Wednesday, May 20, 2026

History: Lydia Sherman, the Derby Poisoner

 Today's blog is a story from the New England Historical society about a murderess who poisoned many people she became involved with, even children. What a horrific, evil woman. 

Lydia Sherman, the Derby Poisoner, Commits the “Horror of the Century” 

She poisoned eight children and three husbands -- at least
New England Historical Society, May 3, 2026

Lydia Sherman had an unfortunate addiction to murder. She went on a decades-long killing spree in New York and Connecticut, poisoning at least eight children and three of her husbands.

Her sensational trial in 1872 resulted in newspaper headlines that called her “America’s Queen Killer,” “The Poison Fiend,” “The Modern-Day Lucretia Borgia” or simply, “The Derby Poisoner.”

While awaiting trial, she wrote a best-selling confession, called, The Poison Fiend!: Life, Crimes, and Conviction of Lydia Sherman, (the Modern Lucretia Borgia,) Recently Tried in New Haven, Conn., for Poisoning Three Husbands and Eight of Her Children : Her Life in Full! Exciting Account of Her Trial–the Fearful Evidence : the Most Startling and Sensational Series of Crimes Ever Committed in this Country : Her Conviction and Confession.

The childhood of Lydia Sherman offers few clues to her emergence as a serial killer. She was born Lydia Danbury on Christmas Eve, 1824, in Burlington, N.J. A year after her birth, her mother died, and she went to live on her uncle’s farm until she turned 16. Then she went to live with her brother in New Brunswick.

She was slim and pretty, with blue eyes, dark hair and porcelain skin. She also had a strong attachment to the Methodist church. At 18, she attended a Methodist dinner and met Edward Struck, a widowed blacksmith with six children. Shortly afterward, he proposed marriage. She said ‘yes.’

They set up housekeeping in New York City and had eight children of their own. With such a large family to support, Edward Struck decided he needed more income. So he got a job as a New York City police officer. But a few years into the job, witnesses charged him with cowardice during a hotel robbery in Manhattan. Edward Struck lost his job.

How It Started 

Edward Struck sank into depression, refusing to leave the apartment or his bed. Lydia decided to put him out of his misery.

One day she went to the drugstore to buy arsenic, easy to obtain as a rat-killing poison in the 19th century. She stirred a thimbleful into Edward’s oatmeal – though a few grains will kill a man – and after several agonizing hours he died. First his throat burned, then he suffered excruciating abdominal pains and diarrhea, then convulsions and finally death.

Months earlier, their two-year-old daughter Lydia contracted measles but died of similar symptoms. Her mother never admitted to killing her, though she confessed to killing eight other children. .

Child Killer 

As the Civil War raged, Lydia created carnage in her own household. Without any means of support and young children to feed, Lydia decided her youngest three — Martha Ann, 6; Edward, Jr., 4 and William, 9 months old — “could do nothing for me or for themselves.” She decided to put them out of the way the same way she had disposed of their father. Less than six weeks after killing Edward Struck, Lydia poisoned her three children.

Three of her older children stayed alive, at least for a while, by finding work to support the family. But then George, 14, contracted lead poisoning from his job as a painter. He took to his bed, a fatal mistake. His mother gave him arsenic in his tea.

Lydia’s 12-year-old daughter Ann Eliza was the next to go, as she didn’t have a job and had always been sickly. John, 16, had moved out of the house, which probably saved his life. Eighteen-year-old Lydia, the last child living at home, had a job as a retail clerk. But then she fell ill and had to stay in bed. Soon, her mother got rid of her the same way she got rid of the others.

Then she got a job as a nurse.

Move to Connecticut

 By the end of the Civil War, Lydia’s stepson Cornelius Struck grew suspicious about Lydia and shared his concern with the district attorney. The DA promised an investigation, but nothing happened.

When the Civil War ended, Lydia got a job selling sewing machines in New York City. She met John Curtiss, a customer impressed with the 41-year-old’s nursing experience. In 1867, he hired her to take care of his elderly mother in Stratford, Conn.

After eight months with the old lady, she encountered a rich widower named Dennis Hurlburt in the local grocery store. She still had her looks and enough charm to convince Hurlburt he needed her as his housekeeper. She accepted the job, and soon he asked her to marry him.

On Nov. 22, 1868, Lydia married Dennis Hurlburt and made sure he wrote her into his will. Fourteen months into the marriage, she noticed his hands shaking while he shaved for church. He said he felt dizzy, and couldn’t shake it off.

She decided he suffered from some malady, so she put him out of his suffering with a large dose of arsenic in his clam chowder. Three excruciating days later, Hurlburt died, leaving Lydia $20,000 worth of real estate and $10,000 in cash.

Eight weeks later, she met a Derby, Conn., factory mechanic named Horatio Sherman, a recent widower with four children. They married within a few months later, and she moved to Derby.

Lydia Sherman Unmasked 

Horatio Sherman, unaware of his wife’s murderous proclivities, drank heavily and spent her money freely. One day, while drunk, he ranted that he wished his sickly infant son Frankie would die to end his suffering.

 George Frederick Barker, who discovered the arsenic used by Lydia Sherman Lydia Sherman took the hint, and mixed a little arsenic into the baby’s milk. He died quickly. The next month, her 14-year-old stepdaughter Ada came down with the flu. Doctors couldn’t help her but Lydia Sherman knew how to take care of her.

The death of his beloved daughter caused Horatio Sherman to go on a bender. Lydia decided to make her husband sick of liquor, so she spiked a bottle of brandy with arsenic. When he took to his bed, she left the brandy by his bedside.

When Dr. J.C. Beardsley came to treat Horatio, he grew suspicious of his strange symptoms. Horatio, inevitably, died, and the doctor asked Lydia Sherman if he could order a post mortem. She agreed.

Beardsley sent Horatio Sherman’s organs to Yale for analysis. Sure enough, Yale professor George Frederick Barker found large quantities of arsenic in Horatio Sherman’s body.

Autopsies performed on Dennis Hurlburt and Frankie and Ada Sherman found more arsenic.

Arrest and Trial Lydia Sherman had moved to New Brunswick to live with her family, but on June 7, 1872, police arrested her for murder. They took her to New Haven to await trial.

Her trial began on April 16, 1872 and lasted eight days. Lydia Sherman appeared prim and proper in court, wearing a black alpaca dress, a shawl, gloves, a straw hat with a thin veil. She steadfastly claimed her innocence. But the jury, faced with overwhelming evidence, convicted her of the second-degree murder of Horatio Sherman.

Tabloids called it the Horror of the Century.

Five years into her prison sentence, she pretended to have a serious illness and escaped. She got a job as a housekeeper to a rich widower in Providence. He survived his employee, probably because authorities tracked her down after a week and sent her back to prison in Wethersfield, Conn..

Lydia Sherman died on May 16, 1878, from cancer. No one gave her any arsenic to put her out of her misery.

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

SCIENCE: Florida is facing its most intense drought in 15 years.

Climate change has caused a lot of extreme droughts and floods depending on where you live in the world. One of the east coast states that has been hardest hit with drought is Florida. Today's blog provides the latest findings on the drought status there.

 


(Image: More than 70% of Florida is facing "extreme" or "exceptional" drought conditions. In Georgia, which has also been gripped by drought, that figure is 69%.(Image credit: U.S. Drought Monitor/Brian Fuchs)

Florida is facing its most intense drought in 15 years. Here's how it got so bad and how long it will last.

More than 70% of the state is under "extreme" to "exceptional" drought conditions, and other parts of the U.S. Southeast are similarly affected. But why, and what are the impacts?

Sascha Pare, LIVE SCIENCE, April 24, 2026

Florida is experiencing its most intense drought in 15 years, with more than 70% of the Sunshine State facing what the U.S. Drought Monitor calls "extreme" to "exceptional" drought conditions.

Northern Florida is suffering the driest conditions in the state, and recent rainfall has brought almost no relief, according to the latest drought data. Forecasts show no rain and high temperatures over the next week, so the situation will likely get worse before it gets better, experts told Live Science.

"Dry conditions have been building throughout the winter," Esther Mullens, an assistant professor of geography at the University of Florida, told Live Science in an email. "Three months ago, 98% of the state was in unusually dry conditions, however only 4% were in severe to exceptional drought. As of currently, this number has risen to over 71% in severe to exceptional drought."

Why is Florida in a drought? 

Florida, along with Georgia and other parts of the U.S. Southeast, currently sits beneath a ridge of high atmospheric pressure that has moved in and out of the region since fall last year but remained stationary since March. This means the air above the Southeast is sinking and compressing, which reduces humidity and prevents cloud formation.

"Rain cannot form in sinking air so it just stays warm and dry," Pam Knox, an agricultural climatologist at the University of Georgia and the director of the Georgia Weather Network, told Live Science in an email.

Clear skies have dominated for weeks over Florida and other parts of the Southeast. But it's not just high pressure that's driving the current drought, because rainfall has been below average for months. Florida was unusually dry for much of last year, and many areas have received less than 50% of their normal rainfall since Sept. 1, 2025, according to the National Weather Service.

"That means they are about 20 to 25 inches [50 to 65 centimeters] below what would be considered average rainfall," Knox said.

Months of dry weather were followed by a La Niña winter, which shifted the jet stream northward. This brought colder, wetter conditions to the northern U.S. and Canada, while the southern U.S. became warmer and drier.

"The combined effects of the lack of tropical storms last year with the La Nina over the winter, which is usually a time of warmer and drier climate than average, have helped lead to this current situation," Knox said.

Why is the current Florida drought so bad? 

The current drought in Florida differs from previous bad droughts because it has hit in spring instead of summer. The last time the U.S. Drought Monitor recorded such exceptionally dry conditions in the Sunshine State was June 2011, but it has not been this dry so early in the year since 2000, Knox said.

While the La Niña, low precipitation, and fewer storms this season are attributable to natural variability, global warming and shifts in the water cycle caused by higher temperatures may be contributing to the dryness, Knox said.

The impact of climate change is difficult to disentangle from natural variation without proper attribution studies, Mullens agreed.

How long will the Florida drought last? 

Current drought conditions in Florida will probably worsen until the end of April, but they are expected to improve slightly in May as the high-pressure area in the atmosphere moves away from the Southeast. 

It's unclear how conditions will evolve through summer, but a lot of moisture will be needed to end the drought. Ideally, a tropical storm or a stationary front should bring enough rain in the coming weeks to quench plants and replenish soil moisture.

A strong El Niño is on the horizon, which could bring wetter weather this summer, Mullens said. But a clear picture of this year's drought will emerge only once it's over, when scientists will be able to more accurately compare its length with droughts that struck Florida in 2000 and 2011.

Monday, May 18, 2026

Attended lots of local lectures: Google Suite, Hiking Trail and an Architectural Dig

We love going to local lectures and learning about new things from local places to books,technology, climate and archaeology. In today's blog, you'l learn about Google Suite, a local hiking spot and an archaeological dig - all of which we attended lectures about over the last 2 months! 

(Patrick from the local library explains the different components of Google Suite) 

1) Google Suite Training!  - We've worked with many of the items, especially the Calendar, Google Meet Video (which has no time limit like Zoom), Google Photos and Google Maps. Patrick, who is the circulation manager of our local library put on an informative presentation about how the components of Google Suite works.

TRAINING VIDEO ON "WHAT IS GOOGLE SUITE"? VIDEO LINK: https://youtu.be/x5eiVDYyU4M?si=p9fY12t8TtX-ORz- WHAT IS GOOGLE SUITE? (commonly known as G Suite and rebranded as Google Workspace) It is a collection of cloud-based productivity and collaboration tools developed by Google. It bundles professional versions of Gmail, Docs, Drive, Calendar, and Meet, designed for businesses, education, and organizations to work together seamlessly with custom domains   


(Sign at the entrance of the trail about the Pilated Woodpecker, which species is active in the entire region of southwestern Maine). 

2) Penny Pond Hiking Trail, Berwick - The town recently received a grant to construct a wooden platform that would enable people with disabilities to enjoy part of the Penny Pond Trail in Berwick, Maine. The platform and ramps were constructed in the summer of 2025, and will continue in 2026. The 4 foot wide wooden boardwalk will extend into the woods to a picnic area. The rest of the trail will only be a dirt trail and proceeds into the town center. 

ABOUT THE POND TRAIL -  This conserved area of about 20 acres is surrounded by Sullivan Street, Old Pine Hill Road, Logan Street, and Dobson Road. It is accessed by parking at the library and walking a short distance down Sullivan Street to the marked trail opening. About a half mile of walking trails have been established, with split-log walkways through wet areas and interpretive signs along the path. The improved trail was dedicated in 2014. Penny Pond itself, is a small, shallow pond sometimes used for ice skating.  

3) York, Maine Archaeological Site -  Since 2021 there has been an archaeological dig happening, and we learned about the dig, saw some of the artifacts uncovered, and learned the history.   
      Woodstone at York Village is located on the site of one of the earliest and most historic homesteads in York, Maine.
    Abraham Preble and Judith Tilden immigrated with their respective families from Kent, England to Scituate, Massachusetts in the 1630s. In 1639 they married, and three years later, the couple and three other Scituate families moved to York, buying land next to each other on what would be called “Scituate Men’s Row,” which is present-day York Street. At the time York was known as “Gorgeanna,” a small frontier community that had served as the capital of the fledgling Province of Maine from the time its first English settlers arrived in 1631. 

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Middle Aged And Creeped Out podcast Talks with Rob about Paranormal Stuff

Middle Aged And Creeped Out podcast Talks with Rob about Paranormal Stuff in this 1 hour and 52 minute podcast about all things Paranormal, and there's a big focus on pets in the middle of it. The guys talk amongst themselves for the first 16 minutes before Rob comes on.

The guys have a very heartwarming, special and excitingly spooky guest chat with…Rob Gutro (Paranormal Investigator, Medium and Author)!!!

LINK: https://audioboom.com/posts/8898235-guest-chat-with-rob-gutro-paranormal-investigator-medium-author

Idiot of the Week: Drunk Man Driving Over 100 mph in Neighborhood Crashes, Killing Passenger

This week's idiot is a drunk 25 year old man driving a BMW SUV at 103 miles per hour in a residential neighborhood in Maine. Of course he lost control and crashed. He killed his passenger. How does a 25 year old afford a BMW SUV, and even drunk, how do you drive 103 mph in a neighborhood?  

(Image: Blaze Small, Lewiston crash into home SOURCE: WMTW)

Driver sentenced after crashing into a Lewiston, Maine, home, killing one person  

 WMTW logoUpdated: 2:32 PM EDT Apr 23, 2026 Adam Bartow, Executive Producer 

LEWISTON, Maine — A Lewiston man will spend five and a half years in prison after crashing into a home in Lewiston last year, killing a passenger in his car and injuring two others.

Blaze Small, who was 25 at the time, lost control of his BMW SUV on May 21, 2025 and crashed into a home on Webster Road, causing extensive damage to the home. Investigators say he was going 103 miles per hour in an area with a posted speed limit of 35 mph.

Several people were trapped inside the vehicle and needed to be removed by first responders. A front-seat passenger, Natasha Thoits, 28, of Lewiston, was pronounced dead at the scene after she was removed from the vehicle.

Small was arrested on an arrest warrant as part of a crime suppression enforcement detail on July 3, 2025 and charged with manslaughter.

Small was convicted of manslaughter, aggravated operating under the influence resulting in death, aggravated OUI causing serious bodily injury, aggravated driving to endanger, criminal speed, and reckless conduct.

He was sentenced on Tuesday to 21 years in prison, with all but five and a half years suspended. When he gets out, he will be on probation for four years.

Saturday, May 16, 2026

Heroes of the Week: Firefighters and Dog Boarding Business Help with Shelter Dogs from Fire

 One of the scariest things that can happen in a pet shelter is a fire. Fortunately, this week's heroes are the firefighters of Dover, NH and k9 Kaos, a nearby dog boarding business, who both stepped in to rescue dogs from a shelter fire and temporarily house them! 

(Photo: Dover firefighters Sierra Rodenhuis, left, and Trevor Smith comfort Flower, one of the rescue dogs at Pope Memorial Humane Society - Cocheco Valley, after responding to a fire at the shelter on May 5, 2026)

Fire stopped fast at Pope Memorial animal shelter in Dover, NH


Karen Dandurant, Foster's Daily Democrat, May 6, 2026, 1:07 p.m. ET

DOVER — Firefighters quickly responded to a fire at at Pope Memorial Humane Society - Cocheco Valley on the night of May 5, taking mere minutes to prevent it from spreading with no injuries to animal or humans, officials said.

Dover Fire Chief Brendan Driscoll said the cause of the May 5 fire has not yet been determined, but it appears to have started in a laundry cart at the rear of the building, in the area where the dogs are housed. He said it was knocked down quickly.

Driscoll said the department received a general fire alarm for the 221 County Farm Road shelter at 8:20 p.m.

"As crews made entry they noted a large amount smoke, so we sent the rest of the crew," Driscoll said. "A small fire was located in the rear of the building, in a laundry cart. We pushed it outside and continued to work. The laundry cart is the only thing that burnt, so damage is minimal. They will have some smoke and odor mitigation to do."

Driscoll said all the animals are safe. This includes Flower, one of two pups that remained up for adoption from among 26 dogs rescued by the shelter working in tandem with Mary's Dogs Rescue & Adoption of Northwood.

"Once the cart was removed and extinguished, we ventilated to remove smoke," Driscoll said. "(Pope Memorial) crews and volunteers were on site. We cleared the scene at 8:28 p.m., after making sure there was no more smoke and/or toxic gases."


The chief added, "I want to stress the importance of a properly functioning smoke alarms and fire alarm systems. The system worked as it should and alerted the department before the fire was able to grow in size. Crews were able to quickly handle the issue without loss to the animals or structure itself."

Driscoll said mutual aid came from Newington, Somersworth, Rochester and Stewart's Ambulance.

Pope Memorial staff responds, too, with assist from K9 Kaos "We had a very long night," said Molly Shanahan, development and marketing director for Pope Memorial. "All the dogs were safely removed. Some were taken to foster homes and many were taken to K9 Kaos, located down the street from the shelter."

Shanahan said Pope Memorial's team jumped into immediate action when they received word of the fire.

"A few of our management team gets notified when the alarm goes off," Shanahan said. "Caryn Fugatt, our executive director, lives on County Farm Road so she and her fiancé got there really fast. The fire department shut down the road but were letting us in. Our police and fire personnel were fantastic, so helpful, so quick."

Shanahan said K9 Kaos staff showed up, offering to take as many dogs as needed. K9 Kaos is a boarding, day care, grooming and training center located at 432 Sixth St. in Dover. 

"It blew my mind how quickly they came to help," Shanahan said. "All the dogs are happily having sleepovers with friends right now until we can clean out the area and make sure it's safe for their return."

Friday, May 15, 2026

Book of the Week: Kilrone by Louis L'Amour

I like westerns, and I've read a few of them by Louis L'Amour and I've enjoyed them. The latest book I enjoyed was "Kilrone." This was a good story and had some interesting characters, especially the main character, Barnes Kilrone, former Army officer who left the army. He wound up defending a fort from Indian attacks that were orchestrated by an insider, who turned out to be the villain of the story. It kept me reading and I finished the book within a week! Really enjoyable characters and story!

ABOUT THE BOOK: Kilrone by Louis L'Amour

When Major Frank Paddock and Barnes Kilrone were dashing young officers in Paris, they both fell in love with the same woman. But now they are men in exile in one of the harshest territories of the American West. It is against this inhospitable backdrop, where survival itself is a day-to-day struggle, that Paddock makes a fateful decision that will plunge both men into a headlong battle for their lives and the lives they’re sworn to protect. As Paddock leads his company of soldiers in pursuit of a Bannock war party, Kilrone is left behind to guard the post’s women and children. And before the day is over, one of them, outnumbered and outgunned, will be trapped in a fight to the finish.…

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Kraken octopus from the Cretaceous Period was 62-feet-long

 Today's blog is about another prehistoric creature, but this one was an ocean dweller. Paleontologists discovered a gian octopus measuring 62 feet in length that lived during the time of the dinosaurs.

(IMAGE:  N. haggarti could have been one of the largest species in Cretaceous oceans. (Image credit: Hokkaido University))

Kraken octopus from the Cretaceous Period was 62-feet-long

A close inspection of 27 fossil jaws from finned octopuses challenge the longstanding belief that the apex oceanic predators of the Cretaceous were all vertebrates.

By Sophie Berdugo, LIVE SCIENCE, April 2026

Scientists have identified enormous finned "kraken" octopuses that may have reached up to 62 feet (19 meters) long. The behemoths prowled the oceans during the Cretaceous and could be the largest invertebrates ever discovered.

Fossil jaws revealed distinctive markings that suggest these kraken-like octopuses used their powerful jaws to crush hard-shelled prey. That, combined with their gigantic size and evidence of intelligence, put them top of the marine food chain, according to a study published Thursday (April 23) in the journal Science.

This finding suggests scientists need to rethink the oceanic pecking order during the Cretaceous period (145 million years to 66 million years ago).

"These findings revise the view of the Cretaceous ocean as a world dominated only by large vertebrate predators," study co-author Yasuhiro Iba, a paleontologist at Hokkaido University in Japan, told Live Science in an email. "They show that giant invertebrates — octopuses — also occupied the top of the food web."

Other experts say these size estimates are the upper end of a large possible range. Even so, the discovery raises questions about the oceanic landscape of the Cretaceous, such as how these species could grow so large, and whether even larger marine species existed after the Cretaceous period, they said.

For the study, the researchers reassessed 15 fossilized octopus jaws previously unearthed in Japan and Vancouver Island. They also discovered 12 new Cretaceous fossil octopus jaws in Japan using state-of-the-art digital fossil-mining technology. Combined, these revealed two species of extinct finned octopuses: Nanaimoteuthis jeletzkyi and Nanaimoteuthis haggarti.

The N. jeletzkyi fossils were unearthed in rocks dating to between 100 million and 72 million years ago, pushing back the oldest known octopuses by around 5 million years, and finned octopuses by 15 million years, the authors wrote in the study.

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Pennhurst Asylum Paracon, PA welcomes Rob the Pet Medium 5/16 and 5/17

 

 Pennhurst Asylum Paracon, PA welcomes Rob the Pet Medium 5/16 and 5/17

 

THIS WEEKEND! Meet Pet Medium Rob Gutro & Many Famous Paranormal Folks at the PENNHURST PARACON:  Paracon & Oddities Expo – May 16th & 17th  DETAILS/TICKETS: https://pennhurstasylum.com/

Join us at the famous former Pennhurst State School campus for a 2 day Paranormal Enthusiast & Oddities Expo event featuring vendors, psychics, special Guests, historical tours, & Paranormal Investigations.  Meet in person special guests like Ghost Hunters, Destination Fear, Kindred Spirits and more!


 

 Paracon & Horror Expo Weekend Pass!
$60.00

Two full days of paranormal, pop culture, and the unexplained at Pennhurst.
Meet stars from your favorite paranormal investigations and cult-favorite films and series — all in one legendary location. 

WHAT'S INCLUDED:
• Access to Paranormal & Oddities Vendors
• Guest Panels & Celebrity Appearances
• Access to explore the Mayflower & Devon Buildings during Expo hours
• Expo Admission for both days
• 10:30 AM – 5:00 PM each dayWhether you’re here for investigations, fandom, collectibles, or the energy of the paranormal community — this is the weekend to be at Pennhurst. 

TICKET: https://secure.interactiveticketing.com/1.43/ec53d5/

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Key Atlantic ocean current is much closer to collapse than scientists thought

 Here's a very concerning finding- that the Gulf stream current that transports warmth from the Gulf of Mexico north along the U.S. East coast and over to Eastern Europe is weakening at a faster rate than suspected. That current is what keeps the U.S. East coast and eastern Europe temperate in the winter, and keeps sea levels down along the U.S. East Coast. Today's blog shares the new findings.. 

(Ocean flows colored with sea surface temperature data, yellow is the warmer waters of the Gulf stream. Credit: NASA Goddard/SVS) 


'Nations need to prepare now': Key Atlantic ocean current is much closer to collapse than scientists thought

LIVE SCIENCE, April 2026 

Atlantic Ocean currents that are vital for keeping Earth's climate in check will halve in strength by 2100 and may be closer to collapse than first thought, a new study finds.

The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) acts as an oceanic conveyor belt, circulating warm water north from the tropics and cold water south. This regulates climates across Europe, Africa and America while also sustaining aquatic life.

Now, a study estimates the AMOC will slow down between 43% and 59% by 2100 — a 60% stronger weakening than past models predicted. The research corrects for biases in previous estimates by including the temperature and saltiness of the Atlantic Ocean's surface, according to the study published Wednesday (April 15) in the journal Science Advances.

This "more substantial AMOC weakening" means that a critical planetary system is closer to a tipping point — an irreversible "point of no return" for the climate — than many past models suggest, the authors wrote in the study.

However, other experts note that the predicted magnitude and speed of an AMOC slowdown varies greatly from study to study.

"In my opinion there is a need to interpret new results for each study into a wider context," María Paz Chidichimo, an expert on ocean circulation at the National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET) and National University of San Martín in Buenos Aires, Argentina, told Live Science in an email.

"Studies predict AMOC decline on a range from small decline to large decline, but I think the magnitude and timing of AMOC decline are still uncertain given the large spread in model projections," she added.

Laura Jackson, an expert in North Atlantic ocean currents at the Met Office in the U.K., agreed. "It is still an open question as to which model AMOC projections are most likely," she told Live Science in an email.

(Animation: Ocean flows colored with sea surface temperature data, the yellow indicates the warm waters of the Gulf stream and how they flow up the U.S. East coast and over to eastern Europe. Credit: NASA Goddard / SVS) 

Catastrophic collapse 

An AMOC collapse would last for hundreds to thousands of years and have catastrophic consequences. It would send temperatures in northern Europe plummeting while southern Europe experiences extreme droughts. The sea level would rise along the northeast coast of North America. Disruption would spread across food webs and ecosystems in the ocean and on land — for example, the amount of land available for growing wheat and maize, which supply two-fifths of global calories, would be cut by more than half.

Modeling the AMOC slowdown 

Observations reveal that the AMOC has weakened compared with its 1850 to 1900 baseline. Previous research has attempted to estimate the strength and pace of the AMOC slowdown, with some studies finding minimal weakening by the end of the century while others predict an imminent collapse.

The predicted AMOC is "so weak that it is then very likely on the way to full shutdown," Stefan Rahmstorf, a professor of ocean physics who heads the Earth system analysis department at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany, told Live Science in an email.

Even so, experts told Live Science that AMOC model estimates are largely driven by which variables are included in the analyses, so results can vary. And although the new study corrects for previous biases, there "remains uncertainty in how well models can simulate and predict changes in the AMOC," Thornalley said.

Focusing too heavily on an AMOC collapse may not be the most helpful path forward, Chidichimo said. "We have enough scientific evidence of AMOC variability and slowdown, and we are already experiencing environmental changes associated with AMOC change which have important socioeconomic impacts worldwide," she said. "Nations need to prepare now."

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

SCIENCE: The fluffy fossil that finally showed the world that birds are dinosaurs

In the 1970s there was a theory that birds evolved from dinosaurs, and recently there have been a lot of findings that some dinosaurs had feathers, confirming that theory. That's today's blog.

(Images: model of an Archaeopteryx. The bird was discovered in the 1860s and provided the first hint that birds and dinosaurs may be related. Fossil of the bird to the right)

The fluffy fossil that finally showed the world that birds are dinosaurs 

In this excerpt from "The Story of Birds", author Steve Brusatte explores the moment where paleontologists realized they had critical evidence to show birds came from dinosaurs — a fluffy fossil from China. 

 By Steve Brusatte , April 29, 2026, Live Science

In the 1970s, paleontologist John Ostrom revived the theory that modern birds are evolved from theropod dinosaurs, a group that includes Tyrannosaurus rex. But a key piece of evidence was missing: feathered fossils. Then, a chance discovery in China upended our understanding of bird evolution.

In this excerpt from "The Story of Birds: An Evolutionary History of the Dinosaurs That Live Among Us" (Mariner Books, 2026), author and paleontologist Steve Brusatte looks at the monumental shift in dinosaur research after the first feathered dinosaur was discovered.

For well over a century, since its discovery in the Bavarian lithographic mines in 1861, the fossil bird Archaeopteryx was the oldest and most primitive creature known to have feathers. Then, in the autumn of 1996, this understanding was upended. Some revolutions start with a single shot; this one began with a chance encounter and a handful of photographs.

FOUND IN A BEIJING MUSEUM

Canadian dinosaur hunter Phil Currie had been in China, leading a group of tourists to dinosaur dig sites. While there, he spied something peculiar in the backroom of a Beijing museum, discovered by a farmer named Yumin Li two months prior. It was the skeleton of a small dinosaur, about the size of a chicken, fossilized as if frozen in time, in a muddy rock imbued with volcanic ash, a sign it was overcome by a sudden cataclysm.

Rapid burial had locked in the dainty details of the skeleton, but it was the stuff surrounding the bones that caught Currie's attention. The dinosaur's body was encircled by a halo of fluff. Thin, tufty, delicate strands ran along the dinosaur's back, from the top of its head to the tip of its tail. Some of the strands looked like they branched at their base. For all the world, the fuzz looked like the downfeathers of a bird.

But this wasn't a bird; it didn’t have wings, and obviously couldn't fly. It was a bona fide dinosaur — a small coelurosaur theropod, very similar to the German Compsognathus, which Huxley had held up in the 1860s as the type of transitional reptilian species birds might have evolved from.

Currie and his Chinese colleague Pei-ji Chen snapped photographs, which they printed out at the size of index cards and brought to the conference in New York. Once there, word spread fast; the rumors of a fluffy dinosaur billowed through the hallways and meeting rooms. Somebody tracked down John Ostrom, then in the twilight of his career, three decades after his discovery of the raptor Deinonychus had reignited the theory that birds evolved from dinosaurs. Currie and Chen handed him the photos. Ostrom looked shell-shocked. He began to cry, and almost fell to the floor. "I need to sit down," he stuttered, delirium taking hold.

Here it was, finally: a dinosaur with feathers. Just as Ostrom had predicted. Just as the doubters had demanded. The final piece of the puzzle, the strongest evidence that birds have dinosaur ancestry.

This was the key to the fine preservation: Normally soft bits like skin and feathers decay before a skeleton can harden into a fossil, but in this one remarkable place, feathers could easily fossilize. It was a dinosaurian Pompeii. As the new millennium dawned, the mounting Chinese discoveries transformed our image of dinosaurs.

One feathered dinosaur became ten, then hundreds, then thousands of skeletons, belonging to several dozen distinct species. Some, like the ostrich-size Beipiaosaurus, were adorned with simple filaments that looked like oversize versions of the bristle feathers of modern birds. Others, like the original Sinosauropteryx, had more complex feathers that resembled little paintbrushes, with many individual bristles branching from a root in an untidy tuft.

MORE DINOSAURS DISCOVERED WITH FEATHER-LIKE FEATURES  

Much more extravagant were the feathers of the turkey-size Caudipteryx and dromaeosaurid "raptors" like Sinornithosaurus, which had true quill pens with a central shaft and many barbs extending off the sides to form vanes. Sometimes, these pennaceous feathers lined up along the hand and arm, making what could only be described as a wing, like in the crow-size Microraptor.

The roster of feathered dinosaurs got richer and richer. Even tyrannosaurs were in on the makeover: two early cousins of T. rex called Dilong and Yutyrannus were found coated in bristle and tufty feathers. Most of these plumose dinosaurs were theropods, members of the great group of meat-eaters on the family tree, but a few plant-eaters like Psittacosaurus, a primitive cousin of Triceratops with tiny horns on its head, had mohawks of bristles along their tails. 

Initially, there was some skepticism that these wispy fossilized structures on the backs, tails, and arms of dinosaurs were true feathers. It was a legitimate question when Sinosauropteryx was first unveiled: Could its little strands and bristles have been something else, like degraded skin, or a freak by-product of decay and fossilization?

The discovery of full-on pennaceous quills — with shafts, barbs, and vanes — in species like Caudipteryx and Microraptor proved that many of these were genuine feathers. But what of those simpler filaments in other dinosaurs? We can be confident they are real. They not only look like the bristles and down feathers of birds today, but they share the same structure: They are hollow, chemical analysis shows they are formed of those rare CBP proteins, and when you look at them under powerful microscopes, you see they are full of melanosomes, the minuscule bubbles that hold pigments and give modern feathers their colors.

(Image: The species to which the tail belonged is uncertain but researchers say it was most likely a non-avian theropod – a group of dinosaurs including velociraptors and tyrannosaurs. Photograph: Royal Saskatchewan Museum/R.C. McKellar) 

DINOSAUR FEATHERS PRESERVED IN AMBER

Still doubt it? Then gander at one of the most improbable fossils ever discovered, from Myanmar, announced in 2016. It's a tail of a juvenile theropod embedded in amber, shrouded in feathers, their details preserved in stunning 3D. Suspended in yellow resin, like a bug frozen into an ice cube, the feathers seem almost alive.

They may as well be bundles of down that slipped out of a pillow and stuck onto your sofa. They have a small central shaft, which branches into barbs, which further branch into barbules. And they are clearly observed growing from follicles in the skin. They are absolutely feathers, and fulfill every definition we use to characterize feathers in modern birds — but they are plastered to a dinosaur.

This bounty of feathered dinosaurs, fundamentally, was that final piece of evidence to verify what has now become paleontological consensus: Today's birds evolved from dinosaurs.

Monday, May 11, 2026

Joey and Jimmy get a Dog Manner Training Class!

May 1st, 2026 marked the day that our recently adopted 4 year-3 month our Dachshund/Chihuahua mixed brothers Joey and Jimmy went to school for the first time ever (we know this because they knew nothing when we adopted them). They (and we) needed schooling to keep them from being aggressive against bigger dogs and there is a potty problem with one of them. They are the joy of our lives and we want them to be happy and loved. Today's blog explains. 

(Photo: Joey in the process of sitting down while looking up at Tom during class) 

OUR OBSERVATIONS -These 2 brothers lived their lives together since puppies, as they were with the same family for 4 of their 4 years 3 months. We quickly realized the family never taught them any commands, so I've worked hard with them for our first month together and they now know, "stop," "walk," "sit," "stay," and "come."  We also realized the family likely abused them because Jimmy, the more Chihuahua looking and smaller one cowers when you ask him to do something. Also, Joey would not look us in the eye until today when we took him to school with Jimmy. 

IT'S A COMMITMENT - If you want to adopt a dog, TRAIN THEM. To not train them is detrimental to them and to you. They are children who need instructions. People who don't train them are lazy and selfish. Dogs are living, breathing, loving things, they are not "cute objects" and they are our 100% responsibility. 

(Photo: Jimmy was very well behaved. He only acts up when his brother Joey does.) 

BEHAVIOR #1 NEEDING CORRECTION - We adopted Joey and Jimmy on March 28, 2026. They came from the Lovable Paws Rescue in South Carolina, which is a fantastic rescue. When we adopted them we quickly learned they were okay with small dogs, as our friend Jeff's Beagle/Chihuahua mix, Myrtle was visiting the weekend we adopted the boys. They had no issues with her. But when our neighbor brough their calm, well-behaved 60 pound dog over, Joey went ballistic trying to bite her. **That told us he was previously attacked by a larger dog in his past. Little Jimmy followed Joey's behavior and did the same.** So, thanks to our friends Naomi and Wayne, we found the best place. 

BEHAVIOR #2 NEEDING CORRECTION  - Oddly, only Joey likes to poop in the house whenever we go out of the house. Jimmy does all his business outside. Joey is also consistent in his "poop spot." THE FIX: We were instructed to put a pee pad in that location. After some time (days/weeks) we move it to the door to the outside so he can start going there. Then we move it into the garage or outside so Joey learns the proper place.  Since we have about 30 washable pee pads (from Dash's senior years) we were well-equipped.
HOW THE FIRST CLASS WENT - Tom worked with Jimmy and I (Rob) worked with Joey. They were leashed of course and we were armed with treats. Both boys are great with people and okay with small dogs. So the instructor brought in her calm, well-behaved Border Collie (about 70 pounds) who sat next to the instructor (Merrillynn). Her dog, Dani, did not react as Joey squeaked and squealed and lunged. **We were instructed to pick up Joey (and Jimmy if he squeaked) , turn him away from the dog, hold the scruff of their neck (like a mother dog does) and give them a shake and say out loud "Uh-uh!"  After about 5 or 6 times of putting Joey down, it worked better each time. '  
    By the end of the hour, we were able to put Joey and Jimmy on the floor and they ignored the Border Collie. WOW. We need to continue this training daily. 
     Also, it's important to maintain a 6 foot distance between Joey & Jimmy with other local dogs. 

SOME AGILITY WHILE THERE - Fortunately, the school had orange cones set up in a line, so we took advantage of that to get Joey and Jimmy to do some basic agility of weaving through the cones, and they did a fantastic job!

BOTTOM LINE- Dogs do better in life with instruction, just as people do. Take and make the time to train them for their benefit and for your benefit. 

WHERE WE WENT - ​Piscataqua Obedience Club (POC) is a non-profit dog training club dedicated to fostering and deepening the relationship between dogs and their owners. Based in Berwick, Maine we offer Manners and competition level classes. We welcome purebreds, mixed breeds, rescue dogs, puppies, seniors, and everyone in between to our classes. Our certified instructors use motivational training techniques that emphasize kind, positive treatment.     

Who I am

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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