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Category Archives: Transhuman News

DNA verdict on skeleton: It's King Richard III

Posted: February 6, 2013 at 1:48 am

The bones of King Richard III have been found in England. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

Experts say DNA analysis supports their claim that the bones dug up last year under a parking lot in the English city of Leicester are the last mortal remains of England's King Richard III.

"It's the academic conclusion of the University of Leicester that beyond reasonable doubt the individual exhumed at Greyfriars in September 2012 is indeed Richard III, the last Plantagenet king of England," Richard Buckley, the project's lead archaeologist, said during a Monday news briefing in Leicester.

The project used 21st-century forensic science to solve a 500-year-old mystery surrounding one of William Shakespeare's best-known villains. Shakespeare's play, "Richard III," made the king out to be a scheming monster who killed children to get to the English throne. The bard gave Richard III dramatic lines that are still evoked today, ranging from "the winter of our discontent" to "A horse! A horse! My kingdom for a horse!"

In real life, Richard III's battlefield death in 1485 marked the end of England's Wars of the Roses, a decades-long conflict between the houses of York and Lancaster. Tradition held that he was buried in the choir of Leicester's Greyfriars Church, but the precise location of his remains was lost in the mists of time. Some even speculated that Richard's bones were thrown into the River Soar during Henry VIII's reign.

It was only in the past few years that archaeologists have been able to zero in on the location of the Greyfriars site again. Last year, a team led by the University of Leicester excavated a city parking lot and found a wealth of intriguing evidence including a skeleton with a battle-scarred skullanda spine that was curved due to scoliosis. There was no evidence of a coffin, a shroud or clothing that was buried with the body.

All those clues suggested that the skeleton could have been that of the historical Richard III, but to firm up the connection, scientists put the bones through genetic tests, radiocarbon dating and more detailed osteological analysis.

"The skull was in good condition, although fragile, and was able to give us detailed information about this individual," University of Leicester archaeologist Jo Appleby reported Sunday in a news release. During Monday's news briefing, Appleby said experts identified 10 injuries to the bones, including eight wounds to the skull and "postmortem humiliation injuries." Such wounds are "highly consistent" with the accounts of Richard III's death, she said.

"Historical sources tell us that Richard's body was stripped," hacked and put on public display after the battle, Appleby noted.

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DNA verdict on skeleton: It's King Richard III

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Horse DNA found in burgers at second major Irish plant

Posted: at 1:47 am

DUBLIN (Reuters) - Burgers containing horse DNA have been discovered at a second major plant in Ireland, the country's agriculture department said on Monday, again pointing the finger at Poland as the country of origin for the raw materials.

Food companies such as Tesco and Burger King last month found that beef products supplied by an Irish firm contained horse DNA, a scandal that has hit retailers with a wave of bad publicity and left Ireland's 2 billion euro ($2.7 billion) beef industry reeling.

Results of tests on a Polish meat ingredient at Ireland's Rangeland Foods, a supplier of frozen burgers to restaurants, caterers and pubs including local fast food chain Supermac's, contained 75 percent horse DNA, the agriculture department said in a statement.

"This isn't a huge surprise, it's another depressing saga that has put Irish food in the headlines for all the wrong reasons," Irish Agriculture Minister Simon Coveney told national broadcaster RTE.

"It's not a surprise to me because this is the same product that has been going into Silvercrest," he said, referring to the plant run by Ireland's most powerful beef baron Larry Goodman, the first whose burgers were found to contain horsemeat.

Coveney's department said Rangeland has suspended production pending the outcome of an investigation and the company has indicated that none of the products, which were imported through a meat trader based in Ireland, had entered the food chain.

Rangeland, based in the northern county of Monaghan, exports burgers to Britain, Sweden, Spain, Belgium, the Netherlands, Greece and Cyprus. Coveney said the product containing the horse DNA was destined for the catering industry outside Ireland.

LEGAL ACTION

Initial tests on burgers produced by another Irish company, Liffey Meats, also tested positive for low traces of horse DNA, although further tests came back clear.

The minister said the only two other burger manufacturers in the country had both confirmed they have not used any Polish products, and that their products are 100 percent Irish sourced.

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Horse DNA found in burgers at second major Irish plant

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GSC 14 Talk by Jonathan Coddington – The Global Genome Initiative – Video

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GSC 14 Talk by Jonathan Coddington - The Global Genome Initiative

By: MediomixMedia

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GSC 14 Talk by Jonathan Coddington - The Global Genome Initiative - Video

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NM, Korean researchers map chile pepper genome

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Posted at: 02/05/2013 2:53 PM By: The Associated Press

LAS CRUCES, N.M. (AP) - Researchers in New Mexico and South Korea say they have mapped the chile pepper genome, a development that could speed efforts to breed new, improved peppers.

Researchers from New Mexico State University's Chile Pepper Institute and Seoul National University announced Tuesday that they have completed a high-resolution draft of the chile genome.

The genome map signals where genes that underlie certain traits are located. Researchers say the data will provide the tools for how to breed desired traits into pepper plants.

The head of the Chile Pepper Institute, Paul Bosland, says possibilities include plants that would use less water, resist pests and diseases and adapt to climate change.

NMSU researchers plan to use the map to investigate disease resistance to chile wilt, one of the leading problems for growers in New Mexico and abroad.

(Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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NM, Korean researchers map chile pepper genome

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Atopic dermatitis (Eczema) Part 1 – Video

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Atopic dermatitis (Eczema) Part 1

By: acng

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Atopic dermatitis (Eczema) Part 1 - Video

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Naturally clearing acne, and eczema – Video

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Naturally clearing acne, and eczema
The truth about Naked Juice : http://www.youtube.com David "the skin king": http://www.youtube.com You can also get all these organic products from amazon, or your closes health food store. Good Luck.

By: queenjamerica

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Naturally clearing acne, and eczema - Video

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How I Treat Dry Skin and Eczema – Video

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How I Treat Dry Skin and Eczema

By: CreateYourWorld1111

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How I Treat Dry Skin and Eczema - Video

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Natural Psoriasis Protocol – Carley Simandl – Video

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Natural Psoriasis Protocol - Carley Simandl
This psoriasis protocol entails both internal solutions to common deficiencies as well as a thorough list of topical approaches to explore to minimize symptoms. Several effective supplements are detailed for this skin ailment with whole food recommendations to balance common deficiencies linked to psoriasis. For more information please visit: http://www.thehealthandbeautyworld.com

By: Carley Simandl

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Natural Psoriasis Protocol - Carley Simandl - Video

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Politically Incorrect with Tom Christiano, FEB 5, 2013 – Video

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Politically Incorrect with Tom Christiano, FEB 5, 2013
Politically Incorrect Show with Roland Van Liew (Selectman TM Rep candidate), Henry Parlee (Planning Bd. candidate), Chris Garrahan Pat Magnell (Town Meeting Rep Candidates), and Show host Tom Christiano.

By: Tom Christiano

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Politically Incorrect with Tom Christiano, FEB 5, 2013 - Video

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Book News: Myanmar Celebrates As Censorship Recedes; And Oh Those Seussian Hats

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A sea of Seuss hats at an event at the Library of Congress in 2010.

A sea of Seuss hats at an event at the Library of Congress in 2010.

The daily lowdown on books, publishing, and the occasional author behaving badly.

Myanmar pro-Democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi presided over the country's first international literary festival over the weekend. The Irrawaddy Literary Festival in Rangoon featured such international authors as Vikram Seth and William Dalrymple, along with around 80 Myanmarese writers, most of whom have not been translated into English. The festival comes as Myanmar (also known as Burma) begins to relax its censorship laws.

"All over Dr. Seuss's beloved children's books, his characters sport distinctive, colorful headwear unless they are the kinds of creatures that have it sprouting naturally from their heads in tufted, multitiered and majestically flowing formations." The New York Times, in honor of an exhibit of Seussian headgear opening today at the New York Public Library.

NFL players re-imagined as Dickens characters, from McSweeney's: Otis Grigsby "maintains a cheerful outlook on life despite being much afflicted by gout, baldness, and an old harpoon injury."

In a profile of the French spy novelist Gerard de Villiers, New York Times writer and Middle East expert Robert F. Worth makes the surprising assertion that the Lockerbie bombing was carried out by Iran and not by Libya, and quotes a CIA official who says "the best intelligence" points to the Iranians. This has been something of an unconfirmed conspiracy theory for years.

Jared Diamond, the popular anthropologist with an endearingly apparent comb-over and a tendency toward overgeneralization, is in trouble with the indigenous rights group Survival International because of his new book The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn from Traditional Societies? Director Stephen Corry wrote, "Describing tribal peoples as more violent than industrialized societies sounds much like the arguments put forward by missionaries, explorers and colonial governments from the 16th century onward."

Ernest Hemingway's garden gate is up for auction.

The Most Important Books Coming Out This Week:

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Book News: Myanmar Celebrates As Censorship Recedes; And Oh Those Seussian Hats

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