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Saturday, 10 September 2016

World Suicide Prevention Day - 10 September, 2016

The World Health Organization estimates that over 800,000 people die by suicide each year – that’s one person every 40 seconds. Up to 25 times as many again make a suicide attempt. The tragic ripple effect means that there are many, many more people who have been bereaved by suicide or have been close to someone who has tried to take his or her own life. And this is happening in spite of the fact that suicide is preventable. 'Connect, communicate, care' is the theme of the 2016 World Suicide Prevention Day. These three words are at the heart of suicide prevention.
Connect
Fostering connections with those who have lost a loved one to suicide or have been suicidal themselves is crucial to furthering suicide prevention efforts. Although every individual suicide is different, there are some common lessons to be learned. Those who have been on the brink of suicide themselves can help us understand the complex interplay of events and circumstances that led them to that point, and what saved them or helped them to choose a more life-affirming course of action. Those who have lost someone to suicide, or supported someone who was suicidal, can provide insights into how they moved forwards on their journey. The sheer numbers of people who have been affected by suicide would make this a formidable network.read more

What Is Acid Reflux Disease?

At the entrance to your stomach is a valve, which is a ring of muscle called the lower esophageal sphincter (LES). Normally, the LES closes as soon as food passes through it. If the LES doesn't close all the way or if it opens too often, acid produced by your stomach can move up into your esophagus. This can cause symptoms such as a burning chest paincalled heartburn. If acid reflux symptoms happen more than twice a week, you have acid reflux disease, also known as gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD).

What Causes Acid Reflux Disease?read more

Sunday, 4 September 2016

Wait-Incredible-picture-shows-toddler-chasing-cheetah-zoo-seems

An incredible picture appears to show a toddler chasing after a cheetah at a zoo - but it's not all as it seemsAn incredible picture appears to show a toddler chasing after a cheetah at a zoo - but it's not all as it seems. 
Nadya Chandler's heart almost skipped a beat when she first saw her photo as it appeared like her three-year-old niece had got inside the enclosure with the big cat at Paignton Zoo, Devon.
However the 25-year-old quickly realised the lighting had made it appear that Layla was running on the other side of the glass, when it was in fact her reflection.read more

Littersweet Symphony: Album For Cats Released

Cat listens to musicA musician has created an album of music for feline listeners, even though he is allergic to them.
David Teie, a scientist and cellist in the US National Symphony Orchestra, raised hundreds of thousands of dollars through crowdfunding and sold 10,000 copies of his record independently.
He was then offered a deal with Universal Music and his album Music For Cats is set for release on 28 October.
Mr Teie said that the music was created based on his scientific theory that cats appreciate music through the sounds they hear as kittens, such as their mother's purr or birds chirping.read more

Is Your Memory Normal?

older. So what's the first? Umm, I forgot! And actually, by the time you reach the end of this story, you may remember only a fraction of it. Not to worry, you're not alone.
Experts say that mild memory loss is perfectly normal -- especially as we age. That's right, if you sometimes forget simple things, you're not necessarily developing Alzheimer's disease. There is a gang of people walking around just like you who occasionally misplace their keys, have that deer-in-headlights look as they search for their cars in parking lots, and can't recall the name of one new person they met at their last office party -- yes, the one from last night. And there's a reason for those character-themed floors coupled with the happy-go-lucky music in Disney amusement park parking garages.
"If we have forgotten an appointment, we begin thinking, 'Uh oh, is this the first sign of Alzheimer's disease?' and we become much more conscious, and it gets kind of a disproportionate amount of attention when it really may be something quite benign," Stuart Zola, PhD, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Emory School of Medicine and director of Yerkes National Primate Facility in Atlanta tells WebMD.
Memory is the ability to normally recall the facts and events of our lives, and this takes place in three stages:read more
Dementia is a serious brain disorder that interferes with a person’s ability to carry out everyday tasks.
  • The key feature of dementia is a decline in cognitive functions. These are mental processes such as thinking, reasoning, learning, problem solving, memory, language, and speech.
  • Other features that occur frequently in dementia include changes in personality and behavior.
  • Generally, these symptoms are not considered dementia unless they have continued unabated for at least 6 months.
  • Dementia has many different causes. Some may be reversible, such as certain infections, drug intoxication, and liver diseases. Of the irreversible causes, the most common in older adults is Alzheimer's disease.
  • Although dementia is frequently linked to old age (“getting senile”), it is not a normal part of aging. Even children with certain degenerative brain disorders can develop dementia.read more

Heaven & Hell Heritage Project - Facebook

Heaven & Hell Heritage Project - Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/hlfheavenandhell/videos
Heaven & Hell Heritage Project. 5 likes · 5 talking about this. A Heritage Lottery Fund youth project by Seize the Moment exploring churches.

Great Fire of London website to mark 350th anniversary

A 120-metre long model of 17th-century London, which will be burned on the Thames on Sunday nightThe Museum of London has launched a Great Fire of London website to mark the 350th anniversary of the blaze, tracking the course of the fire that broke out in the small hours of 2 September 1666, and over four days tore the heart out of the medieval city.
The site is intended as a permanent resource for information on the fire, and brings together interactive maps as well as images and information from 11 partners, including the museum’s own collections, the Guildhall art gallery and the London Metropolitan Archives. read more

CANNIBAL SPIDERS in UK: New warning on ravenous arachnids that feast on flesh in YOUR home

Long-legs spider and a woman in a bathAs millions of people cower at the sight of huge, hairy spiders sprinting across the carpet looking for sex, an even creepier crawly is taking over our homes – a with lust for flesh.
Arachnophobes will be left scared out of their wits by the sight of cannibal daddy-longlegs spiders hunting for easy meals in toilets, bathrooms and even under our beds.
Only last week, the nation squirmed as videos of huge house spiders began to emerge on the web as perfect summer conditions created a bumper harvest of two scary species: Tegenaria Saeva and Tegenaria gigantea.read more

Missing Clyde the turtle returned to aquarium after appeal

Clyde the turtleA missing turtle called Clyde has been safely returned to his aquarium in north-west England after a nationwide appeal.
Clyde, a 20cm mud turtle, was taken from his tank at the Blue Planet aquarium in Ellesmere Port on Tuesday afternoon, Cheshire police said.
He was returned home on Wednesday after detectives circulated CCTV images of a woman accompanying a young boy who had apparently dived into Clyde’s tank. The boy was seen carrying something suspiciously turtle-like under a jumper.
Clyde’s keepers had warned that without proper care he could die.
Police said Clyde was returned to the aquarium by a group of people. No one had been arrested. “We are continuing with our inquiries,” a spokeswoman said. “Clyde seems to be safe and well.”
How and why Clyde was taken remains unclear. Before the turtle was returned, DS Rob Grantham said: “Our investigation has so far established that a young boy managed to get into the tank and remove the turtle. The boy was completely -read more

The Island with Bear Grylls under fire again after crocodile stabbed to death

Bear Grylls has once more come under fire, both by viewers and animal charities, after contestants on The Island with Bear Gryllskilled and consumed a crocodile.
The episode saw Made in Chelsea star Ollie Locke, encouraged by fellow contestant Karen Danczuk, jump on the back of the animal before stabbing it through the back of its neck; as part of the reality TV series which challenges celebrities to use their survival skills to endure two weeks on a remote island. 
Alan Knight, of International Animal Rescue, told The Sun about the incident, "I feel it is totally unacceptable to kill or abuse animals for entertainment." The charity spokesperson claimed the animal "suffered unncecessarily", as Locke would not have the right knowledge to kill the animal "humanely".-read more

Thin ice getting thinner

Levels of Arctic sea ice reached an all-time low this spring, according to data collected by scientists at the European Space Agency (ESA). 
The measurements are based on data collected by ESA’s CryoSat satellite and are consistent with what the agency has observed for the past three years. (See time lapse video below.)
Launched in 2010, CryoSat uses radar to measure the difference between the top height of the ice and the top height of water in cracks between the ice sheets. Scientists the use the data to calculate the thickness and volume of the ice.
“CryoSsat continues to provide clear evidence of diminishing Arctic sea ice,” Professor Andrew Shephard said in an address at the Living Planet Symposium in Edinburgh, Scotland.
Winter holds clues to summer ice amounts
Arctic sea ice, which floats on the ocean, unlike ice sheets on land, expands and contracts with the seasons.read more

hick hick sting

Image result for yellow jacket wasp ukbeware of the worker yellowjacket wasp  is coming from germany after finishing supplying nectar to their queen and now getting drunk on fermenting fruit.these wasps are bigger than the common wasp and sting nastier.wiki link info

Garden gang 'steal a second hedge just 30 miles away from their first night raid

Peter and Julie Vine, of Wrotham in Kent, spent £1,300 on a line of 127 shrubs to blot out road noise - but overnight all of their beloved trees were stolenA second couple have woken up to find their hedge dug up and stolen just 30 miles from the first incident of shrub theft.
Peter and Julie Vine, of Wrotham in Kent, spent £1,300 on a line of 127 shrubs to blot out road noise - but overnight all of their beloved trees were stolen.
Meanwhile over the weekend pensioners Anthony and Daphne Hawley, who live just 30 miles away in Copthorne, West Sussex, woke to find their hedge of 25 laurels worth £750 had also been snatched.read more

he Mars Simulation Project (MSP)

The Mars Simulation Project (MSP) is an open source java project simulating future missions of establishing human settlements on Mars.
You may ask, "in what ways?"
Have you ever been fascinated by reality TV shows in which how contestants survive each test? Some are natural-born team players even if they must compete against one another or must help. Some are loners by traits and have to work pass suspicion and mistrust to collaborate with others to accomplish mutual goals.read more

Bathers flee Spanish beach after 'shark' spotted

Tourists were ordered out of the water at a packed Costa del Sol beach after bathers said they had spotted a sharkT
ourists were ordered out of the water at a packed Costa del Sol beach after bathers said they had spotted a shark.
Holidaymakers raced to get back to the shoreline in scenes reminiscent of the hit film Jaws after the alert was raised.
Lifeguards on jet skis helped children on dinghies and from an inflatable water park near where the shark was spotted to safety as colleagues ran along the shoreline blowing their whistles and ordering swimmers to get out of the water.
Fuengirola beach, one of the most popular beaches on the Costa del Sol with British tourists, was closed for five hours while patrol boats searched for the fish.
The red flag was hoisted along nearly two miles of coastline.-read more

old tasks found .

found in austria were 2 giant tusks of a rae breed of million year old mammoth .

Man, 23, spends thousands on the world’s biggest Mr Men collection… and now plans to open a theme park

Mr Men CollectionTHIS is the man who’s splashed thousands of pounds on the world’s biggest Mr Men collection – and now he plans to open a Mr Men THEME PARK.
23-year-old Ben Daly has spent nearly two decades collecting anything and everything to do with the childhood classic – and now he’s got almost 3,000 items in his impressive collection.Ben and his parents, Kate and Jerry, have spent the best part of £20,000 on the collection over the years – and Kate has even taken out special insurance for it to the tune of £35,000.
Ben, who has autism and Asperger’s Syndrome, fell in love with Mr Men after mum Kate starting reading them to him when he was just a tot – and he’s been obsessed ever since.
Ben, from Eastbourne, East Sussex, explained: “Mum used to read me the books, as she had loved them as a child – she said they were the only thing she could draw easily!
“Since then I’ve been hooked.-read more

Where is the Small Tortoiseshell this summer?

Small Tortoiseshell on RudbeckiaGardeners are being asked to focus on their flowerbeds this Bank Holiday to look for one of the UK’s best-loved butterflies whose numbers appear to have plummeted this summer.
The beautiful Small Tortoiseshell is one of the most recognisable and widespread UK species and is a regular garden fixture in high summer.
But this year, numbers have been worryingly low as the cool spring and slow start to the summer appear to have taken their toll on the butterfly’s attempts to breed and feed.
Small Tortoiseshell sightings are significantly down across the UK and gardeners are being asked to look out for the butterfly by joining the Garden Butterfly Survey, sponsored by B&Q, to help build a picture of what is happening.
The Small Tortoiseshell has endured a tumultuous recent history. The butterfly, whose population has plummeted by 73% since the 1970s, had seen its numbers rise over the last few years and hopes were high that it was on the path to recovery.
But this summer’s poor showing could mean the Small Tortoiseshell is set for yet more years of decline.
Butterfly Conservation Head of Recording Richard Fox said: “We don’t understand what is causing the drastic long-term decline of this familiar and much-loved butterfly. Theories involve climate change, pollution and parasitic flies that kill the butterfly’s caterpillars, but we need more information.
“If you see Small Tortoiseshells or any other butterflies in your garden, the Garden Butterfly Survey -read more