31 Aralık 2012 Pazartesi

Giant Bird's Killer Foot

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The Upland Moa (Megalapteryx didinus) was a species of Moa bird endemic to New Zealand. Ratites are flightless birds with a sternum without a keel. They also have a distinctive palate. It was the last moa species to become extinct, vanishing around 1500. It has been ascertained that this moa resided on the South Island only and in high-altitude beech forest
Preserved Megalapteryx foot.
Credit: Wikipedia
It was the last moa species to become extinct, vanishing around 1500. The Upland Moa was around 1.3 metres tall and weighing perhaps 25 kilos, according to nzbirds.com. It was one of the smallest of the moa species, the upland counterpart to the Little Bush Moa. As its name implies, it lived in the higher, cooler parts of the country, browsing in the high country forests, and in summer on the shrubs and herbs of the subalpine zone. As far as we know, the Upland Moa was unique to the South Island. From a mummified find, a foot, we know that, unlike other Moa, this one had feathers right down to its ankle — probably an adaptation to its cold home.

In 1878, H.L. Squires obtained near Queenstown the remains of a Moa with the skin still attached to the head and feet. Part of this was fowarded to the British Museum a few years afterwards and was the basis of the species Dinornis didinus of Owen. Two nearly complete skeletons are known, one found at Pokororo and now in the British Museum, and the other found near Cromwell and now preserved in the Dominion Museum, Wellington, according to nzbirds.com.File:Megalapteryx.pngCredit: Wikipedia


Sharpest Views Of Sunspots And Solar Granulation

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The highest ever resolution image of a sunspot, made with the New Solar Telescope at the Big Bear Solar Observatory.

 sunspot-big-bear
 Credit: BBSO
Sunspots appear as temporary darker regions on the visible surface of the Sun. They are caused by strong magnetic fields blocking the transfer of heat from the solar interior, allowing the region above to cool. Sunspots are characterised by a darker core or umbra surrounded by a lighter penumbra and are often larger than the Earth.
After a long period of relative calm and few sunspots, activity on the Sun is rising towards an expected peak sometime between 2012 and 2014. At the Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO) in California, astronomers are commissioning the New Solar Telescope (NST), an instrument with a mirror 1.6-m across.

The NST is already producing remarkable images like the one above, where details as small as 50 km across can be seen on the disk of the Sun, 150 million km away from the Earth, making it the sharpest ever image of a sunspot. The umbra, penumbra and surrounding granulation (marking convection cells) are all clearly visible.


Credit: Big Bear Solar Observatory

New observations of the solar granulation with the New Solar Telescope (NST) at the Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO) allowed a NJIT-Stanford research team to make the next step in understanding of the solar surface structure. A new complex world of very small granules became visible between normal solar granules. Mini-granules, as small as Maine, form a multi-fractal structure, similar to other systems in nature, such as coast lines, glaciers, earthquakes, stock market, etc. A key property of such systems is their unpredictable, burst-like behavior and jagged, irregular shape. Usually, occurrence of numerous independent random processes lead to the formation of a such system. Studying of such systems is beneficial for understanding both the universe and the social life.

The image shows solar granulation acquired with the NST on August 3, 2010 with overplotted contours of detected mini-granules (structures of equivalent diameter less than 600 km). The image size is 20500x19000 km. A map of USA is overplotted for comparison.

Until now it was thought that solar convection produces convection cells, visible on the solar surface as granules, of characteristic (dominant) spatial scale of about 1000km and a Gaussian (normal) distribution of granule sizes. In this case, the mechanism that produces granules is "programmed" to churn up convection cells of a typical size, without much freedom in size variation. Mini-granules do not display any characteristic ("dominant") scale, their size distribution is continuous and can be described by a decreasing power law (Gaussian distribution does not work any longer here) across all scales ranging from 140 to 2000 km. A majority (about 80%) of mini-granules are smaller than 600 km and about 50% are smaller than 300 km in diameter. This non-Gaussian distribution of sizes implies that a much more sophisticated mechanism, with much more degrees of freedom may be at work, where any very small fluctuation in density, pressure, velocity and magnetic fields may have significant impact and affect the resulting dynamics.

Scientist for long time saw difference in properties of small and large granules. However, low contrast and spatial resolution did not allow scientists to explore the entire range of structures. The NST provides images with contrast twice that of the previous data. It also enables us to see features on the solar surface as small as 80~km. These capabilities allowed us for the first time to accurately detect and measure very small convection cells. Their existence and properties were a subject of debate for long time, and now the NST solves the puzzle of the small (mini) granules.

Original paper titled "Detection of small-scale granular structures in the quiet sun with the New Solar Telescope" by V. I. Abramenko, V.B. Yurchyshyn, P.R. Goode (Big Bear Solar Observatory, NJIT) and I.N. Kitiashvili, A.G. Kosovichev (Stanford University) will be published by Astrophysical Journal Letters at the end of August, 2012

These results were published in Sept 2012 issue of Astrophysical Journal Letters (ADS | Arxiv)
Contacts and sources:Royal Astronomical Society.Big Bear Solar Observatory

TrackingPoint Precision Guided Firearms Demonstration

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The release of the official trailer video for TrackingPoint's Precision Guided Firearms:  this trailer includes footage shot during the company field testing in the snow at altitude hunting western game, on safari hunting plains game, and hunting hogs from helicopters right in our back yard in Texas.

 
Fact Sheet
After reviewing the online discussion and incoming emails stemming from the initial product videos, the company  put together a short fact sheet that addresses some of the most asked questions about TrackingPoint PGFs. They expect that it will help provide some insight into their technology prior to the official company, product, and website launch on 14 January 2013.



Shot Show

And finally if you're at SHOT Show, Trackingpoint is in booth 12451 and shooting live at SHOT Media Day on the 14th. Company president Jason  Schauble  welcomes you to stop by and meet the team. Contacts and sources:
Jason Schauble, President TrackingPoint

A Wanderer Dances The Dance Of Stars And Space

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The Hubble Space Telescope captured a spectacular image of the bright star-forming ring that surrounds the heart of the barred spiral galaxy NGC 1097. In this image, the larger-scale structure of the galaxy is barely visible: its comparatively dim spiral arms, which surround its heart in a loose embrace, reach out beyond the edges of this frame.
Image Credit: NASA/ESA/Hubble
This face-on galaxy, lying 45 million light-years away from Earth in the southern constellation of Fornax (The Furnace), is particularly attractive for astronomers. NGC 1097 is a Seyfert galaxy. Lurking at the very center of the galaxy, a supermassive black hole 100 million times the mass of our sun is gradually sucking in the matter around it. The area immediately around the black hole shines powerfully with radiation coming from the material falling in.

The distinctive ring around the black hole is bursting with new star formation due to an inflow of material toward the central bar of the galaxy. These star-forming regions are glowing brightly thanks to emission from clouds of ionized hydrogen. The ring is around 5000 light-years across, although the spiral arms of the galaxy extend tens of thousands of light-years beyond it.
Contacts and sources:NASA

By The Numbers: Comparing Spending By Gun Rights And Gun Control Interest Groups

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by Suevon Lee, ProPublica  

 Political spending by gun rights groups far outweighs that by gun control groups. Here, we break down just how wide the discrepancy is.

We define gun rights groups as non-profit organizations that lobby Congress and advocate on behalf of the ownership and use of firearms, and we define gun control groups as non-profit organizations that lobby Congress and advocate for gun control legislation. (Where relevant, we've also included donations from super PACs where gun control policy is a major focus.)\
File:Gun pyre in Uhuru Gardens, Nairobi.jpgCredit: WikipediaWe've honed in on the largest and most prominent of these special interest groups. See how their spending breaks downFederal Campaign Contributions$3.13 millionTotal amount of top campaign contributions by gun rights interest groups in 201296Percent of the above figure donated to Republicans$1.1 millionTotal campaign contributions by the National Rifle Association, the nation's largest gun rights group, in 201289Percent of the above figure donated to Republicans$4,036Total campaign contributions by gun control interest groups in 2012100Percent of the above figure donated to Democrats$581,394Largest-ever total of campaign contributions from the gun control lobby (in 2000)Independent Expenditures(defined by the Federal Election Commission as an advertisement "expressly advocating the election or defeat of a clearly identified candidate")$18.2 millionNRA's reported independent expenditures in the 2012 election cycle$11.4 millionHow much the NRA spent against all Democratic candidates in 2012$8.2 millionHow much the NRA spent against President Obama in 2012$0Reported independent expenditures in the 2012 election cycle by the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, the largest grassroots organization dedicated to gun control measures$3.3 millionAmount spent by Independence USA PAC, a super PAC founded by New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg in 2012 that focuses on issues of gun control, school reform and marriage equality, to help unseat former U.S. Rep. Joe Baca, R-Calif., known to be pro-gun rights$460,850Amount spent by Independence USA PAC this election to help unseat former U.S. Rep. Ann Marie Buerkle, R-N.Y., known to oppose restrictions on gun ownershipLobbying$3.8 millionAmount that gun rights groups on a whole spent lobbying Congress in 2012$2.2 millionAmount that the NRA spent lobbying Congress in 201266Number of congressional bills NRA lobbied on behalf of in 2012242Number of U.S. House members to whom NRA has given an "A" rating146Number of U.S. House members to whom NRA has given a "D" or "F" rating46Number of U.S. senators to whom NRA has given an "A" rating35Number of U.S. senators to whom NRA has given a "D" or "F" rating$180,000Amount that gun control groups on a whole spent lobbying Congress in 201283Percent of the above figure spent solely by Mayors Against Illegal Guns, a coalition of mayors founded in 2006 dedicated to promoting gun control initiatives$960,000Largest-ever amount the Brady Campaign spent on lobbying (in 2004)$30,000Amount the Brady Campaign spent lobbying Congress in 201236Number of congressional bills the Brady Campaign lobbied on behalf of in 2012$2.1 millionLargest-ever amount gun control groups on a whole spent lobbying Congress (in 2001)Revenue$228 millionNRA's total revenue in 2010 (most recent year available)$107 millionTotal amount NRA collected from membership dues and fees in 2010781Number of NRA employees in 2010125,000Number of NRA volunteers in 20104 millionCurrent estimated number of NRA members300,000Estimated membership of Gun Owners of America, another gun rights lobbying group$970,300Total compensation for NRA Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre in 2010$1.1 millionTotal compensation for NRA Executive Director of General Operations Kayne Robinson in 2010$19.8 million - $52.6 millionEstimated contribution range to NRA from outside corporations since 2005 through a corporate-giving program, per a report by the Violence Policy Center, a non-profit organization that advocates for stricter gun control74Percent of the above amount contributed by the firearms industry (manufacturers and sellers of guns and gun products)$11 billionEstimated revenue in 2012 by the gun and ammunitions industry$2.9 millionBrady Campaign's total revenue in 2010 (most recent year available)16Number of Brady Campaign employees in 2010500Number of Brady campaign volunteers in 2010$264,870Total compensation for Brady Campaign's then-president Paul Helmke in 2010$2.7 millionTotal revenue drawn by Mayors Against Illegal Guns Action Fund in 2010  

Contacts and sources:
by Suevon Lee, ProPublica

27 Aralık 2012 Perşembe

Test To Detect Pre-Menstrual Syndrome

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Even though there are many women who do not notice any special symptoms, there are some whose pre-menstrual disorders hamper their everyday lives: depressive mood, anxiety, excessive emotional sensitivity, fatigue, lack of concentration, headache, etc. Nevertheless, according to Leire Aperribai, PhD holder in Psychology from the UPV/EHU-University of the Basque Country, unified criteria for defining and diagnosing this disease have yet to be agreed on, “and so it is difficult to develop suitable interventions to treat women suffering from these symptoms."

Aperribai has sought to fill this gap through her PhD thesis. Her first task was to define the disorder, and to do this she took as her basis the 4th version of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders of the American Psychiatric Association.
Leire Aperribai, PhD holder in PsychologyCredit:  UPV/EHU-University of the Basque Country

This manual defines premenstrual dysphoric disorder and proposes criteria for diagnosing it. For example, it explains that the symptoms are sufficiently serious to cause clear damage, socially as well as in the workplace, and points out that this takes place during the luteal phase, in other words, during the period between ovulation and menstruation. The manual also explains that the symptoms disappear at the onset of menstruation, and for it to be regarded as a disorder, it is necessary to display at least 5 symptoms related to it, and one of them has to be among the following: depressive mood, feelings of desperation or self-rejection; clear internal anxiety, tension, a feeling of not being able to take any more; clear emotional lability, in other words, sadness, bursting into tears or manifestations of emotional over-sensitiveness towards rejection by other people; and irascibility or irritability.

In Aperribai’s view, the manual gives a special identity to premenstual dysphoric disorder, despite the fact that it is still classified among those described as "non-specific depressive disorders,” so it constitutes a firm proposal as it takes the main groups of symptoms into consideration. Aperribai also added that among the current classifications, this is the one that has been most welcomed.

Reliable and useful

So, taking as the starting point the definitions and criteria provided by the manual, Aperribai has produced a set of questions and has validated them through interviews given by women who are either working or studying on any of the UPV/EHU’s three campuses. And this way she has verified its reliability. In fact, and in accordance with current calculations, premenstrual dysphoric disorder is suffered by between 3% and 10% of the population; in the study done by Aperribai, by contrast, it has been found to affect 15%.

The author has explained that this difference is “normal because it concerns test screening. In other words, this is not a diagnostic tool, but a filter to distinguish those who suffer from the disorder from those who do not.” In this respect, she has stressed its usefulness, both in the area of research and in health centres. It takes 10 minutes or less to do the test and a lot of progress can be made with it. After that, diagnostic tests are carried out in positive cases and these can take up to two months.

The title of the thesis is “An Evaluation of Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder: building a screening tool” (Una evaluación del Trastorno Disfórico Premenstrual: construcción de una herramienta de screening). The test is currently being translated into Basque: “We’ve done one part, but there is still quite a way to go," she says.

Contacts and sources: Elhuyar Fundazioa

Tigers Roar Back: Great News for Big Cats in Key Areas

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The Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) announced yesterday significant progress for tigers in three key landscapes across the big cat’s range due to better law enforcement, protection of additional habitat, and strong government partnerships.

The successes are much-needed good news as tiger numbers worldwide continue to hover at all-time lows due to the combined threat of poaching, loss of prey, and habitat destruction. WCS estimates that only 3,200 tigers exist in the wild.

The news begins in southwestern India where WCS research and conservation efforts that began 25 years ago now show a major rebound of tigers in the Western Ghats region of Karnataka State. Over 600 individuals have been identified to date from camera trap photos during the last decade in this mountainous landscape. 
Camera Trap Image of tigers and cubs from Huai Kha Khaeng (HKK) Wildlife Sanctuary, Thailand.Camera Trap Image of tigers and cubs from Huai Kha Khaeng (HKK) Wildlife Sanctuary, Thailand.Credit: WCS
In Nagarahole and Bandipur National Parks, tigers have actually reached saturation levels, with surplus young tigers spilling out into forest-reserves and dispersing using secured forest corridors through a landscape that holds over a million human beings. The combination of strict government-led anti-poaching patrols, voluntary relocation of villages away from tiger habitats, and the vigilant local presence of WCS conservation partners watching over tigers has led to the rebound of big-cat populations and their prey. In newer tiger reserves including Bhadra and Kudremukh, numbers have increased by as much as 50 percent after years of neglect and chronic poaching were tackled.

In Thailand, WCS conservationists report a tiger comeback in Huai Kha Khaeng (HKK) Wildlife Sanctuary – a 2,700 square kilometer (1,042 square mile) protected area in the vast Western Forest Complex. WCS has worked closely with Thai authorities to beef up enforcement and anti-poaching patrols in the region. Last year, a notorious poaching ring was busted, and this year the gang leaders were given prison sentences of up to five years – the most severe punishments for wildlife poaching in Thailand’s history. Since their capture, there have been no known tiger or elephant poaching incidents in the park. Tiger numbers have been rising steadily in the park since 2007, with a record 50-plus tigers counted last year.

Meanwhile in Russia, government officials are drafting a new law that will make transport, sales, and possession of endangered animals a criminal offense rather than just a civil crime. This will close a loophole that currently allows poachers to claim they found endangered species like tigers already dead and thus avoid stiffer criminal penalties for poaching.

Russia is making progress in creating additional protected areas for tigers, too, declaring a new corridor called Central Ussuri Wildlife Refuge on October 18. The new refuge acts as a linkage between the Sikhote-Alin tiger population in Russia, which is the main population of Amur tigers, and some of the best tiger habitat in China’s Heilongjiang Province in the Wandashan Mountains. The creation of the new refuge ensures that tigers have the capacity to move across the international border between Russian and China in this region. WCS first identified this key corridor in 1999 after conducting joint wildlife surveys with Chinese and Russian scientists there.
WCS President and CEO Cristián Samper said: “Tigers are clearly fighting for their very existence, but it’s important to know that there is hope. Victories like these give us the resolve to continue to battle for these magnificent big cats. While the news about tigers has been bleak, these recent developments clearly show how smart strategies and strong partnerships are ensuring tigers are saved for centuries to come.”

John Robinson, WCS Executive Vice President of Conservation and Science said: “Saving tigers is clearly a team effort. Today’s victories show that through collaboration with governments, law enforcement, fellow conservationists, and local people, we can save these big cats across their range.” 
WCS scientist Ullas Karanth who has led these tiger recovery efforts, said: “I am confident that our conservation model of combining solid science with passionate local advocacy and effective government collaboration demonstrates practically how tigers can be brought back in emergent Asia.”
WCS is looking to replicate these successes in other parts of the tiger’s range. WCS has over 300 people working on the ground to conserve tigers in the most important tiger sites in seven of the ten remaining countries with tigers. We collaborate with local governments and partners to implement a suite of proven tiger conservation interventions, including improved law enforcement and enlarging and consolidating tiger habitat, that are tailored to each specific country and site.
The Wildlife Conservation Society saves wildlife and wild places worldwide. We do so through science, global conservation, education and the management of the world's largest system of urban wildlife parks, led by the flagship Bronx Zoo. Together these activities change attitudes towards nature and help people imagine wildlife and humans living in harmony. WCS is committed to this mission because it is essential to the integrity of life on Earth. Visit www.wcs.org.
Source: Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) 

Strange Behavior: New Study Exposes Living Cells To Synthetic Protein

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One approach to understanding components in living organisms is to attempt to create them artificially, using principles of chemistry, engineering and genetics. A suite of powerful techniques—collectively referred to as synthetic biology—have been used to produce self-replicating molecules, artificial pathways in living systems and organisms bearing synthetic genomes.

In a new twist, John Chaput, a researcher at Arizona State University’s Biodesign Institute and colleagues at the Department of Pharmacology, Midwestern University, Glendale, AZ have fabricated an artificial protein in the laboratory and examined the surprising ways living cells respond to it. 
John Chaput, a researcher at Arizona State University’s Biodesign Institute and colleagues at the Department of Pharmacology, Midwestern University, Glendale, AZ3549528248_966c5f8ff5_mCredit:  Arizona State University

“If you take a protein that was created in a test tube and put it inside a cell, does it still function,” Chaput asks. “Does the cell recognize it? Does the cell just chew it up and spit it out?” This unexplored area represents a new domain for synthetic biology and may ultimately lead to the development of novel therapeutic agents.

The research results, reported in the advanced online edition of the journal ACS Chemical Biology, describe a peculiar set of adaptations exhibited by Escherichia coli bacterial cells exposed to a synthetic protein, dubbed DX. Inside the cell, DX proteins bind with molecules of ATP, the energy source required by all biological entities.

“ATP is the energy currency of life,” Chaput says. The phosphodiester bonds of ATP contain the energy necessary to drive reactions in living systems, giving up their stored energy when these bonds are chemically cleaved. The depletion of available intracellular ATP by DX binding disrupts normal metabolic activity in the cells, preventing them from dividing, (though they continue to grow).

After exposure to DX, the normally spherical E. coli bacteria develop into elongated filaments. Within the filamentous bacteria, dense intracellular lipid structures act to partition the cell at regular intervals along its length (see figure 1). These unusual structures, which the authors call endoliposomes, are an unprecedented phenomenon in such cells.

“Somewhere along the line of this filamentation, other processes begin to happen that we haven’t fully understood at the genetic level, but we can see the results phenotypically,” Chaput says. “These dense lipid structures are forming at very regular regions along the filamented cell and it looks like it could be a defense mechanism, allowing the cell to compartmentalize itself.” This peculiar adaptation has never been observed in bacterial cells and appears unique for a single-celled organism.

Producing a synthetic protein like DX, which can mimic the elaborate folding characteristics of naturally occurring proteins and bind with a key metabolite like ATP is no easy task. As Chaput explains, a clever strategy known as mRNA display was used to produce, fine-tune and amplify synthetic proteins capable of binding ATP with high affinity and specificity, much as a naturally occurring ATP-binding protein would.

Figure 1: The depletion of ATP in cells of the bacterium Escherichia coli causes them to
transition to a filamentous state and form dense lipid structures known as endoliposomes.
The structures can be clearly observed in these transmission electron micrographs of increasing magnification.

Credit:  Arizona State University’s Biodesign Institute

First, large libraries of random sequence peptides are formed from the four nucleic acids making up DNA, with each strand measuring around 80 nucleotides in length. These sequences are then transcribed into RNA with the help of an enzyme—RNA polymerase. If a natural ribosome is then introduced, it attaches to the strand and reads the random sequence RNA as though it was a naturally-occurring RNA, generating a synthetic protein as it migrates along the strand. In this way, synthetic proteins based on random RNA sequences can be generated.

Exposing the batch of synthetic proteins to the target molecule and extracting those that bind can then select for ATP-binding proteins. But as Chaput explains, there’s a problem: “The big question is how do you recover that genetic information? You can’t reverse transcribe a protein back into DNA. You can’t PCR amplify a protein. So we have to do all these molecular biology tricks.”

The main trick involves an earlier step in the process. A molecular linker is chemically attached to the RNA templates, such that each RNA strand forms a bond with its newly translated protein. The mRNA-protein hybrids are exposed to selection targets (like ATP) over consecutive rounds of increasing stringency. After each round of selection, those library members that remain bound to the target are reverse-transcribed into cDNA (using their conveniently attached RNA messages), and then PCR amplified.

In the current study, E. coli cells exposed to DX transitioned into a filamentous form, which can occur naturally when such cells are subject to conditions of stress. The cells display low metabolic activity and limited cell division, presumably owing to their ATP-starved condition.

The study also examined the ability of E. coli to recover following DX exposure. The cells were found to enter a quiescent state known as viable but non-culturable (VBNC), meaning that they survived ATP sequestration and returned to their non-filamentous state after 48 hours, but lost their reproductive capacity. Further, this condition was difficult to reverse and seems to involve a fundamental reprogramming of the cell.

In an additional response to DX, the filamentous cells form previously undocumented structures, which the authors refer to as endoliposomes. These dense lipid concentrations, spanning the full width of the filamented E. coli, segment the cells into distinct compartments, giving the cells a stringbean-like appearance under the microscope.

The authors speculate that this adaptation may be an effort to maintain homeostasis in regions of the filamentous cell, which have essentially been walled off from the intrusion of ATP-depleting DX. They liken endoliposomes to the series of water-tight compartments found in submarines which are used to isolate damaged sections of the ship and speculate that DX-exposed cells are partitioning their genetic information into regions where it can be safely quarantined. Such self-compartmentalization is known to occur in some eukaryotic cells, but has not been previously observed in prokaryotes like E. coli.

The research indicates that there is still a great deal to learn about bacterial behavior and the repertoire of responses available when such cells encounter novel situations, such as an unfamiliar, synthetic protein. The study also notes that many infectious agents rely on a dormant state, (similar to the VBNC condition observed in the DX-exposed E. coli), to elude detection by antibiotics. A better understanding of the mechanisms driving this behavior could provide a new approach to targeting such pathogens.

The relative safety of E. coli as a model organism for study may provide a fruitful tool for more in-depth investigation of VBNC states in pathogenic organisms. Further, given ATP’s central importance for living organisms, its suppression may provide another avenue for combating disease. One example would be an engineered bacteriophage capable of delivering DX genes to pathogenic organisms.

In addition to his appointment at the Biodesign Institute, John Chaput is an associate professor in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, in the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences


Contacts and sources:
by Richard Harth
Arizona State University

Birdsong Study Pecks Theory That Music Is Uniquely Human

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A bird listening to birdsong may experience some of the same emotions as a human listening to music, suggests a new study on white-throated sparrows, published in Frontiers of Evolutionary Neuroscience.

“We found that the same neural reward system is activated in female birds in the breeding state that are listening to male birdsong, and in people listening to music that they like,” says Sarah Earp, who led the research as an undergraduate at Emory University.

For male birds listening to another male’s song, it was a different story: They had an amygdala response that looks similar to that of people when they hear discordant, unpleasant music.

The study, co-authored by Emory neuroscientist Donna Maney, is the first to compare neural responses of listeners in the long-standing debate over whether birdsong is music.

“Scientists since the time of Darwin have wondered whether birdsong and music may serve similar purposes, or have the same evolutionary precursors,” Earp notes. “But most attempts to compare the two have focused on the qualities of the sound themselves, such as melody and rhythm.”



Earp’s curiosity was sparked while an honors student at Emory, majoring in both neuroscience and music. She took “The Musical Brain” course developed by Paul Lennard, director of Emory’s Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology program, which brought in guest lecturers from the fields of neuroscience and music.

“During one class, the guest speaker was a composer and he said that he thought that birdsong is like music, but Dr. Lennard thought it was not,” Earp recalls. “It turned into this huge debate, and each of them seemed to define music differently. I thought it was interesting that you could take one question and have two conflicting answers that are both right, in a way, depending on your perspective and how you approach the question.”

Perhaps your brain would enjoy some music while reading this. Here's a sample of Earp's favorite: "Firebird."


As a senior last year, Earp received a grant from the Scholars Program for Interdisciplinary Neuroscience Research (SPINR), and a position in the lab of Maney, who uses songbirds as a model to study the neural basis of complex learned behavior.

When Earp proposed using the lab’s data to investigate the birdsong-music debate, Maney thought it was a great idea. “Birdsong is a signal,” Maney says. “And the definition of a signal is that it elicits a response in the receiver. Previous studies hadn’t approached the question from that angle, and it’s an important one.”

Earp reviewed studies that mapped human neural responses to music through brain imaging.

She also analyzed data from the Maney lab on white-throated sparrows. The lab maps brain responses in the birds by measuring Egr-1, part of a major biochemical pathway activated in cells that are responding to a stimulus.

The study used Egr-1 as a marker to map and quantify neural responses in the mesolimbic reward system in male and female white-throated sparrows listening to a male bird’s song. Some of the listening birds had been treated with hormones, to push them into the breeding state, while the control group had low levels of estradiol and testosterone.

During the non-breeding season, both sexes of sparrows use song to establish and maintain dominance in relationships. During the breeding season, however, a male singing to a female is almost certainly courting her, while a male singing to another male is challenging an interloper.

Justin Bieber, watch your back: A male white-throated sparrow belts out a tune.

Credit: Emory University

For the females in the breeding state every region of the mesolimbic reward pathway that has been reported to respond to music in humans, and that has a clear avian counterpart, responded to the male birdsong. Females in the non-breeding state, however, did not show a heightened response.

And the testosterone-treated males listening to another male sing showed an amygdala response, which may correlate to the amygdala response typical of humans listening to the kind of music used in the scary scenes of horror movies.

“The neural response to birdsong appears to depend on social context, which can be the case with humans as well,” Earp says. “Both birdsong and music elicit responses not only in brain regions associated directly with reward, but also in interconnected regions that are thought to regulate emotion. That suggests that they both may activate evolutionarily ancient mechanisms that are necessary for reproduction and survival.”

A major limitation of the study, Earp adds, is that many of the regions that respond to music in humans are cortical, and they do not have clear counterparts in birds. “Perhaps techniques will someday be developed to image neural responses in baleen whales, whose songs are both musical and learned, and whose brain anatomy is more easily compared with humans,” she says.

Earp, who played the viola in the Emory orchestra and graduated last May, is now a medical student at the Cleveland Clinic.

So what music makes her brain light up? “Stravinsky’s ‘Firebird’ suite,” Earp says.


Contacts and sources:
Beverly Clark
Emory University

Piranha Kin Wielded Dental Weaponry Even T. Rex Would Have Admired

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Taking into consideration its size, an ancient relative of piranhas weighing about 20 pounds delivered a bite with a force more fierce than prehistoric whale-eating sharks, the four-ton ocean-dwelling Dunkleosteus terrelli and – even – Tyrannosaurus rex.

Besides the force of the bite, Megapiranha paranensis appears to have had teeth capable of shearing through soft tissue the way today’s piranhas do, while also being able to pierce thick shells and crack armoring and bones, according to Stephanie Crofts, a University of Washington doctoral student in biology.

“If our calculations are correct, Megapiranha was probably a bone-crushing predator taking bites of anything and everything,” she said. Crofts is co-author of “Mega-Bites: Extreme jaw forces of living and extinct piranhas,” published Dec. 13 in the online journal Scientific Reports.


Skeleton of today’s black piranha. In the wild, one 2 ½ pound black piranha delivered a bite with a force 30 times its body weight.

Steve Huskey

The bite force of Megapiranha, which lived 10 million years ago, was extrapolated from the first field measurements of the biting force of Earth’s largest piranha today, Serrasalmus rhombeus or black piranha. One 2 ½ pound fish delivered a bite with a force of 320 newtons, or about 72 pounds, which is 30 times its body weight. The force is nearly three times greater than the bite force of an equivalent size American alligator.

Based on the 2 ½ pound piranha and other specimens tested in the wild, the scientists calculate that Megapiranha paranensis, which weighed approximately 22 pounds, could have had a bite force anywhere from 1,240 to 4,750 newtons – or 280 to 1,070 pounds – and possibly more.

Other scientists have previously estimated that T. rex slammed its jaws shut with 13,400 newtons, or 3,000 pounds of force, but that’s nowhere near 30 times its body weight.

Pound for pound, Megapiranha and black piranha have the most powerful bites among carnivorous fishes, living or extinct, the paper said. “For its relatively diminutive size, Megapiranha paranensis’ bite dwarfs other extinct mega-predators” including the enormous whale-eating Carcharodon megalodon and the monstrous Dunkleosteus terrelli, a four-ton armored fish.
Bite force quotients – considering both bite force and body size – compare the powerful bites of black piranha (S. rhombeus) and now-extinct Megapiranha (M. paranensis) with barracuda, blacktip shark (C. limbatus), bull shark (C. leucas), hammerhead shark (S. mokarran), the extinct 4-ton Dunkleosteus terrelli, great white shark (C caracharias) and the extinct whale-eating Carcharodon megalodon.


Justin Grubich, et al/Scientific Reports

The same was true when the scientists corrected for body size and made comparisons with today’s barracudas, hammerhead sharks and great white sharks.

“We were surprised that in spite of their long history and infamous reputations that no one had ever measured their bite forces,” said Justin Grubich, with the American University in Cairo, Egypt, and lead author of the paper. “When we finally started to get the data, we were blown away at how tremendously strong the bites were for these relatively little fish.”

As the paper says, “While anecdotes of piranha-infested waters skeletonizing hapless victims are generally hyperbole, the effectiveness of their bite is not.”

Just how does one measure the bite force of a piranha living in the wild? Well, you get out your rod and reel and go fishing. Land a specimen, then hang tight to the tail with one hand and use your other hand to support its belly while offering the fish a chance to bite the plates of a customized force gage.

“Piranhas are ornery little fish so they bit down as hard as they could,” Crofts said based on what she was told by those on the fishing expedition along tributaries of the Amazon River.

The black piranha’s bite is so powerful in part because of its massive jaw muscles and rope-like tendons that together account for 2 percent of the fish’s overall weight, the scientists found. Further the shape of their jaw has evolved into a powerful lever, “one of the highest jaw-closing mechanical advantages ever identified in fishes,” the paper said.
Stephanie CroftsU of Washington

Crofts’ main contribution involved analysis of how Megapiranha teeth handled stresses and how breakable the teeth might have been. The scientists were particularly interested because Megapiranha’s unusual teeth appear to do two things at the same time, one the piranha-like ability to shear soft tissues and the other an ability to bite like the nut-crushing pacu, piranha’s close relative.

Based on a fossilized jaw and three teeth, Crofts conducted a computer generated “finite element analysis” for the team.

“We found the Megapiranha teeth had the same maximum strength like you saw in regular piranha, but then the patterns of stress distribution within the tooth was also similar to fish able to eat hard-prey,” she said.

The actual diet remains a mystery, but during the time when Megapiranha lived a lot of potential prey species were gigantic.

“Thus it is reasonable to assume the food resources available to Megapiranha would likely have required jaw forces and dental weaponry capable of capturing and processing very large prey,” the paper says.

Other co-authors on the paper are Steve Huskey with Western Kentucky University, Guillermo Orti with George Washington University and Jorge Porto with the Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia.

Funding came from the National Geographic and the Field Museum of Natural History.



Contacts and sources:
Sandra Hines
University of Washington

20 Aralık 2012 Perşembe

Weather Report - December 11, 2012

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Winter is back!

After a round of rough weather on Monday morning, winter has finally returned to south Louisiana. Colder air filtering in from the north will result in morning lows in the 30°s through the remainder of the week. Highs will climb from the mid 50°s on Tuesday to the mid-upper 60°s by Friday. A disturbance passing through the area will likely keep a good deal of cloud cover around on Tuesday. However, sunshine should become more prevalent for the remainder of the workweek. It looks like our next chance of rain will come late Saturday into Sunday with the passage of a cool front. - Jay Grymes & Steve Caparotta / WAFB Storm Team

Weather Report - December 14, 2012

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Goodbye AM Freezes...Rain This Weekend

Friday morning will deliver another chilly start, but it looks like just about everyone will stay above freezing. Look for clouds to increase through the day, with highs climbing into the upper 60°s. The warming trend continues this weekend as our winds shift around to the south. Morning temps will range from the mid 50°s on Saturday to the lower 60°s on Sunday, with highs in the low-mid 70°s. We'll only mention a spotty shower in the Saturday forecast, but showers and t-storms are likely by Sunday as a cool front approaches. Look for some rain to linger into Monday morning before skies gradually clear and give way to slightly cooler weather for the mid portion of next week. - Steve Caparotta / WAFB Storm Team

Weather Report - December 17, 2012

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Still Some Strong Storms Expected Late Tonight

There remains a threat for severe weather late this evening into the predawn hours Monday for the Baton Rouge area. A cold front will slip through South Louisiana Monday morning ushering in stable and drier air ending rain coverage by the late morning hours. We stay dry and slightly cooler on Tuesday, but warmer weather returns quickly on Wednesday. A stronger cold front will arrive early Thursday with sct'd showers and t-storms. Much colder temperatures will be behind this front leading to cold morning starts Friday and Saturday with lows in the mid 30°s. The weather turns warmer again by late next weekend. - Jeff Morrow / WAFB Storm Team

Weather Report - December 18, 2012

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Cooler Mornings, Mild Afternoons

We'll see cooler morning starts for a couple of days in the wake of a front that pushed through on Monday, but afternoon temps will remain quite mild. Look for temps to start out in the low-mid 40°s on Tuesday, with highs climbing to near 70° under plenty of sunshine. Clouds increase and temperatures will be mild on Wednesday, but it looks like we'll stay dry during the daylight hours. However, showers and t-storms are expected to return late Wednesday night into Thursday morning in association with our next front. We'll continue to monitor trends, but a few strong storms can't be ruled out at this point. Skies should clear by Thursday afternoon and give way to much cooler weather. Lows will drop into the 30°s for Friday and Saturday mornings. The extended outlook points toward a potentially mild and wet Christmas, but we'll fine tune the details as the week progresses. - Jay Grymes & Steve Caparotta / WAFB Storm Team

Weather Report - December 20, 2012

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Gradual Clearing and Cooler Rest of Today

The rocky weather arrived just like we expected early Thursday. Wind gusts in Baton Rouge topped out at 49 mph at times. The good news is the stormy weather is now well to the east and we await clearing skies and a continuation of cold temperatures. Temperatures won't change much the rest of the day staying in the 50°s. A light freeze will be possible Friday and Saturday mornings thanks to the influx of colder air. We will see a warming trend start Saturday afternoon. Our next storm system regrettably arrives during the Christmas holiday. Sct'd showers and t-storms will be possible Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, and the day after. - Jeff Morrow / WAFB Storm Team

16 Aralık 2012 Pazar

Glommy Day's and aSociete.

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Turquoise Chain Necklace C/O aSociete/ Jeffrey Campbell Lita/ H&M Knit/ Brandy Melville Skirt
  
Being a full time student is time consuming, exhausting and can be very expensive. As a person 
who likes to stay on top of the latest fashion trends I know how costly it can get. This is why
I love the website aSociete! They are a small and affordable website created by college students
for college students who are also on a budget. They have brands from T-Squad to Betsey Johnson 
and all up to 50%-80% off, it's crazy! And even if your not a college student who doesn't like 
a good sale right? So I highly recommend everyone to go check out aSociete! 

Polka Dot's and Wedges.

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Steve Madden Wedge/ Laugh Cry Repeat skirt c/o aSociete / Vintage Polka-Dot Blouse
Ever since aSociete sent over this skirt, I can't seem take it off. I am seriously obsessed with it! I think it goes well with everything I own. When I'm feeling lazy, I just throw on this skirt, a knit sweater and I'm out the door. I can also wear it on a night out, it's so versatile! If you guys haven't already checked out their site I highly recommend you do!
I also did an interview with aSociete, check out the interview here.

I'll Wear my Sunnies Even In the Dark.

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Gifted Leopard Shorts/ Vintage Sunnies + Bag/ UO Corset/ Deena & Ozzy Booties
I've been really into Leopard print lately especially when I received these amazing Leopard Short! I think leopard print will never go out of style and I also think you can pull off wearing it during any season, just depends on how and what you wear it with. In another note, I wanted to thank all my new followers and thank you guys for all the great comments and support.

Sometimes I do it Just to do it like it's Nothing.

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H&M sweater/ UO platform/ Brandy Melville Bucket bag/ Cotton on Hat
I'm so overwhelmed with all the love on Instagram! I now have over 18,000 followers and you guys are the reason why I decided to open my very own Online Vintage Shop! I'm super excited for this and I really can't wait for all you guys to finally be able to browse and shop through it. I will be selling things you guys have asked for, meaning some items will be vintage(used) and some will be brand new. Either way, I'm super excited and will definitely keep you guys updated.

Out of the 70's.

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One Sleeve Dress c/o SugarLips / Vintage Bag & Sunnies / Jessica Simpson Dany
The first time I saw this dress it totally reminded me of the 70's and I think that's why I immanently fell in love with it! I'm deeply oblessed with that era and their fashion. Every time I watch movies and tv shows inspired by the 70's such as, "That 70's show" and "Boogie Nights" I drool over their clothes. Flair Jens, floral prints and big sun glasses, big hair and of course a lot of printed maxi dresses. Get this amazing dress over at sugarlips.com!

12 Aralık 2012 Çarşamba

I'll Wear my Sunnies Even In the Dark.

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Gifted Leopard Shorts/ Vintage Sunnies + Bag/ UO Corset/ Deena & Ozzy Booties
I've been really into Leopard print lately especially when I received these amazing Leopard Short! I think leopard print will never go out of style and I also think you can pull off wearing it during any season, just depends on how and what you wear it with. In another note, I wanted to thank all my new followers and thank you guys for all the great comments and support.

Sometimes I do it Just to do it like it's Nothing.

To contact us Click HERE
H&M sweater/ UO platform/ Brandy Melville Bucket bag/ Cotton on Hat
I'm so overwhelmed with all the love on Instagram! I now have over 18,000 followers and you guys are the reason why I decided to open my very own Online Vintage Shop! I'm super excited for this and I really can't wait for all you guys to finally be able to browse and shop through it. I will be selling things you guys have asked for, meaning some items will be vintage(used) and some will be brand new. Either way, I'm super excited and will definitely keep you guys updated.

Out of the 70's.

To contact us Click HERE
One Sleeve Dress c/o SugarLips / Vintage Bag & Sunnies / Jessica Simpson Dany
The first time I saw this dress it totally reminded me of the 70's and I think that's why I immanently fell in love with it! I'm deeply oblessed with that era and their fashion. Every time I watch movies and tv shows inspired by the 70's such as, "That 70's show" and "Boogie Nights" I drool over their clothes. Flair Jens, floral prints and big sun glasses, big hair and of course a lot of printed maxi dresses. Get this amazing dress over at sugarlips.com!

Falling into love with fall.

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Bustier c/o Savous / LunaVintage Skirt / Lace Up Booties c/o JoaCloset / Aztec Cardigan c/o ChicwishNecklaces c/o Alimonada
Finally, it feels like fall in LA! Can you tell by the leaves on the floor? Everyone, always asks me what I wear during the colder whether & this outfit is the perfect example! I hate jeans with a passion, therefore I rather wear maxi skirts, leggings & anything else that isn't a pair of jeans! Now, my current obsessions are these amazing lace up booties from joacloset.com, this leatherette bustier from savous.com & this tribal cardigan from chicwish.com! It's crazy, I wasn't planning on wearing them all in one outfit but it so happen that I loved the way they looked together!  I hope everyone is having an amazing week so far! Talk to you guys next time :)


Bull Skulls & Horns.

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Bull Skull Crop + Double Slit Maxi c/o Dena Venable / Vintage Belt / Cotton On Hat
I can't get enough of this Bull Skull crop top! I love the fit & I'm definitely loving this color for fall. I recently came across this unbelievable talented designer from Miami. I discovered her online shop via Instagram & I can't get enough of her designs! You definitely need to check out her website (http://denavenable.com) to understand what I mean. You'll be drooling over everything.

11 Aralık 2012 Salı

Our Weekend in May in the Mountains

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"'Don't banish me then bid me home,then tell me where I came undone,Don't harbor love likes its all your ownThen linger over what you've done,You'll sink underneath the weight when you'retrying to carry way too much"
Powderfinger, Drifting Further Away...


I think I am ready to tell some of the stories now, now that I can predict the ending, now that I am a bit more me again... Now that there maybe no one left listening.

Too much truth to bare in print all at once, that I had abandoned this place and his face, with all its honesty for the fake smiles and shallow chatter of the real world and some grand adventures...
I'm better with the truth, so here I am. Typing in front of an open window, a drizzly night breeze breathing in against my skin still sticky from the salt of the sea and another evening of swimming under the moon, daring her depths to keep me. 

She wont. 

An independent creature, ever changing and as afraid of commitment as any soul I've ever loved on land, she always gives me back to the beach and the sand and the din of the cars passing on the freeway.....

Always.
So lets start here...

We drove. 

From salty coast to mountain top in about three hours, we chatted politely about the weather and the changing landscape, marveling at the openness that reminded us both of our original homes, breathing in the relief of nature and a new place...

 (the neighborhood)

We arrived at our cabin that I had picked after many nights of scouring vacation websites for places that were far and away from anything but trees and sky... At 7000 feet elevation and a few miles off the main roads... I found it...

(Our View from the Deck)


(Our little cabin, there was another bedroom, a loft and a bathroom behind me)
We arrived in the darkness and gingerly walked down stone steps with bags of groceries and hiking clothes, dropping everything inside the door and wandering back outside to take in the view. A hot tub on a deck over looking nothing and everything with only trees, stars and the distant glow of L.A way off on the horizon...
He was so excited to see this place, new to both of us, and I was excited to be there with him. I made us pizza, and we drank a bottle of wine while we watched a movie that was so sad and disturbing that it haunted me throughout the night while he slept peacefully...
The next day we went hiking. There was an awkwardness between us that I was not accustom too.. the making of polite conversations as we climbed our way though trees and trails, taking in the view and photographing everything. He spoke of his life back home, old girl friends and family stories and I listened to each detail, inserting an opinion or comment whenever appropriate. It was hot, even at that altitude, but the canopy of trees provided us with enough shade that I escaped with only minor sun burns...



Back at our cabin I made lunch while he gathered wood for an evening fire and we debated on whether or not to take the mushrooms that we had bought especially for this occasion, for our time away from other people, computers and phone calls... I cut up pineapples and oranges and we decided to do it. A commitment to the rest of that day that I knew I was making and perhaps the only one that would ever be made between us... 
We sat on the deck waiting for the mushrooms to help us melt away and into the landscape and I relaxed.  I watched him looking out over the mountain side, breathed in the gratitude and watched as the trees began breathing with him... 
I smiled hard. Suddenly aware that I was tripping and unsure of how to act around him, I couldn't contain my laughter...

He smiled back and I knew he was there with me...

We watched an entire day happen in front of us. 

It was beautiful and sad as I had the overwhelming understanding that I should keep my distance, that rules applied that normally did not. That I had to be careful of each word I chose to speak, that I shouldn't touch him, as time flew past us and we stood still. 

I was, even more than usual, acutely aware of the time. Our time in the day, on the mountain, in that season, in each others lives. 

It became our undoing. I became our undoing...

Its a familiar story in new surroundings.  A new face and a new place but the same me, sober or faded, I will hold my heart to the flame till its snuffed out and I am burned...

We watched the stars in shooting through the blackness of the night sky, marveled in the magic and simplicity. We drank, him in the hot tub, me wrapped in blankets leaning on the railing, eyes always looking upward. It hurt to look at him and he could tell. 
With no street lights the night consumed us. I could make out his shape by the glow of his cigarette, which made me worry about forest fires and lung cancer, but even in my altered state I knew better than to worry out loud...
All I wanted to do was touch him. 

We were safe and away from the people and problems that made real life complicated. Clean air scented with pine and the rustle of leaves under squirrel feet. If we couldn't be what we are up there, I was forced to look at the truth...He wont be able to be us anywhere, ever...

Our conversation slipped from serious to absurd and back to quiet... I could feel our time slipping away and I could feel his carelessness...and just how much I didn't know him...

He would occasionally look at me with compassionate eyes, understanding that I was hurting and he was at its cause... but for the most part our eyes were looking up, watching the night go by.
I willed time to slow and it seemed to obey and we sat still in a mutual hallucination that made us feel like magic...
Music poured from his tiny iphone speakers and reminded me of just how alike we are, that we feel all  the same things and only our opposite reactions to just about everything, made us different. That far swinging pendulum is what keeps us from completely understanding each other... Its what keeps him wanting to try but unable to actually do so...

We were alive and flawed and messy...

Beautiful.

The next morning we were quiet. Packed our things and left our retreat...

We shopped in the little mountain town and he bought me lunch. It was relaxed and beautiful and he thanked me for showing him this hideaway and I thanked him for letting me... I felt like we mattered for a moment before we headed back down to earth...

Three hours in his car, quiet. Listening to an obscure radio station about green living and aquaculture, I watched him nod in agreement to everything the voice in the speakers was saying as I massaged the hand that wasn't on the steering wheel...

We arrived at my house, my brother was visiting from L.A so he came in to see my family...

They exchanged pleasantries like casual acquaintances and he left without really saying "goodbye" so I followed him out the door to grab the last bag from his car...

We hugged and I let go...