Friday, March 20, 2026

The microbiome is basically an undiscovered organ of the human body

Amazing stuff!

"... A growing body of research now suggests that the microbiome’s medical significance may be even broader than imagined — extending not just to gastrointestinal conditions but also to the immune system, metabolism, and even the brain. The progress has come not from moving fast, but from moving carefully.

“The microbiome has basically been an undiscovered organ of the human body,” ...  “It’s difficult to study, but it’s incumbent upon us to understand it.” ..."

The Long Game of Microbiome Science | Harvard Medicine Magazine "Looking beyond the hype, three experts explain what research on the gut microbiome might actually deliver"

40 Years of Wireless Evolution Leads to a Smart, Sensing Network

Recommendable! One of the authors is Vint Cerf (co-inventor of the Internet)!

"... The story of wireless connectivity is often told in speeds and standards—megabits per second, latency, and spectrum bands. But these generational shifts in device specs obscure a deeper pattern. Each generation, from 1G to 5G, rewrote the relationships between three elements: the Devices we carry, the Networks that connect them, and the Applications that run on them. We call this connectivity’s DNA. With 6G, that DNA of interconnection is about to change fundamentally. ..."

Telecom History: From 1G Voices to 6G AI Agents - IEEE Spectrum "The path from 1G to 6G traces from dumb pipes to a nervous system"

What Happens When an incarcerated criminal Gets Cancer in Prison?

Bad news! One more good reason to stay out of prison!

What this PJP may not have investigated is how much prisoners were themselves negligent or ignorant to diagnose and undergo treatment? 

"People who are imprisoned are more likely to die from cancer than the general population in the United States. Chronic stress and unhealthy food contribute to poor cancer outcomes, as do delays in diagnosis, patchy treatment and lack of coordination with outside healthcare systems. Contributors to the Prison Journalism Project (PJP) reported symptoms being ignored or downplayed, follow up appointments being missed because of administrative failures or resourcing issues and being strip-searched and chained when seeing doctors, receiving treatments or travelling for healthcare. PJP contributors described recovering from cancer in prison as a unique kind of hell." (Nature Briefing Cancer)

What Happens When You Get Cancer in Prison? — Prison Journalism Project "PJP contributors on what it’s like to suffer from the leading killer behind bars."

Self-healing materials could make aircraft and automobile parts last over 100 years

Good news!

"Researchers ... have achieved sustained self-healing of a composite material. The findings promise to extend the lifetime of aircraft and automotive parts by a century ..."

From the significance and abstract:
"Significance
Delamination damage has long hindered the safety and lifetime of fiber-reinforced polymer composites. This failure mode not only undermines their lightweight mechanical advantage but also amplifies the cost and environmental impact of these modern structural materials, which are inherently challenging to repair/recycle.
Here, we innovate self-healing by automating in situ thermal remending to achieve 1,000 delamination heal cycles, an order-of-magnitude greater than prior studies. The life extension unlocks new science where diminishing interfacial chemical reactions and fiber debris accumulation contribute to a gradual, asymptotic decline in fracture recovery that follows a Weibull distribution. Our findings show this self-healing strategy for interlaminar fracture is repeatable on a scale far exceeding typical composite design lifetimes, thus shedding delamination from structural concern.

Abstract
... Synthetic fiber-reinforced polymer (FRP) composites also leverage material hierarchy via fibrous reinforcement encapsulated within a polymer matrix, maximizing stiffness and strength. However, the layered architecture of laminated FRP composites makes them vulnerable to interlaminar delamination—debonding of fibers from the matrix—which significantly compromises structural integrity. Recently, we introduced a self-healing strategy via in situ heating, where soft yet tough thermoplastic inclusions achieve interlaminar fracture recovery via polymer chain re-entanglement, i.e., thermal remending. Here, in our latest embodiment, by automating in situ thermo-mechanical experiments, we achieve an order-of-magnitude enhancement in self-healing repeatability—reaching an unprecedented 1,000 cycles. Healing begins at 175% and slowly declines to 60% of the mode-I fracture resistance of a plain (nonhealing) composite, revealing unique chemo-physical mechanisms that govern this behavior. Both fiber-debris accumulation in the molten poly(ethylene-co-methacrylic acid) (EMAA) healing agent, and waning interfacial chemical reactions between the EMAA and epoxy matrix, contribute. A Weibull distribution capturing this complex fracture recovery predicts an asymptotic healing limit above 40%, suggesting sustained repair is possible. Translating these newfound thermal remending results into real-world context, a modest quarterly self-healing schedule could maintain interlaminar fracture repair of FRP composites for over 125 y—well beyond the typical design life of many modern structures including aircraft and wind turbines. Thus, this latest self-healing paradigm effectively eliminates delamination as a failure mode."

Self-healing materials could make automobile parts last over 100 years – Physics World



Self-healing process A composite material, suffering from a delamination fracture, uses an embedded healing agent (blue) to fill and fix the crack. Scale bars: 0.5 mm. 


Tuareg rebels in the Sahel conducted a drone swarm attack on a Malian army base

The global spread of the latest tactics in drone warfare!

Sudan War Continues Despite Iran War, Peace Efforts: Africa File, March 19, 2026 | Critical Threats

National League of Cities launches nationwide drone-as-first-responder program

Maybe next time you are involved in a serious car accident a drone will come first to the accident scene!

National League of Cities launches nationwide drone-as-first-responder program | StateScoop "The National League of Cities launches nationwide effort to help local governments deploy and scale “drone as first responder” programs."

Elektrische Käfer aus China

Made in Germany China! Neben den zig Millionen elektrischen Motorrädern auf Chinas Strassen und Buergersteigen darf ein Kaefer nicht fehlen! 😊

"Er war das Symbol des Wirtschaftswunders und deutscher Qualitätsarbeit – der VW-Käfer, das deutsche Kult-Auto schlechthin. Er wurde mehr als 21 Millionen Mal verkauft, 1978 lief der letzte Volkswagen in Deutschland vom Band.
Jetzt gibt es den Käfer wieder: als Bausatz aus China. Und das Besondere: Dieser neue Käfer ist elektrisch, wie Bild berichtet. Ein chinesisches Unternehmen aus Guangdong bietet jetzt Umrüstsätze an, die den Kult-Käfer in ein Elektroauto verwandeln können – und das für 8.822 Euro bei AliExpress. Der Umrüstsatz bringt Antriebseinheit und Batterie ins Heck des Käfers – dorthin, wo früher der Motor eingebaut war. Allerdings: Ob der umgebaute Käfer in Deutschland auf die Straße darf, ist noch ungewiss. Experten geben außerdem zu bedenken: Bei AliExpress ist oft nicht klar, was man letztlich bekommt. Vorsicht ist also geboten – pfiffig ist das Angebot aus China trotzdem. In einer Zeit, in der sich Generationen Deutscher wehmütig an ihren ersten Käfer erinnern und traurig die aktuelle Situation bei Volkswagen verfolgen, kommt diese erfrischende Idee aus China zur richtigen Zeit."

Geldregen für die Erfinder der Potsdam-Lüge: Correctiv bekommt200.00 0 Euro Steuergeld, um gegen „Desinformation“ zu kämpfen




Thursday, March 19, 2026

Disclaimer

I  am currently blogging from behind the Great Firewall of China.

My Internet service in China is very spotty. Thus, I am not able to blog as usual.

Notes on FAST: Efficient Action Tokenization for Vision-Language-Action Models

Just finished reading this paper. A very recommendable paper from early 2025 by Chelsea Finn and Sergey Levine and their team!

"Autoregressive sequence models, such as Transformer-based vision-language action (VLA) policies, can be tremendously effective for capturing complex and generalizable robotic behaviors. However, such models require us to choose a tokenization of our continuous action signals, which determines how the discrete symbols predicted by the model map to continuous robot actions. We find that current approaches for robot action tokenization, based on simple per-dimension, per-timestep binning schemes, typically perform poorly when learning dexterous skills from high-frequency robot data.
To address this challenge, we propose a new compression-based tokenization scheme for robot actions, based on the discrete cosine transform. Our tokenization approach, Frequency-space Action Sequence Tokenization (FAST), enables us to train autoregressive VLAs for highly dexterous and high-frequency tasks where standard discretization methods fail completely.
Based on FAST, we release FAST+, a universal robot action tokenizer, trained on 1M real robot action trajectories. It can be used as a black-box tokenizer for a wide range of robot action sequences, with diverse action spaces and control frequencies. Finally, we show that, when combined with the pi0 VLA, our method can scale to training on 10k hours of robot data and match the performance of diffusion VLAs, while reducing training time by up to 5x."

[2501.09747] FAST: Efficient Action Tokenization for Vision-Language-Action Models






Putin’s now four year long war in the Ukraine may have cost Russia as much as $2.5 trillion

When will the apathetic and lethargic Russian people finally get rid of the warmonger and war criminal Putin the Terrible!

"As Russia’s war in Ukraine enters its fifth year, debates over sanctions, negotiations and military aid increasingly hinge on a central question: How costly has the war been for Russia itself? Our analysis, using standard economic tools, finds the cost so far to be about $2.5 trillion. That doesn’t mean, of course, that Putin has borne much of that cost.

A January 2026 report by researchers from the Center for Strategic and International Studies indicates that this war has now claimed 325,000 Russian lives and 875,000 wounded (or missing). For context, roughly 15,000 Soviet military personnel were killed in the ten-year Afghan war. ..."

Putin’s $2.5 trillion gambit


What a scarecrow (or what a monster)!
"In this pool photograph distributed by the Russian state agency Sputnik, Russia's President Vladimir Putin gives a speech during a meeting of the Federal Security Service Board in Moscow on Feb. 24, 2026."


Israel to mount lasers on fighter jets and helicopters

Good news!

"Elbit Systems will develop laser weapons for the Israeli Air Force to be installed on fighter jets and military helicopters, the company said on Tuesday.

Elbit revealed plans to that effect during the presentation of financial statements for 2025, though the company has kept technical details and information about the envisioned timing under wraps. ..."

Israel to mount lasers on fighter jets and helicopters

Inside a $1.1B deal to reshore critical minerals refining like nickel

Good news! Extreme environmentalism made Western countries dependent on China!

"The U.S. and Europe have a nickel problem. The critical mineral is used in everything from batteries and missiles to electronics and steel. And yet, the two regions have struggled to mine and refine it largely due to permitting issues and waste concerns.

Indonesia and China dominate the refining process. Dig a little deeper, though, and it’s apparent that Chinese companies control around 75% of the nickel refining capacity in Indonesia, too, giving the country control of more than half the world’s supply. ... 

Nth Cycle ... startup has been developing an electrochemical system to refine nickel and other critical minerals, including cobalt, copper, and rare earths. Just over a year ago, the company started production at a facility in Ohio that can process up to 3,100 metric tons of scrap. Now Nth Cycle has a $1.1 billion agreement with commodity trader Trafigura to quadruple that amount. ...

Though eventually there will be a tidal wave of EV batteries that need to be recycled and their metal refined, it hasn’t materialized yet and is unlikely to before the end of the decade.  ..."

Inside a $1.1B deal to reshore critical minerals refining | TechCrunch

Banana aroma is a result of acetohydroxyacid synthase and isopropylmalate synthase alternative isoforms that bypass feedback inhibition

Comment from a daily banana eater: Everything you ever wanted to know about the aroma of bananas! 😊

From the significance and abstract:
"Significance
During banana fruit ripening, the two feedback-inhibited, rate-limiting enzymes of the valine and leucine biosynthetic pathway are simultaneously alternatively spliced, effectively losing their feedback regulation and promoting carbon flux into the pathway for the accumulation of precursors to branched-chain amino acids and volatile branched-chain esters. The fact that the two reactions are positioned sequentially in the pathway may help explain why the production of significant levels of “banana” flavor compounds is so rare in nature. Understanding this phenomenon is timely given the current threat to global Cavendish production due to the spread of Fusarium wilt. Coordinated, dual alternative splicing of rate-limiting enzymes is a means to metabolic dysregulation to enable unidirectional, committed processes like aroma formation during fruit ripening.

Abstract
The distinctive aroma of banana fruit (Musa spp.) results from the upregulation of a pathway that is, paradoxically, understood to be feedback limited. The primary character impact compounds in banana are branched-chain esters with 3-methylbutyl moieties. Recent work has established that these esters, as well as prominent “fruity” 2-methylpropyl and butyl esters, are derived from the ripening-dependent de novo synthesis of the branched-chain amino acids valine and leucine, and their respective α-ketoacid precursors.
The biosynthetic pathway possesses two sequential, rate-limiting, and feedback-inhibited enzymes: acetohydroxyacid synthase and isopropylmalate synthase. We found these enzymes to be alternatively spliced in ripening banana fruit pulp. Unripe fruit and nonfruit tissues had only trace levels of alternative splicing. Revealingly, the domains corresponding to the allosteric inhibitory binding of valine and/or leucine were truncated in the altered isoforms. During ripening, the expression and frequency of the shorter splice forms increased concomitantly with production of branched-chain esters and accumulation of their α-ketoacid precursors. Purified proteins of the modified isoforms were active but relieved of feedback inhibition. Transient expression of the shortened isoforms in Nicotiana benthamiana led to a greater accumulation of iso-branched-chain metabolites than the full-length isoforms. Results indicate that a developmentally dependent and simultaneous dysregulation in two sequential steps of the branched-chain amino acid synthetic pathway enables the biosynthesis of banana fruit’s unique character-impact esters."

Banana aroma is a result of acetohydroxyacid synthase and isopropylmalate synthase alternative isoforms that bypass feedback inhibition | PNAS (no public access)




Big banks in the U.S. would be allowed to hold billions of dollars less in capital on their books under new proposals

Good news! About time! Bravo President Trump! The business of America is business!

"Doing so would ease rules put in place after the 2008 financial crisis that were meant to help shield against meltdowns. Translation: A big win for big banks, which had resisted sharply higher requirements proposed under the Biden administration. JPMorgan Chase and others waged an intense lobbying campaign to fight them. Wall Street’s embrace of Trump 2.0 largely centered on the prospect that such plans for stricter rules would be scrapped. Trump officials say simplifying the rules will boost lending and benefit the economy."

Wall Street Journal What's news

Resurfaced Posts Show New York mayor's Wife Celebrating Terrorists like on October 7

What a transition from Mayor Rudi Giuliani to Mayor Zohran Mamdani!

Let's give his wife (age 28 now, from Syria) the benefit of doubt that her young age back then was the reason for poor judgment!

"New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s wife, Rama Duwaji, reportedly glorified terrorism in a series of social media posts when she was in her late teens and early 20s. ...

These revelations come shortly after reports that Duwaji produced art featured in an article by an anti-Israel activist. The author previously had said the Oct. 7 terror attack on Israel was “spectacular,” and had called Jews “vampires,” among other derogatory names. ..."

Resurfaced Posts Show Mamdani's Wife Celebrating Terrorists




What a nice couple!

I bet these two have the potential/opportunity to come up with something great! 

Trump hosts dinner for Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi (Source)



China demands evidence that traditional medicine injections really work

Better late, then never! 😊

"China is about to apply its growing scientific expertise to one of its most cherished cultural treasures: traditional medicine. Last fall, government agencies with authority over pharmaceuticals and health issued draft guidelines calling on companies that make traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) injections—many of them used for decades—to provide evidence that they are safe and effective and explain how they work. If the companies don’t comply, their products will be removed from the market. ...

will only apply to TCM products that are injected intramuscularly or intravenously, not to the remedies widely taken by mouth in China and overseas. TCM injections have been plagued by inconsistent evidence of benefits and a spotty safety record. ..."

China demands evidence that traditional medicine injections really work | Science | AAAS

Brain circuit needed to incorporate new information may be linked to schizophrenia

Good news!

"... MIT neuroscientists have now identified a gene mutation that appears to give rise to this type of difficulty. In a study of mice, the researchers found that the mutated gene impairs the function of a brain circuit that is responsible for updating beliefs based on new input.

This mutation, in a gene called grin2a, was originally identified in a large-scale screen of patients with schizophrenia. The new study suggests that drugs targeting this brain circuit could help with some of the cognitive impairments seen in people with schizophrenia. ...

More recently, researchers ... used a different strategy, known as whole-exome sequencing, to reveal gene mutations linked to schizophrenia. This technique sequences only the protein-coding regions of the genome, so it can reveal mutations that are located in known genes.

Using this approach on about 25,000 sequences from people with schizophrenia and 100,000 sequences from control subjects, the researchers identified 10 genes in which mutations significantly increase the risk of developing schizophrenia. ..."

From the abstract:
"Belief updating is thought to be impaired in schizophrenia, leading to delusions. The neural substrates underlying belief updating are unknown, in part due to a lack of appropriate animal models and behavior readouts.
We generated mice bearing a schizophrenia-associated point mutation in Grin2a (Grin2aY700X+/−) and developed a computationally trackable foraging task to assess belief-driven decision strategies in mice. Grin2aY700X+/− mice performed less optimally than their wild-type (WT) littermates, due to unstable cognitive states related to noisy representation of dynamic task values. We identified the mediodorsal (MD) thalamus as being hypofunctional in Grin2aY700X+/− mice and showed that MD neurons encode dynamic task values and cognitive states in WT mice. Optogenetic inhibition of MD neurons in WT mice phenocopied Grin2aY700X+/− mice and enhancing MD activity rescued task deficits in Grin2aY700X+/− mice. Together, our study identifies the MD thalamus as a key node for schizophrenia-relevant cognitive dysfunction and a potential target for future therapeutics."

Brain circuit needed to incorporate new information may be linked to schizophrenia | MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology "Impairments of this circuit may help to explain why some people with schizophrenia lose touch with reality."

Thymus may be critical to adult health reversing the old assumption that the Thymus only matters in childhood

Amazing stuff!

"Two new studies led by Harvard-affiliated researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute challenge a decades-old assumption that the thymus, an organ best known for its role in establishing immune function in childhood, becomes irrelevant in adulthood.
Using AI to analyze routine CT scans, researchers uncovered that adults with a healthy thymus had increased longevity and reduced risk for cardiovascular disease and cancer
In a separate study of patients with cancer, the researchers found that thymic health may influence response to immunotherapy — a treatment that depends on the strength of a patient’s immune system. ..."

From the abstract:
"The thymus is essential for establishing T cell diversity early in life, but undergoes profound involution with age and has therefore traditionally been regarded as largely nonfunctional in adults.
Here we propose that preserving thymic functionality is integral to adult health and longevity.
We developed a deep learning framework to quantify thymic health from routine radiographic images and evaluated its association with longevity and risk of major age-associated diseases in two large prospective cohorts of asymptomatic adults: the National Lung Screening Trial (n = 25,031) and the Framingham Heart Study (n = 2,581).
In both cohorts, thymic health varied markedly across the population. In the National Lung Screening Trial, higher thymic health was consistently associated with lower all-cause mortality, reduced lung cancer incidence and lower cardiovascular mortality over 12 years of follow-up after adjustment for age, sex, smoking and comorbidities.
In the independent Framingham Heart Study cohort, higher thymic health was significantly associated with reduced cardiovascular mortality, independent of age, sex and smoking. Thymic health was further linked to systemic inflammation and metabolic dysregulation, and associated with modifiable lifestyle factors including smoking, obesity and physical activity.
Together, these findings reposition the thymus as a central regulator of immune-mediated ageing and disease susceptibility in adulthood, highlighting its potential as a target for preventive and regenerative strategies to promote healthy ageing and longevity."

Thymus may be critical to adult health — Harvard Gazette "Research indicates often-overlooked organ can be key predictor in longevity, disease risk, cancer treatment outcomes"



Fig. 1: Overview of study design.


Anima Anandkumar Appointed to UN Scientific Advisory Board

Congratulations Anima Anandkumar! She is a well known researcher in ML & AI!

Anima Anandkumar Appointed to UN Scientific Advisory Board - www.caltech.edu




Extracting More health Information from Exhaled Breath

Amazing stuff!

"... The first thing a smart mask does to collect data is cool exhaled breath using a hydrogel—a water-based substance that can retain water while maintaining its structure—and capture the resulting liquid, called exhaled breath condensate (EBC). Once EBC is collected, sensors analyze the samples for biomarkers of health, such as metabolites, pathogens, and inflammatory indicators, and transmit the data wirelessly to a personal phone, tablet, or computer. But in previous versions of the mask, the hydrogel dried up after a few hours, making continuous monitoring over time difficult. ..."

From the abstract:
"Exhaled breath condensate (EBC) offers a non-invasive window into respiratory and systemic metabolism, yet wearable EBC systems are constrained by unstable moisture harvesting, short sensor lifetimes in humidity and battery dependence.
Here we present EBClite, a battery-free smart mask for multiday EBC biomarker monitoring, using lactate as a model analyte. The platform integrates a regenerable antidrying porous hydrogel that achieves sustained and reactivatable breath condensation over several days, extending operational lifetime while reducing material cost.
EBClite further incorporates a long-term stable electrochemical lactate sensor and an ultrathin quasi-two-dimensional perovskite solar cell with a power-to-weight ratio of 10 W g−1 and a power conversion efficiency exceeding 30% under ambient indoor illumination, enabling autonomous operation across diverse lighting conditions. Human studies demonstrate strong correlations between EBC and blood lactate levels during exercise and carbohydrate intake, enabling real-time tracking of metabolic fluctuations. EBClite provides a sustainable, user-friendly platform for continuous respiratory and metabolic monitoring."

Extracting More Information from Exhaled Breath - www.caltech.edu "Exhaled breath can provide a treasure trove of health information, offering a noninvasive window to both respiratory microenvironments and systemic physiological states. But collecting such data is a challenge."


Illustration of the origin and transport pathway of metabolites (for example, lactate) from blood to the airway surface liquid, where they diffuse across the epithelium and are incorporated into exhaled vapor before condensing as non-volatile metabolites in exhaled breath condensate.


The EBClite smart mask can analyze the chemicals in one's breath in real time.


How researchers cleared the metal–perovskite interface bottleneck holding back next-gen electronics

Good news!

"Researchers ... have discovered a way to dramatically improve how electrical current enters perovskite semiconductors, an emerging class of materials with enormous potential for next-generation electronics.

A longstanding challenge has been the metal–perovskite interface, where electrical current often struggles to pass efficiently from the metal electrode into the semiconductor. T...

The research team developed a strategy that makes this transition much easier. By creating a very thin, locally modified region under the metal contact, they enabled electrons to pass through the barrier using a quantum mechanical process called tunneling.

This approach reduces the resistance at the contact by shrinking the “blocked” region from about 250 nanometers to less than 25 nanometers. As a result, current can flow more efficiently at lower voltages. ...

They developed a contact-induced charge-transfer doping method using silver oxide nanoclusters formed at the interface.

The process involved three key steps:
  1. A van der Waals–laminated metal electrode was placed on the perovskite surface to minimize damage.
  2. Mild thermal annealing allowed small amounts of silver to diffuse into the near-surface region.
  3. Ultraviolet light exposure converted the silver into silver oxide nanoclusters. These nanoclusters act as electron acceptors, pulling electrons away from the perovskite and creating a locally p-doped region beneath the metal contact.
..."

From the abstract:
"Efficient carrier injection at metal–semiconductor interfaces is essential for probing intrinsic electronic properties and enabling high-performance devices. Thinning the Schottky barrier via contact doping is a cornerstone strategy in semiconductor technology for minimizing contact resistance (Rc).
However, carrier doping in halide perovskites has remained elusive, and selective contact doping has not been achieved, resulting in excessive Rc that far exceeds the intrinsic material resistance.
Here we report an effective contact-doping strategy by transferring Ag/Au electrodes onto single-crystal CsPbBr3 thin films using a low-energy van der Waals integration process. Moderate annealing (80–180 °C) during transfer enables silver diffusion into CsPbBr3, followed by its transformation into Ag2O clusters upon ultraviolet treatment, forming an Ag2O/CsPbBr3 bulk heterojunction. The Ag2O clusters embedded in CsPbBr3 act as interfacial electron acceptors, inducing a local hole density of ∼5 × 1017 cm−3 in the contact region. This markedly shrinks the Schottky barrier and enhances carrier injection, yielding a substantially reduced Rc of 26–70 Ω cm and a notably high two-terminal sheet conductance exceeding 225 µS at 190 K."

How UCLA researchers cleared the nanoscale bottleneck holding back next-gen electronics | UCLA





Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Children and adults shaped clay 15,000 years ago, long before pottery or farming, archaeologists find

Amazing stuff!

"Long before pottery, before agriculture, when the first villages took shape, people in the Levant were already molding clay with their hands, carefully, deliberately, and sometimes playfully. Some of those hands belonged to children. ...

An international team of archaeologists ... has uncovered the earliest known clay ornaments in Southwest Asia, revealing a forgotten chapter in the story of how humans began to express identity, belonging, and meaning through material culture. The findings ... push back the symbolic use of clay in the region by thousands of years.

The ornaments, 142 beads and pendants, were made some 15,000 years ago by Natufian hunter-gatherers living in what is now Israel. These communities were the first in the world to settle permanently in one place, millennia before the rise of agriculture. Until now, clay in this period was thought to play little or no ornamental role. In fact, only five clay beads from this era were previously known worldwide. ..."

From the abstract:
"Ornamental practices are essential for understanding socioeconomic structures and technosymbolic dynamics of prehistoric societies. However, our perception of these practices remains limited and biased, due to preservation issues, e.g., perishable materials, which are known only through indirect evidence or rare conservation contexts. Such is the use of unbaked clay for ornamentation, a practice that became widespread across Eurasia in the Neolithic, sporadically documented earlier in Upper Paleolithic Europe.
Focusing on the Levantine “revolution of symbols,” we report the earliest known clay ornamental tradition outside of Europe: 142 personal ornaments from five Natufian (Late Epipaleolithic, 15,000 to 11,650 calibrated years before the present) sites in Israel. Using a multidisciplinary approach, we show that both children and adults participated in crafting these items, which reflect newly emerging symbolic expressions, some inspired by plant forms. These findings offer original insights into the social organization of craft production and the rise of symbolic practices at the dawn of sedentism, which ultimately shaped the Neolithic transition in Southwest Asia."

Children shaped clay 15,000 years ago, long before pottery or farming, archaeologists find



Fig. 1. Typological variability of Natufian personal ornaments in the Southern Levant.


Fig. 2. Map of the distribution of Natufian sites.


Faecal transplants boost immunotherapy

Good news! Fecal transplants keep on giving!

"Three trials provide compelling evidence that faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) can boost the effectiveness of immunotherapy in advanced solid tumors ... in an analysis of three studies ... But challenges for safety, donor selection and product development remain.
Tumours partially or completely shrunk in 75% of FMT-treated people who underwent immunotherapy with melanoma, 80% of those with non-small cell lung cancer and 50% with metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC) across the studies. The only randomized, placebo-controlled trial, which evaluated immunotherapy plus an oral drug with or without FMT in individuals with metastatic RCC, did not find statistically significant 12-month progression-free survival. But it did find that FMT increased the proportion of people whose tumours shrunk (52% versus 32%)."

Nature Briefing: Translational Research

Microbiome modulation in cancer immunotherapy (no public access) "Three landmark trials confirm that fecal microbiota transplantation is a promising approach to enhancing immunotherapy efficacy in advanced solid tumors. The trials also provide insights with major implications for microbiome therapeutic development."


Three studies suggest that FMT improves immunotherapy responsiveness not only by bolstering the growth of good bacteria, which improves the microbiome to help the immune system respond to cancer, but also by killing off bad bacteria.


Spaceflight supercharges anti-bacterial viruses thanks to microgravity

Amazing stuff! Good news!

"Viruses that infect bacteria, called phages, evolve different strategies to infect their targets on the International Space Station than they do on the ground, which could help create new treatments for antibiotic-resistant infections.
Researchers found that the phages took longer to infect E.coli in microgravity, and that the viruses developed microgravity-specific mutations, some of which helped them to better cling onto bacterial receptors.
Once they returned to earth, they were able to kill stubborn strains of E.coli responsible for urinary tract infections that tend to be resistant to bacteriophages."

"... Once the viruses adapted to microgravity by subtly shape-shifting, though, they became even more effective bacteria killers. “A simple microgravity experiment exposes these mutations that have much higher efficacy against pathogens,”  ..."

From the abstract:
"Bacteriophage–host interactions play a fundamental role in shaping microbial ecosystems. While extensively studied on Earth, their behavior in microgravity remains largely unexplored.
Here, we report the dynamics between T7 bacteriophage and Escherichia coli in microgravity aboard the International Space Station (ISS). Phage activity was initially delayed in microgravity but ultimately successful.
We identified de novo mutations in both phage and bacteria that enhanced fitness in microgravity. Deep mutational scanning of the phage receptor binding domain revealed striking differences in the number, position, and mutational preferences between terrestrial and microgravity conditions, reflecting underlying differences in bacterial adaptation. Combinatorial libraries informed by microgravity selections yielded T7 variants capable of productively infecting uropathogenic E. coli resistant to wild-type T7 under terrestrial conditions. These findings help lay the foundation for future research on the impact of microgravity on phage–host interactions and microbial communities and the terrestrial benefits of this research."

Nature Briefing: Translational Research

Spaceflight supercharges viruses’ ability to infect bacteria "Viruses develop tricks to attack bacteria without the help of gravity"



Fig 1. Experimental design to evaluate microgravity interactions on the ISS.


Georg Hackl: „Bananenrepublik“ Deutschland – BRD

Scheint so also ob Hackl meinen Blog gelesen hat! 😊

Georg Hackl: „Bananenrepublik“ Deutschland – BRD "Rodellegende Georg Hackl spricht aus, was Millionen Deutsche denken und täglich erleben – die Unfähigkeit der Regierenden eines einst so erfolgreichen Landes, schnell, richtig und ehrlich zu handeln, um seine Lebensadern für die Zukunft zu erhalten."


Rodellegende Georg 'Schorsch' Hackl, 16.01.2026


A new children’s book called Goodnight Light

Amazing stuff!

"A new children’s book called Goodnight Light appears completely blank during the day but comes to life at night with glow-in-the-dark ink, then folds into a bedside lamp."

Wednesday, March 18, 2026 - Join The Flyover








Several ally countries rejected President Trump's request to send warships to the Strait of Hormuz

This is pretty lousy by these allies! Shame on them!

That Germany and the UK are among them is particularly despicable!

An ally may disagree with Trump's war on Iran, but to refuse to assist protecting the Strait of Hormuz with any navy ships etc. when asked by the US is very bad!

E.g. it should be in every NATO member's best interest to make sure one of the most important shipping lanes in the world is safe to pass for ships! Especially when a country run by an Islamist theocracy threatens the save passage!

Argentina formalizes withdrawal from World Health Organization

Good news! What is the WHO good for? Maybe time for a new international health organization!

"Argentina has officially left the World Health Organization (WHO), the agency of the United Nations responsible for international public health. A year after requesting its withdrawal, the process has been completed, Foreign Minister Pablo Quirno announced.

President Javier Milei’s administration had informed its decision to leave the organization in February 2025, and sent a notification requesting withdrawal on March 17 of last year. 

The move was in line with United States President Donald Trump’s decision to abandon the WHO last year, a process that was completed in January.

“Our country will continue to promote international cooperation in healthcare through our bilateral agreements and regional frameworks, while fully safeguarding its sovereignty and its decision-making authority regarding health policies,” Quirno said in an X post. ..."

Argentina formalizes withdrawal from World Health Organization - Buenos Aires Herald "The moves follows the steps of President Donald Trump and is part of Javier Milei’s alignment with the US"

Image of the day

Source

This hot pink cricket is no mutant/Arota festae’s unusual hue may help it blend in with immature plants




 

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Very old loom found on the Iberian peninsula about 3450 years old

Amazing stuff!

"When a fire ripped through a wealthy Iberian village 3450 years ago, it left behind heaps of rubble that trapped tools, pots, and jewelry—and, archaeologists argue in a new Antiquity study, one of the oldest looms ever found. The charred, meter-long pine beams, stone weights, and fiber cords open a window on an ancient economy, and perhaps on Bronze Age fashion.

Beginning around 2000 BCE, written sources from Mesopotamia, Mycenae, Egypt and elsewhere indicate that looms and weaving had become a part of daily life. But because they were made of perishable wood, finding an actual loom from prehistoric Europe is extremely rare. “What we find in archaeology is usually just the loom weights, because everything else decays ,”  ... “To find a loom like this, just as it was standing there 3500 years ago, is really remarkable.”

Archaeologists found the loom’s wooden frame when they excavated a site near modern-day Alicante, Spain, in 2008. Close by lay nearly 50 clay loom weights, along with tough grass fibers probably used to lash the frame together—key clues the structure was used for weaving, rather than being simply debris from the collapsed house, the new paper argues. The weights were unusually light, potentially suggesting the weavers were working with delicate material such as sheep’s wool, which would have been a relatively new material in the region."

From the abstract:
"The deep history of weaving is attested by spindle whorls and loom weights, so the evolution of techniques may be tracked through changes in these durable artefacts; however, wooden looms rarely preserve.
Here, the authors document a series of loom weights and associated charred timbers and fibres that represent the remains of a Bronze Age warp-weighted loom, uncovered at the settlement of Cabezo Redondo in south-eastern Spain. Based on the number, weight and size of the weights, hypothetical reconstructions of loom setup and resultant textile products are proposed, revealing possible diversification of weaving processes in the mid-second millennium BC."

ScienceAdvisor



Figure 1. Location of Cabezo Redondo: a & b) aerial views; c) plan of the site. The red arrow and dot indicate the location of the raised platform on which the loom was documented


Figure 5. Different views of the loom timbers during excavation





US Senate Minority Leader Schumer (D): SAVE America Act 'Despicable,' Trump Wants to 'Cheat' in Midterms. Really!

The about 80 years old Chuck Schumer is getting more and more senile and demented like the 46th President! Here is more proof!

When will he finally retire!

The Dimocratic Party needs to accelerate his resignation!

Schumer: SAVE America Act 'Despicable,' Trump Wants to 'Cheat' in Midterms "Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) called the SAVE America Act “one of the most despicable pieces of legislation” he has seen ahead of the bill being brought to the floor for a vote this week."


Chuck Schumer


Why some moments endure: Episodic memory encoding fluctuates with brain's theta rhythms

Amazing stuff!

"... One memory-related theoretical framework, rooted in behavioral science, is the Separate Phases for Encoding and Retrieval (SPEAR) model. This model outlines the idea that the human brain rapidly switches between the encoding of information and the retrieval of stored information. ...

Researchers ... recently carried out a study aimed at testing this theory and the possibility that memory processes change moment-by-moment following this rhythmic pattern. Their findings ... are aligned with the SPEAR model's predictions and suggest that the brain is only disposed to learn new information during brief time windows. ..."

From the abstract:
"Why do some experiences endure in memory better than others? Here we explore the possibility that learning fluctuates rhythmically several times per second, with fortuitously timed experiences being more memorable. Although such fleeting opportunities for encoding would evade our awareness, they are predicted by a prominent model describing how theta rhythms in the brain coordinate memory—the Separate Phases for Encoding and Retrieval (SPEAR) model.
In a preregistered study, we adapted a dense sampling approach to reconstruct the millisecond time course of memory encoding in n = 125 participants. We found that memory encoding fluctuated at a theta rhythm (3–10 Hz), that these rhythms were not a by-product of rhythmic attention and that—like theta rhythms in the brain—memory rhythms were modulated by putative markers of acetylcholine.
Our findings provide behavioural evidence consistent with the SPEAR model of episodic memory."

Why some moments endure: Episodic memory encoding fluctuates with brain's theta rhythms



Object classification, memory test and overall performance.


Toward autonomous self-organizing biological robots with a nervous system

Amazing stuff! Robots don't have to be cold machines! 😊

When will humans and robots converge?

"Biobots, whose growing line of variants started with Xenobots, are fascinating tiny self-powered living robots built exclusively using frog embryonic cells. Originally developed in the laboratories ..., biobots are remarkably motile, moving autonomously through aqueous environments. Since then, the team has shed light on many exciting properties of biobots, including their ability for kinematic self-replication, and responding to sound stimuli.

Biobots can similarly be constructed using human cells in the form of Anthrobots, which have the ability to heal neural wounds in vitro.  Thus, a vision emerged that biobots, made out of patients’ own cells, could one day be deployed to repair spinal cord or retinal nerve damage, clear plaques from the arteries, locally deliver pro-regenerative drugs, and perform other vital tasks in the human body. More fundamentally, ... “Such novel beings, exhibiting both new morphology and behavior, despite their wild-type unmodified genome, can reveal important aspects of multicellular plasticity, of relevance to evolutionary biology, bioengineering, and regenerative medicine. They uniquely enable us to investigate questions like ‘What is the origin of anatomical and physiological properties in living forms that have no history of selection for those traits?’ and ‘What determines the range of possible forms, functions, and lifestyles that a given genome can facilitate?’” ...

Now, ... creating the first “neurobots,” which essentially are biobots that with the help of a micro-surgical technique are integrated with neuronal precursor cells and allowed to grow unperturbed. The study shows that novel types of nervous systems self-organize within neurobots with neuronal processes extending in between neurons as well as towards non-neuronal cells lining the surface of the bots. Target cells include multiciliated cells (MCCs) that allow biobots to be motile, mucus-secreting goblet cells which among other functions facilitate ciliary beating, ionocytes that regulate the balance of ions, and small secretory cells (SSCs) that produce MCC-stimulating molecules. ..."

From the abstract:
" ...These ‘biobots’ are autonomous, self-powered, and able to move through aqueous environments.
Here, we report a new type of biobot, the neurobot, composed of mucociliary epidermis and neural tissue. We show that neural precursor cells implanted in explanted Xenopus ectodermal tissue develop into mature neurons, extending processes both toward the surface and among each other.
These self-organized neurobots exhibit unique morphology, more complex movements, and different responses to neuroactive drugs compared to non-neuronal counterparts. Calcium imaging confirms neuronal activity in neurobots. Transcriptomics reveals increased transcript variability, expression of genes related to nervous system development, a shift toward ancient genes, and up-regulation of neuronal genes linked to visual perception."

Toward autonomous self-organizing biological robots with a nervous system "In a first-of-its-kind study, researchers demonstrate that functional nervous systems can form within self-organized living cellular robots, conferring complex movement patterns and distinct gene expression profiles"

Engineered Living Systems With Self-Organizing Neural Networks: From Anatomy to Behavior and Gene Expression (open access)


The team made an important step towards creating self-organizing biological robots with a functional nervous system. As can be seen in this image, neurobots are made of an outer surface consisting of multicilliated cells, mucus-secreting goblet cells, ionocytes, and small secretory cells, and a nervous system that reaches out to surface cells underneath.


Fig. 1 Construction and development of a neurobot.


Nordrhein-Westfalen will Braunkohletagebau permanent fluten

Wieder eine saudumme Idee aus der Bananenrepublik D!

Wahrscheinlich hat kein anderes westliches Land seine Energieversorgung so gründlich sabotiert wie die Bananenrepublik D!

"Als eines der größten Infrastrukturprojekte der Region preisen Vertreter von RWE, Kommunen und Landkreisen diese gigantische Vernichtung der Energieversorgung. Die geplante Leitung soll künftig Wasser aus dem Rhein in die ehemaligen riesigen Tagebaue Hambach und Garzweiler transportieren. Kern ist ein mehrere Dutzend Kilometer langes Leitungssystem mit rund 10.000 einzelnen Rohrsegmenten. Über diese Verbindung soll Rheinwasser bei Dormagen in die Tagebaue gepumpt werden, um dort Seen und neue Landschaften zu schaffen. ..."

Rheinwasser statt Braunkohle – Wie NRW seine Energiereserven endgültig versenkt "Elsdorf in Nordrhein-Westfalen: Heute Mittag „erster Spatenstich“ für die Rheinwassertransportleitung im rheinischen Braunkohlerevier – oder besser: für den „Kaiser Nero“-Befehl. Denn die Tagebaue sollen geflutet und damit unbrauchbar gemacht werden. Für immer. Milliarden Tonnen Kohlevorräte in der Erde werden damit unzugänglich gemacht."

Only 5 minutes needed to charge an EV with Chinese automaker BYD’s updated “Blade” battery

Good news! The gap between the time to recharge and refuel a car is closing!

Keep in mind, there are at least a hundred million or many more electric motorcycles in daily use in China.

"The minutes needed to charge an EV with Chinese automaker BYD’s updated “Blade” battery from low to 70%. In nine minutes, it can be almost fully recharged. In the U.S., fast-charging sessions can take around 20 to 40 minutes or more, depending on the vehicle. America is trying to catch up."

Wall Street Journal

Amazon adds 1-hour and 3-hour delivery options in 2000 US cities

Good news! How many drones will it take? Busy skies ahead! 😊

"The e-commerce giant is making more than 90,000 items available via this new delivery system. If an item can be delivered to a user within one or three hours, they'll see a label saying so next to that item on the Amazon app."

Techcrunch

Near-earth asteroid contains all five DNA, RNA bases and Vitamin B3, boosting origin of life theories

Amazing stuff!

"Samples collected from the near-Earth asteroid Ryugu have been found to contain all five nucleobases, adding to evidence that life’s building blocks exist elsewhere in the solar system. The researchers think that such asteroids may have helped deliver these molecules to Earth, potentially kick-starting life.

The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency launched a spacecraft to the carbon-rich Ryugu asteroid in December 2014 as part of its Hayabusa 2 mission. The spacecraft made two landings on the asteroid’s surface in 2019, before returning to Earth in December 2020.

Initial analysis of a sample from the mission revealed the presence of the nucleobase uracil, as well as nicotinic acid (vitamin B3), its derivatives and several imidazoles.

Scientists in Japan have now analysed two other samples collected during the mission, using high-performance liquid chromatography and high-resolution mass spectrometry to determine the type and abundance of molecules in the sample. ..."

Ryugu asteroid contains all five DNA and RNA bases, boosting origin of life theories | Chemistry World


Samples from the asteroid Ryugu (bottom left) were found to contain all five nucleobases


Labels like “Proudly Human” and “AI-Free” are popping up on various products, marketing materials and websites

To err is human! 😊

"Labels like “Proudly Human” and “AI-Free” are popping up on books, films, and websites as at least eight organizations race to create a universal certification for products made without generative AI, modeled after Fair Trade."

Tuesday, March 17, 2026 - Join The Flyover