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1276
 
 

Humans' exposure to high temperature burn injuries may have played an important role in our evolutionary development, shaping how our bodies heal, fight infection, and sometimes fail under extreme injury, according to new research.


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Should we protect an emblematic species if it may come at the cost of another one—particularly in ecosystems that are still recovering from human impacts? This is the conservation dilemma facing Monte Leon National Park, on the Patagonian coast in Argentina.


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This article was originally published by KOSU, an independent news service based in Oklahoma.

Thomas Pablo
KOSU

Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt reaffirmed calls to limit tribal sovereignty during his final State of the State address on Monday, dismaying tribal leaders in attendance.

Stitt said Oklahoma’s criminal and taxation laws should apply to every Oklahoman without exception, giving the state government sole sovereignty.

“Many of us in this room have decried the DEI programs of the Biden administration yet stand quietly by when some say an Indian should be subject to a different set of laws,” Stitt said. “We either believe in equal rights for all or we don’t, and it’s time to choose.”

Tribal leaders respond

Following the address, Choctaw Nation Chief Gary Batton released a statement saying Stitt misrepresents the relationship between tribes and the state government.

“Tribes and tribal members have sovereign rights, which are based not on race, but on treaties and other agreements between our nations and the United States,” Batton said. “Gov. Stitt must recognize this history and respect what it means today.”

Leaders from the Cherokee, Muscogee and Chickasaw Nations attended the address, along with other tribal representatives.

Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin, Jr., called Stitt’s view antiquated, saying the state recognizes the importance of tribal nations.

“Everything he said in there was really to erode some of the most meaningful attributes that are left of tribal sovereignty, that we’re trying to regain and exercise,” Hoskin said. “He would wipe all of those out in service, not to some great day for Oklahoma, but to some diminishment of tribes that really amounts to termination.”

Hoskin also referred to Stitt as the most “anti-Indian tribe governor in the history of the state.”

David Hill, Muscogee Nation principal chief, said the tribes expected negative rhetoric from Stitt. Hill also took issue with Stitt’s reference to the Land Run of 1889, in which he said the land claimed during the Land Run was “unassigned.”

“Our forefathers chased opportunity in the Land Run of 1889, staking claims on unassigned lands and building communities from the ground up,” Stitt said.

Hill said the Land Run should not be aspirational.

“The one comment that I did like, that: ‘When you’re young, you learn to read. As you get older, you read to learn,’” Hill said. “Maybe he should start reading and especially on the Land Run. If you read the history, that’s when more land was taken away from the Native people.”

Oklahoma House Tribal and External Affairs Leader Scott Fetgatter, R-Okmulgee, also released a statement criticizing Stitt’s comments. He said the end of Stitt’s tenure will give the state opportunities to build relationships with tribal governments.

“When the governor, in his last State of the State speech, had the opportunity to correct the wrongs he has inflicted on our state’s tribes, he instead chose to exacerbate the divide and ignore the partnerships that have benefited Oklahomans for years in health care, public safety, education, infrastructure and many other areas of potential collaboration,” Fetgatter said.

Addressing reporters after Stitt’s address, House Democratic Leader Cyndi Munson, D-Oklahoma City, called the governor’s comments “extremely disturbing.”

“We are all aware of the governor’s refusal to work with tribes, but today’s speech highlighted something much darker,” Munson said. “It’s more than apparent that he does not understand the history of our country and our state, and does not respect tribal sovereignty. Tribes do more than enough, not only for their citizens and members, but also the state of Oklahoma.”

Stitt continues vocal opposition toward McGirt

Stitt’s statements continue to challenge the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2020 decision in McGirt v. Oklahoma. That case determined around half of Oklahoma is reservation land and reaffirmed the Muscogee Nation’s reservation was never disestablished, providing a win to the state’s Five Tribes and their ability to govern their citizenry. In the years since, courts have affirmed that other tribal reservations in Oklahoma were also never disestablished.

Stitt, a Cherokee Nation citizen, has battled tribal sovereignty in the courts since McGirt, calling for a single set of laws that spans the state’s area and supersedes tribal jurisdiction. During his 2021 State of the State address, Stitt asked tribes to work with the state to find clarity over the McGirt ruling.

Now, Stitt said he wants to protect the vision established upon statehood in 1907, adding every resident should be subject to the Oklahoma Constitution.

“This issue will continue to split our state, both literally and figuratively, unless we address it head on,” Stitt said. “It will be uncomfortable, and you’re going to have to face down the state’s largest political donors, but we must continue to fight for one Oklahoma.”

The tribal representatives in attendance did not join the applause following that statement.

Hoskin said he hoped Stitt would engage and learn about the tribes throughout his governorship due to his Cherokee citizenship.

“You don’t often see a leader who actually seems to have a lower knowledge base and a lower understanding of the facts and the law and the policy on an issue than when he started,” Hoskin said in an interview after Stitt’s address. “I mean, I’ve got a lot of faults, but I think I’ve improved on some issues that I’ve really been curious about that have challenged me. I’ve seen the opposite out of Governor Stitt on tribal relations. So I can’t make sense of it.

“But I am his chief, and I’d love him to listen to me.”

Sarah Liese contributed to this report.

The post Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt calls for limits on tribal sovereignty, tribal leaders respond appeared first on ICT.


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High school students Josie Ungott and Janissa Noongwook set out to learn from their teacher how drumming and dance has changed over the years in their village, Gambell, on Saint Lawrence Island.


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Alaska's Republican congressional delegation said they support the state's appeal, and are urging FEMA and the Trump administration to fund the disaster relief effort.


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A 2017 lease sale drew lackluster bidding, and a 2021 lease sale drew no bids at all.


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69828e6fe52f579c5@espoLast Updated on February 4, 2026 Santarém, Pará, Brazil – On the 13th day blockading Cargill’s grain terminal in Santarém, Indigenous protestors are demanding in-person dialogue with Brazil’s federal government, following its failure to send representatives to a meeting last week. The arrival of dozens of Munduruku representatives from upstream on the Tapajós River bolstered […]

Source


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Great things can come from failure when it comes to geology. The Midcontinent rift formed about 1.1 billion years ago and runs smack in the middle of the United States at the Great Lakes. The rift failed to completely rupture, and had it succeeded it would have torn North America apart. Under immense pressure from receding tectonic plates, the weakened lithosphere instead created a basin in the crust eventually filled by Lake Superior, and it also exposed a 3000-km-long band of deeply buried igneous and sedimentary rocks.


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For decades, scientists have tried to answer a simple question: why be honest when deception is possible? Whether it is a peacock's tail, a stag's roar, or a human's résumé, signals are means to influence others by transmitting information and advantages can be gained by cheating, for example by exaggeration. But if lying pays, why does communication not collapse?


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Scientists have captured a rare view of one of the ocean's least understood whales—without ever seeing it. By listening to the sounds beaked whales naturally produce, researchers have reconstructed a three-dimensional picture of their deep-diving behavior in the Gulf of Mexico. The study provides the first detailed description of the deep-diving behavior of a Gervais's beaked whale (Mesoplodon europaeus) anywhere in the world.


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Chronic exposure to pollution from wildfires has been linked to tens of thousands of deaths annually in the United States, according to a new study.


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Oysters famously filter their surrounding water, but it turns out they are removing more than algae and excess nutrients. New research from William & Mary's Batten School of Coastal & Marine Sciences & VIMS shows they can also reduce the spread of disease in nearby marine species, including Chesapeake Bay's prized blue crabs.


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Forest soils have an important role in protecting our climate: They remove large quantities of methane—a powerful greenhouse gas—from our atmosphere. Researchers from the University of Göttingen and the Baden-Württemberg Forest Research Institute (FVA) have evaluated the world's most comprehensive data set on methane uptake by forest soils. They discovered that under certain climate conditions, which may become more common in the future, forest soils' capacity to absorb methane actually increases.


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MULKHARKA, Nepal — Ashok Tamang’s first glimpse of his community’s future flickered on a projector screen inside a local monastery. It was July 2023, and a few dozen people had gathered at the Sonam Choeling Monastery in Mulkharka, a small settlement tucked within Shivapuri Nagarjun National Park on the northern edge of Nepal’s capital, Kathmandu. As the slides shifted, so did the mood among a few attendees as they saw plans of a dam that would soon be constructed near their settlement. For many in that room, including Tamang, it was the first time they had heard of the Nagmati Dam, as officials spoke of its height and capacity. They promised progress would come along. “They only told us about the benefits of the dam — we would have better roads, better business and better income,” says Tamang, sitting outside his house overlooking the hazy Kathmandu Valley. “They never told us about the risks. Now that we know, we wholeheartedly oppose this project.” The idea for the dam took shape in the early 2010s, with plans to construct the 95-meter (311-foot) barrier — as tall as the Statue of Liberty in New York — on the Nagmati stream to collect monsoon runoff and release it during the dry season. Officials say the dam, spread over 50.7 hectares (125 acres) of land — the size of as many as 72 soccer fields — would help revive the holy Bagmati River that runs past the Hindu temples of Pashupatinath, Guheshwori and Gokarneshwor Mahadev…This article was originally published on Mongabay


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The Asian-Australian monsoon system (A-AuMS) is the world's most typical cross-equatorial coupled monsoon system. On a seasonal timescale, the summer monsoon in one hemisphere is usually linked to the winter monsoon in the other via outflows. However, robust evidence is lacking as to whether such cross-equatorial monsoon coupling persists during orbital-scale paleoclimate evolution. A scarcity of high-resolution paleoclimatic records from the Northern Australian monsoon region in the Southern Hemisphere has limited a full understanding of the A-AuMS's dynamic mechanisms.


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Researchers in the College of Agriculture, Health and Natural Resources have developed a novel line of bovine embryonic stem cells, which have significant potential for a variety of new innovations, from lab-grown meat to models for human tissue replacement. This work, led by Xiuchun "Cindy" Tian, professor of biotechnology in the Department of Animal Science, and her former and current graduate students Yue Su, Jiaxi Liu, and Ruifeng Zhao, was published in Stem Cells.


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No natural phenomenon provides a rarer chance to study the secrets of the animal world than a total solar eclipse. This was recently demonstrated by researchers investigating how a total solar eclipse might affect the soundscape of Midwestern United States prairie communities. Their objective was to discover how soundscapes—combinations of natural and artificial sounds that shape an environment—are influenced by ambient light, as light level helps cue annual biological events such as sexual reproduction and migration.


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Red-fleshed kiwifruit, valued for its high anthocyanin content and associated health benefits, is increasingly threatened by rising temperatures. Global warming severely inhibits anthocyanin accumulation, leading to flesh discoloration and nutrient loss, directly compromising fruit quality and the sustainable development of the industry. To address this challenge, researchers from the Wuhan Botanical Garden of the Chinese Academy of Sciences used "Hongyang" kiwifruit to simulate high-temperature stress (30°C, 35°C, 40°C, compared with a 25°C control).


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Groundwater is considered the largest reservoir of liquid freshwater on Earth and a habitat for complex microbial communities that drive essential biogeochemical cycles. Until now, the role of viruses that infect microorganisms in this hidden ecosystem was largely unknown. An international research team has, for the first time, created a comprehensive picture of viral diversity and function in a groundwater system.


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syilx songwriter and musician Francis Baptiste, a member of Osoyoos Indian Band, lives in ‘Vancouver.’ Photo courtesy of Y Hanson Photography

syilx musician Francis Baptiste, a member of Osoyoos Indian Band, says his latest album Lived Experience in East Vancouver hopes to ‘help people who struggled.’ Photo courtesy of Y Hanson Photography

“How long is the winter of our discontent?” Francis Baptiste sings out on his latest album. “Feels like it never ends.”

The syilx alt-rocker says he set out to “humanize addiction” on his country-infused third release, Lived Experience in East Vancouver.

In an interview with IndigiNews, the “Vancouver”-based songwriter says his goal with the project is “to help people who struggled with things that I’ve struggled with in the past.”

And as the record’s title suggests, the 41-year-old Osoyoos Indian Band (OIB) member delved into his own “lived experience” as he wrote the album’s 10 songs.

Released last October, the project echoes similar themes in his previous two albums — 2024’s Sənk̓lip, the Trickster, and it predecessor, Sneqsilx (Family), two years earlier.

All three musical projects touch upon his own experiences with loneliness, loss, substance abuse, healing, parenthood — rooted in a constant longing for family and home.

On his website, Baptiste describes himself as “a washed-up, divorced, recovering alcoholic and drug addict” — someone trying “to balance being a single father and being a middle-aged musician, living under the poverty line in East Vancouver.”

The music video for Francis Baptiste’s song Locked in for Lock, off his 2025 album Lived Experience in East Vancouver.Courtesy of Francis Baptiste/Youtube

His first two albums featured a mix of songs in both English and nsyilxcən, the language of the syilx people.

He tells IndigiNews he often incorporates nsyilxcən into his songs to both preserve and promote his nation’s language.

But, he explains, he didn’t grow up fluent in nsyilxcən; he views singing in the language as a learning tool for both himself and his 10-year-old son.

“I made a resolution to myself,” he explains, “to start trying to learn it, and for me to teach it to my son.”

Last year, he contributed music to the immersive Whispers of the Trickster short-film, which remains on display at the Nk’Mip Desert Cultural Centre in sw̓iw̓s (Osoyoos).

When he’s not making music, Baptiste works at the DUDES Club Society, a wellness organization in “Vancouver’s” Downtown Eastside. It offers Indigenous men community healing support and programming.

As he shares his story with IndigiNews, he explains how reconnecting with music also brought him closer to his heritage and homelands.

That reconnection, he says, contributed to his journey towards healing and hope, through personal struggle.

“In the immortal words of Francis Baptiste,” the songwriter quips self-referentially near the start of his new album, “‘I’m barely f—ing surviving here … I’m hoping for a little more.”

Lived Experience in East Vancouver by Francis Baptiste

The following Q&A has been edited for length and clarity.

Aaron Hemens: How did your life experiences — and working at the DUDES Club Society — inform the themes of your latest album, Lived Experiences in East Vancouver**?**

Francis Baptiste: I’ve struggled with addiction a lot in my life. Most of my life, I’ve been an alcoholic or a drug addict.

And I think a lot of my drug addiction was at its peak after my divorce about five, six years ago — just a bit before I started working here — where I was using every day and really struggling to maintain stability.

I was a single father at the time, so it was just me and my young son. I’ve had full custody of him for like five or six years. And during that time, I was still struggling, and being a single parent was something that was new to me. A lot of that is what’s in the album.

Now that I’ve battled through the addiction problems — I feel like it’s important to give back to the community. At the DUDES Club, I see people with addiction issues every day. Not everybody here is an addict or recovering addict, but a lot of them are.

And I have a lot of sympathy — a lot of empathy — for anyone who’s struggling with addiction or struggling with poverty.

Now that I work here, I’m on kind of the other side of things, where I’m trying to help people who struggled with things that I’ve struggled with in the past. It really kind of informs a lot of things I write about.

Part of the purpose of this album was trying to humanize addiction through my own experiences and my own stories — and help people understand that every addict has their own individual circumstances. We’re all human beings that deserve help and deserve sympathy.

A: Your past albums feature tracks of you singing in nsyilxcən. How has that contributed to your healing?

F: It’s been a big part of my healing and my healing journey.

When I was writing my first solo album, Snəqsilxʷ, that was directly after my divorce, and I was so depressed.

I had all this time to reflect: “I need to do something to get me out of this; I need to do something for myself that’s going to feed my soul and reconnect me to who I am, and help me build who I’m going to be from this point going forward.”

The two things that stuck out to me were going back [to] playing music — and the other answer was reconnecting with my family.

I’d been living out here in Vancouver at that time for like 15 years. So I started spending more time back home with my brothers and sisters — I have eight brothers and sisters, and a lot of uncles and aunties — spending time back on the OIB rez, connecting, realizing that I need to connect with the history of our people a little more.

Around the same time, my grandmother Leona Stelkia had just died. She was the last fully fluent language speaker in our Baptiste family — in our immediate family. The big theme at her funeral was about the language, and about losing another fluent language speaker.

It really made me realize I’ve spent so much time away from home, just not really thinking about home very much, and being in my own life, being very me-focused.

I didn’t realize that we were, as a community, so close to losing our language — so close to losing this super-important part of our identity.

So I made a resolution to myself: to start trying to learn it, and for me to teach it to my son.

Personally, the easiest way to do that was to incorporate it into songs. It’s almost like learning your ABCs: you put a couple words into a melody, and then before I knew it, my son was singing along to these songs, and then he’s learning the words.

It was like a learning tool for me, and it still is.

I’m not a fluent speaker, not even close; I’m like a child speaker.

I have friends at OIB that are fluent speakers, and I send them little bits — little poems — and they’ll send me back translations and audio files from their phone, little voice memos, so I can get the pronunciation right.

That process is really exciting for me, because it makes me feel connected to home, and it makes me feel like I’m doing my part to preserve our heritage.

A: When you use nsyilxcən in your songs, do you view it as promoting it, in addition to preserving it?

F: Definitely. It really feels like more of a spiritual journey reconnecting with the old ways. One of my goals with including language in the music is to show the younger generations that it’s a cool thing to take interest in your culture.

There wasn’t anybody doing that when I was younger, leading by example, I guess.

I’m actually going to perform at Senpaq’cin School in April. Senpaq’cin is the school we have on the reserve in Oliver.

I’ll perform for the kids and give a little talk about the language and the importance of preserving culture and all that — basically the same talk we’re having right now — then perform at a dinner for the parents.

That’ll be really a good way to give back, and get the kids interested in learning and seeing the value in learning the language.

A: I see that you’re also on TikTok promoting the language there?

F:  Yeah, I’m trying to get back into that this year. I fell out of it a bit with releasing this album. I was kind of focused on a lot of PR and press stuff.

I used to do these “word of the day” or “word of the week” videos.

My goal for 2026 is to get back to doing that more regularly.

Because I think it’s just a fun thing to do, and fun to include my son in it — building it back into my routine, and making it public to encourage other people in the community to learn words here and there and work on their vocabulary.

A: I think it’s beautiful that you are sharing nsyilxcən with others, as you are on this journey of learning the language yourself.

F: Hopefully it has a group mentality effect [so] when people see it they’re like, “I should do that too.”

Because I think a lot of people want to, they just don’t have time or whatever. But then every time you see somebody else doing it, you’re like, “You know what? Maybe I will do it.”

The post syilx rocker Francis Baptiste ‘hoping for a little more’ with release of newest album appeared first on Indiginews.


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A single queen in the tropics; large colonies in deserts; workers with uniform morphology in temperate regions; ant social structures vary according to environmental conditions. This is shown, for the first time at a global scale, by research carried out at the Department of Ecology and Evolution of the University of Lausanne and published in PNAS.


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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Mexican long-nosed bats have a taste for agave, their tongues designed to lap up the famous desert plant’s nectar during nightly flights. It’s not just a means of satisfying taste buds. It’s a matter of fueling up for an arduous journey. The endangered species migrates each summer from Mexico into the southernmost reaches of the United States. Big Bend National Park in Texas is a destination, as is Hidalgo County in New Mexico’s Bootheel. It wasn’t until last year that DNA evidence helped to add Arizona to the list. Bat Conservation International announced on Tuesday that swabbing agave plants and hummingbird feeders on the fringes of New Mexico’s Gila National Forest also turned up proof that the bats are farther north than ever before. The research shows they’re traveling about 100 miles (160 kilometers) beyond their known roosts in New Mexico. The state’s Bootheel region has been hit hard by drought, and agaves there don’t seem to flower as much as they used to, said Kristen Lear, director of the Agave Restoration Initiative at Bat Conservation International. “We think these bats are trying to look for healthy agave food sources elsewhere,” she said. “So that’s kind of driving them farther north, where the agaves are a little bit less hit by drought.” Traveling another 30 miles (48 kilometers) can add another night to a bat’s journey. To keep the sweet nectar flowing along the route, researchers on both sides of the international border say restoration of desert…This article was originally published on Mongabay


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Dogs who scored well on the Wesen test, which is used to analyze a dog's temperament, tended to have lower levels of cortisol, often called the "stress hormone," and higher levels of serotonin, often called the "happiness hormone," according to a study published in the open-access journal PLOS One by Minjung Yoon from Kyungpook National University, Republic of Korea, and colleagues.


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What do microplastics, water color, and satellites have in common? Dr. Karl Kaiser, professor of marine and coastal environmental science in the College of Marine Sciences and Maritime Studies at Texas A&M University at Galveston is exploring an innovative idea: using satellites to spot microplastics in the ocean. How? By studying how tiny plastic particles change the way light reflects off the water—and how that changes the color we see from space. If this connection works, it could give scientists a powerful new tool to track microplastic pollution across the globe without ever leaving orbit.


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Snakes may well be one of nature's greatest predators, capable of eating whole deer or even crocodiles, but just as impressive is that they can go months, or even a whole year, without a single meal. And now an international team of scientists thinks they know how they do it.


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