investor Kevin O’Leary calls Bud Light’s ad campaign ‘a nightmare from hell for the brand’ AS USA
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Temperatures on Greenland haven’t been this warm in at least 1,000 years, scientists report



CNN
 — 

As humans fiddle with the planet’s thermostat, scientists are piecing together Greenland’s history by drilling ice cores to analyze how the climate crisis has impacted the island country over the years. The further down they drilled, the further they went back in time, allowing them to separate which temperature fluctuations were natural and which were human-caused.

After years of research on the Greenland ice sheet – which CNN visited when the cores were drilled – scientists reported Wednesday in the journal Nature that temperatures there have been the warmest in at least the last 1,000 years – the longest amount of time their ice cores could be analyzed to. And they found that between 2001 and 2011, it was on average 1.5 degrees Celsius warmer than it was during the 20th century.

The report’s authors said human-caused climate change played a significant role in the dramatic rise in temperatures in the critical Arctic region, where melting ice has a considerable global impact.

“Greenland is the largest contributor currently to sea level rise,” Maria Hörhold, lead author of the study and a glaciologist with the Alfred Wegener Institute, told CNN. “And if we keep on going with the carbon emissions as we do right now, then by 2100, Greenland will have contributed up to 50 centimeters to sea level rise and this will affect millions of people who live in coastal areas.”

– Source:
CNN
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Greenland: Secrets in the Ice — Part 5


07:57

– Source:
CNN

Weather stations along the edge of the Greenland ice sheet have detected that its coastal regions are warming, but scientists’ understanding of the effects of rising temperatures there had been limited due to the lack of long-term observations.

Understanding the past, Hörhold said, is important to prepare for future consequences.

“If you want to state something is global warming, you need to know what the natural variation was before humans actually interacted with the atmosphere,” she said. “For that, you have to go to the past – to the pre-industrial era – when humans have not been emitting [carbon dioxide] into the atmosphere.”

During pre-industrial times, there were no weather stations in Greenland that gathered temperature data like today. That’s why the scientists relied on paleoclimate data, such as ice cores, to study the region’s warming patterns. The last robust ice core analysis in Greenland ended in 1995, and that data didn’t detect warming despite climate change already being apparent elsewhere, Hörhold said.

“With this extension to 2011, we can show that, ‘Well, there is actually warming,’” she added. “The warming trend has been there since 1800, but we had the strong natural variability that has been hiding this warming.”

Before humans began belching fossil fuel emissions into the atmosphere, temperatures near 32 degrees Fahrenheit in Greenland were unheard of. But recent research shows that the Arctic region has been warming four times faster than the rest of the planet.

Significant warming in Greenland’s ice sheet is nearing a tipping point, scientists say, which could trigger catastrophic melting. Greenland holds enough ice that if it all melted, it could lift global sea levels by roughly 24 feet, according to NASA.

Although the study only covered temperatures through 2011, Greenland has seen extreme events since then. In 2019, an unexpectedly hot spring and a July heat wave caused almost the entire ice sheet’s surface to begin melting, shedding roughly 532 billion tons of ice into the sea. Global sea level would rise by 1.5 millimeters as a result, scientists reported afterward.

Then in 2021, rain fell at the summit of Greenland – roughly two miles above sea level – for the first time on record. The warm air then fueled an extreme rain event, dumping 7 billion tons of water on the ice sheet, enough to fill the Reflecting Pool at Washington, DC’s National Mall nearly 250,000 times.

With these extreme events in Greenland happening more often, Hörhold said the team will continue to monitor the changes.

“Every degree matters,” Hörhold said. “At one point, we will go back to Greenland and we will keep on extending those records.”

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Most humans haven’t evolved to cope with the cold, yet we dominate northern climates—here’s why

Many humans dread the cold of winter. Credit: Mariia Boiko/Shutterstock

Humans are a tropical species. We have lived in warm climates for most of our evolutionary history, which might explain why so many of us spend winter huddled under a blanket, clutching a hot water bottle and dreaming of summer.

Indeed all living apes are found in the tropics. The oldest known fossils from the human lineage (hominins) come from central and eastern Africa. The hominins who dispersed northwards into higher latitudes had to deal with, for the first time, freezing temperatures, shorter days that limited foraging time, snow that made hunting more difficult and icy wind chill that exacerbated heat loss from their bodies.

Given our limited adaptation to the cold, why is it that our species has come to dominate not only our warm ancestral lands but every part of the globe? The answer lies in our ability to developed intricate cultural solutions to the challenges of life.

The earliest signs of hominins living in northern Europe are from Happisburgh in Norfolk, eastern England, where 900,000-year-old footprints and stone tools have been found. At that time, Happisburgh was dominated by coniferous forest with cold winters, similar to southern Scandinavia today. There is little evidence the Happisburgh hominins stayed at the site for long, which suggests they didn’t have time to adapt physically.

It’s still a bit of a mystery how these hominins survived the tough conditions that were so different from their ancestral African homelands. There are no caves in the region, nor evidence of shelters. Artifacts from Happisburgh are simple, suggesting no complex technology.

Evidence for deliberate campfires at this time is contentious. Tools for tailoring fitted, weather-proof clothes don’t appear in western Europe until almost 850,000 years later. Many animals migrate to avoid seasonal cold, but the Happisburgh hominins would have had to travel about 800km south to make a meaningful difference.

It’s hard to imagine hominins surviving those ancient Norfolk winters without fire or warm clothing. Yet the fact the hominins were so far north means they must have found a way to survive the cold, so who knows what archaeologists will find in the future.

The Boxgrove hunters

Sites from more recent settlements, such as Boxgrove in West Sussex, southern England, offer more clues about how ancient hominins survived northern climates. The Boxgrove site dates to nearly 500,000 years ago, when the climate deteriorated towards one of the coldest periods in human history.

There is good evidence these hominins hunted animals, from cut marks on bones, to a horse shoulder blade probably pierced by a wooden spear. These finds fit with studies of people who live as foragers today which show people in colder regions depend on animal prey more than their warm climate counterparts. Meat is rich in the calories and fats needed to weather the cold.

A fossilized hominin shin bone from Boxgrove is robust compared to living humans, suggesting it belonged to a tall, stocky hominin. Larger bodies with relatively short limbs reduce heat loss by minimizing surface area.

The best silhouette for avoiding heat loss is a sphere, so animals and humans in cold climates get as close to that shape as possible. There is also clearer evidence for campfires by this period.

Cold climate specialists

The Neanderthals, who lived in Eurasia about 400,000-40,000 years ago, inhabited glacial climates . Compared to their predecessors in Africa, and to us, they had short, strong limbs, and wide, muscular bodies suited to producing and retaining heat.

Yet the Neanderthal protruding face and beaky nose are the opposite of what we might expect to be adaptive in an ice age. Like Japanese macaques living in cold areas and lab rats raised in cold conditions, living humans from cold climates tend to have relatively high, narrow noses and broad, flat cheekbones.

Computer modeling of ancient skeletons suggests Neanderthal noses were more efficient than those of earlier, warm-adapted species at conserving heat and moisture. It seems the internal structure is as important as overall nose size.

Even with their cold-adapted physique, Neanderthals were still hostage to their tropical ancestry. For example, they lacked the thick fur of other mammals in glacial Europe, such as wooly rhinos and musk oxen. Instead, Neanderthals developed complex culture to cope.

There is archaeological evidence they made clothes and shelters from animal skins. Evidence of cooking and use of fire to make birch pitch glue for the manufacture of tools show sophisticated Neanderthal control of fire.

More controversially, some archaeologists say early Neanderthal bones from the 400,000-year-old site of Sima de los Huesos in northern Spain show seasonal damage from slowing down their metabolisms to hibernate. The authors argue these bones show cycles of interrupted growth and healing.

Only a few species of primate hibernate such as some lemurs in Madagascar and the African lesser bushbaby, as well as the pygmy slow loris in norther Vietnam.

This might give you the idea that humans can hibernate too. But most species that hibernate have small bodies, with some exceptions like bears. Humans may be too big to hibernate.

Jack of all trades

The earliest fossils in the Homo sapiens lineage date from 300,000 years ago, from Morocco. But we didn’t spread out of Africa until about 60,000 years ago, colonizing all parts of the globe. This makes us relative newcomers in most habitats we now inhabit. Over the intervening thousands of years, people living in freezing cold places have adapted biologically to their environment but on a small scale.

One well-known example of this adaptation is that in areas with low sunlight, Homo sapiens developed light skin tones, which are better at synthesizing vitamin D. The genomes of living Inuit people from Greenland demonstrate physiological adaptation to a fat-rich marine diet, beneficial in the cold.

More direct evidence comes from DNA from a single 4,000-year-old permafrost-preserved hair from Greenland. The hair hints at genetic changes that led to stocky body shape that maximized heat production and retention, like the hominin we only have one shin bone from the Boxgrove site.

Our tropical legacy means we would still be unable to live in cold places without developing ways of coping with the temperatures. Take, for example, the traditional Inuit parka, which provides better insulation than the modern Canadian army winter uniform.

This human ability to adapt behaviorally was crucial to our evolutionary success. Even compared to other primates, humans show less physical climatic adaptation. Behavioral adaptation is quicker and more flexible than biological adaptation. Humans are the ultimate adapters, thriving in nearly every possible ecological niche.

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NASA Scientists Present Theory About Why We Haven’t Met Other Intelligent Life. It’s Crushing.

NASA scientists have explained in a new paper why they believe it’s likely we haven’t ever encountered intelligent extraterrestrial life — and it’s heartbreaking.

All intelligent life, they argue, has likely destroyed itself before reaching a sophisticated enough point in evolution to support such an encounter. And the same fate likely awaits humans unless we take action, they believe.

The “Great Filter” theory — as in “filtering out” various forms of life — argues that other civilizations, possibly several, have existed during the life of the universe. But they all destroyed themselves before they could make contact with Earth, noted the paper, “Avoiding the ‘Great Filter’: Extraterrestrial Life and Humanity’s Future in the Universe.”

The scientists fear that all intelligent life, such as humans, have deeply ingrained dysfunctions that may “snowball quickly into the Great Filter,” they wrote.

But there’s still a bit of hope for humans — provided we can learn and take steps to avoid our own extinction, noted the paper by a team of researchers based at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in southern California.

“The key to humanity successfully traversing such a universal filter is… identifying [destructive] attributes in ourselves and neutralizing them in advance,” astrophysicist Jonathan Jiang and his coauthors wrote in the paper that appeared online on Oct. 23.

The paper has not yet been peer-reviewed.

Whatever seems likely to wipe out humans would conceivably alsothreaten intelligent life on other planets, the authors argue. The likely culprits — which could be impacted by humans or other intelligent life forms — include nuclear war, pandemic, climate change, and uncontrolled artificial intelligence, the authors note.

The trick, the biggest challenge of all, will be to work together to survive, the researchers said.

“History has shown that intraspecies competition and, more importantly, collaboration, has led us towards the highest peaks of invention. And yet, we prolong notions that seem to be the antithesis of long-term sustainable growth: Racism, genocide, inequity, sabotage,” the writers warn.

Check out the full paper here.

This article originally appeared on HuffPost and has been updated.

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