If I sat there and said, “I’m going to make the most beautiful painting I’ve ever painted in my life,” it’s going to be horrible. I did a lecture at the Frick in 2019 and somebody asked me: “How do you make a distinction between what’s a good painting or a bad painting.” For me, it’s like the desert question: If you had to take one painting with you to a desert island, which one would it be? But it’s not a question of what you can live with. When it comes to art: it’s what can you die with? What’s the last thing you want to see before you go?
How to Paint Like Hayao Miyazaki – Animation Obsessive
The pencil-and-watercolor methods of a master.
Source: How to Paint Like Hayao Miyazaki – Animation Obsessive
Corsi–Rosenthal Box
Source: Corsi–Rosenthal Box – Wikipedia
Leaving this here in case I need it someday.
The Corsi–Rosenthal Box, also called Corsi–Rosenthal Cube and Comparetto Cube, is a design for a do-it-yourself air purifier that can be built comparatively inexpensively. It was designed during the COVID-19 pandemic, with the goal of reducing the levels of airborne viral particles in indoor settings
Also known as a Corsi-Rosenthal box, this DIY method of building your own air filter with MERV13 furnace filters and a box fan are an easy and cost-effective way to help clear indoor air from airborne virus particles, wildfire smoke, pollen, dust, and more!
If you can seal a box, you can build one (or 100!) of these!
Fluke Discovery of Ancient Farming Technique Could Stabilize Crop Yields : ScienceAlert
While studying food diversity in 2011, environmental scientist Morgan Ruelle, now at Clark University, accidentally stumbled across one possible technique that could help stabilize dipping crop yields.
The once widespread practice is now only used by small farms in places like Caucasus, Greek Islands, and the Horn of Africa. Despite being incredibly simple, most of the agroecology community weren’t aware of it.
Yet farmers have been using this technique for more than 3,000 years across at least 27 countries. It may have even been what gave rise to agriculture in the first place.
The method is planting maslins – a combined mix of cereals that can include rice, millet, wheat, rye, barley and more – and harvesting them all together to be separated or used as a single product.
In Ethiopia, for example, where Ruelle discovered the existence of maslins, duragna contains multiple species and varieties of barley and wheat, all grown together. The locals consider the mix to be one crop, using it to make bread, beer and traditional savories with it.
Local farmers reported this mix ensures at least some yield under unfavorable conditions, and now researchers have the experimental trials to back up these claims. Working at Cornell University, Ruelle and colleagues conducted a review of previous work, demonstrating maslins yielded higher stability under changing conditions. By shifting species composition each season, farmers could hedge against climate impacts without the need for additional intervention.
Monkey Experiment Reveals a Brain Switch That Could Be Useful For Space Travel : ScienceAlert
For humans to ever venture out among the stars, we will have to solve some hefty logistical problems.
Not the least of these is the travel time involved. Space is so large, and human technology so limited, that the time it would take to travel to another star presents a significant barrier.
The Voyager 1 probe, for instance, would take 73,000 years to reach Proxima Centauri, the nearest star to the Sun, at its current speed.
Voyager launched more than 40 years ago, and more recent spacecraft might be expected to travel faster; even so, the journey would still take thousands of years with our current technology.
One potential solution would be generation ships, which would see multiple generations of space travelers live and die before reaching the final destination. Another would be artificial hibernation, if it could be successfully implemented.
This is what scientists from the Shenzhen Institute of Advanced Technology (SIAT) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences have started to investigate; not in humans, but in monkeys, by chemically triggering a state of hypothermia.
“Here, we show that activating a subpopulation of preoptic area (POA) neurons by a chemogenetic strategy reliably induces hypothermia in anesthetized and freely moving macaques,” the researchers write in their paper.
“Altogether, our findings demonstrate the central regulation of body temperature in primates and pave the way for future application in clinical practice.”
Hibernation and its slightly less comatose state, torpor, are physiological states that allow animals to withstand adverse conditions, like extreme cold and low oxygen.
The body temperature lowers, and metabolism slows to a crawl, keeping the body in a bare-bones ‘maintenance mode’ – the bare minimum to stay alive while preventing atrophy.
This can be found across several animals, including warm-blooded mammals, but very few primates. Neuroscientists Wang Hong and Dai Ji of SIAT wanted to see if they could artificially induce a state of hypometabolism, or even hibernation, in primates by chemically manipulating neurons in the hypothalamus responsible for sleep and thermoregulation processes – the preoptic neurons.
The research was performed on three young male crab-eating monkeys (Macaca fascicularis). In both anesthetized and non-anesthetized states, the researchers applied drugs designed to activate specific modified receptors in the brain, known as Designer Receptors Exclusively Activated by Designer Drugs, or DREADDs.
Then, the scientists studied the results using functional magnetic resonance imaging, behavioral changes, and physiological and biochemical changes.
An illustration showing the role preoptic neurons play in hypothermia. (SIAT)“To investigate the brain-wide network as a consequence of preoptic area (POA) activation, we performed fMRI scans and identified multiple regions involved in thermoregulation and interoception,” Dai says.
“This is the first fMRI study to investigate the brain-wide functional connections revealed by chemogenetic activation.”
The researchers found that a synthetic drug called Clozapine N-oxide (CNO) reliably induced hypothermia in both the anesthetized and awake states in the macaques.
However, in anesthetized monkeys, the CNO-induced hypothermia resulted in a drop in core body temperature, preventing external heating. The researchers say that this demonstrates the critical role POA neurons play in primate thermoregulation.
The researchers recorded behavioral changes in the awake monkeys and compared them to those of mice with induced hypothermia. Typically, mice decrease activity, and their heart rate lowers in an attempt to conserve heat.
The monkeys, by contrast, showed an increased heart rate and activity level and, in addition, started shivering. This suggests that thermoregulation in primates is more complex than in mice; hibernation in humans (if it can be done at all) will need to take this into account.
“This work provides the first successful demonstration of hypothermia in a primate based on targeted neuronal manipulation,” Wang says.
“With the growing passion for human spaceflight, this hypothermic monkey model is a milestone on the long path toward artificial hibernation.”
The research has been published in The Innovation.
Source: Monkey Experiment Reveals a Brain Switch That Could Be Useful For Space Travel : ScienceAlert
5 Extreme Times Tardigrades Proved Themselves to Be Incredibly Resilient : ScienceAlert
They can take it.
Source: 5 Extreme Times Tardigrades Proved Themselves to Be Incredibly Resilient : ScienceAlert
You don’t need to drink 8 glasses of water a day after all
The original advice from 1945 encouraged adults to consume 1.8 litres of water daily. It was probably misinterpreted anyway, researchers now say.
Source: You don’t need to drink 8 glasses of water a day after all
Best-Selling Author Jeff VanderMeer Finds That Nature Is Stranger Than Fiction | Audubon
The novelist attained fame with gripping works of eco-fiction. How hard could it be to rewild his own backyard?
Source: Best-Selling Author Jeff VanderMeer Finds That Nature Is Stranger Than Fiction | Audubon
Baz Luhrmann – Everybody’s Free To Wear Sunscreen – YouTube
Safety in space: Synthetic hibernation could provide protection from cosmic radiation — ScienceDaily
It is still a glimpse into the future: Astronauts could be put into artificial hibernation and in this state be better protected from cosmic radiation. At present, there are already promising approaches to follow up such considerations. An international research team now has found decisive indications of the possible benefits of artificial hibernation for radiation resistance.
Source: Safety in space: Synthetic hibernation could provide protection from cosmic radiation — ScienceDaily