Wednesday, April 20, 2022

A Fun Senior Mystery: The Painted Lady by (the late) Peter Abresch

 "The Painted Lady" by Peter Abresch is a mystery about a retired couple (over 62) who travels on vacations called "Elderhostels." I've never heard the term... and learned that in 2009 the 34-year-old educational travel organization changed its name to Exploritas, a combination of the words 'explore' and 'veritas,' to promote their mission of pursuing “adventures in lifelong learning."  As for the book, it was a fun read. Today's blog has my review. 

 My Review:    Main characters James P. Dandy and his girlfriend Dodee Swisher (a semi-retired artist), have joined their retiree tour group of the old Santa Fe Trail starting in Denver and down into New Mexico. The book starts quickly with the death of an Indian medicine woman, who falls from a rooftop. Jim witnesses the fall, and before long a variety of mysterious characters are dogging him. To make matters worse, the medicine woman's image keeps showing up in Dodee's paintings. PAINTED LADY is light-hearted. You can tell the author was in his 60s or so when he wrote it, because he brings the characters to life. The author also does a great job bringing in U.S. western history (I recognized several places he described) throughout. There's also a legendary Mayan artifact, a kidnapping, a crazy bus-car chase, a shootout, with a tinge of the paranormal! It was an enjoyable book and a great find. 

The author wrote quite a few books, mysteries and poetry. He passed in 2021. 



Tuesday, April 19, 2022

No Surprise: Ivermectin Not Effective in Stopping Severe COVID, Study Finds

 If you're an anti-vaxxer or know one who didn't get the COVID-19 shot and decided to try the false-cure of Ivermectin, you or they are either dead now or have lasting effects from a bad case of COVID-19. A new study AGAIN confirms that Ivermectin, an anti-parasitic drug (not an antiviral, and COVID is a virus) does nothing for people with COVID. Today's blog is about that study.

    Side note: Why people don't get vaccinated and be smart is unfathomable because it is SO selfish. COVID isn't about you. It's also about protecting those around you, including the most vulnerable.  Here's the Study: 



Ivermectin Not Effective in Stopping Severe COVID, Study Finds By Marcia Frellick, Web MD

Feb. 22, 2022 -- Ivermectin, the controversial anti-parasitic drug, does not help treat mild to moderate COVID-19, another new study has found.

WHAT IS IVERMECTIN REALLY USED FOR IN PEOPLE AND ANIMALS? What Is Ivermectin? ANSWER: the FDA has approved prescription ivermectin tablets to treat two infections caused by parasitic worms. Doctors can also prescribe a type of ivermectin that you put on your skin (called a topical medication) to treat head lice and skin conditions like rosacea and scabies. In animals, ivermectin can help prevent heartworm disease and certain parasites

"The study findings do not support the use of ivermectin for patients with COVID-19," researchers said in the study published last week in JAMA Internal Medicine.

The trial took place at 20 public hospitals and a COVID-19 quarantine center in Malaysia between May 31 and Oct. 25.

BOTTOM LINE DIRECT FROM THE JOURNAL PAPER:

Findings  In this open-label randomized clinical trial of high-risk patients with COVID-19 in Malaysia, a 5-day course of oral ivermectin administered during the first week of illness did not reduce the risk of developing severe disease compared with standard of care alone.

Meaning  The study findings do not support the use of ivermectin for patients with COVID-19.

In this randomized trial of 490 high-risk patients with mild-to-moderate COVID-19, ivermectin treatment during early illness did not prevent progression to severe disease.

Among 241 patients who received ivermectin, 52 developed severe COVID-19, compared to 43 of 249 patients who did not take the drug.

The people studied, who were on average 62 years old and were 55% women, were randomly assigned to receive either a 5-day course of ivermectin plus standard care or standard care alone. 

The researchers also looked at smaller groups of people in the study to see if there were differences in whether they were vaccinated. They said that analysis was "unremarkable."

Just more than half of participants (51.8%) were fully vaccinated with two doses of COVID-19 vaccines. Among the vaccinated patients, 17.7% in the ivermectin group and 9.2% in the control group developed severe disease.

Ivermectin and COVID 

While the FDA has not approved ivermectin to treat COVID-19, doctors continue to prescribe the inexpensive and widely available antiparasitic drug anyway. There is little evidence the drug is effective in treating COVID-19, but it has been embraced by anti-vaccine advocates as a useable alternative.

There have been reports of people becoming hospitalized after taking ivermectin, and the FDA has even warned against its use.

Monday, April 18, 2022

Take the Test: 8 Misused Weather Terms - Are You Guilty?

There are at least several weather terms that I've heard people misuse, and Dr. Marshall Shepherd of University of Georgia (and the Weather Channel's Weather Geeks Podcast highlighted 8 misused terms in this educational article he wrote for Forbes. As you read it, you'll test yourself to see what you may have misidentified.


8 Misused Weather Terms - Are You Guilty? 
Marshall Shepherd, SOURCE:  Forbes.com 

I was listening to sports talk radio last week, and one of the guys used the term “tsunami” to describe rainstorms that had moved through our area. While I often hear that description, it is a misuse of the term. From my lens as a meteorologist, atmospheric sciences professor, and the former president of the American Meteorological Society (AMS), I thought it would be fun to document eight misused weather terms that I have noticed over the years. Which ones are you guilty of using?

Let’s start with tsunami. It’s not even a meteorological term though people often use it in that manner. The FEMA Ready.gov website defines a tsunami as, “A series of enormous ocean waves caused by earthquakes, underwater landslides, volcanic eruptions or asteroids.” It is an oceanic phenomenon not an atmospheric one. If you want to get technical, there is an obscure thing called a meteotsunami, which I have written about in the past. However, I am pretty certain that most people are thinking of the ocean-based tsunami when they use the term.

Monsoon is another misused term often associated with a big rainstorm. Meteorologically, the term is used to describe wind. According to the AMS Glossary of Meteorology, a monsoon is, “A name for seasonal winds” and is derived from the Arabic word mausim (a season). Many people are familiar with the monsoons of India and other parts of Asia, but they are found in other places too. They are caused by seasonal differences in temperature between large land masses (like India or the U.S. Southwest) and nearby oceans. The onshore monsoonal flow can be associated with significant rainfall totals and is likely why the term has evolved in more common usage.

Blizzard is a another commonly misused term. Here in the south, the media will generally refer to any significant amount of snowfall as the “Blizzard of (fill in the year).” The National Weather Service Glossary notes that Blizzard conditions are met when the following conditions are met for 3 hour or more : “Sustained wind or frequent gusts to 35 miles an hour or greater; and Considerable falling and/or blowing snow (i.e., reducing visibility frequently to less than a ¼ mile).”

(Image; Lightning over Oklahoma on May 1, 2009. Credit: Sean Waugh/NOAA/NSSL, NOAA Photo Library).   

Heat lightning is one that really surprises people here in my neck of the woods. For years, people have been told by their grandmother or uncle that the heat of the day causes the sky to illuminate during the warm season. There is honestly no such thing as “heat lightning.” It is not some specific type of lighting. The use of the term heat lightning has evolved to describe lightning too far off in the distance to hear the thunder. Alternatively, it may also be used to refer to distant cloud-to-cloud or intracloud lightning. Remember, only about 20% of lightning is the cloud-to-ground type.

Polar vortex gained prominence in the last decade or so but has always been a part of meteorological textbooks and research papers. It is not an Arctic hurricane or distinct storm feature like a tornado. A Stanford University website describes the Polar Vortex this way - “The polar vortex forms every winter because of the temperature difference between the equator and the poles....A jet forms to balance this temperature difference. This jet is what we call the polar vortex or the polar night jet.” This feature is found about 6 miles above the surface of the Earth and generally flows completely around the Pole. Other planets can have one too.

(Image: large hailstones (next to a baseball) from a thunderstorm.  Credit:  NOAA Legacy Photo; OAR/ERL/Wave Propagation Laboratory/NOAA Photo Library)

Hail is often misunderstood and we are now in the season (Spring) in which it ramps up in many locations. Over the years, many friends have messaged me during a winter weather event asking if they were seeing hail in their yard. They were actually describing “sleet” or ice pellets, which is often associated with wintry weather scenarios. By the way, don’t confuse sleet with freezing rain, which is precipitation that falls to the ground as liquid but then freezes because the temperature is below 32 degrees F. Hail is a form of frozen precipitation that forms in thunderstorms, which means that it can be found in Spring and Summer storm. For more on how hail forms, visit the outstanding National Weather Service Jet Stream website.

Marshall Shepherd Dr. J. Marshall Shepherd, a leading international expert in weather and climate, was the 2013 President of American Meteorological Society (AMS) and is Director of the University of Georgia’s (UGA) Atmospheric Sciences Program. Dr. Shepherd is the Georgia Athletic Association Distinguished Professor and hosts The Weather Channel’s Weather Geeks Podcast, which can be found at all podcast outlets.

Sunday, April 17, 2022

Idiot of the Week: Woman steals $4,000 Cognac bottle from Restaurant - Caught on Video

 This week's idiot is about a thief who stole a very expensive bottle of wine under video surveillance (VIDEO below in the blog). Fortunately, her family found out and returned it, embarrassed by their idiot relative. Bravo to the family for returning the bottle.

(Camera snap shot- The idiot thief is front left in the gown./A screenshot of security footage provided by the Santa Clara County Sheriff's Office. \Courtesy of Santa Clara County Sheriff's Office)


Woman banned from Bay Area steakhouse after stealing $4,000 Cognac bottle 

 Joshua Bote , SFGATE March 14, 2022

> $4,000: The price of a nearly 100-year-old bottle of cognac a Bay Area woman swiped from a steakhouse. Her family eventually returned the bottle and is now banned from the establishment.

March 15, 1 p.m. The woman seen grabbing a $4,000 Cognac bottle from behind the bar at Mt. Hamilton GrandView has been banned from the restaurant after security footage of her alleged theft went viral.

NBC Bay Area reported Tuesday that the family returned the bottle and apologized. The owner is also declining to press charges, the station reported, but the woman and her family have been barred from the premises.

March 14, 2:25 p.m. A woman wearing an evening gown strolls around the bar counter at a swanky Bay Area steakhouse, in security footage from March 8.

With at least three other people watching the vicinity, she grabs a bottle from the bar at San Jose’s Mt. Hamilton GrandView — a $4,000 bottle of Louis XIII cognac — and walks away with a man, dressed up in in a white button-down shirt and slacks.

The Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Office is now investigating the case as a felony grand theft, according to a Saturday post on the office’s Facebook page. The office also posted security footage — as well as screenshots zeroing in on the alleged bottle thief. KTVU reported Saturday that the bottle of Louis XIII cognac is nearly a century old. VIDEO:

Saturday, April 16, 2022

Good News Story: Abington firefighters rescue dog

Here's a good news story that could have been in yesterday's Firefighter Friday! These firefighters in Massachusetts were called to save a dog from drowning after falling through ice on a pond. Here's the story:

(Photo: Sadie getting dried off by an Abington firefighter. Credit: Abington firefighters)

 

She is everything to us': Abington firefighters rescue dog 
By Alyssa Fell 
The Patriot Ledger

ABINGTON – When Sadie saw swans at Ames Nowell State Park during a walk with Joel Culley on Monday, the dog took off running. It wasn't long before she fell through the thin layer of ice covering Cleveland Pond.

Culley called the Abington Fire Department for help, which Chief John Nuttall said was exactly the right thing to do. Firefighters were quickly able pinpoint the location of the cellphone Culley used, and jumped in to action to save Sadie.

Firefighters rescue Sadie from Cleveland Pond in Abington on Feb. 21, 2022. An Abington Fire Department Facebook post about the rescue prompted an outpouring of gratitude, including from those who love Sadie most.

"I am so grateful to you all. ... She is everything to us," Joel Culley wrote.

Joel Culley uploaded a photo and thanked the Abington Fire Department on their post about Sadie's rescue. Ellen McCormack Culley shared his sentiment.

"Thank you Abington fire and police for saving our crazy Sadie," she said.

Abington firefighters don't take animal or ice rescues lightly, Nuttall said.

"We also know that at some point the owner, the person, is going to go in, so we take it very seriously," he said.

Sadie gets some attention in an Abington Fire Department rescue truck after she was rescued from a pond on Feb. 21, 2022. The department has special training and equipment to prepare for and execute this type of rescue. Nuttall urged people to be careful around ice, and said ice over bodies of water can melt more quickly than people may think.

Friday, April 15, 2022

News You May Have Missed: Scotland Photos, Anti-Lynch Bill now Law/Air Force Helps LGBTQ kids; and more

Every day we're barraged with news. Today's blog is some News You May Have Missed: Scotland Photos, Anti-Lynch Bill now Law/Air Force Helps LGBTQ kids; and more FOR NEWS YOU MAY HAVE MISSED

(Scotland Image:  Alan McLean's photo of Eilean Donan Castle lit up in the colours of the Ukraine flag. Credit: BBC News) 

**Good news** > President Joe Biden signs Emmett Till anti-lynching bill into law, designating such killings as a federal hate crime

EZRA MILLER, Actor of the Flash in MOVIES- Got in trouble in Hawaii over a Lady Gaga Song https://www.boston.com/news/entertainment/2022/03/29/the-flash-actor-ezra-miller-arrested-at-hawaii-karaoke-bar/?s_campaign=Email:BComTonight&SUBID=d7882715bb&AUDID=30656330

(Scotland Image: Andy Murray said of his shot: "I took this photo of my partner Wendy walking towards Carraig Fhada Lighthouse on a stormy day on a trip to Islay from our home in Edinburgh." Credit: BBC News)

**Good news** AIR FORCE OFFERS MEDICAL, LEGAL HELP AS STATES CLAMP DOWN ON TRANS AND LGBTQ+ CHILDREN The Air Force suggests reaching out to military health clinics and on-base legal advisors.

**Interesting***  CHRIS WALLACE SPEAKS OUT AGAINST FOX NEWS' ELECTION CONSPIRACIES -   Former Fox News host Chris Wallace opened up about his surprising decision last year to jump ship for rival network CNN. He said the network's post-2020 coverage became "increasingly unsustainable" for him and he disagreed with its airing of political conspiracy theories 

 **Good news** FEDERAL EMPLOYEES CAN NOW TAKE PAID LEAVE TO VOTE AND WORK AT THE POLLS In today's Federal Newscast: Federal agency CIOs are finalizing plans to create and fund a zero-trust architecture. A former head of the TSA has died. And you can now sport ombre nails while in a Marine Corps uniform.

**Uh-OH!** WIFE OF SUPREME COURT JUSTICE, GINNI THOMAS COLLABORATED ON THE JAN 6TH INSURRECTION Ginni Thomas, wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, sent nearly two dozen text messages urging former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows to aggressively move to overturn the 2020 presidential election. “The majority knows Biden and the Left is attempting the greatest Heist of our History," she wrote. Meadows has turned in a total of 2,230 messages to the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.

(Image: UFO-like clouds turned out to be a wee theme this week. This picture was taken by Murdo O'Connor as he travelled south towards Ardhasaig, Isle of Harris.)

 GREAT PHOTOS FROM SCOTLAND!!! https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-60793679 

DISGRACED GOP REP. JEFF FORTENBERRY RESIGNS Nebraska Republican Rep. Jeff Fortenberry resigned, effective March 31, after he was convicted of three felonies related to an illegal $30,000 donation he received from a foreign national in 2016. Each of the three felony charges carry a statutory maximum penalty of five years in federal prison.

IT'S OFFICIAL: TRUMP'S 'IMPENETRABLE' BORDER WALL WAS AN EXPENSIVE FAILURE Trump's $15 billion wall was breached thousands of times in the areas where it was completed, with smugglers using cheap power tools available in retail stores, according to The Washington Post. One report last year found some smugglers were building effective ladders with about $5 worth of material. In another famous case, a stiff wind knocked over a wall segment.

VIDEO: Plane ditches in ocean during Florida airshow  

 A World War Two-era aircraft taking part in an airshow in Cocoa Beach, Fl https://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-us-canada-56792530

Thursday, April 14, 2022

Fountain Restoration Happening at the Ancient city of Pompeii

One of the most fascinating places we have visited is the city of Pompeii in southern Italy. In 79 AD Mount Vesuvius erupted and covered the city in hot ash, burying it and its people and keeping the structures intact. Today it's an archaeological treasure where visitors can see how ancient Romans lived, and how far advanced their civilization was over other areas of the world at the time. This historic site is an archaeological dig in progress as there is still much to uncover.. In today's blog, though, I'll focus on the latest restoration project- the 40 fountains discovered within the ancient city. Here's the story and video from Pompeii Sites.

Image: The official restorer of the Archaeological Park of Pompeii, Paola Sabbatucci. Credit: pompeiisites.org) 

The restoration of the public fountains of the ancient city of Pompeii

February 2022

The official restorer of the Archaeological Park of Pompeii, Paola Sabbatucci, and the technical director of Pantone Restauri, Luca Pantone, explain the ongoing restoration work on the public fountains of the ancient city of Pompeii. This is a comprehensive project that includes the restoration of more than 40 public fountains, the 3D survey of the artefacts and an archaeological excavation around some of the fountains that will allow us to investigate their relationship with the road network. 

The restoration work seeks to preserve these fountains for as long as possible, and to return them to public use, looking their very best. 

VIDEO LINK: https://youtu.be/t-uioJVdino

Wednesday, April 13, 2022

Science: Why aren't there polar bears in Antarctica?

 There are no penguins in the Arctic (north pole) but there are polar bears. Conversely, there are no polar bears in the Antarctic (south pole) where the penguins live. Here's a story that explains why there are no polar bears in the Antarctic!

(Image: A male polar bear prowls the snowy Alaska coast at Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Photo By/Credit: Eric Regehr/USFWS)

Why aren't there polar bears in Antarctica? 

By JoAnna Wendel LIVE SCIENCE March 22, 2022

Most bears live in the Northern Hemisphere; polar bears are no exception.

The Arctic and Antarctica, while similar habitats in some ways, are home to very different creatures. Both poles host a variety of seal and whale species, but only the Arctic is home to Earth's largest bear, the polar bear.

Polar bears (Ursus maritimus) and their tumbly cubs can be found around the Arctic Circle in Alaska, Canada, Greenland (part of Denmark), Norway, Russia and, occasionally, Iceland. A polar bear's fur is specially suited for temperatures that can dip below minus 22 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 30 degrees Celsius). They live on ice for most of their lives, feeding on fat-rich seals that keep them energized for long periods between meals.

Antarctica also has sea ice, cold temperatures and seals. So why aren't there any polar bears on the southernmost continent? The answer has to do with evolution and the geologic history of Earth.

"Bears are largely a Northern Hemisphere phenomenon," said Andrew Derocher, a professor of biological sciences at the University of Alberta in Canada who has studied polar bears for nearly 40 years. Aside from the Andean bear (Tremarctos ornatus) of South America, bears appear only in the Northern Hemisphere. There's no specific reason for this, just that some species evolve in some places and some don't. "Biogeography is full of oddities," Derocher said. "Some species made it to new places and some didn't."

For polar bears specifically, there was never a time in their evolutionary history when the North and South poles were connected by ice (or land, for that matter). People say polar bears are the "biggest terrestrial carnivore in the world, and yet they're not a terrestrial species at all," Derocher told Live Science. The big, white bears live on sea ice for almost their entire lives, only occasionally coming ashore to breed.

Polar bears are, evolutionarily, a relatively young species. They evolved from a common ancestor of the brown bear (Ursus arctos) sometime between 5 million and 500,000 years ago, Derocher said. But even 5 million years ago, the continents were in similar positions to where they are today, so polar bears never got the opportunity to travel from pole to pole. The closest landmass to Antarctica is the southern tip of South America, which includes Chile and Argentina. To get to Antarctica, polar bears would have to cross the treacherous Drake Passage. The area is also known for powerful storms and rough seas as cold water from the south runs into warm water from the north. 

 Originally published on Live Science.

Tuesday, April 12, 2022

Re-Read this Great Book Craig & Fred (the dog) with a New Insight into the Afghanistan War

 I just re-read the book "Craig and Fred" by Craig Grossi. It's an amazing book about a Marine who found a dog in Afghanistan during the war there when our troops were fighting for the Afghan people. This time, I got something additional out of it - that made me SO GRATEFUL the U.S. has pulled our troops out of Afghanistan. Here's what I found: 



MY SECOND READ -  First, I was moved by Craig's bonding with a scrappy pup in Afghanistan during the middle of a war, and his determination to get the dog to the U.S. safely. Second, I found this book to be eye-opening about the horrors our servicemen and women faced in Afghanistan.  

Craig lost 2 friends in the war, and he pays tribute to them at the end of the book. But he also suffers from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Craig recounted the horrors of seeing one of his friends die from a landmine and frightening accounts of being pinned down by Taliban sniper fire. He wrote about how the Taliban would come out at night and plant landmines around the U.S. camps, and how any loud noise would be a cause for concern. 

As I read these chapters, I could breathe a big sigh of relief that the U.S. finally pulled out of Afghanistan in 2021 after 20 years of fighting. I thought about the horrors of war that Craig wrote about, and how after training the Afghan army for 20 years they quickly folded to the Taliban. Although not its initial purpose, the book opened my eyes to the horrors these servicemen and women faced. 

WHAT I WROTE THE FIRST TIME I READ IT IN 2019: 

This book is about a Marine in Afghanistan who met a special dog he named "Fred" and bonded with. The book, "Craig and Fred" is a true story written by Craig Grossi, the marine who Fred found in a war zone. Craig explains how this scrappy dog bonded with him during the Taliban war in Afghanistan, and how Craig when through hoops to get Fred to the U.S. to wait for him. The chapters take you through Craig's war-time experiences and some are heart-wrenching. Alternative chapters take place after Craig returned home and reunited with Fred, then took a cross-country journey. 

  It's a wonderful book and there are great photos in the back of the book. Craig learned what dog parents learn- there's nothing like the unconditional love of a dog. Get the book and enjoy it!  

ABOUT THE BOOK: The uplifting and unforgettable true story of a US Marine, the stray dog he met on an Afghan battlefield, and how they saved each other and now travel America together, "spreading the message of stubborn positivity."

Monday, April 11, 2022

Discovery! Wreck of 207-Year-Old Whaling Ship in Gulf of Mexico

 Shipwrecks are fascinating looks back into history, and recently a whaling ship that traveled far south and into the Gulf of Mexico was found there. Here's the story (and a 1 minute video) from NOAA (The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration): 

(Image: This anchor was one of two found among the remains of what is likely the 19th century whaler Industry explored during the 2022 ROV and Mapping ShakedownImage courtesy of NOAA Ocean Exploration, 2022 ROV and Mapping Shakedown.)

NOAA, Partners Discover Wreck of 207-Year-Old Whaling Ship in Gulf of Mexico

Black and Native American mariners worked aboard as essential crew

NOAA and partners today announced the discovery of the wreck of a 207-year-old whaling ship, called Industry, found on the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico. The remains of the 64-foot long, two-masted wooden brig opens a window into a little known chapter of American history when descendants of African slaves and Native Americans served as essential crew in one of the nation’s oldest industries.

This is an important discovery for American history,” said U.S. Deputy Secretary of Commerce Don Graves. “This 19th century whaling ship will help us learn about the lives of the Black and Native American mariners and their communities, and the immense challenges they faced at sea and on land.”

“Today we celebrate the discovery of a lost ship that will help us better understand the rich story of how people of color succeeded as captains and crew members in the nascent American whaling industry of the early 1800s,” said NOAA Administrator Rick Spinrad. “The discovery reflects how African Americans and Native Americans prospered in the ocean economy despite facing discrimination and other injustices. It is also an example of how important partnerships of federal agencies and local communities are to uncovering and documenting our nation’s maritime history.”

(Image: The artifacts shown here, including the tryworks and an anchor, helped confirm that the shipwreck explored during the February 25 2022 ROV and Mapping Shakedown dive is likely the remains of Industry, an historically significant 19th century whaler. Image courtesy of NOAA Ocean Exploration, 2022 ROV and Mapping Shakedown. )

With guidance provided via satellite connection from partner scientists on shore, a team aboard NOAA Ship Okeanos Explorer piloted a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) to explore the seafloor on February 25, 2022, at a suspected location first spotted by an energy company in 2011 and viewed briefly by an autonomous vehicle in 2017, but never fully examined.

VIDEO: 

(Video caption: During Dive 02 of NOAA Ocean Exploration’s 2022 ROV and Mapping Shakedown on NOAA Ship Okeanos Explorer, scientists on ship and shore explored the wreck of what they believed to be an historic 19th century whaler. Scientists from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management and SEARCH Inc. provided coordinates and other information and narrated the dive from shore, live via telepresence. Artifacts documented during the dive include tryworks, an iron stove with two kettles that was used to render whale blubber into oil; two visible anchors; and bottles. Only one whaler is known to have been lost in the Gulf of Mexico between the post-American revolutionary period and the end of the 19th century. At the time of the dive, we didn’t know if this and the wreck were one and the same, but the data collected and further research have confirmed that this is very likely the remains of the brig IndustryVideo courtesy of NOAA Ocean Exploration, 2022 ROV and Mapping Shakedown. )


Armed with extensive research on Industry and the video from the ROV, the team of shoreside scientists led by James Delgado, senior vice president of SEARCH Inc.; Scott Sorset, marine archeologist for the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM); and Michael Brennan, also of SEARCH Inc., have now confirmed that the wreck is most likely the brig Industry.

The whaling brig was built in 1815 in Westport, Massachusetts, and hunted whales across the Atlantic Ocean, the Caribbean, and the Gulf of Mexico for 20 years. It was lost when a strong storm snapped its masts and opened its hull to the sea on May 26, 1836. Industry was whaling primarily for sperm whales more than 70 miles off the mouth of the Mississippi River. It is the only whaling ship known to have been lost in the Gulf of Mexico out of 214 whaling voyages from the 1780s to the 1870s.

While Industry eventually sank, there was some mystery about what happened to the crew. Thanks to new research by Robin Winters, a librarian at the Westport Free Public Library, the crew’s fate is finally clear. Winters tracked down a June 17,1836, article in the Nantucket Inquirer and Mirror that reported the crew of Industry was picked up at sea by another Westport whaling ship, Elizabeth, and crewmen were returned safely to Westport.

“This was so fortunate for the men onboard,” said Delgado, who worked closely with Winters and several other local historians to confirm the identity of Industry. “If the Black crewmen had tried to go ashore, they would have been jailed under local laws. And if they could not pay for their keep while in prison, they would have been sold into slavery.”

SEARCH Inc., working with BOEM, plans to nominate the wreck site for the National Register of Historic Places as part of a larger BOEM project, led by SEARCH, to document historic 19th century shipwrecks in the Gulf of Mexico.

“BOEM is proud to be a part of this important discovery,” said BOEM Director Amanda Lefton. “We work hard with our partners to safeguard historic and cultural treasures in the outer continental shelf.”

While the crew list for the last voyage of Industry disappeared when the ship sank, lists of crews from previous voyages describe crewmembers and officers as including Black people, Native Americans, White people, and multiracial people. The brig is connected to the life of Paul Cuffe , a mariner and entrepreneur whose father was a freed slave and mother was a Wampanoag Indian. Cuffe started whaling as a teenager and rose to become a successful ship builder, merchant, abolitionist, philanthropist, founder of an integrated public school, and among the leaders of a project to settle freed Black people in a new colony in Africa. His son William was a navigator on Industry and his son-in-law, Pardon Cook , was an officer on the brig and is believed to have made the most whaling voyages of any Black person in American history.   FULL ARTICLE: https://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/news/oer-updates/2022/industry.html

Sunday, April 10, 2022

Idiots of the Week: At-home COVID-19 tests linked to accidental injuries

 Read. The. Directions.      I've taken several at-home COVID-19 tests and show me where in the directions it says "put this liquid in your eye." UGH. It doesn't!!! It says swab your nose, put it in the liquid, then put 3 drops of the liquid in the plastic test rectangle of plastic. PERIOD. This week's bunch of idiots around the U.S. are either putting it in their EYES (Eeeewww) or mouth! Again, READ. THE. DIRECTIONS. (These are likely the same idiots that don't get vaccinated). Here's the story from Live Science:


At-home COVID-19 tests linked to accidental injuries, FDA warns 

Live Science March 18, 2022

Some people are accidentally hurting themselves by using at-home COVID-19 tests incorrectly, such as mistakenly putting the liquid test solution in their eyes, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has warned.

On Friday (March 18), the FDA issued an alert warning that at-home COVID-19 tests can cause harm if they are used improperly, for example, if the liquid test solution touches a person's skin or eyes, or if the small vials of liquid solution are swallowed, the agency said in a statement. The agency also reminded people to keep the tests out of reach of children and pets.

Some test solutions contain the chemical sodium azide, which can cause harm if it comes into contact with the skinnose, mouth or eyes, or if the chemical is swallowed, the agency said. The FDA has received reports of injuries that occurred when people accidentally put the liquid test solution in their eyes because they mistook the small vials of liquid for eye drops.

The agency has also received reports of injuries that occurred when people put the tests' nasal swabs into the liquid before they swabbed their nose. (The liquid should not touch the body, the agency noted.) In addition, children have been injured when they put the test parts in their mouth and swallowed liquid test solutions.

Full Story: Live Science (3/18)

Saturday, April 9, 2022

Heroes of the Week: 2 Men in Wales Rescue 3 People from Small Plane Crash

This week's heroes/good people of the week are two men who live in Wales and ran to a crashed, burning small plane and pulled out the pilot and two other people before it was consumed by fire. Here's the story from BBC News.

(Image: Rescuers Daniel Nicholson (l) and Joel Snarr (r) ran to the crashed plane to help. Credit: BBC NEWS )

Abergavenny plane crash: Rescuers awarded bravery medal 

By Jordan DaviesBBC News  Feb 15, 2022

Two men who rescued three people from a burning plane have received one of the highest civilian honours for bravery.

Daniel Nicholson, from Monmouthshire, and Joel Snarr, from Hampshire, pulled a pilot, his niece and nephew from the wreckage after the light aircraft came down on the A40 in Abergavenny.

They have now both been awarded the Queen's Gallantry Medal by the Princess Royal.

Mr Nicholson, from Abergavenny, said: "My family and I are very proud."

The pilot, Stuart Moore, had flown the single-engine four-seater plane from Buckinghamshire and landed in Abergavenny to pick up his niece and nephew.

However, there was a fuel problem during take-off and the plane hit power cables and crashed onto the dual carriageway.

Mr Nicholson and Mr Snarr were travelling along the A40, in May 2019, when the plane ditched onto the road.

The men ran towards the burning wreckage and smashed the plane's windows.

Mr Snarr, a former Army bomb disposal officer, pulled Mr Moore from the plane and Mr Nicholson, a shop manager, saved passengers Billie Manley and Jack Moore.

The plane was engulfed in flames not long after they were rescued.

Daniel Nicholson met Jack Moore and Billie Manley for the first time at the Pride of Britain Awards Mr Nicholson met the family at the Pride of Britain Awards months later, as he collected a bravery award for the rescue.

On surviving the crash, Mr Moore said: "We are very lucky, lucky people." He thanked his rescuers.

Speaking after receiving the gallantry medal, Mr Nicholson said: "It is an honour to be regarded in the same manner as previous QGM winners."

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I'm a simple guy who enjoys the simple things in life, especially our dogs. I volunteer for dog rescues, enjoy exercising, blogging, politics, helping friends and neighbors, participating in ghost investigations, coffee, weather, superheroes, comic books, mystery novels, traveling, 70s and 80s music, classic country music,writing books on ghosts and spirits, cooking simply and keeping in shape. You'll find tidbits of all of these things on this blog and more. EMAIL me at Rgutro@gmail.com - Rob

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