Tag Archives: Noticed

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

Read original article here

Eagle-Eyed Fans Noticed the Gesture Zahara Jolie-Pitt Did That May Indicate Her Real Relationship With Dad Brad Pitt – Yahoo Life

  1. Eagle-Eyed Fans Noticed the Gesture Zahara Jolie-Pitt Did That May Indicate Her Real Relationship With Dad Brad Pitt Yahoo Life
  2. Angelina Jolie, Maddox, Pax Support Zahara at Sorority Luncheon PEOPLE
  3. ‘I Definitely Peeped That’: Fans Are Noticing That Angelina Jolie And Brad Pitt’s Daughter Dropped His Last Name During Her Sorority Induction Ceremony Video CinemaBlend
  4. Is Brad Pitt estranged from his children with Angelina Jolie? All we know as Zahara drops Pitt from last name HELLO!
  5. Zahara Jolie-Pitt supported by mom Angelina, brothers Maddox and Pax at AKA event Page Six
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

‘House of the Dragon’ Fans Have Noticed a Very Important ‘Game of Thrones’ Inconsistency

Photo credit: HBO

Everyone and their dog watched the premiere episode of House of the Dragon, HBO’s Game of Thrones prequel. But did you (or your dog!) catch the not-so-subtle references to the original series?

Focusing on the “Age of Dragons,” a period of time in Westeros when the Targaryen family reigned, House of the Dragon occurs roughly 200 years before Game of Thrones begins. The series makes note of the chronology in the opening, stating that our story begins “before the death of the mad king, Aerys, and the birth of his daughter, Princess Daenerys Targaryen.” However, some fans believe that the nod wasn’t meant to connect the new series to Game of Thrones, but to George R.R. Martin’s original novels, A Song of Ice and Fire.

At the end of the premiere episode, King Viserys Targaryen has a talk with his daughter, Princess Rhaenyra. Viserys informs her that he intends to name her his heir to the throne, and he shares with her an apocalyptic prophecy passed down by five generations of Targaryen rulers. According to Viserys, the legendary Aegon “the Conqueror” Targaryen had a vision that foretold of a terrible winter, and an enemy that could only be defeated if a Targaryen united the Seven Kingdoms of Westeros. Aegon allegedly titled the prophetic dream, “A Song of Ice and Fire.”

This reference—possibly just a way to connect House of the Dragon to the events of Thrones even further—just created more questions. Viewers may remember that at the end of Thrones, Samwell Tarly tied the series up in a nice little bow by naming his written account of events A Song of Ice and Fire. Tarly later states that he came up with the name himself. Game of Thrones never mentions Aegon’s prophesy, however, and Daenerys also seemed to have no knowledge of it in the show either. Is this believed inconsistency merely a way for fans to retcon the last two seasons of Game of Thrones, or is this the honest truth from the House of the Dragon team as well?

The theory may have legs to stand on. In an interview with Vanity Fair, showrunner Ryan Condal confirmed that the idea of Aegon’s prophecy came from the writer himself. In the novels, Daenerys has a vision in the House of the Undying that mentions Aegon’s dream. Though this wasn’t depicted in Game of Thrones, she hears a voice belonging to her late brother Rhaegar, that says, “Aegon. What better name for a king… He is the prince that was promised, and his is the Song of Ice and Fire.”

In hindsight, the statement all but points to Jon Snow. He has yet to be resurrected in the books (an insane cliffhanger for Martin to have left us on for so many years!) but Thrones eventually reveals that Jon is actually Rhaegar Targaryen’s son, Aegon. Martin also claimed that he intends to incorporate the prophecy into The Winds of Winter—should he ever finish writing!—which will also have a “very different” ending.” Is this his way of adding new ideas to a series decades in the making, or is the prophecy’s title a way to separate his work from Thrones’ underwhelming conclusion?

“What we’re doing at this point in the history of A Song of Ice and Fire… we have two canons,” author George R.R. Martin stated in a live-streamed video. “The show (Game of Thrones) canon, and the book (The Song of Ice and Fire) canon.” For fans of the series, it’s a welcome distinction. Though it’s nearly impossible to view the new prequel series as anything but a follow-up to HBO’s Thrones, the theory allows for audiences to technically watch House of the Dragon as a prequel to the beloved novels instead. Works for me. Whatever it takes to erase Game of Thrones‘s ending from our minds!

You Might Also Like



Read original article here

Signs and symptoms of subungual melanoma by US woman who noticed a ‘cool streak’ under her thumbnail for 10 years

A woman who noticed a “cool streak” under her thumbnail for 10 years discovered the brown stripe was actually cancer.

Maria Sylvia, from the US, said she first noticed a pale line under her nail bed in 2012 – but she was told it was “likely a mole”.

WATCH IN THE VIDEO ABOVE: How woman’s streak turned out to be cancer

For more Health & Wellbeing related news and videos check out Health & Wellbeing >>

But a decade later, the 25-year-old was given shock news after she was diagnosed with subungual melanoma, a rare form of skin cancer that occurs under nails.

“Me: Having this for 10 years thinking it was a cool streak in my nail,” she said in a viral TikTok video.

“It’s cancer…. I wish I were joking.”

Maria Sylvia who noticed a “cool streak” under her thumbnail for 10 years (left) discovered the brown stripe was actually cancer. Credit: invrfoundwaldo/TikTok

After spotting a faint line under her thumbnail 10 years ago, Maria said she noticed the streak turned darker within one year.

“I had seen doctors, I was in and out of doctors’ [appointments] all the time. I was an athlete so I was getting [check-ups] every year,” she explained.

“No one really noticed it until one time, a doctor did notice it. This was probably circa 2014.

“They were like, ‘Oh that’s odd but you don’t fit the demographics’ so if it grows any bigger, go and see a doctor. So by then, it already grew to its full extent.”

‘I figured it was a mole’

Maria said she never experienced anything unusual about the mark.

“It’s very likely that this has been sitting for 10 years and it’s been cancerous for the last three, it’s kind of hard to tell,” she said.

“[However] I didn’t really have any issue, I didn’t have any pain with it so I figured it was a mole because that’s what they told me… It was likely a mole in my nail bed.”

She first noticed a pale line (right) under her nail bed in 2012 – but she was told it was “likely a mole”. Credit: invrfoundwaldo/TikTok

But she decided to undergo a biopsy after her friend encouraged her to get checked earlier this year.

“My friend really pushed me to go do it, so I did it,” she said.

Fortunately the cancer didn’t spread after she was diagnosed with stage 0 subungual melanoma.

“Everything looks good, it didn’t spread. I’m super lucky and very thankful,” she said.

Maria said she didn’t require any further treatment – but she needed to undergo a skin graft using the skin from her arm to patch up her thumb.

“It doesn’t hurt too bad, pretty sensitive but most of the pain is pretty good, it’s tolerable,” she said after her skin graft surgery.

All-clear

Maria said she was given the all clear after her “results came back clean”.

The 25-year-old was diagnosed with subungual melanoma, a rare form of skin cancer that occurs under nails, after a biopsy. Credit: Tran, Cindy

By speaking out, she wanted to urge everyone to get checked if they notice anything unusual about their nails.

“This is a very rare cancer, especially for my demographic but there’s no harm in going to see a doctor,” she said.

Maria has been sharing updates about her biopsy and diagnosis on social media.

‘I’m worried’

Her first video has been viewed more than 25 million times – with many confessing they have a similar mark.

“I have one on my left thumb. Had it for years. It’s a small brown line on my left thumb. Now I’m worried,” one wrote.

Another said: “I had this exact cancer! I had my thumb amputated a year ago and cancer free! Six surgeries, and five years later.”

Another added: “Literally everybody analysing their own nails now.”

Read original article here

Signs and symptoms of subungual melanoma by US woman who noticed a ‘cool streak’ under her thumbnail for 10 years

A woman who noticed a “cool streak” under her thumbnail for 10 years discovered the brown stripe was actually cancer.

Maria Sylvia, from the US, said she first noticed a pale line under her nail bed in 2012 – but she was told it was “likely a mole”.

WATCH IN THE VIDEO ABOVE: How woman’s streak turned out to be cancer

For more Health & Wellbeing related news and videos check out Health & Wellbeing >>

But a decade later, the 25-year-old was given shock news after she was diagnosed with subungual melanoma, a rare form of skin cancer that occurs under nails.

“Me: Having this for 10 years thinking it was a cool streak in my nail,” she said in a viral TikTok video.

“It’s cancer…. I wish I were joking.”

Maria Sylvia who noticed a “cool streak” under her thumbnail for 10 years (left) discovered the brown stripe was actually cancer. Credit: invrfoundwaldo/TikTok

After spotting a faint line under her thumbnail 10 years ago, Maria said she noticed the streak turned darker within one year.

“I had seen doctors, I was in and out of doctors’ [appointments] all the time. I was an athlete so I was getting [check-ups] every year,” she explained.

“No one really noticed it until one time, a doctor did notice it. This was probably circa 2014.

“They were like, ‘Oh that’s odd but you don’t fit the demographics’ so if it grows any bigger, go and see a doctor. So by then, it already grew to its full extent.”

‘I figured it was a mole’

Maria said she never experienced anything unusual about the mark.

“It’s very likely that this has been sitting for 10 years and it’s been cancerous for the last three, it’s kind of hard to tell,” she said.

“[However] I didn’t really have any issue, I didn’t have any pain with it so I figured it was a mole because that’s what they told me… It was likely a mole in my nail bed.”

She first noticed a pale line (right) under her nail bed in 2012 – but she was told it was “likely a mole”. Credit: invrfoundwaldo/TikTok

But she decided to undergo a biopsy after her friend encouraged her to get checked earlier this year.

“My friend really pushed me to go do it, so I did it,” she said.

Fortunately the cancer didn’t spread after she was diagnosed with stage 0 subungual melanoma.

“Everything looks good, it didn’t spread. I’m super lucky and very thankful,” she said.

Maria said she didn’t require any further treatment – but she needed to undergo a skin graft using the skin from her arm to patch up her thumb.

“It doesn’t hurt too bad, pretty sensitive but most of the pain is pretty good, it’s tolerable,” she said after her skin graft surgery.

All-clear

Maria said she was given the all clear after her “results came back clean”.

The 25-year-old was diagnosed with subungual melanoma, a rare form of skin cancer that occurs under nails, after a biopsy. Credit: Tran, Cindy

By speaking out, she wanted to urge everyone to get checked if they notice anything unusual about their nails.

“This is a very rare cancer, especially for my demographic but there’s no harm in going to see a doctor,” she said.

Maria has been sharing updates about her biopsy and diagnosis on social media.

‘I’m worried’

Her first video has been viewed more than 25 million times – with many confessing they have a similar mark.

“I have one on my left thumb. Had it for years. It’s a small brown line on my left thumb. Now I’m worried,” one wrote.

Another said: “I had this exact cancer! I had my thumb amputated a year ago and cancer free! Six surgeries, and five years later.”

Another added: “Literally everybody analysing their own nails now.”

Read original article here

Utah doctors have noticed a pattern in how COVID long-haulers finally recover

They also have noticed a pattern in who is suffering.

(Intermountain Healthcare via Zoom) Dr. Dixie Harris, critical care physician for Intermountain Healthcare, encourages Utahns who have had COVID-19 to “listen to their bodies” and seek help for long COVID. In a news conference Feb. 14, 2022, Intermountain said it was launching a “long COVID navigator” for patients to seek help with symptoms that persist for more than three months after they were infected.

As Intermountain Healthcare launches Utah’s second dedicated care plan for patients with “long COVID,” doctors who have already been treating long-haulers say they have noticed some patterns in how their illnesses play out.

“I have yet to see somebody with long COVID who was vaccinated,” said Dr. Ellie Hirshberg, an Intermountain critical care physician. “I’ve seen patients who had long COVID and then got vaccinated and are still trying to get rid of some of their symptoms. But I have yet to see somebody with long COVID who was vaccinated first.”

For about two years, Hirshberg has been seeing patients with “long COVID” — that is, people whose symptoms persist at least two to three months after they were diagnosed with COVID-19.

Earlier in the pandemic, COVID “long-haulers” described frustration getting doctors to believe their symptoms were related to the coronavirus. But now Utah has two clinics — one operated by the University of Utah Hospital and the other by Intermountain — for patients to seek help with the hundreds of prolonged symptoms now described in medical literature.

The most common are fatigue, “brain fog,” and heart and lung problems — and some Utah patients have described symptoms so severe they could not walk, drive or bathe themselves. But doctors at the U. and at Intermountain also have reported symptoms ranging from hair loss and distorted taste to “zinging” nerves and vision problems.

Still others are seeking help a little earlier than three months post-infection, for more serious lung problems like pneumonia and blood clots, said Dr. Dixie Harris, also a critical care physician for Intermountain.

And many ultimately suffer from depression and anxiety, Harris said — though it is unclear whether that is directly triggered by the virus or whether it develops as a result of frustration from persistent, debilitating symptoms.

“The COVID molecule seems to affect a lot of different organ systems and in somewhat [more] unusual ways than what traditional medicine is used to diagnosing,” said Hirshberg, one of the doctors for the Intermountain clinic, which announced its “Long COVID navigator” system in a news conference Monday.

“The navigator program really was started to try to bring in all of these multi-specialties and get the patients to the right place in a quick timeframe. A lot of our subspecialty clinics are are booked out typically, and this is a way to get people in … rather quickly,” Hirshberg said.

Doctors at Utah’s two long COVID clinics described similar patterns among the patients they have seen: most are middle-aged or younger, with no serious underlying health problems, and their initial illness from COVID-19 was not severe.

“I’m seeing … a lot of athletes, a lot of fully working individuals who the fatigue and the brain fog is so profound that they’re not able to get back to their pre-COVID degrees of exercise and activity,” Hirshberg said. In fact, she noted, long COVID patients who were hospitalized for COVID-19 often are recovering more quickly than those whose initial cases were milder.

“These are people who didn’t have risk factors, not diabetics, not hypertensive, doesn’t have coronary disease, never got very sick with COVID,” Harris agreed. “But it just lingers. All these symptoms continue and continue.”

About 40% of patients with symptomatic COVID-19 are experiencing some sort of “sequelae” — that is, symptoms develop or persist for more than the two weeks it generally takes a person to recover from COVID-19, Hirshberg said.

(Intermountain Healthcare via Zoom) Dr. Ellie Hirshberg, critical care physician for Intermountain Healthcare, implores Utahns to get vaccinated to pre-empt long COVID in a news conference Feb. 14, 2022. Intermountain was launching a “long COVID navigator” for patients to seek help with symptoms that persist for more than three months after they were infected.

“We’ve been pretty booked,” she said, echoing reports from the University of Utah’s long COVID clinic. The high numbers could simply be a reflection of how transmissible COVID-19 is, and how many Utahns have had it.

But, Hirshberg said, “it also seems like there’s something a little bit different about the COVID molecule. … We certainly see much more of this with COVID than we have with any virus previously.”

Some patients recover soon thereafter, but some have had symptoms continue for as long as a year, Hirshberg said.

“This is a good reason not to catch this virus — not to go out intentionally catch it because you just want to build immunity,” Harris said. “I really don’t want to have a headache for the next 12 months.”

The Intermountain doctors said they have noticed one factor in particular that appears to play a significant role when COVID long haulers finally do recover: sleep.

“The good news is most of them, those early patients, they’ve given me feedback that they’re really feeling much better these days. And I think a key component of that is actually sleep,” Hirshberg said. “A lot of these folks are having disrupted sleep. And whether or not that’s from exact changes in their neuro-hormonal pathways that COVID stimulates in the brain or from the overwhelm — really working on figuring out new sleep patterns and getting enough sleep and enough rest has helped a lot of these patients.”

That means “self care” is a big part of recovering from long COVID, Harris said. Patients “have to be really careful about going back to full exercise and really listen to their bodies,” Harris said. “This is not a typical cold. You have to listen to … how your body feels with activity. Even patients just walking across the room … can become short of breath and their heart can start racing.”

Anyone with persistent symptoms after a COVID-19 diagnosis may call Intermountain’s long COVID navigator at 801-408-5888. Information about the University of Utah long COVID clinic is at https://healthcare.utah.edu/locations/covid-19-clinic/.

Read original article here

The Nanotechnology Revolution Is Here—We Just Haven’t Noticed Yet

Before there was a “metaverse,” before there were crypto millionaires, before nearly every kid in America wanted to be an influencer, the most-hyped thing in tech was “nanotechnology.” “Nano-,” for those who could use a refresher, means “one billionth,” and nanotechnology generally refers to materials manipulated at an atomic or molecular scale.

For decades, computer scientists and physicists speculated that, any minute now, nanotechnology was going to completely reshape our lives, unleashing a wave of humanity-saving inventions. Things haven’t unfolded as they predicted but, quietly, the nanotech revolution is under way.

You can thank the microchip. Engineers and scientists are using the same technology perfected over decades to make microchips to create a variety of other miniature marvels, from submicroscopic machines to new kinds of lenses. These nano-scale gizmos have become so integrated into the fabric of our lives, and the devices in our pockets, that we seem to have missed the fact that they are real-life examples of the nanotechnology revolution we were promised over the past half-century.

Among the routine items that have benefited from nanotechnology: air bags, cellphones, radar, inkjet printers, home projectors, and 5G and other fast wireless technology. Just around the bend, nanotechnology could enable ultra-tiny cameras, as well as a dizzying array of other kinds of sensors, able to detect everything from air pollution and black ice to hacking attempts and skin cancer.

Some of this technology is even at the heart of the current controversy over whether or not America’s 5G networks could make flying less safe.

It’s all still a far cry from the more outlandish past predictions about nanotech’s future. We don’t have molecule-size robots that patrol our bloodstream and repair damage, or microscopic factories capable of churning out endless copies of themselves until the entire planet has been reduced to what nanotech pioneer Eric Drexler in the 1980s worried would be nothing but a “gray goo.”

In the more distant future, this technology might yet enable the vision physicist Richard Feynman laid out in his famous 1959 lecture “There’s Plenty of Room at the Bottom,” in which he hypothesized about a way to build three-dimensional structures one atom at a time. Achieving even a fraction of what he proposed would open up tantalizing possibilities, from sensors that can detect viruses in the air before we inhale them to quantum computers in our pockets.

In the present, creating real-life nanomachines means capitalizing on the hundreds of billions of dollars invested in perfecting the manufacture of microchips since their introduction, also in 1959. Chip companies’ march to make faster, more power-efficient chips has led to the development of fantastically complicated and expensive equipment. By using the same types of machines, techniques and “fabs”—as microchip factories are known—builders of nanomachines can use the steady progress of Moore’s Law to make their devices ever smaller.

ASML, one of the world’s leading manufacturers of the equipment that makes microchips, researches and builds its equipment with its primary customers in mind—the Intels, Samsungs and TSMCs of the world, says CEO

Peter Wennink.

But it has also always had a division that works with clients who want to make things other than conventional microchips, and designs its technology so that it can be customized to their needs, he adds.

These include microelectromechanical systems—MEMS for short—which represent a classic example of tiny machines made with chip fabrication equipment. MEMS have gotten radically smaller over the decades.

Take your smartphone. To transmit and receive the different radio frequencies required for it to talk to cell towers or connect to your Wi-Fi or wireless earbuds, it must filter out all the stray interference that, more than ever, affects those bands of spectrum.

So it uses tiny radio filters without which none of our wireless devices could function. Where microchips and radio antennae are static, entirely solid-state devices, the radio filters they depend on actually move, says

George Holmes,

CEO of Resonant, a company that makes the filters. They vibrate at the same frequency as the signal to be received or transmitted, or sometimes at the frequency to be filtered out, like a cluster of tiny tuning forks.

A technician assembles a system to test Resonant’s ultra-small radio filter for 5G wireless communication systems.



Photo:

Resonant

That means that when your phone is sitting on your desk, streaming music to your earbuds, there are dozens of little elements inside, most shaped like tiny combs, vibrating billions of times a second. They work precisely because they are tiny. Only something so small—existing on a scale at which the bonds between atoms are much stronger relative to an object’s size—could vibrate at these frequencies and not shake itself to bits.

Similarly, for the ground-sensing radar in planes to work properly, it has to filter out interference from, among other things, America’s rapidly proliferating 5G cellphone networks. The problem, says Mr. Holmes, is that radars in older planes were designed and built before anyone knew 5G networks would be a thing. Fixing this problem could be expensive, as it could mean replacing or updating some of those old radars. The fear of airlines and the FAA is, in essence, that for the lack of sufficient microscopic combs vibrating at a few hundreds of millions or billions of times a second in order to tune out a nearby cellphone tower, a plane could be lost.

Our phones also contain many other MEMS. The system that lets them (and smartwatches and other health trackers) know their orientation, as well as the magnitude and direction of their acceleration, is no bigger than a grain of rice today. When it was first invented and installed in the Apollo spacecraft, it was bigger than a basketball. Similar and equally tiny sensors tell air bags when to deploy. The system of rapidly-twitching, red blood cell-size mirrors that make home projectors possible are also MEMS; ditto the nozzles on inkjet printers.

Another example of modern nanomachines manipulates light rather than electricity. A new kind of lens, known as a “metalens,” has been shown in the laboratory to be able to bend and shape light in ways that used to require a whole stack of conventional lenses, says Juejun Hu, an associate professor of materials science at MIT. The advantage of metalenses is that they are thin and nearly flat—at least to the naked eye.

Under an electron microscope, the surface of a metalens looks like a plush carpet. At this scale, the metalens is clearly covered with minuscule pillars—each one-thousandth the width of a human hair—sticking up from its surface. This texture allows a metalens to bend light in a way that’s analogous to the way that conventional lenses do. (The way these little silicon “fibers” work is novel enough that they forced physicists to rethink their understanding of how light and matter interact.)

A handful of startups are translating metalens technology to commercial applications. Among them is Metalenz, which just announced a deal with semiconductor manufacturer

STMicroelectronics

to make 3-D sensors for smartphones. This application of metalenses could allow a greater variety of phone manufacturers to achieve the kind of 3-D sensing that enables

Apple’s

Face ID technology.

Unlocking your phone with your face is just the beginning, says Metalenz CEO Robert Devlin. Metalenses also have abilities that can be difficult to reproduce with conventional lenses. For example, because they facilitate the detection of polarized light, they can “see” things conventional lenses can’t. That could include detecting levels of light pollution, allowing the cameras on automobile safety and self-driving systems to detect black ice, and giving our phone cameras the ability to detect skin cancer, says Mr. Devlin.

Shrinking nanomachines further, and getting to the theoretical limit of tininess—the point at which humans are manipulating individual atoms—will require technologies radically different than the ones we currently use to manufacture even the most advanced microchips, says Dr. Andrei Fedorov, a professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology. His team, among others, has published research in which they use electron beams to etch patterns in sheets of graphene and other two-dimensional materials—or to build up structures made of carbon atoms atop them.

Graphene and its kin are already the subject of intense research as an alternative to silicon in the microchips of the future. But Dr. Fedorov says that future could include building three-dimensional structures atop two-dimensional sheets of graphene. Being able to do so with atomic precision could allow, among other things, creating the kind of structures required for the next generation of ultrapowerful quantum computers which governments and tech companies alike are trying to build.

Most of Dr. Fedorov’s research is supported by the Semiconductor Research Corp., a nonprofit sponsored by nearly every major advanced chip manufacturing and design company on earth, set up in the early 1980s to pursue fundamental research that could someday be used in electronics manufacturing. So it’s not implausible that the semiconductor industry, in its exploration of technologies that could take us beyond the limits of today’s microchips, could someday employ techniques pioneered by his team or the many others working on similar technologies.

The end goal is the ability to use an electron beam to rapidly remove, add or modify the atoms on a surface. The result is a system that resembles 3-D printing—at the atomic scale.

When Dr. Fedorov gives talks about his research, he tells audiences about what Richard Feynman proposed in 1959. “I say, ‘This is the vision,’ and then I say, ‘Sixty years later, we realized Feynman’s vision. It’s now in our hands.’”

For more WSJ Technology analysis, reviews, advice and headlines, sign up for our weekly newsletter.

Write to Christopher Mims at christopher.mims@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Read original article here

Vancouver Canucks assistant equipment manager thanks fan who noticed his melanoma at game against Seattle Kraken

Popovici was sitting behind Hamilton as she watched the Canucks play the Seattle Kraken on October 23. Unsure if Hamilton was aware of the mole, Popovici banged on the glass window to catch his attention and showed him a message she had typed on her phone.

Following her advice, Hamilton did get the mole checked out and it proved to be a malignant melanoma, a type of skin cancer.

With the Canucks scheduled to play the Kraken in Seattle on Saturday, the Vancouver team posted a message on social media as they tried to track down Popovici so Hamilton could thank her personally.

“I’m trying to find a very special person and I need the hockey community’s help,” wrote Hamilton in a social media post.

“To this woman I am trying to find, you changed my life, and now I want to find you to say THANK YOU SO VERY MUCH.

“That evening Oct 23rd, and the message you showed me on your cell phone will forever be etched into my brain and has made a true life-changing difference for me and my family.

“Your instincts were right and that mole on the back of my neck was a malignant melanoma and thanks to your persistence and the quick work of our doctors, it is now gone.”

‘What wonderful news!’

It didn’t take long for the internet to work its magic as Popovici’s mother replied to the Canucks’ original Facebook post.

“This was my daughter!!! We are the season ticket holders for the Kraken who sit behind the visitors bench at the Climate Pledge Arena. This was my daughter’s first game and the Canucks have always been my team before the Kraken existed.

“She noticed the mole on the back of Red’s neck and she wasn’t sure he knew about it. So she typed the message on her phone and knocked on the glass window to get his attention. He finally looked at the message, nodded and smiled and continued working.

“She hasn’t even seen this message yet as she worked graveyard shift at the suicide crisis center in Seattle so she’s still asleep. She’ll be shocked to see this message!

“She will be at the game tonight in the same seats. She’ll be so happy and excited to know he got it checked! What wonderful news!!!! She just got accepted into multiple medical schools!”

In a video posted by the Canucks on Facebook, Popovici and Hamilton are shown together in an emotional meeting.

Both wearing masks, Popovici asks if Hamilton is OK with shaking hands or hugging, but they quickly opt for the hug given the moment’s poignancy.

Hamilton explained in the video that when Popovici knocked on the glass and showed him the message on her phone that he initially had been quite taken aback.

“The next day I woke up,” continued Hamilton in the video. “I said to Jess [Hamilton’s partner] … ‘It was your effort and your persistence … the way you wrote it on your phone. I owe it to this person to get checked, if she went this far, I don’t know her, I don’t know anything about her.’

“I am fortunate we have doctors on the team who can help,” added Hamilton.

It was during Saturday’s game that a stunned Popovici learned about the $10,000 scholarship award.

Vancouver won 5-2, but as the Canucks tweeted a picturing of Hamilton and Popivici together taking a selfie, the tweet’s caption said it all: “The biggest win tonight.”

Jacob Lev contributed to this report.



Read original article here

A Scary Mass Extinction Happened 30 Million Years Ago, And We Only Just Noticed

The close of the Eocene roughly 33 million years ago marks a time of great change on Earth. In a slow reversal of what we’re seeing today, temperatures dropped and glaciers stretched their icy fingers towards the equator.

 

The loss of life across the Asian continent was profound. But Africa’s biodiversity, sheltered by the warmth of the tropics, appeared to go unscathed by the colossal changes. Or so we thought.

According to a recently published study by a team of researchers from across the US, we just weren’t looking at the fossil record the right way.

The research suggests that far from thriving through this cold change, mammals on the Arabian Peninsula and across the African continent experienced significant declines, with nearly two thirds of their peak diversity disappearing 30 million years ago.

Exactly what precipitated each loss isn’t clear, though with widespread temperature fluctuations and intense volcanic activity rocking the region, there’s no shortage of possibilities.

Whatever caused the loss, the ecological niches left open by the extinction event weren’t vacant for long.

“It’s very clear that there was a huge extinction event, and then a recovery period,” says Duke University biologist Steven Heritage.

Much of what we know about the shifting climate at the transition from the Eocene to the following epoch, the Oligocene, comes from analyses of changes in oxygen isotopes in cores of sediment dug from the ocean floor.

 

Matching these with various other clues on fluctuating sea levels and evidence of glacier growth gives us a general picture of how our planet as a whole was changing.

Yet signs on more local levels can be a little patchy, relying more on modelling and a close examination of fossils that pop up sporadically here and there.

Records taken on dry land can provide a mixed picture, so it’s hardly surprising that there’s been a debate over the impact global cooling ultimately had on masses near the equator.

On one hand, there’s evidence of animals such as the ancestral relatives of modern lemurs vanishing from Africa’s north east. Yet other studies suggest Africa experienced barely any environmental changes, or perhaps none at all.

Fossil records can be challenging to interpret thanks to their tendency to be rather patchwork. Not all species leave their remains neatly preserved in a convenient location, but with the right analytic tools, researchers can still pull a trove of information from just a handful of bones.

The team collected data on fossils representing five groups of mammals, including carnivores called hyaenodonts, two rodent groups, squirrel-like anomalures, and two primate groups – one occupied by our own ancestors.

 

From these samples, the researchers constructed a family tree representing the timing of known appearances and losses for each. Statistical tools could then give the scientists a better idea of when the losses were substantial enough in given areas to be linked with global events.

By looking at the characteristics within related groups, researchers could also see how species diversified to fill the niches vacated by the lost animals.

Take an animal’s teeth for example. Subtle differences in their shapes over a long period of time can tell us how species rapidly adapted to a newly abundant food source.

“We see a huge loss in tooth diversity, and then a recovery period with new dental shapes and new adaptations,” says lead author Dorien de Vries, from the University of Salford.

Incidentally, our own primate ancestors appear to be among the hardest hit. Diversity in anthropoid teeth 30 million years ago dropped to virtually nothing. It was so bad, a single type of dental morphology remained, constraining the kinds of foods their descendants could eat.

Bottlenecks like these are common throughout the evolutionary record. Knowing how species respond to them could be vital, given the squeeze we’re putting on so many ecosystems around the globe today.

Somehow, that tooth design got us through. Had it not, our species might never have seen the light of day.

“It was a real reset button,” says de Vries.

This research was published in Communications Biology.

 

Read original article here