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15 Videos Of Kids And Pets That Prove They’re Cuter Together

There's just something about the innocence of kids and pets that makes their interactions warm our hearts. We're captivated by these videos, so we had to share them with the world. Every time you share an article, we donate to Smile Train to help provide life-changing surgeries to children in need.

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Italians Celebrate Birth Of Village's First Baby In 30 Years

In the mountain village of Pagliara dei Marsi, where the hum of cats fills the empty streets and the population hovers around 20, the birth of a baby is not just news — it's an event of national significance. Lara Bussi Trabucco, born in March, is the first baby to arrive in the village in nearly 30 years. Her christening brought together every resident in the community — and, reportedly, many of the cats — for a celebration that briefly turned the quiet Abruzzo hamlet into a destination. “At just nine months old, she’s famous,” said her mother, Cinzia Trabucco. But while Lara’s arrival has brought joy to her village, it also throws a stark spotlight on a much larger problem: Italy’s accelerating demographic decline. In 2024, births in Italy dropped to a historic low of 369,944, continuing a 16-year slide. The national fertility rate fell to 1.18 children per woman — one of the lowest in Europe. In the sparsely populated region of Abruzzo, where Pagliara dei Marsi is located, the crisis is especially acute. Between January and July 2025, births fell another 10.2% compared to the same period the year before. Pagliara dei Marsi may be small, but it mirrors a nationwide pattern: ageing populations, vanishing schools, shuttering maternity wards, and shrinking towns with little generational renewal. “Pagliara dei Marsi has been suffering from drastic depopulation, exacerbated by the loss of many elderly people, without any generational turnover,” said the village’s mayor, Giuseppina Perozzi. She lives just a few doors away from baby Lara, and sees her as a symbol of hope. She also sees her as rare. Trabucco, 42, a music teacher from Frascati near Rome, moved to the village — her grandfather’s birthplace — in hopes of raising a family far from the chaos of the capital. She met her partner, 56-year-old construction worker Paolo Bussi, and together they became the only family in the village with a newborn. Their decision to settle and have a child in a village like Pagliara dei Marsi is not typical — and not easy. They received a €1,000 “baby bonus” from the government, introduced in January 2025 by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s far-right administration as part of its effort to address the so-called “demographic winter.” The couple also receives about €370 per month in child benefits. But they’re clear: money isn’t the problem. “The entire system needs to be revolutionised,” Trabucco said. “We’re a country of high taxes but this does not translate into a good quality of life or good social services.” One of their biggest challenges is childcare. Italy’s public support for working parents remains inadequate, and many women drop out of the workforce when they have children. Re-entering is often difficult, and childcare infrastructure is patchy — especially in rural areas like this. Then there’s schooling. The last time Pagliara dei Marsi had a teacher, she taught out of her own home. The closest infant and primary school is in nearby Castellafiume, but its future is uncertain amid a wave of school closures due to declining enrolment. About an hour’s drive away, in the once-bustling city of Sulmona, residents are fighting to save the maternity unit at Annunziata Hospital. It delivered just 120 babies in 2024 — well below the national minimum of 500 required to keep funding. Midwife Berta Gambina, who has worked in the unit for nearly four decades, says that benchmark is outdated. “Even in the best of times, we averaged about 380 births a year. But I will do all I can to keep it open – my biggest fear is abandoning pregnant women.” Those fears aren’t hypothetical. Gianluca Di Luigi, a gynaecologist at the hospital, recalled a woman who got stuck in a snowstorm while in labour. She didn’t reach the hospital for eight hours and needed an emergency caesarean. “She was traumatised by the whole experience,” he said. While the government’s financial incentives are welcomed, critics argue they don’t go far enough — especially when hospitals and schools are closing. “How can you give women money to have babies but not guarantee them a safe and secure place to give birth?” asked city councillor Ornella La Civita. Di Luigi believes one critical piece of the puzzle is still missing from public discourse: fertility preservation. “Ideological thinking in Italy has always been a block,” he said. “But if we want newborns, then we need enlightenment too. Yes, provide young people with dignified jobs — but let’s start teaching them about preserving fertility.” For now, in Pagliara dei Marsi, Lara remains a living, breathing symbol of the future — as rare as she is beloved. But the question hanging over the village, and the country, is whether more babies like her will follow — or whether Lara will grow up as alone as the cats.

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Alien Comets, Black Hole Births, and a Faint Glimmer of Martian Life: The 8 Biggest Space Discoveries of 2025

It’s been a blockbuster year for astronomy. From the arrival of a new interstellar visitor to a potential sign of past life on Mars, 2025 delivered some of the most exciting discoveries in years. Here's a look at eight of the most jaw-dropping space stories from the past 12 months. 1. A Speeding Visitor From Beyond Our Solar System Comet 3I/ATLAS burst onto the scene in July, when Chilean telescopes caught it racing through the constellation Sagittarius at a blistering 58 kilometers per second. It’s only the third interstellar object ever spotted in our solar system, and scientists quickly confirmed it wasn’t native to our sun’s orbit. What made it even more fascinating was its unusual tail. Alongside the traditional trailing tail of dust and gas, 3I/ATLAS had a real, physical "anti-tail" pointing toward the sun — not just an optical illusion. Chemical analysis revealed a composition similar to solar system comets, though with a slightly different carbon dioxide and nickel profile, hinting at its distant galactic origin. 2. Witnessing the Birth of Supermassive Black Holes When the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) started imaging the far reaches of the universe, astronomers noticed something odd: tiny, bright red dots scattered across the early cosmos. By 2025, researchers proposed that these weren't galaxies or clusters — they were "black hole stars," a new class of objects forming gigantic black holes inside dense gas clouds less than a billion years after the Big Bang. These findings could rewrite our understanding of how galaxies and their massive central black holes formed, offering a fresh path for cosmic evolution. 3. Dark Energy Might Be Changing The Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) stunned the scientific world this year with evidence that dark energy — the mysterious force accelerating the universe’s expansion — might not be constant after all. Based on a three-year survey mapping over 13 million galaxies and quasars, the DESI team found that dark energy appeared unusually strong up to 4.5 billion years ago, then began to weaken. That shift throws a wrench into current models of the universe, sparking speculation about “phantom” forms of dark energy and unknown physics still at play. 4. Biosignatures — From Mars to a Watery World In September, NASA’s Perseverance rover found its strongest hint yet of past microbial life on Mars. The evidence came from “leopard spots” — light-red patches surrounded by darker rock — that resemble patterns formed on Earth either by extreme heat or biological processes. Organic molecules were also found in the same area, but not yet definitively identified. Farther out, the JWST found stronger evidence of dimethyl sulfide (DMS) in the atmosphere of exoplanet K2-18b. On Earth, DMS is only produced by life. While the signal remains weak and highly debated, it adds to growing intrigue around "hycean" planets — potential ocean worlds with thick hydrogen-rich atmospheres that could host life in unfamiliar ways. 5. A Planet Next Door? After years of false starts, astronomers confirmed four rocky exoplanets orbiting Barnard’s Star, just six light-years away. The largest of the group is only one-third the mass of Earth, with the smallest about a fifth. None of them lie in the star’s habitable zone, but the door remains open for other, more temperate planets nearby. Meanwhile, JWST found its most convincing signs yet of a planet orbiting Alpha Centauri A. The potential gas giant has a mass similar to Saturn and an eccentric orbit — likely a side effect of its binary-star environment. At just over four light-years away, this would be one of the closest exoplanets ever detected. 6. Milky Way and Andromeda May Miss Each Other New simulations based on gravitational interactions with nearby galaxies suggest there’s a 50% chance the Milky Way won’t collide with Andromeda after all. If their closest approach is more than 650,000 light-years, the galaxies will pass each other without merging. That’s a far cry from the previous assumption of a guaranteed smash-up in about 4 billion years. 7. The Biggest Black Hole on Record? At the center of a galaxy nicknamed the Cosmic Horseshoe, astronomers found what may be the most massive black hole ever directly measured. Weighing in at 36 billion solar masses, it dwarfs our Milky Way’s own black hole, Sagittarius A*, by a factor of nearly 9,000. What makes this find especially important is how the mass was calculated. Instead of relying on indirect guesses, researchers tracked the motion of stars near the black hole — a more precise method that could help confirm or debunk earlier, disputed “largest black hole” claims. 8. A New Era Begins: Vera C. Rubin Observatory Sees First Light After decades of planning, the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile finally turned its massive 3.2-gigapixel eye to the sky. In its first images, it captured the Virgo Cluster in unprecedented detail, along with star-forming regions like the Trifid and Lagoon nebulas. Designed to scan the sky every few nights, the observatory will issue 10 million alerts daily for celestial events and collect 60,000 terabytes of data over its first decade. It’s expected to vastly accelerate discoveries in dark matter, dark energy, and the changing night sky.

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Fiona, Once Britain’s Loneliest Sheep, Is Now Pregnant with Twins

Fiona the sheep went from total isolation to internet stardom — and now, motherhood. After spending two years stranded alone at the base of a cliff in the Scottish Highlands, Fiona is not just thriving at her new home, she’s expecting twins. Her story first captured hearts in 2021, when kayaker Jill Turner spotted her near Balintore, Easter Ross. Turner was shocked to find Fiona still stuck in the same spot two years later. What followed was a viral rescue campaign that drew global attention — and support. Over 55,000 people signed a petition, and donations poured in from the UK, Canada, the US, and Australia, raising four times the initial £2,500 goal. Fiona’s dramatic rescue involved expert climbers, 200 meters of rope, a winch truck, and a makeshift sling. She was found in a sea cave 250 meters down a cliff, significantly overweight from grazing alone. “She has kind of forgotten how to be a sheep,” said Ben Best, manager of Dalscone Farm, where Fiona was brought after her rescue in November 2023. The transition wasn’t easy. Fiona struggled to bond with other sheep and needed treatment for arthritis, along with a strict diet to reduce her weight to a healthy 90 kilograms. But now, just over a year later, Fiona is part of the flock — and pregnant. In a recent Facebook video, Best shared the unexpected news. “Fiona’s having twins. What have we done? We have actually got her in lamb. The pressure is on.” He explained that Fiona was given hormones to help her conceive and was paired with a Suffolk ram. It worked. She’s due to give birth in early February. “She’s doing really well,” Best said. “She is the world’s most famous sheep.” Fiona’s transformation from abandoned and overlooked to loved and looked after has captivated people around the world. Now, her next chapter begins — this time, as a mother.

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Art Therapy Could Cut Burnout in Half, New Study Shows

Art therapy sessions may hold the key to reducing burnout among healthcare workers, according to a new study out of London. Researchers at Queen Mary University and Barts Health NHS Trust found that medics who participated in group art therapy sessions reported significantly lower levels of stress, anxiety, and emotional exhaustion. The study involved 129 doctors, nurses, and other hospital staff from across London. Half attended weekly art therapy sessions led by trained professionals; the other half were placed on a waitlist. After just six sessions, the group that received therapy showed “much lower emotional exhaustion and depersonalisation” compared to those who didn’t. Those who didn’t participate were nearly twice as likely to report feeling burnt out. The benefits weren’t short-lived either. Participants still reported improved mental well-being three months after the sessions ended. Megan Tjasink, principal art psychotherapist at Barts Health and one of the study’s leaders, said the approach helps staff process the emotional weight of their jobs — something many aren't given the space or tools to do. “While they're very good at solving problems in a rational way, they can be less well practised at processing feelings,” she said. “Using the art therapy method helps people to communicate with colleagues in a very different way and to share feelings that might otherwise be difficult to express.” Tjasink added that sessions are led by psychological professionals, which allows participants to explore difficult emotions in a safe, supported environment. The idea has since spread. Following the pilot, art therapy has been rolled out across five hospitals in the Barts Health NHS Trust, funded by Barts Charity. And researchers believe the benefits could extend well beyond the NHS. “Burnout is an issue across numerous professions such as teaching and social care, and in the corporate sector,” Tjasink said. “Group art therapy could make a difference there too.” Still, she cautioned it’s not a standalone solution. “Art therapy must go alongside other tools to deal with burnout and mental health pressures.” For many of those who participated, though, the impact was immediate and personal. “They definitely helped me,” said oncologist Dr Umur Guven, who attended sessions at St Bartholomew’s Hospital. “Our shifts are so busy, but this gives us time to pause, to remember we are human again and to express our feelings through art.” Dr Lani Walshaw, also in oncology, described the experience as “really therapeutic.” “Working in oncology is obviously quite emotionally challenging,” she said. “We see a lot of difficult disease and patients going through the hardest times of their lives. To take some time out from that to do these art sessions is really therapeutic.” Anaesthetist Dr Francesco Rosato said the group setting helped counter the isolation many feel on busy shifts. “In these sessions when you find out others share the same feelings as you, you don’t feel alone anymore.” For consultant anaesthetist Dr Giampaolo Martinelli, who helped conduct the study, the sessions offered a rare moment of calm. “The session is protected time where I come in here and I feel like I’m in a suspended space, completely different from the hospital, where nothing else matters apart from me,” he said. As the pressures on healthcare workers continue to grow, the research suggests that even a small creative outlet could be a powerful tool to protect staff from burnout. And if early results are any indication, it might be a model worth replicating far beyond hospital walls.

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Boss Surprises Employees With $240M Bonuses After Selling Family Company

In an era when corporate buyouts often leave workers behind, one CEO decided to flip the script. Before selling his company earlier this year, Fibrebond CEO Graham Walker made sure 15% of the $1.7 billion deal would go to his 540 full-time employees. The result? A $240 million bonus pool — or an average of $443,000 per worker — spread out over five years for those who stay with the company. It’s one of the most generous employee payouts in recent corporate memory. And for many of the factory workers in Minden, Louisiana, where Fibrebond is based, it was life-changing. “Before, we were going paycheck to paycheck,” said longtime employee Lesia Key. “I can live now; I’m grateful.” Fibrebond, which manufactures complex electrical modules for data centers and industrial projects, was acquired by power management giant Eaton earlier this year. But Walker, 46, wasn’t willing to finalize the sale without ensuring that the people who built the company shared in the reward. “I hope I’m 80 years old and get an email about how it’s impacted someone,” he told The Wall Street Journal. Asked why he pushed for 15% of the sale price to go to staff, his response was blunt: “It’s more than 10%.” Founded by his father, Claud Walker, in 1982, Fibrebond has weathered more than its fair share of turmoil. A fire in 1998 nearly wiped out operations. During the recovery, the Walkers continued to pay employee salaries. The early 2000s were equally grim, with the dot-com crash shrinking Fibrebond’s customer base to just three companies and forcing layoffs that brought its workforce down from 900 to 320. Graham and his brother took over in the mid-2000s and began rebuilding. Over time, some of the laid-off workers were rehired. The company’s defining pivot came in 2020, when it invested $150 million into infrastructure for data centers — a gamble that paid off during the AI-fueled tech boom. Over the past five years, Fibrebond’s sales grew by 400%. As of this year, the company had deployed more than 51,000 modules across the U.S. and was recognized as a national leader in its field. It was that success that led to the acquisition by Eaton, finalized on April 1. The next day, Walker gathered the entire company to share the news — not just about the sale, but the surprise bonuses. “We shared the same humbling question, how did we build this?” he wrote in a letter. “Forty-three years of memories, failures, successes, and opportunities came forth as tears, hugs, and profound joy.” Inside the company, the mood was disbelief. “It was surreal, it was like telling people they won the lottery,” said Hector Moreno, a Fibrebond executive. “There was absolute shock. They said, ‘What’s the catch?’” There was no catch. Some used the money to pay off debt or send kids to college. Others put it toward retirement or took long-delayed vacations. A few still didn’t quite believe it. The bonuses are being paid out gradually over five years — a timeline designed to reward long-time staff and keep institutional knowledge within the company. Walker will formally step away from Fibrebond on December 31. “It’s time, for the good of the business and all involved,” he told The Journal. He may be leaving, but his impact is likely to linger for years — not just in bank accounts, but in the lives changed by a rare act of generosity.

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The Joy of Fixing Things: How Repair Cafes Are Building Community and Saving Memories

In community halls across the West Midlands, a quiet revolution is underway. Armed with toolboxes, sewing kits, and a whole lot of patience, groups of volunteers are helping people fix what they once might have thrown away — and in the process, finding connection, comfort, and meaning. “It all came about because people started to get fed up with throwaway culture,” said Clare Beckhelling, who volunteers with Repair Cafe Redditch. “In this day and age, we shouldn't be throwing it all away, we should be repairing it and keeping it going.” That idea has taken root in places like Worcestershire, Staffordshire, and Shropshire, where repair cafes are cropping up as alternatives to both landfills and loneliness. Their mission is simple: keep things out of the bin and bring people together. Pam Beale runs two of them — the Lichfield Repair and Share Cafe at the Curborough Community Centre and another at St Joseph’s Catholic Church in Burntwood. Together, they see around 60 visitors a month, bringing in everything from broken tools and appliances to deeply personal items. “Our oldest repairer is 96,” Beale said. “He was an expert in furniture and marquetry and he knows about how a lot of things are put together.” Some fixes are purely practical — a lamp that won’t light, a torn shirt. But many are deeply emotional. “We had two or three record turntables in particular,” Beale said. “One belonged to a woman whose husband had passed away and she really wanted to play their records again. She was in floods of tears [when it was fixed]. Another woman wanted hers mended because her husband had dementia and she wanted the records to bring back memories for him.” Over in Redditch, the local repair cafe has been running for eight years and now has 31 volunteers. It meets once a month at Webheath Village Hall and recently inspired a spin-off in the nearby town of Studley. The repairs range from vintage tech to toys from another era. A porcelain doll from 1947 was brought back to life, as was a 70-year-old teddy bear. “People are very attached to [dolls and bears] because it’s one of the things their parents gave to them when they were young,” Beckhelling said. One of the most unusual items they’ve seen recently was a set of fairy lights from the West Indies, wrapped in delicate skeleton leaves — brought to the UK by a woman who arrived as part of the Windrush generation. The lights had failed and the fragile leaves were in danger of falling apart. The team at Studley’s repair cafe removed each one, ironed them flat, and carefully reattached them to a new string of lights. “When he saw it glowing again, his face said everything,” the team recalled. “A moment of pure joy – shared by all of us.” In Shrewsbury, the local repair cafe has more than 45 volunteers and uses the festive season as an opportunity to encourage people to reuse and repair, rather than buy new. “We have all been faced with the situation of bringing down the storage box from the roof or out of the garage, getting the familiar decorations out and finding that the lights don’t flicker or that musical ornament doesn’t play,” said Pete Martin, a repairer and administrator for the group. “Instead of rushing out to replace them, at the repair cafe we may be able to repair them, either by checking the wiring or simply by cleaning the contacts as the batteries were left in all year.” Even a favourite Christmas jumper with a hole in it can be given new life — “we can patch or darn it so it can be worn again,” he added. Sustainability is at the heart of all of these efforts. Beckhelling and Beale both volunteered with environmental groups before joining the repair cafes, and their message is clear: it’s not just about fixing objects, it’s about rethinking consumption entirely. “It did come out of a need, a desire to improve, to be more environmental and ecological and less wasteful,” Beckhelling said. “Some things just need a fuse, for the sake of 50p. A Sony Walkman was put back to use for the sake of a very specific elasticated band that cost £6.87.” Beale added, “It’s about taking responsibility for all aspects of your life rather than just an impulse thing. Many of which are made out of something that might never biodegrade, that will last forever. Think of the supply chain and the creation of items – the mining of minerals for a phone or tech or disposable vapes. Everything is valuable and somewhere far away someone with not much money is at the bottom of all of this.” Beyond the repairs and the environmental impact, though, the cafes have also become social lifelines. Volunteers and visitors alike have found friendship and purpose in the process. “An ex-engineer said, ‘You’ve saved my weekend,’” Beckhelling recalled. “I was tearing my hair out after I retired and twiddling my thumbs and he was going bonkers at home. He loves it.” Not everyone comes with a broken toaster or a set of lights. Some just want a slice of cake and a chat. And that’s part of the magic too. In fixing the things we once thought were lost, people are also finding each other.

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Family’s Surprise Sleepover for Grandparents Turns into Viral Christmas Moment

What started as a simple family tradition in California has turned into a viral celebration of love, time, and pizza. Daniel Miller and his cousins brought back their cherished “Grandparents Christmas” tradition this year with a surprise pre-Christmas sleepover at their grandparents’ home. A video posted on December 21 capturing the moment has since drawn more than 14 million views across social media. The video begins with Miller and his wife walking through the front door. “I’m here to spend the night,” Miller tells his unsuspecting grandmother, who responds warmly, “That’s fine. You can spend the night if you’d like to.” One by one, more cousins and family members begin trickling in. Miller said he was texting them cues from inside. At one point, his grandmother pauses and asks, “Are we doing Grandparents Christmas?” The realization hits her — and the tradition is reborn. The night included all the staples of their longtime family event: making homemade pizzas, crafting, and sharing stories. The moment that’s resonated with so many viewers comes later in the video, when Miller’s grandfather, Carroll Blackstock, addresses the family. “I do thank you for all coming,” he says. “I can tell you that this room has not felt this kind of love ever, and we appreciate it. Thank you so much.” Miller credits the idea to his wife, who recently lost her own grandparents and wanted to revive the tradition that had gone quiet in recent years. “She kind of brought up the idea of doing this old family tradition that we had that kind of hasn't happened,” Miller told Fox News Digital. “I was like, 'All right, I'm gonna go ahead and do it,' and so we did it.” The tradition stretches back 25 years, originally started by Miller’s grandmother, Toni Blackstock, who used to host regular pre-Christmas events at her home. Homemade pizza was always part of it — a nod to her Italian roots. Miller said his grandparents have always shown up for their family — at every birthday, every sports game, every milestone. “The greatest gift you can give someone is your time,” he said. “I think that's taught us that time is very valuable and that [we] should always come together as family.” As for their viral fame? Miller said his grandparents don’t quite know what “going viral” means, but they understand the impact. “We kind of put it in perspective,” he said. “This is touching a lot of people’s hearts, and this has created a lot of tears of joy. And so, it made them feel really good.”

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With One Eye and Mushy Colours, This Photographer Is Capturing the Peak District Like Few Others Can

If you blur your camera lens on purpose, you’ll get a sense of what William Hickie sees out of his left eye. It’s not much — but it’s never stopped him from chasing the perfect shot. The 23-year-old photographer from Tameside, Greater Manchester, lives with amblyopia, commonly called lazy eye. It’s a condition that’s left him functionally blind in one eye since childhood. He also has deuteranopia, a type of colour blindness that makes greens, browns, greys and pinks all blur into one. Even so, his work has been featured on BBC Countryfile, and his images of Derbyshire and the Peak District have earned him a growing following. “A camera only has one lens and one sensor, rather than two lenses and one sensor,” he said. “So only being able to see out of one eye might actually benefit me.” Hickie first picked up a camera at 14, drawn to the way it brought together his love of creativity and the outdoors. “I’m not too sure what actually sparked the interest,” he said. “I enjoyed it, and that was it.” He was diagnosed with a lazy eye as a child and underwent several unsuccessful attempts to correct it. Eye patches, drops, glasses — none of it stuck. “I had to use patches over my strong eye, but because I couldn’t see where I was going, I just used to rip them off all the time,” he said. Eventually, his brain simply stopped using the left eye altogether. That’s what amblyopia is: a neurodevelopmental condition where the brain ignores input from the weaker eye. Hickie sees almost exclusively out of his right. And then there’s his colour vision. “In between a gradient, most people can see all the different shades of colours,” he said. “Whereas for me, in the centre, that’s just one block of colour. It all looks the same.” Still, Hickie doesn’t believe his colour blindness affects the quality of his work. In fact, he believes his visual impairments have only pushed him harder to prove himself. “If there is something you’re really passionate about and someone tries to take you off the path, just stay on,” he said. That determination paid off when one of his photos — a striking image of a stag in Froggatt Woods near Calver — caught the attention of the BBC Countryfile team. They invited him to contribute to an episode featuring the Chatsworth Estate, with presenters Anita Rani and Sean Fletcher. “Photography now has pretty much totally consumed my life, in a good way,” Hickie said. “Landscape photography gives me the opportunity to get out of the house, go for a nice walk and enjoy nature and being outside. I think it’s just a really good thing to do.” With just one eye and a limited view of colour, Hickie has managed to see — and show — the world in a way that many others can’t.

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Anonymous Donor Covers Pet Emergency Fees At Colorado Animal Hospital

A Colorado animal hospital got an unexpected visit from a mystery man who left a trail of kindness behind — and a stack of checks. Staff at Wheat Ridge Animal Hospital say the man walked in around 8 a.m., told them he planned to stay for a few hours, and quietly began covering emergency exam fees for anyone who brought in a pet that day. Each payment came in a plain envelope with a check inside, covering the nearly $200 cost for an emergency room visit. “He didn’t know any of the people he was helping,” said veterinary staff member Veronica Suazo. “There was no heads-up, no big announcement. He just wanted to help.” Over the next few hours, the man paid for at least 10 pet owners, some of whom were overwhelmed by the gesture. A few offered to pass the help along and let the next person use the money instead. Others were moved to tears, unsure how they would’ve managed to pay for care without the surprise donation. Emergency vet fees can be a financial burden, especially in high-stress moments when a pet’s health is at stake. The anonymous donor made it a little easier, not just for the people he met, but for those who arrived later too — he left behind additional envelopes for staff to hand out after he left. And before walking out the door, he added one more gift: a $400 donation to the hospital’s charity fund, ensuring more animals would get care even after he was gone.

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Archaeologists Uncover 10 Astonishing Discoveries In 2025

From Egypt to the Atlantic, 2025 Was a Banner Year for Archaeology It’s been a remarkable year for archaeology, with discoveries coming from deserts, ruins, libraries, and the ocean floor. Some were powered by advanced technology, others by sheer human curiosity—and in one case, a lucky stroll past a monument. Together, they’ve deepened our understanding of ancient civilizations, rewritten historical narratives, and even called into question the capabilities of one of antiquity’s most mysterious devices. In Egypt’s Valley of the Kings, archaeologists from the New Kingdom Research Foundation unearthed the tomb of Thutmose II, a pharaoh of the 18th dynasty. It’s the first royal tomb found since Tutankhamen’s in 1922. Though the chamber was in poor condition and largely empty—likely due to flooding soon after the burial—experts believe Thutmose’s wife and half-sister, Queen Hatshepsut, may have overseen the interment. Another ancient Egyptian surprise came not from a tomb, but from a monument hiding in plain sight. While walking past the obelisk of Ramses II in Paris’s Place de la Concorde during the pandemic, Sorbonne lecturer Jean-Guillaume Olette-Pelletier spotted something others had missed. After getting permission to climb the 70-foot structure, he confirmed that the topmost hieroglyphs included a royal boast: Ramses had been chosen by the gods to rule. From its original position in Luxor, these glyphs would have been clearly visible to boat-bound nobles arriving for festivals. At the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, preparations for an exhibition led to the discovery of something more personal: a 4,000-year-old handprint on a funerary object known as a “soul house.” The clay structure, shaped like a building, would have been used to hold food offerings for the dead. Researchers believe the print was left in the still-wet clay before firing—possibly by the maker themselves. Pompeii also yielded its share of stories this year. At the necropolis of Porta Sarno, archaeologists uncovered two life-sized statues of a man and woman, likely a married couple from the late Roman Republic. The woman wore a crescent moon pendant, a protective charm, and evidence suggests she may have held the title of priestess—an uncommon role for a woman in that period. Meanwhile, at Oxford University’s Bodleian Library, a chance discovery may change how scholars read one of Shakespeare’s most famous works. A lecturer specializing in early modern literature found a handwritten copy of Sonnet 116—but this wasn’t the version most people know. The manuscript includes alternate lines and revised couplets, suggesting the sonnet may not just be about love, but also carry coded commentary on the English Civil War. In the realm of technology, underwater robots named Romeo and Juliet completed a full 3D scan of the Titanic’s wreckage on the Atlantic seabed. The high-resolution model captured details down to individual personal items and lifeboat mechanisms. Contrary to the century-old rumor that first officer William McMaster Murdoch fled his post, the scan shows that he likely stayed and helped with the evacuation until the very end. A different kind of digital tool helped researchers unlock a hidden voice from ancient Mesopotamia. A team from the University of Baghdad and Ludwig Maximilian University used A.I. to analyze cuneiform tablets and uncovered a 250-line hymn celebrating Babylon and its people. The hymn appears in over 30 surviving manuscripts, a discovery that would have taken decades to assemble without machine learning. Researchers believe it served a unifying, nationalistic role—comparable to a modern-day pledge of allegiance. In Greece, a long-standing mystery was put to the test, and came up short. The Antikythera mechanism, often described as the world’s first analog computer, has fascinated historians since its discovery in 1901. A new study by researchers in Argentina used digital reconstructions to test the device’s accuracy. The result? It jammed in 90 percent of simulations. Despite its sophisticated appearance, the ancient gadget may not have functioned particularly well. The Tower of London also revealed more of its past this year. Excavations on the historic site, part of a long-term study of the fortress’s construction, turned up coffins from the 12th and 13th centuries, and a mass grave from the 14th-century Black Death. Some of the remains are believed to belong to high-status individuals, shedding light on who lived—and died—within the castle’s shadow. And finally, a new theory about Easter Island’s massive stone statues has gained ground. When Dutch explorers first arrived in 1722, the local Rapanui people said the statues had “walked.” For decades, this was dismissed as myth. But new research from Binghamton University and the University of Arizona suggests they may have been right. Using experiments with replica statues, researchers showed how the figures could have been rocked side to side using ropes, essentially “walking” them across the landscape thanks to their design and low center of gravity. Whether pulled from the ground, spotted in a library, or revealed by a robot deep underwater, these discoveries highlight the evolving—and often surprising—nature of archaeology. One thing’s clear: the past still has plenty of stories left to tell.

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