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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

Urban Dangers for Rural Preppers Happening Now
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prepping.com

Urban Dangers for Rural Preppers Happening Now

Urban Dangers for Rural Preppers Happening Now Don't let rural living make you complacent when it comes to personal security and the safety of your family. Urban crime is here now and getting worse. ☢ For more information on SHTF prepping, community networking and for ways to support the channel, check out: https://www.MagicPrepper.com ? insta : https://www.instagram.com/magicprepper/ ? To gain access to exclusive content, direct communication with MP and preparedness incentives, please consider joining my SubscribeStar page for $5 a month here: https://www.subscribestar.com/magic-prepper #rural #urban #preparedness #midwayusa
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

She's On The Brink Of Disaster?
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prepping.com

She's On The Brink Of Disaster?

On The Angry Truth Channel, is She's On The Brink Of Disaster?
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

Living on the Edge: How Fragile is Our Food and Supply System?
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prepping.com

Living on the Edge: How Fragile is Our Food and Supply System?

In this eye-opening video, "One Step from Chaos: Prepare for the Next Supply Chain Crisis," we delve into the critical vulnerabilities of global supply chains and how they can lead to widespread disruption. Discover the key factors that contribute to supply chain instability, including geopolitical tensions, natural disasters, and economic fluctuations. Join us as we explore actionable strategies to safeguard your business and personal needs against potential shortages. We'll cover topics such as inventory management, alternative sourcing, and the importance of building resilient supply networks. Stay informed and prepared for the unexpected as we share expert insights and real-world examples of past supply chain crises. Don't wait for the next disruption to strike—watch this essential guide to ensure you are one step ahead. Subscribe for more content on supply chain management, economic trends, and crisis preparedness! #SupplyChainCrisis #CrisisPreparedness #EconomicTrends #BusinessStrategy #SupplyChainManagement ❱❱❱ Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcw07-5iLuW1I1Zx-jVvspA/join ❱❱❱ LOCALPREPPER OFFICIAL: https://www.localprepper.net ❱❱❱ PREPPER STORE: https://www.amazon.com/shop/localprepper Trusted Products: ❱❱❱ The Water Machine - https://thewatermachine.com/discount/localprepper - CODE “LOCALPREPPER” to save 15% ❱❱❱ Water Supply Tanks - https://www.watersupplytanks.com/?sca_ref=3358080.v4gepw145A - CODE “LOCALPREPPER” to save 10% ❱❱❱ Augason Farms - https://augasonfarms.com/localprepper - CODE “LOCALPREPPER” to save 10% ❱❱❱ Wallaby Food Storage - https://wallabygoods.com/?rfsn=6889913.9ebcf3d - CODE “LOCALPREPPER” to save $5 on EACH purchase ❱❱❱ JASE Medical - https://jasemedical.com/?rstr=4270 - CODE “LOCALPREPPER10” to save $10 ❱❱❱ Refuge Medical - https://www.refugemedical.com/?sca_ref=6182277.tM8dYmxJpE9t - CODE “PREPSTOCK” to save 15% ❱❱❱ EMP Shield - https://www.empshield.com/?coupon=localprepper - CODE “LOCALPREPPER” to save $50 ❱❱❱ Parcil Safety - https://parcilsafety.com/?rfsn=7052224.c702f2 - CODE “LOCALPREPPER” to save 20% ❱❱❱ Snail mail: LocalPrepper P.O. Box 12 Onancock, VA 23417 ❱❱❱ DISCLAIMER: - The opinions stated in this video are my own. I AM AN AMAZON AFFILIATE and SOME links are AFFILIATE LINKS also know as "Paid Links" where I make, what I think are, about two cents for every dollar you spend. It costs you nothing extra. #SurvivalKit #EmergencyPreparedness #SurvivalGear #Unboxing #OutdoorAdventure #SurvivalTips #BePrepared #survival #prepper #shtf #prepardness #offgrid #nuclearwar #war #economy #survival #prepper #shtf #prepardness #offgrid #conflicted #localprepper #wwiii #russia #china #ukraine #survival #prepper #shtf #nuclear #martiallaw #wrol #newsnuclear #martiallaw #wrol #news
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

Establishing a New Habitability Metric for Future Astrobiology Surveys
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www.universetoday.com

Establishing a New Habitability Metric for Future Astrobiology Surveys

The search for exoplanets has grown immensely in recent decades thanks to next-generation observatories and instruments. The current census is 5,766 confirmed exoplanets in 4,310 systems, with thousands more awaiting confirmation. With so many planets available for study, exoplanet studies and astrobiology are transitioning from the discovery process to characterization. Essentially, this means that astronomers are reaching the point where they can directly image exoplanets and determine the chemical composition of their atmospheres. As always, the ultimate goal is to find terrestrial (rocky) exoplanets that are “habitable,” meaning they could support life. However, our notions of habitability have been primarily focused on comparisons to modern-day Earth (i.e., “Earth-like“), which has come to be challenged in recent years. In a recent study, a team of astrobiologists considered how Earth has changed over time, giving rise to different biosignatures. Their findings could inform future exoplanet searches using next-generation telescopes like the Habitable Worlds Observatory (HWO), destined for space by the 2040s. The study was led by Kenneth Goodis Gordon, a graduate student with the University of Central Florida’s (UCF) Planetary Sciences Group. He was joined by researchers from the SETI Institute, the Virtual Planetary Laboratory Team at the University of Washington, NASA’s Nexus for Exoplanet System Science (NESS), the Space Science Division and Astrobiology Division at the NASA Ames Research Center, the Sellers Exoplanet Environments Collaboration (SEEC) at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The paper that describes their findings is being considered for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. Artist concept of Earth during the Late Heavy Bombardment period. Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab. As the team indicates in their paper, the current census of exoplanets includes more than 200 terrestrial planets, dozens of which have been observed in their parent stars’ habitable zone (HZ). Many more are expected in the coming years, thanks to next-generation instruments like the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) and the ESO’s Extremely Large Telescope (ELT). Equipped with cutting-edge spectrometers, adaptive optics, and coronographs, these and other telescopes will enable the characterization of exoplanets, identify biosignatures, and determine their habitability. This is a complex problem since a range of different planetary, orbital, and stellar parameters must be considered. To date, Earth is the only planet known to harbor life, which limits our perspective. But as Goodis Gordon told Universe Today via email, this is not the only way in which habitability studies have been constrained: “Currently, there is only one example of a planet known to harbor life: our own Earth. However, when we think of habitability, most of the time, people will only relate that term to modern-day Earth-like conditions: large-scale vegetation, animals, humans, etc. This can severely limit our approach to finding habitable exoplanets because it only provides us with one data point to compare against. “But we know from biogeochemical analyses that the Earth is not just one data point and that our planet has actually been habitable for eons. So better understanding the signatures of the Earth throughout its evolution provides us with more comparison points when searching for habitable worlds elsewhere.” For instance, life emerged on Earth during the Archeon Eon (ca. 4 billion years ago), when the atmosphere was predominantly composed of nitrogen, carbon dioxide, methane, and inert gases. By the late Paleoproterozoic Era (ca. 2.5 to 1.6 billion years ago), the Great Oxygenation Event occurred after a billion years of cyanobacterial photosynthesis. This period lasted from 2.46 to 2.06 billion years ago and caused Earth’s atmosphere to transition from a reducing atmosphere to an oxidizing atmosphere, which led to the emergence of more complex life forms. Artist’s impression of Earth during the Archean Eon. Credit: Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History During this same period, the Sun underwent evolutionary changes over the past 4.5 billion years. At this time, the Sun was 30% dimmer than it is today and has gradually grown brighter and hotter since. Despite this, Earth maintained liquid water on its surface, and life continued to survive and evolve. The complex interrelationship between Earth’s evolving atmosphere and our Sun’s evolution is key to maintaining habitability for billions of years. As Goodis Gordon explained: “In addition to that, current exoplanet characterization strategies tend to rely solely on the unpolarized light received from these worlds, which studies have shown can result in errors in the retrieved fluxes and degeneracies in the calculated planetary parameters. For example, if an exoplanet has really thick clouds or hazes in its atmosphere, the observed flux spectrum can be flat with almost no spectral features. This makes it extremely difficult to detect what gases are in the atmosphere or even what those clouds or hazes that blocked the light are made of.” In recent years, several studies have examined the flux and polarization signatures of light reflected by an early Earth. Others have simulated different scenarios throughout the Archean, Proterozoic (2.5 billion to 541 million years ago), and Phanerozoic Eons (538.8 million years ago to the present). Lastly, some studies analyzed how the signatures of these early-Earth analogs would change if they orbited different types of stars. But as Goodis Gordon pointed out, nearly all of these studies focused on the unpolarized flux from these worlds, so they missed some of the information available in the light: “Polarization is a more sensitive tool than flux-only observations and can enhance exoplanet characterizations. Polarimetry is extremely sensitive to the physical mechanism scattering the light, thereby allowing for accurate characterizations of the properties of a planetary atmosphere and surface. Also, since polarization measures light as a vector, it is sensitive to the locations of features on the planet, such as cloud and land distributions, as well as diurnal rotation and seasonal variability. Within the Solar System, polarimetric observations helped characterize the clouds of Titan, Venus, and the gas giants, while outside of it, polarimetry has been used to characterize the cloud properties of brown dwarfs. In most of these cases, the characterizing discovery was possible only with polarimetry!” This artist’s concept features one of multiple initial possible design options for NASA’s Habitable Worlds Observatory. Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab This could have profound implications for the study and characterization of exoplanets in the near future. Using an expanded concept of habitability that takes into account how Earth has evolved over time and benefits from the study of polarized light, astronomers will likely identify far more habitable planets when next-generation observatories like the HWO become available. The plans for this observatory build upon two earlier mission concepts – the Large Ultraviolet Optical Infrared Surveyor (LUVOIR) and the Habitable Exoplanets Observatory (HabEx). Based on these previous studies and the experience astronomers have accrued by working with previous exoplanet-hunting missions—i.e., Hubble, Kepler, the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), and the JWST—the HWO will be designed specifically to examine the “atmospheres of exoplanets for potential indications of life” (aka “biosignatures”) and determine if they are potentially habitable planets. As Goodis Gordon indicated, his team’s research could help inform future surveys using the HWO and other next-generation observatories: “Our models provide more data points to compare observations of terrestrial exoplanets against and therefore help to inform habitability studies of these worlds. Additionally, there has been a push in the exoplanet community in recent years to include polarimetry in near-future observatories like the Extremely Large Telescopes on the ground or the Habitable Worlds Observatory in space. Our hope is that our models will help prove the power of polarimetry in characterizing and distinguishing between different habitable exoplanet scenarios in ways that unpolarized flux observations cannot.” Further Reading: arXiv The post Establishing a New Habitability Metric for Future Astrobiology Surveys appeared first on Universe Today.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

Cats Basically Are a Liquid After All, Study Confirms
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www.sciencealert.com

Cats Basically Are a Liquid After All, Study Confirms

We knew it!
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Clips and Trailers
Clips and Trailers
1 y ·Youtube Cool & Interesting

YouTube
Al Pacino's Epic Bathtub Scene | Scarface 4k HDR
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Bikers Den
Bikers Den
1 y ·Youtube General Interest

YouTube
Father Watches Son Crash Motorcycle | @parodiluca
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Comedy Corner
Comedy Corner
1 y ·Youtube Funny Stuff

YouTube
The Longer You Live The More You Learn. Mark Sweeny
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

5 'amazing' siblings were living in separate foster care homes, so this family adopted them all
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www.upworthy.com

5 'amazing' siblings were living in separate foster care homes, so this family adopted them all

15 years ago, Andi Bonura of Texas was told she wouldn't be able to have any more children, now she has eight.Her and her husband, Thomas', oldest child Joey, 15, was born with a twin, Eli, but he passed away at just five months. Joey pulled through and has been living with cerebral palsy and visual impairment, but his mother told Good Morning America he's the "happiest kid in this house.""When we lost Eli, we were told we couldn't have any more children, and we were devastated," Andi told CBS News. "And we actually started looking at adoption then, but for some amazing reason, we had two more daughters that were a complete shock."The daughters, Sadie and Daphne are now 10 and eight.The Bonura family now had three children but they didn't stop there. Knowing it would be risky to have any more biological children, they turned to fostering in 2017. via Andi Bonura "Then they told us to come pick up our now 2-year-old Bryson," who joined the family right out of the NICU. "We didn't think we would have him forever or anything. We were there to love him for now. But we found out he had siblings," she said.Bryson has four siblings that had all been split up into different foster care homes. So Andi asked if she could foster some of the siblings, and was approved."We still weren't thinking we were going to have them forever. We were just happy they were together," she told CBS News.Then, to the family's surprise, they learned that all five children would be put up for adoption because their parents terminated their rights as guardians. "We had already been meeting with the twins, who are now 8, and we just loved them. They were constantly asking when they were going to move into our house," she said. via Andi BonuraIn May, after two years of going through the adoption process, they were granted the adoption via a Zoom call with through the DePelchin Children's Center. Thomas, 8, Carter, 8, David, 6, Gabrielle, 4 and Bryson, 2 now had a forever family."The kids have been through a lot but they're the sweetest. They're amazing — and resilient," Andi said.Being a parent to eight children is no easy task and Andi gives a lot of the credit to the support she receives from other foster parents. "The only reason I made it through all of this is because of the other foster moms and the support we have for each other," she said. "Honestly, I'm nothing special. If anything, it's the other moms who encouraged me."Andi says it feels like all eight siblings have been together their entire lives. "They love each other and they support each other and they look out for each other. They're so proud to be brothers and sisters."This article originally appeared on 7.14.20
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

Meet Pippa, the therapy dog changing lives at a Michigan high school
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www.upworthy.com

Meet Pippa, the therapy dog changing lives at a Michigan high school

When social worker Kati Loiselle strolls the halls of Bay City Central High School with Pippa, her four-year-old Golden Retriever, students can’t help but light up. Some pause to greet the dog with excitement, while others offer her a calm pat on the head. Pippa, trained to match the mood of those around her, adjusts her behavior accordingly, always offering just what each student seems to need. Pippa is more than just a cute face and a wagging tail, though. She’s a fully certified therapy dog who plays a vital role in improving the school’s emotional climate, helping students and staff navigate challenging moments. According to Loiselle, “I tell people she actually does my job better than I do.” Loiselle, a Licensed Master Social Worker with Bay City Public Schools, has been bringing Pippa to work for nearly three years, after realizing the immense benefits therapy dogs bring to the school environment. Pippa’s presence helps with everything from managing behavioral interventions to teaching kids social skills.Turning bad days around For Loiselle and the students, Pippa isn’t just a tool for emotional regulation—she’s a friend. “There’s a couple of kids who if they’re having a meltdown and she’s here, they walk them over here. They just say, ‘Pippa!’ And it just totally turns their day around,” Loiselle explained, per Route Bay City. “They just say, ‘Pippa!’ And it just totally turns their day around.” — Kati Loiselle The room Loiselle and Pippa work from is designed with comfort in mind: couches, bean bags, and plenty of dog toys and treats make it a welcoming space for both Pippa and students seeking a break from the pressures of school life. This cozy environment, coupled with Pippa’s natural ability to soothe, makes it a safe space where students can unwind or process their emotions. Teaching kids life skills through canine companionship Kati Loiselle and Pippa in the halls of Bay City Central High. Bay City Public Schools But beyond emotional support, Pippa is teaching kids valuable skills. Loiselle notes that when students talk about Pippa or even their own pets, it helps them build conversational skills. Pippa also mirrors the emotions of the students around her, which allows Loiselle to teach kids how to recognize and name their feelings. Loiselle uses the dog’s behavior to highlight emotions the students might not be aware of themselves. Pippa’s influence doesn’t stop at emotional and social development. Last year, Loiselle worked with students to help Pippa earn an American Kennel Club (AKC) certificate for novice tricks, adding to her list of talents. Students have taken ownership of teaching her new tricks, like ringing a bell or weaving through someone’s legs, which has helped them gain confidence in their own abilities. More than just a school dog There was even a heartwarming moment when a student asked to use Pippa for a Special Olympics pageant. Although Pippa didn’t perform her tricks on stage, the experience brought joy to the students and the school community. Therapy dogs like Pippa play an increasingly important role in schools and other institutions. Loiselle explained that universities are beginning to offer certificates in animal-assisted therapy, acknowledging the benefits therapy dogs bring to those in need (Route Bay City). Pippa’s presence is not just appreciated by the students. Loiselle jokes that the staff may benefit just as much from Pippa’s calming presence. “There’s a handful of staff members who if they’re having a bad day, they come down to see Pippa. After a few minutes, they go back to work,” she said to Midland Daily News. Every day is a good day for Pippa Pippa in her therapy room.Bay City Public Schools Pippa is just as thrilled to be at school each day as the students are to see her. Loiselle shared that Pippa's enthusiasm is contagious when they arrive in the morning. With one more year left before Pippa “graduates” alongside the senior class, her legacy of spreading joy and comfort at Bay City Central will undoubtedly endure long after. Whether it’s de-escalating a stressful situation, teaching a new trick, or brightening someone’s day, Pippa is proof of the powerful bond between humans and animals.
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