Daily Archives: August 6, 2022

What we hope to learn about the Ohio State basketball team during Bahamas trip – Scarlet and Game

Posted: August 6, 2022 at 8:01 pm

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The Ohio State basketball team has had a pretty enjoyable week so far this week. Chris Holtmann and the rest of the coaching staff has been doing an excellent job landing recruits for the 2023 recruiting class. Now, the current Buckeye basketball team is in the Bahamas this weekend for a team vacation.

While in the Bahamas they will play in a pair of exhibition games against the Egyptian and Puerto Rican national teams. These exhibition games will be the first piece of action for this rebuilt Buckeye roster.

Chris Holtmann did announce that Justice Sueing and Seth Towns will not play in their exhibition games as they are still trying to get 100% healthy. With those two being out, that means this weekend will be a great opportunity to mix and match some different lineups and see who all plays well with each other.

There are a lot of uncertainties around this Ohio State basketball team heading into the 2022 season. We are going to learn a lot about this team while on their trip to the Bahamas. What are some of the things that we hope to find out about this team after this week of Buckeye basketball?

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WHAT’S NEW IN THE BAHAMAS IN AUGUST – PR Newswire

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NASSAU, Bahamas, Aug. 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Summertime festivities are in full swing in The Bahamas, where a variety of all-new experiences, celebrity performances and lively events across the islands await. Travelers should make sure to check out the many fun summer happenings and hot deals before planning their next trip to The Bahamas.

NEWSLynden Pindling International Airport Reports Strong Tourism Numbers This Summer With preliminary passenger numbers for summer stronger than what they were pre-pandemic in 2019, and in anticipation of busier months ahead, Nassau's Lynden Pindling International Airport encourages travellers to arrive 3 to 3.5 hours ahead of their international flight's scheduled departure time.

Check out the many fun summer happenings and hot deals before planning your next trip to The Bahamas!

Celebrate Bahamian Culture During the Goombay Summer FestivalsThe Bahamas' annual Goombay Summer Festivals will take place across 12 islandsincluding Andros, Long Island and Eleutherain August.

Go Glampingunder the Stars at Atlantis Paradise IslandAtlantis Paradise Island'snewMarine Life Camping Adventureallows guests to sleep in luxury tents at the beach while connecting with marine life on exclusive adventures like kayaking with dolphins andsnorkellingat twilight.

Celebrate Baha Mar's New Partnership with Bruno Mars' SelvaRey Rum Baha Mar will celebrate its new partnership with SelvaRey Rum, a new liquor brand owned by Bruno Mars, with a Labour Day weekend party at SLS Baha Mar from 1 4 September 2022. Tickets to see performances by Bruno Mars and Anderson .Paak are open for booking.

The Bahamas Is Listed In Travel + Leisure's 2022 "World's Best Awards" The Bahamas were well represented in Travel + Leisure's 2022 "World's Best Awards" with The Exumas, Harbour Island, and Eleuthera all making it onto the list of "25 Best Islands in the Caribbean, Bermuda and The Bahamas."

The Hurricane Hole Superyacht Marina Reopens After a complete reconstruction, Hurricane Hole Superyacht Marina on Paradise Island has officially reopened, featuring over 6,000 feet of slips, concrete floating docks and a 240-foot turning basin able to accommodate the most luxurious superyachts.

PROMOTIONS AND OFFERSFor a complete list of deals and discounted packages for The Bahamas, visitwww.bahamas.com/deals-packages.

Stay More and Save More at Peace & Plenty Resort Peace & Plenty Resort in The Exumas is offering guests 15% off their stayfor bookings of five nights or more. The offer is valid for travel through 30 September 2022.

Explore Eleuthera with The Cove Eleuthera Newly renovated resort The Cove Eleuthera is offering guests who book a three-night minimum stay a unique package that allows them to immerse themselves into the beauty of the island. The package includes a guided half-day tour of the island, a $200 resort credit and a chef-packed picnic lunch for two. Room rates apply.

ABOUT THE BAHAMASExplore all the islands have to offer atwww.bahamas.com or onFacebook,YouTube orInstagram to see why It's Better in The Bahamas.

PRESS INQUIRIESAnita Johnson-PattyBahamas Ministry of Tourism, Investments & Aviation[emailprotected]

Weber ShandwickPublic Relations[emailprotected]

SOURCE The Bahamas Ministry of Tourism, Investments & Aviation

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Kevin Keatts discusses NC States trip to the Bahamas – Backing The Pack

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NC State will lead college basketball in trips to the Bahamas this year with two. The Wolfpack will be down there for the Battle 4 Atlantis over Thanksgiving, and this weekend theyre heading down to play a couple of exhibition games.

Schools are allowed these summer trips every few years, though obviously its been a while since its been possible to take them. This is as good a time as any for the Pack to take advantage of extra practices and start getting this team full of newcomers more comfortable playing together.

Kevin Keatts met with the media to discuss the trip and some other things, including his squads injury situation. Unfortunately, Greg Gantt wont be able to play thanks to a finger injury which Keatts said is likely to keep the forward out for a month. Ernest Ross, meanwhile, is fully cleared to play but isnt quite 100% recovered from the ankle injury he suffered in January.

New big man Dusan Mahorcic wont be making the trip, though that doesnt appear to be injury-related.

The Wolfpack will play a team from the Bahamas as well as the Puerto Rican national team. Keatts isnt much worried about the results of those games as he is about just getting a feel for his groups strengths and weaknesses. Its a fact-finding mission, as he put it.

NC State will be in the Bahamas from the sixth until the 11th. I dont imagine there will be any way to watch the Pack play, short of being there in person.

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Bahamas to host Caribbean heads of govt meeting – Bahamas Tribune

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By LEANDRA ROLLE

Tribune Staff Reporter

lrolle@tribunemedia.net

THE Bahamas will host Caribbean Heads of Government at the Baha Mar resort later this month, Prime Minister Phillip Brave Davis announced yesterday.

The event is scheduled for August 16 and 17.

Prime Minister Davis said the meeting will focus specifically on climate change and allow for regional leaders to come together to lobby for change against the issue.

He also said it will be geared towards establishing a unified Caribbean response to better reflect common geographical and geopolitical issues facing regional states.

This meeting will position the Caribbean region to take control of our fate and present a unified position to the world at COP 27 which will take place in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt in November, Mr Davis said during a press conference at the Office of The Prime Minister yesterday.

The government of The Bahamas intends to establish the meeting as an annual event that will seek to have an institute as a regular meeting on the United Nations Framework and Climate Change Convention.

Ive said repeatedly that what happens in this region doesnt stay in this region. We must take the brains in ending our suffering and replace our position of vulnerability with that power.

It is past time to go on the offensive against the painful blows climate change has landed in the region, but we must be united in the fight and convince the world that for better or worse, we are in this together.

Mr Davis said he expects all countries in the region to participate, adding that he will also be making personal calls to invite Caribbean leaders to the event.

We hope for this to be an annual event, he also said. It might not be hosted by our countries always but it is important and I think that in garnering ourselves up for this fight, we need to have a unified voice in this region.

Since taking office last year, the Prime Minister has been among the leading voices with regards to climate change, often travelling to various countries to attend special conferences to speak about the issue.

He has repeatedly called for multilateral organisations to forgive those debts of small countries that are related to climate change, noting the consequences of natural disasters has added some $5bn to the countrys national debt in over the last several years.

Asked yesterday about the governments progress to advance discussions on the issue, Mr Davis said the country was gathering momentum in that regard.

According to Mr Davis, the conference is being sponsored by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

He said the government will only be responsible for providing security.

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DIANE PHILLIPS: Who really named The Bahamas? Was it Lucayans, not the Spanish and does it really mean what we think? – Bahamas Tribune

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FOR AS long as any of us can remember, we have believed what we have been tol that the Spanish who first discovered these islands in 1492 gave them their name, Bahama, meaning shallow sea.

Now along comes historian and author Commodore (Ret) Tellis Bethel and says, not so fast, these islands were named long before the Spanish arrived in the late 1400s. They were named by the indigenous Lucayan Indians who inhabited the Lucayan Archipelago from 700 AD or even earlier.

In his latest book, How The Bahamas and Turks and Caicos Islands Got Their Names (Inspire Publishing 2022), Commodore Bethel gives us six solid reasons for the conclusion, any one of which is enough to give credence to his argument. Here are two.

One of the most compelling reasons for the conclusion is that those with the extraordinarily rare opportunity to name a place they have discovered name the landmass, not the waters. To think of the waters instead of the place would be like calling New York City the Hudson River.

In fact, explains Bethel, what Italian navigator Christopher Columbus under Spanish authority called the territory they landed on Islands and Mainland of the Indies in the Ocean Sea. Why did they call it that? Because they believed they had landed in the spice islands of the East Indies.

History shows the tragedy of their epic mistake. It was not the Indies off Asia as Columbus thought, nor was it spices or gold the discoverers of the New World found, but cheap labour, plenty of it in the Taino and Lucayan people whom they rounded up and exported to other islands or carried back to Europe where they perished from disease and other causes, including distress.

With meticulous research and patience, Bethel poured through hundreds of documents and he is not alone in this finding references only to the Islands of the Ocean Sea off the Asian Mainland in terms of Europeans naming what we know as The Bahamas and Turks and Caicos Islands. Ocean Sea was so accepted as the name that when Isabella, Queen of Spain, wanted to reward Columbus he was given the title Admiral of the Ocean Sea.

So if the Spanish did not refer to the country as Bahama, but only as Isles of the Ocean Sea or Yas de los Lucayos, (Yas being short for Isles; also spelled Las Islas) where did the word come from?

Commodore Bethel cites a scholarly work on ancient languages of the Antilles by Julian Granberry and Gary Vescelius (deceased) published by the University of Alabama Press in 2004. The work traces the first reference to Bahama as meaning large upper middle land, with each of the individual islands in the Lucayan Islands having its own name long before contact with Europeans (like Habacoa for Abaco). Broken down into its smallest parts, the name Bahama is Ba, meaning big, great and large, ha means upper, and ma means middle. The word Grand was added later during European colonisation, but it was the large island in the northwestern Bahamas that first carried the Bahama name and that name was given by the Lucayans hundreds of years before Columbus ever set foot in the New World.

According to Bethel, what we now know as Grand Bahama was in the centre and often the crosshairs of the maritime world around the nation -- the vast marine banks, international shipping channels, major maritime catastrophes, Spanish treasure fleets, and billions of dollars in lost treasure near the island. In that sense, Grand Bahama played a pivotal role in the seafaring history of the archipelagic nation.

The second compelling reason to disavow the idea that the Spanish named The Bahamas for shallow sea is that the letter h in the middle of the word had largely vanished from the Spanish dictionary or vocabulary centuries earlier but was reintroduced by Spanish authorities before Columbus time. The letter j was not used interchangeably with the letter h during this period. The Spanish spelled indigenous words based on how they sounded as noted in Jumeto (a cay in the Ragged Island chain) and Guanahani, the island of Columbus first landfall. Pronunciation of the h and the j were very different in the two languages, soft in Lucayan, harsh in Spanish, whereas the letter h would have been soft in Spanish, making Bahamas a Taino- Lucayan, not Spanish, derivative.

Baja Mar does mean shallow sea, explains Commodore Bethel, and while it may seem a small distinction that The Bahamas takes its name from the Lucayan naming of one island, the island we now call Grand Bahama, it reinforces the importance of remembering the indigenous people of The Bahamas, the Lucayans.

Regardless of the Bahama names historical roots, it would be safe to say that what exists today is a country whose name is Lucayan origin but carries a Spanish meaning, (shallow sea) in the minds of some, the author writes.

Bahama and The Bahamas - Lucayan-Taino in origin, interpreted by some in the Spanish as shallow sea with an s added later during the English colonial era, its little wonder we are confused, the coincidence is a big as a coincidence gets.

All of this may not seem as important as todays headlines or tomorrows worries, but Commodore Bethel has good cause for wanting to get things right and pay homage to the indigenous people of The Bahamas.

His current position is head of the Security Forces Inspectorate and he is, like all of us, deeply disturbed by the violence in the country. He has seen what crime does, how it tears apart families, shakes confidence, destroys a culture that was once proud of being a warm, accepting and peace-loving people. If we remember our roots, he says, if we make them part of who we are today, if we have constant reminders of where we came from, we may have a better, more peaceful, path going forward.

Theres another interesting twist to the name of the indigenous people themselves. The word Lucayan means Island People.

Just as the Island People were on a quest for a better life through peaceful means, we have an inherent responsibility to make the world a more peaceful place in light of the Lucayan demise, he says.

That is also one of the reasons he has spent a decade campaigning for naming the waters the Lucayan Sea. He also reminds us that naming our waters will give us an identity of which we can be proud. A former pilot and diver, Commodore Bethel has probably sailed or flown over every square inch of The Bahamas in his long career with the Royal Bahamas Defense Force and it breaks his heart to think that the waters declared the most beautiful on earth from the vantage point of space have no identity of their own but are just a part of the vast Atlantic Ocean.

His campaign is gaining momentum. Lets hope this administration recognises the benefits that would instantly accrue from a distinct identity with visitors sailing the Lucayan Sea and locals fishing, swimming, snorkeling and just viewing what we know as our own special ocean, a place like none other, in a country named for an island in its midst by an island people who need to be remembered.

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Bahamas Chess Olympiad Open team roars back in Round 6 – EyeWitness News

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NASSAU, BAHAMAS The Bahamas Open Team trumped Seychelles in Round 6 winning three out offour games.

CM Kendrick Knowles, WCM Polina Kerelina, and Noah Albury all secured a win for the Open Team. The Bahamas Womens Team put up a valiant fight against Sudan but only WCM Daijah Johnson was able to secure a win in Round 6.

This Olympiad experience has been a challenging one but has also been a fun and learning experience, said Albury, Open Team.

He continued: Whether I win or lose I get to grow from the experience. My goal for the rest of the tournament is to win more games.

The 44th FIDE Chess Olympiad is an over-the-board team event. National Chess Federations competein classical games for gold medals, trophies, and the title of strongest chess nation in the world. Theevent consists of an 11-round Swiss tournament; each player from a national team plays againstanother player from the opposing national team.

Teams receive game points for winning or drawing games and match points for winning or drawing a match. Teams with the most match points for each section become the champions of their section, with a third award going for the team with the most points from both sections combined.

After taking a two-year hiatus from chess due to Covid, and adjusting to university life, being offered the opportunity to participate in the 44th Chess Olympiad in Chennai, India was a whirlwind of emotions for me, said Daijah Johnson, Womens Team.

She continued: After being gone for so long, my first two rounds started off a bit shaky, however, my game returned to what it once was for the preceding three rounds. After 6 rounds in all and having played 5 rounds, I won 3 games and lost 2 of them. My final win out of my three-win streak was honestly one of my favorites.

In my opinion, I played a good game from start to finish, and I truly felt like I was tapping back into the strength that I once had.

Yesterday served as a well-deserved rest day after six straight days of play. Tournament playresumes today, and Round 6 will see The Bahamas Open Team up against Barbados.

The Barbados Team comprises a highly rated International Master (IM) and FIDE Master (FM). The Bahamas Womens Team will face off against Guam. The Bahamas has a total of 17.5 points.

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Basketball Team Already Training To Face Canada And The Bahamas – Nation World News

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White Bay. The Argentine basketball team arrived in Bahia Blanca yesterday, where it will begin its preparations for the double date of the World Cup qualifiers, in which it will tour Canada in Victoria and the Bahamas in Mar del Plata in a new FIBA window.

The national team, led by Nestor Che Garca, later arrived on a regular flight to the Comandante Espora Civil Balloon Station, to focus on the Dow Center Sports Complex.

Its a new process in which I cant be in the last window. I was chatting with Faisundo and the boys. I think well try to play better from the back window, the toughest opponent against Canada and then at home We have to win because it will be a good game in Mar del Plata. So we have to start preparing ourselves to play together, connect and give it our all, said Laprovitola.

The team is composed of:: Fascundo Campazo, Nicolas Laprovitola (currently without club); (FC Barcelona); Jose Villadoza (Flamengo, Brazil); Leandro Bolmaro (Utah Jazz, USA); Gabriel Deck (Real Madrid); Mark Delia (Wolves of Lithuania); Nicolas Brusino (Gran Canaria, Spain); John Paul Wallet (BAXI Manresa, Spain); Juan Francisco Fernndez (Fuenlabrada, Spain); Patrick Guarino (Girona Basketball, Spain); Taivec Galizzi (Institute of Cordoba); Tomas Chapero (Saint Josep, Spain) and Maximo Fjellerup (Girona Basketball, Spain) and Carlos Delfino (Libertas Pesaro, Italy).

Training in Bahia Blanca, the national capital of Argentine basketball, will take place until Sunday and work will continue in Mar del Plata from Monday.

There will be 14 basketball players in the Albicelle squad, holding a cumulative record of 5 wins and one loss.

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Ministry responds to Bodybuilding and Fitness Federation – Bahamas Tribune

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THE Bahamas Bodybuilding and Fitness Federations inability to travel to regional competition has been a much debated topic of discussion recently and the Ministry of Youth, Sports and Culture sought to clarify the issues.

The 17-member team intended to travel to Barbados last weekend for the Central American and Caribbean Games but cited a lack of funding in the appropriate timeframe to successfully book all aspects of travel logistics.

In an official press release the MYSC responded: The BBFF was the first sports federation to receive its annual grant in the first week of this new budget period. Less than two weeks later, the Federation reached out to the Ministry seeking additional financial assistance of $36,000 for a travelling team, the organisation said in a press release.

Though an unexpected and unbudgeted expense, the Ministry made a particular provision of an additional $20,000.00 to defray more than 50 percent of this late request, effectively making a total contribution of $30,000.00 in July 2022.

In last weeks press conference, BBFF President Joel Stubbs said the organisation needed $36,000 to travel but came up short in their fundraising bid.

He added that his federation BFF received $20,000 from the Ministry of Youth, Sports and Culture but the funds were not cleared until noon on the day of travel.

It is a requirement for federations to plan their calendar of events so they can budget their expenses and make arrangements in a timely manner for travel, the release said.

Unfortunately, the BBFF found itself in a situation where they could not secure sufficient funding to get its team to the CAC Championships in Barbados. The Ministry wholeheartedly supports these athletes, which is why we provided the largest financial assistance ever given to their organisation.

BBFF secretary general Stephen Robinson refuted the MYSCs claims of his organisation not producing its plans in a timely manner for travel.

Firstly, the BBFF submitted its 2022 annual budget to the Ministry on April 7, specifically outlining a calendar of events and costs associated with each event. The document also stated the date and the location of the CAC Championships.

Within days of the document being submitted, additional correspondence were sent pleading for early release of the annual grant as the first show (Novice Championships) was planned for May 21.

The ministry acknowledged the request and stated that they would do its best to facilitate. Unfortunately the Ministry was unable to release funds and, as a result, The Novice Championship was cancelled.

The Northern Bahamas Championship in Freeport, Grand Bahama that was scheduled for June 28 also had to be postponed and rescheduled for July 2 due to insufficient funds in the Federations account.

Robinson said: This response is not meant to embarrass or disrespect the Ministry, but to clear the air and state openly that despite our communication, acts of transparency and adequate planning for our annual events, the lack of funding was the main reason why team Bahamas was unable to travel perform, hear the national anthem played or have our flag hoisted at the 49th edition of the CAC Games.

We are grateful as a federation for the Ministrys grant despite it being reduced from $15k to the sum of 10k by the previous administration.

We still await a quantifiable reason as to why the grant was reduced.

The BBFF has a rich tradition of successful performances at the CAC Championships.

In 2021, struggling through the COVID-19 pandemic, The Bahamas still managed to field an eight-member team to El Salvador, for the CACs.

The team won a total of nine medals - two gold, three silver and three bronze.

In this years competition, Barbados was declared the overall winner, Antigua and Barbuda was second and Mexico finished third.

During the live feed, we were able to inspect all competitors in the various categories while performing and was able to conclude with a fair assessment/judgment, Stubbs said in a release following the event.

Based on my expertise as a qualified international judge, I would like to unequivocally state without bias that, had Team Bahamas attended the championship, we would have stood tall and proud on the podium in just about all of the categories we had intended to take competitors in.

Our athletes would have won resoundingly, walking away with top honours in many of their respective categories.

Team Bahamas now looks ahead to other regional meets beginning in Miami, Florida, August 26-28.

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expert reaction to paper suggesting that cellular and tissue function can be restored in pigs after death – Science Media Centre

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August 3, 2022

A paper published in Nature suggests cellular recovery can occur in pigs after death.

Prof Martin Monti, Professor of Cognitive Psychology, University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), said:

Biological death is more like a cascade of dominoes, with one event triggering the next, than an instantaneous transition. What is ground-breaking about this technology is that this cascade can be halted in some organs if only the right cellular environment and metabolic parameters can be restored. The potential implications, if this will ever be successfully translated to humans, are huge: how many more lives could be saved through transplantation each year thanks to greater organ viability?

What this technology did not do, however, was restore any form of brain network activity and any associated function. Whether this is due to brain tissues having a faster death cascade than other organs or other factors remains unclear.

What is clear, however, is that this technology is not about magically reviving dead tissue. It is about expanding the window for restoring organ function by interrupting the death cascade.

Dr Anders Sandberg, Senior Research Fellow at the Future of Humanity Institute, University of Oxford, said:

When blood circulation stops, cells begin to die due to lack of oxygen, and chemical changes begin that harm tissues and organ function. At normal temperature, irreversible changes set in after a few minutes. What this paper shows is that significant improvements are possible in how long after death preservation methods to keep organs alive can be started (up to an hour), and that some of the cellular damage can be partially reversed.

While the experiment was done on pigs, helping humans is an obvious goal, and the most obvious impact is on organ donation. Currently, most organ donation happens after brain death: the brainstem has permanently ceased functioning, but the body is otherwise functional. These cases are rarer than circulatory death where the heart has irreversibly ceased functioning. However, in these cases, there will be a period of no circulation before artificial circulation can be instituted and organs are likely to be damaged. The system in the paper may help overcome this problem, making more transplants possible.

Ethically, this seems to beunproblematic good news. However, further in the future this kind of method may also make treatment directly after a stroke or major trauma more effective: by saving patients that would otherwise have died, it might reduce the number of available transplants. This may still be good news, but there is a risk that it mainly preventspeople from dying rather than making them recover. There is a challenging ethical issue in determiningwhen radical life support is just futile, and as technology advances we may find more ways of keeping bodies alive despite being unable to revive the person we actually careabout. Much work remainsto find criteria for when further treatment is futile, and alsoin how to get people back from the brink.

Right now, the ethically important aspect of this paper is that it shows that the changes happening after stopped circulation can be slowed or reversed with the right treatment: there is more hope for patients in this state. Death is not an instantaneous event but rather agradual process, and we have gained a further tool to nudge it. Once, lack of breathing was regarded as a sign of permanent death, until artificial breathing merely made it a dangerous state to be in. Later, other technologies have pushed back the point of no return, first to cardiac arrest, and later to brain death. OrganExshows that there is more medical wiggle room in cases with no circulation to fix things than previously looked possible: related methods may make new forms of surgery possible. Paradoxically, this makes the futility debate harder since there is a bit more hope. However, it is better to have more options to save lives than fewer, even if hard moral choices have tobe made.

Doubtless some readers will bring up cryonics, the practice of cooling down bodies to extremely low temperatures after death hasbeen declared in the hope that future medicine will be able to revive them and repair the damage from both the terminal cause and the suspension process. This is not what OrganExis about, but the technology will doubtless be of great interest to cryonics organisations as a way of reducing the damage while temperature is lowered. One of the largest practical hurdles is the often excessivetime between circulation stopping and damage-reducing suspension procedures starting: this technique may buy valuable time. The big question about whether future revival is going to be possible remains, but at least one can improve the present practice to boost the chances.

Dr Sam Parnia MD PhD, Associate Professor of Critical Care Medicine and Director of Critical Care and Resuscitation Research, New York University Grossman School of Medicine, said:

The press release is accurate but if anything underestimates the significance of these discoveries.

This is a truly remarkable and incredibly significant study. It demonstrates that after death, cells in mammalian organs (including humans) such as the brain do not die for many hours. This is well into the post-mortem period.

Consequently, by developing this system of organ preservation (using organ Ex in humans, which is entirely feasible), in the near future doctors will be able to provide novel treatments to preserve the organs post-mortem. This will enable access to many more organs for transplantation, which will lead to 1000s of lives saved every year.

Perhaps, as important is the fact that the OrganEx method can be used to preserve organs in people who have died, but in whom the underlying cause of death remains treatable. Today, this would include athletes who die suddenly from a heart defect, people who die from drowning, heart attacks or massive bleeding after trauma (such as car accidents). The OrganEx system can preserve such peoples organs and prevent brain damage for hours in people after death. This will provide time for doctors to fix the underlying condition (such as a blocked blood vessel in the heart that had led to a massive heart attack and death, or repair a torn blood vessel that had led to death from massive bleeding after trauma), restore organ function and bring such people back to life many hours after death. As such otherwise healthy people, including athletes who die, but in whom the cause of death is treatable at any given time can potentially be brought back to life, and if the cause of death is not treatable, then their organs can be preserved to give life to thousands of people every year.

Finally, this study demonstrates that our social convention regarding death, ie. as an absolute black and white end is not scientifically valid. By contrast, scientifically, death is a biological process that remains treatable and reversible for hours after it has occurred.

For decades millions of people have reported lucid consciousness and a detailed reevaluation of all their own actions, thoughts and intentions throughout life, when on the brink of death, or after crossing the threshold of death. These recalled experiences surrounding death or so called near death experiences were often been dismissed. However, this study and others suggest consciousness may not be annihilated at the time of death. This further reinforces the need to study consciousness and recalled experiences surrounding death in an unbiased scientific manner. Scientists can study what happens to the human mind and consciousness after death and provide answers to the age old question of what happens to us all after we die through the prism of science.

Cellular recovery after prolonged warm ischaemia of the whole body by David Andrijevic et al. was published in Nature at 16:00 UK time on Wednesday 3rd August 2022.

DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05016-1

Declared interests

Prof Martin Monti: No conflict of interest.

Dr Sam Parnia: I donthave any conflicts. However, I do conduct other research into methods to preserve the brain after cardiac arrest.

For all other experts, no reply to our request for DOIswas received.

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David Suzuki: Gaia theorist James Lovelock was always ahead of the times – The Georgia Straight

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Although most of the world knew James Lovelock as an independent scientist and originator of the Gaia hypothesis, he had a slightly different take. Im not a scientist really. Im an inventor or a mechanic. Its a different thing. The Gaia theory is just engineering written very large indeed, hetold theGuardianin 2020.

Regardless of labels, theres no denying the significant influence of Lovelock, whodied July 26on his 103rdbirthday. Although many of his discoveries and ideason subjects ranging from cryonics to chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) and climate to nuclear powerwere controversial, most gained acceptance as the world caught up.

Named for the Greek Earth goddess, hisGaia theorydeveloped with evolutionary biologist Lynn Margulis during the 1960s when he was working for NASAs moon and Mars programssaw the world with its natural cycles as a living, self-regulating organism. When one cycle is knocked out of equilibrium, others work to restore balance.

At the time, many prominent scientists ridiculed the hypothesis, but it has continued to gain acceptance because it helps to explain the chemical and physical balances in air, land, and water that make life possible. It underpins much of climate science. The idea isnt that Earth is conscious of these processes; just that the cycles work together to keep the planet healthy and able to support life.

Its similar to the ways in which many Indigenous Peoples worldwide view the living Earth. Everything is interconnected. He understood that human activities that destroy rainforests and reduce biodiversity, for example, hinder Gaias ability to minimize the impacts of runaway greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

Lovelock wasnt afraid to change his views in the face of evolving evidence, but he also refused to ever soften his message, something I learned from interviewing him several times.

His research revealed the effects of CFCs on the ozone layer, and he warned that burning fossil fuels was changing the climate before these issues were on most peoples radar. His electron-capture device, invented in the late 1960s, detected rising CFC levels in the atmosphereas well as pollutants like PCBs in air, soil, and waterand led to the discovery that this was causing ozone depletion. That eventually resulted in theMontreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer, adopted in 1987 by all countries, thus helping the ozone layer to recover and preventing millions of cases of skin and other cancers and eye cataracts.

Like many who clearly see the environmental predicaments weve created, Lovelock wasnt always optimistic, despite his knowledge of the many available and emerging solutions. I would say the biosphere and I are both in the last one percent or our lives, he told theGuardiantwo years ago.

Lovelock, who started out in medicine, even thought pandemics such as COVID-19 could be related to planetary self-regulation: I could easily make you a model and demonstrate that as the human population on the planet grew larger and larger, the probability of a virus evolving that would cut back the population is quite marked.

He said opposition to the Gaia hypothesis surprised him: Im wondering to what extent you can put that down to the coal and oil industries who fought against any kind of message that would be bad for them.

As for solutions to the climate crisis, he advocated for technologies that havent always been popular, including nuclear energy and Edward Tellers suggestion of a sunshade in a heliocentric orbit that would diffuse a few percent of sunlight from the Earth.

However, he cautioned, I dont think we should start messing about with the Gaia system until we know a hell of a lot more about it. It is beginning to look as if renewable energywind and solarif properly used, may be the answer to the energy problems of humanity.

James Lovelock continued to work, write, and speak until his final days. My main reason for not relaxing into contented retirement is that like most of you I am deeply concerned about the probability of massively harmful climate change and the need to do something about it now, he said.

Lovelock may have left Gaia, but the knowledge he left endures and is essential to understanding our place, predicament, and future.

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David Suzuki: Gaia theorist James Lovelock was always ahead of the times - The Georgia Straight

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