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Health Care Goes Fully Digital in Estonia, Leading Global Innovation

Estonia is leading the way in digital innovation, with a fully digital healthcare system and government services accessible online. The country's success has made it a model for others to follow. Estonia's advancements include a pioneering e-prescription system and a Superbrain headset for the blind. The UAE is also making strides in digital transformation, with initiatives like Malaffi connecting hospitals, labs, and pharmacies for optimal patient care.

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Wearable Patch Detects Early Signs Of Deadly Skin Cancer, Offering Hope For Easier Home Screening

A new wearable patch could transform how we detect the deadliest form of skin cancer — without the need for needles, batteries, or even a trip to the doctor. Developed by researchers at Wake Forest University in North Carolina, the lightweight patch can pick up early signs of melanoma by measuring subtle changes in the skin’s electrical properties. It’s battery-free, chip-free, and wireless, making it a promising tool for at-home screening. “Skin cancer is most treatable when caught early,” said Dr. Mohammad Moghimi, who led the development. “But many people don’t have easy access to specialised dermatology care.” That’s what the patch is designed to change. Using a small external reader, the patch detects what’s known as bioimpedance — a measure of how easily electrical signals pass through tissue. Cancerous lesions tend to have different electrical profiles than healthy skin, and this tool can pick up those differences. In a small trial of 10 volunteers, researchers placed the patch over a suspicious mole or lesion and then over nearby healthy skin. The device used safe, low-level electrical signals to measure bioimpedance, and statistical analysis showed clear differences between normal and abnormal tissue. “It could empower patients and primary care providers to monitor suspicious skin lesions and seek help sooner,” Moghimi said. Unlike standard methods that rely on visual inspection or invasive biopsies, the patch offers objective, numerical data — reducing the chances of missed diagnoses and unnecessary procedures. It also works across all skin tones, a key benefit in a field where darker skin has often been underserved or misdiagnosed. Beyond its technical promise, the patch is also designed to be practical. It’s disposable, low-cost, and doesn’t rely on built-in electronics, making it easier to scale for wider use. The team hopes to improve the device further by adding conductive hydrogel electrodes for better comfort and accuracy. Larger clinical trials are planned to evaluate its effectiveness in real-world settings and to see how reliably it can distinguish between benign and malignant lesions. “Our goal is to make early skin cancer detection accessible to everyone,” Moghimi said. “By providing a tool that can be used at home or in primary care settings, we hope to reduce the number of missed or late diagnoses and improve patient outcomes.” The study was published in the journal npj Biomedical Innovations.

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A Nonprofit Rescued 180 Dogs And A Turtle After Devastating Floods in Alaska

When historic flooding forced hundreds of Alaskans to evacuate remote villages earlier this month, many had no choice but to leave their pets behind. Now, a small but determined nonprofit has stepped in to rescue them — including at least 180 dogs and, in one case, a classroom turtle. Bethel Friends of Canines (BFK9), an animal rescue based in the western Alaska hub of Bethel, has been working around the clock to reach villages cut off by floodwaters and high surf from the remnants of Typhoon Halong. The storm slammed into Alaska’s western coast with strong winds and heavy waves, triggering evacuations in communities with no road access in or out. For BFK9, that isolation posed one of the biggest challenges. “It is hard for people outside of Alaska, and even some in Alaska, to fathom not being able to just drive and save these dogs,” said Jenna Stewart, the nonprofit's director of development. Instead, the group has relied on an informal network of pilots and small airlines willing to fly into affected areas with kennels — and fly out with animals in tow. The organization, which normally takes in around 500 animals a year, has more than tripled its usual pace in just a few weeks. They’ve also leaned on locals who stayed behind. In Kipnuk, one of the hardest-hit villages, a group of teachers and residents began gathering dogs for the rescue flights. Without proper carriers, they got creative. “The first dogs they sent in to us arrived in a plastic tote and a couple puppies in a Spiderman backpack,” said Stewart. “They had nothing else to hold these dogs, but knew they had to get out of the village and to safety with BFK9.” The group has rescued mostly dogs, though this month marked a first: a red-eared slider turtle, once a classroom pet, is now recovering in Bethel under the care of a local vet. Cats are rarely found in Alaska’s remote coastal communities, Stewart said. The group might see three to five cats a year, at most. Once the dogs reach Bethel, the work isn’t done. BFK9 immediately begins efforts to reunite them with their owners. In tight-knit communities where “everyone knows everyone’s dog,” as Stewart put it, that process is usually straightforward. For unidentified animals, the group shares photos online, and offers temporary foster care until the owners are ready. But not every dog is easy to catch. As of Friday, BFK9 was still hearing from villages about animals in need of help. “A lot of these dogs left out there are the scared ones,” said Stewart. “They are so scared, and so confused and are hiding. This ordeal is far from over.” The rescue operation has drawn support from across the state and beyond. BFK9 is now partnering with national and local groups like Humane World of Animals, Best Friends Animal Rescue, and the August Fund in Anchorage to house and care for rescued dogs. Stewart says the outpouring of help has been overwhelming — and essential. “Bethel Friends of Canines has an incredible village,” she said. “We are doing great things, but we couldn't do it without all the people helping us.” With more flood-affected animals still being reported, the group isn’t slowing down anytime soon.

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A Fish Named Arnie Just Swam Into The Record Books

A fish named Arnie has just swam into the record books. The four-year-old Murray cod stunned scientists in Australia by swimming more than 850 kilometers through one of the country’s largest river systems — a distance not previously recorded for the species. First tagged in early 2022 in Mullaroo Creek, about 900 kilometers west of Sydney, Arnie’s journey started when floodwaters hit the region that spring. The young fish, weighing just under 1.7 kilograms at the time, took advantage of newly opened barriers along the Murray River to begin a massive upstream trek. “It basically provided free passage for fish,” said Zeb Tonkin, a researcher at the Arthur Rylah Institute, part of the state of Victoria’s department of energy, environment and climate action. Arnie swam 756 kilometers upstream in less than two months — a distance Tonkin said is “way beyond” what researchers have ever seen. The previous known record for a Murray cod was around 160 kilometers. Sometime in the past year, Arnie turned around and began making his way back, covering another 97 kilometers downstream. Altogether, his round-trip journey clocked in at about 853 kilometers. The discovery came to light only a few weeks ago, when researchers compared tracking data during a routine data-sharing exercise. Tonkin said it came as a complete surprise. “We've been working on these species for decades... and we haven't come across that sort of scale of movement beforehand,” he said. The marathon swim isn’t just impressive — it’s meaningful. The Murray cod is a long-living freshwater predator and a key indicator of ecosystem health in Australia’s largest river system. According to the Australian government, a healthy Murray cod population often signals a healthy river. “If we see this species breeding, growing well, migrating well, it's a pretty good indication that the ecosystem in general is pretty healthy,” said Tonkin. The fish, named after Olympic swimming champion Ariarne Titmus, was one of many tagged as part of a decade-long research initiative aimed at understanding native fish movement and improving environmental water management. The program is jointly run with the Mallee Catchment Management Authority and funded by the Living Murray initiative, a state-supported program overseen by the Murray-Darling Basin Authority. The Murray cod is Australia’s largest freshwater fish. While Arnie weighed only a few pounds when tagged, the species can grow to nearly 2 meters in length and tip the scales at over 80 kilograms. They’ve been known to live more than 48 years. They’re also increasingly rare. The species is listed as “vulnerable” under Australia’s Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act. Populations have dropped sharply in recent decades due to a combination of factors: overfishing, habitat degradation, and the damming and regulation of rivers. “More recently, overfishing, river degradation and human modification of the environment have caused major population declines,” according to the Australian Museum. “Murray cod are now relatively uncommon in most areas.” Even in places where they’re still found, their behavior is notoriously difficult to track. Arnie’s journey is providing new insight into just how far a healthy Murray cod is capable of traveling when conditions allow it. That’s key for water managers, who are tasked with releasing flows that can mimic natural flood patterns. With better data on fish migration, those flows can be timed and designed to support breeding, feeding, and safe passage for native species. Tonkin said the team will continue to follow Arnie and other tagged fish in the area, hoping to learn more. For now, though, the surprise athlete has already made his mark. “We didn’t expect to see this,” said Tonkin. “But it shows what’s possible when river systems are connected and healthy.”

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80-Year-Old Woman Who Conquered The Appalachian Trail Just Set a New Record

While most people celebrate turning 80 with cake and candles, Betty Kellenberger marked hers with a backpack and hiking boots — and by breaking a record. The Michigan native just became the oldest woman ever to complete the entire Appalachian Trail, a staggering 3,500-kilometre trek that stretches across 14 U.S. states and involves an elevation gain equal to climbing Mount Everest 16 times. “You see incredible parts of our country, things that you wouldn’t see otherwise,” Kellenberger said. “So much wildlife. It’s just gorgeous.” She grew up on a farm in Howell, Michigan, where she first learned about the trail. For decades, she dreamed of hiking it from Georgia to Maine. But the time commitment — about six months — never quite fit. Then, with no spouse or children and nothing holding her back, she decided 2024 was the year to try. What followed was the adventure of a lifetime. Kellenberger's trek wasn’t without setbacks. She faced dehydration, a concussion from a fall, and even contracted Lyme disease. At one point, Hurricane Helene forced her off the trail entirely as it swept through the eastern U.S., pausing her hike near the Virginia border. Still, she pressed on. Kellenberger rerouted north in the spring of 2025 and tackled some of the trail’s most difficult terrain through New England — enduring slick rocks, steep climbs, and unpredictable weather until the very end. As she got closer to finishing, other hikers started to take notice. She was on track to beat the record previously held by Linda Vanderloop, who completed the trail at age 74 in 2024. But for Kellenberger, the journey was never about records. “You hike alone, and so you have your thoughts and you have time, and you have, you know, the presence of God and all that magnificent scenery,” she told WOOD. “But it’s the people you meet. It’s the shuttlers. It’s the folks that were hiking with you... it’s experience. It’s a love.” Reaching the end came with a flood of emotions. “So you’re a basket case,” she laughed. “You have so many emotions because you’re excited about finishing. I was really looking forward to saying, ‘I am done.’ But you also know you’re going to miss this big time. You’re not going to have what you have out on that trail. That peace, the serenity.” She said the hardest parts were also the most rewarding: Maine and New Hampshire, with their rugged mountains and unpredictable terrain. But by the end of it all, Kellenberger said she felt stronger than ever. “Now I’m in the best shape of my life,” she said. Reflecting on the hike, she offered some advice for anyone thinking about taking on something big. “This life is a journey. And it may be a series of little journeys. Or maybe just the whole life is a journey,” she said. “And the bigger your efforts, the greater the reward.” For Betty Kellenberger, that reward came with every step, every sunrise, and finally, the finish line.

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Researchers Make Progress In Effort To Boost Poland’s Only Native Turtle Species

A conservation project in central Poland has reached a promising milestone: every single one of the 50 European pond turtles raised last year in captivity has survived. Biologists at the University of Łódź, in partnership with the Łódź Orientarium Zoo and regional institutions, announced the success this week as part of their long-term effort to restore the country’s only native turtle species, which is believed to be extinct in the Łódź region. “In the wild, only about 1% of hatchlings survive due to predators,” the university’s biology department said in a Facebook post. “Bigger equals safer. Breeding allows the young to grow larger, which dramatically increases their chances of survival once released into the wild.” The project, which aims to reintroduce roughly 150 turtles into protected parks in Łódź province over the next few years, takes hatchlings from Poland’s Polesie National Park — home to the country’s largest population of European pond turtles, estimated at around 1,500 — and raises them in specially designed indoor enclosures for their first three years. Those enclosures simulate natural conditions while protecting the young turtles from threats such as foxes and raccoons. The turtles are exposed to seasonal temperatures, natural sunlight and UVB rays, and must forage for food on their own — all to keep their survival instincts sharp. “The European pond turtle has disappeared from our region mainly due to human activity – wetland drainage, pollution and predation,” the department of biology said. “Now, by joining forces, we have a chance to reverse this trend.” Two cohorts of 50 turtles were brought to the zoo in September 2024 and September 2025. The first group, now one year into the three-year rearing process, has shown excellent results. “The turtles have grown significantly and are in excellent condition,” the university reported. Once widespread across central Poland, the European pond turtle has been in steep decline for decades due to habitat loss, water contamination, and invasive predators. The species has been under strict protection in Poland since 1935 but continues to face the threat of extinction. Now, with controlled rearing giving the turtles a fighting chance, conservationists are hopeful that self-sustaining wild populations can one day return to the region. The reintroduction plan focuses on two landscape parks in Łódź province, where researchers believe conditions are suitable for the turtles to eventually thrive without human support. “It’s a major step,” the university said. “We’re not just helping a species survive. We’re working to bring it home.”

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In New Orleans, Brass Bands Don’t Just Play Music — They Carry a City’s Soul

When a trumpet sounds on the corner of Dauphine and Toulouse, everything stops. Traffic yields. Heads turn. What starts as a solemn hymn — maybe “Just a Closer Walk with Thee” — soon rises into something joyful, even defiant. This is a second line parade, one of New Orleans’ most powerful traditions: a moment of public mourning that transforms into celebration, sorrow lifted by rhythm. Here, grief marches side by side with joy. And always, always with a brass band leading the way. Second lines are part funeral procession, part block party. The term “second line” refers to the people who follow behind the musicians — dancers, friends, and onlookers drawn into the moment. But these parades don’t only mark funerals. They happen at weddings, birthdays, holidays, and anytime the city decides something is worth remembering or honoring. At the center of it all are the brass musicians, decked out in pressed white shirts and black pants, wielding trombones, sousaphones, and snares. They’re not just playing music. They’re carrying tradition. “If you grow up here, the African drumbeats, the dancing, which goes back to slavery and to Congo Square, that stuff is in our DNA,” says Roger Lewis, 83, a founding member of the world-renowned Dirty Dozen Brass Band. Formed in 1972 out of a church marching band, Dirty Dozen helped change the sound and shape of brass music. They’ve toured five continents and shared stages with legends from Dizzy Gillespie to Elvis Costello, yet they still play small shows in New Orleans warehouses for a few dollars at the door. That’s how it is here. As jazz legend Ellis Marsalis once said, “In New Orleans, culture doesn’t come down from on high. It bubbles up from the streets.” And brass music is very much street-born. Its origins trace back to the late 1800s, when military instruments and African rhythms merged. Social Aid and Pleasure Clubs — groups that once offered financial support to newly freed slaves — began hiring bands to play at funerals and parades. Over time, brass music soaked in gospel, bebop, funk, and eventually, hip-hop. “We played the same, traditional songs, but we picked that beat up. I mean up,” says Lewis. “I used to say, ‘Wear tennis shoes and your jogging suit. You may lose 40 pounds parading with us.’” That energy shaped the next generation. In the early ’80s, high schoolers in the Tremé neighborhood — too young to play in clubs — took their sound to the streets. That group became the Rebirth Brass Band, now a Grammy-winning act that still plays weekly shows in town. “I think, in terms of sound, we continued what the Dirty Dozen set down,” says Keith Frazier, Rebirth’s bass drummer. “Hip-hop and jazz and reggae… with these instruments, you can do anything.” Neighborhoods shaped the music too. “Uptown guys play it a little faster. The Tremé loves a more traditional set, whereas New Orleans East has a hip-hop fan base,” Frazier explains. “I’m from the Upper Ninth Ward, which is kind of traditional mixed with modern. I think that’s the beauty of brass music. It’s never one thing, or even one part of the city.” But for decades, brass bands were mostly male. That’s changing, slowly. Christie Jourdain leads The Original Pinettes — the first all-female brass band in New Orleans, founded in 1991. “I came out of the ’80s/MTV generation,” she says. “I was listening to Peter Gabriel and Prince rather than the traditionals or Gospel.” With the help of a high school band director, the Pinettes carved out space in a male-dominated scene. “At first people called us ‘cute,’” Jourdain remembers. “Then we’d kick the doors down when we played.” In 2013, they beat out several male bands at a citywide Red Bull competition, forcing organizers to rename the event from “Street Kings” to “Street Queens.” Their success paved the way for newer acts like Bra’s Band, another all-women group formed in 2021. “I got a request to put together an all-ladies brass group for the Krewe of Boheme Mardi Gras parade,” says Bra’s Band leader Maude Caillat. “It wasn’t easy. There aren’t enough women playing brass.” Today, her group includes about 15 women, though only a handful play each gig — a common practice in New Orleans where musicians juggle multiple bands, jobs, and obligations. “French Quarter Fest is my favorite,” says Jourdain. “They recruit homegrown talent and pay well. I wish others would do the same. We all have second jobs now. That’s why a seven-piece band might have 12 members, so people can schedule around work. The pay is something we need to address as a city. Because what is New Orleans without brass music?” It’s a fair question. One few locals want to answer. Ron Rona, former artistic director at the historic Preservation Hall, says it best: “Many brass bands emerge from high school marching band relationships... these musicians often end up knowing their bandmates for much of their lives. Then, whether organically or formally, many serve as musical mentors to the kids coming up. It’s cyclical and familial, and that’s not something too many other cities can claim.” In New Orleans, that cycle plays out daily. A young couple might be getting married right now, just a few blocks from Congo Square. The trumpet player from Kinfolk might look at the bride and say, “You ready?” She’ll nod, lift her parasol, and step into the street. Behind her: a century of tradition, joy, rhythm, and grief — and a brass band that won’t let the music stop.

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Visitors Flock to Sümela Monastery in Turkey as Restoration Reveals Hidden Treasures

Perched on a sheer cliff 300 meters above a forested valley in northeast Turkey, the Sümela Monastery looks more like a movie backdrop than a real place. But this 4th-century site, carved into the mountainside of the Pontic Alps, has not only survived the rise and fall of empires — it’s now undergoing a modern revival that’s bringing both tourists and pilgrims back in droves. Located an hour’s drive from Trabzon, the monastery complex includes chapels, living quarters, a bell tower, and a sacred spring, all clinging improbably to the rock face. For centuries, Sümela has been both a religious sanctuary and a symbol of resilience — first founded by early Christians along the Black Sea coast, later supported by Muslim Ottoman sultans, then abandoned, looted, and vandalized after the fall of the Ottoman Empire. Now, thanks to an extensive and still ongoing restoration effort, the site is open again to the public, with thousands of visitors making the climb each day. “We’ve always had a problem with falling rocks,” said Levent Alniak, manager of museums and historic sites for Trabzon province. “To prevent damage to the structures and harm to visitors, we had industrial mountain-climbers secure the cliff.” The climbers, suspended midair, installed steel cables and mesh netting to stabilize the towering rock wall above the site. That restoration process also led to some unexpected finds. A hidden tunnel was discovered, opening into a small, previously unknown chapel. Inside, archaeologists found vivid frescoes depicting heaven, hell, and the afterlife. Meticulous work is also being done on the site’s better-known frescoes — early Christian wall paintings that have been battered over the years by graffiti, fire, and moisture. “People wrote their names and other things across the frescos that we are trying to remove,” said Senol Aktaş, a restorer currently working on an 18th-century image of the Virgin Mary. “We paint over the graffiti with a style and colors similar to what the original artists used.” But not all the damage was caused by careless tourists. Many of the older frescoes — especially those depicting saints and biblical figures — have had their eyes scratched out. Some blamed religious defacement. Others offered a different explanation. “The Virgin Mary is a holy person for the Muslim people also,” said Öznur Doksöz, a guide who’s been leading visitors through Sümela since the 1980s. “So the people who live around here came and scratched their faces, especially the eyes, boiled the paint chips and drank this water thinking it would bless them. We don’t know if this story is true or not, but that’s what people say.” The story of Sümela itself may be part legend, part history. According to tradition, two Greek monks — Barnabas and Sophronios — were drawn to the site in 386 CE after the Virgin Mary appeared to them in a vision. Guided by that vision, they found an icon of the Virgin painted by the Apostle Luke in a cave that would later become Sümela’s iconic Rock Church. While that founding tale remains unproven, there’s no doubt the monastery was a powerful religious center by the 13th century. It thrived under the rule of the Empire of Trebizond and, later, under the Ottomans, who respected Christian institutions that remained loyal to the sultan. In fact, the Ottoman rulers granted land and donations to the monks. “Sometimes they would change a church into a mosque, like Hagia Sophia in Istanbul,” Alniak explained. “But most of the time, they left the Christians to do their religion.” That changed after World War I. As the Ottoman Empire collapsed, conflict broke out between Turkish and Greek communities, culminating in a 1923 population exchange. Greek Orthodox monks left Sümela behind — and with them, many of the monastery’s most treasured relics. Fearing theft, the monks buried valuable items in secret spots in the Altındere Valley. The monastery was left unguarded and quickly became a target for treasure hunters and vandals. The most sacred object, the icon of the Virgin Mary known as Panagia Soumela, was eventually retrieved and now resides in the Nea Sumela Monastery in northern Greece. Other relics have surfaced in museums or private collections abroad. Efforts to preserve Sümela began in the 1970s. Since then, Turkey’s Ministry of Culture and Tourism has invested heavily in turning the crumbling site into a major tourist destination. In 2010, a symbolic milestone was reached when the Orthodox Patriarch of Constantinople held the first worship service at Sümela in nearly 90 years, an annual tradition that continues every August 15. Today, Sümela is a functioning state museum. Restoration teams continue their work during the dry summer months, while visitors roam its courtyards, chapels, and hidden corners. A short documentary about the site’s restoration plays in one of the former monks’ cells. Getting there is relatively easy. Turkish Airlines offers multiple daily flights from Istanbul to Trabzon. From the city, tour vans or rental cars can take visitors to Altındere Valley National Park. After parking, a shuttle delivers guests to a cobbled pathway that leads to the monastery’s stone steps. Entry costs 20 euros, and visitors are advised to wear proper footwear. The weather can shift quickly, especially during rainy season or winter snowfalls. Accommodation ranges from nearby Coşandere village’s modest Sümela Holiday Hotel to higher-end options in Trabzon like the Radisson Blu and Ramada Plaza. But for most people, the real luxury is standing at the edge of a cliff, surrounded by centuries-old frescoes, gazing out over the Black Sea forests — and imagining what stories these ancient walls might still hold.

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A Cop in Florida Just Reunited With the Warthog He Helped Rescue

A police officer in Jacksonville, Florida, was reunited with a warthog that he helped to rescue after it went missing. The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office said that Officer Sam Ho “used a drone to help locate a missing warthog at the Jacksonville Zoo and Botanical Gardens.” This footage shows Ho visiting the Warthog, named Mateo, who had since fathered three piglets. “It’s good to see Mateo’s healthy and able to, you know, fulfil life and he’s happy and roaming around eating food. He has kids now,” Ho said.

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Japan Unveils Hydrogen-Powered Self-Driving Tractor To Revolutionize Agriculture

Japan has just introduced a new kind of farm machine — and it's unlike anything that's ever plowed a field before. At the upcoming World Expo 2025 in Osaka, Kubota will showcase its hydrogen-powered, fully autonomous tractor — a high-tech, zero-emission solution to two of agriculture’s biggest problems: labor shortages and pollution. The tractor, the first of its kind, features a 100-horsepower hydrogen fuel cell stack that can operate for 12 hours on a single refueling. It produces no carbon emissions, just water and heat, thanks to a process that combines hydrogen and oxygen to generate electricity. But it’s not just what powers it that’s innovative. The tractor also drives itself. Equipped with AI-powered cameras and sensors, the machine can detect people or obstacles in its path and stop automatically — no human needed behind the wheel. As long as it's within range of a remote network, it can operate entirely unmanned. It’s an upgrade from Kubota’s previous hydrogen-powered tractor, a 60-horsepower model introduced in 2024 that required a driver and could run four hours on a 10-minute hydrogen refuel. Both versions rely on fuel cells with high-durability platinum catalysts and thinner membranes that boost efficiency and longevity. The move comes as Japan’s farming sector faces growing pressure. Many of the country’s farmers are aging, and fewer young people are entering the profession. At the same time, traditional diesel-powered equipment contributes to climate change and local air pollution. Kubota’s solution aims to address both issues at once. By removing the need for a human driver and switching to zero-emission fuel, the company hopes to make agriculture more efficient, sustainable, and appealing to a new generation of farmers. “It supports the labor force while making farming more efficient and productive,” Interesting Engineering reported. Compared to battery-electric tractors, the hydrogen-powered model offers greater power and longer runtime — two features that matter in large-scale farming operations. Isamu Kazama, a lead developer at Kubota, said the tractor’s “practical application” is still under development. But once ready, it could transform tomorrow’s farms into tech-driven, environmentally friendly operations with cleaner air, lower costs, and less time spent in the field. In a sector long known for tradition, Kubota’s tractor is a glimpse into the future — one where machines handle the heavy lifting, and farmers manage the land with the help of clean, autonomous technology.

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This Hero Dog Just Rescued a Lost 2-Year-Old Girl After Hours in the Cold Woods

A German Shepherd named Freyja is being celebrated as a hero in New Hampshire. This remarkable dog played a key role in finding a missing 2-year-old girl who wandered off into the woods near her home on October 10. The toddler, dressed only in thin leggings and a light sweater, managed to slip out of her family's fenced yard in Dorchester after their two dogs created an opening. The situation was dire as temperatures hovered in the single digits Celsius and were expected to drop below freezing overnight. Responding quickly, local authorities received a frantic call from the child’s mother and immediately initiated a search operation. Over 90 volunteers joined the effort to locate the little girl before nightfall brought dangerously cold conditions. Among the volunteers was Jeremy Corson from Concord, accompanied by his trained search and rescue dog, Freyja. Jeremy has been volunteering with New England K9 Search and Rescue for 13 years, and he knew how critical it was to find the child swiftly. "Time is of the essence with a 2-year-old," Jeremy noted. The longer they are missing, the farther they can wander. Freyja picked up a scent around 8 p.m., nearly five hours after the girl disappeared. "She’s nose-down, which is an indicator of tracking," Jeremy recalled. Navigating through dense forest where visibility was limited to just a few feet ahead, he called out to the child and heard her respond. Jeremy found her cold and scared but unharmed in what he described as "a really rough piece of woods." He carried her back through the forest to her anxious family waiting at home. The family was overjoyed when they saw their daughter safe again. "Everyone was absolutely ecstatic," said Jeremy, describing how emotional and relieved the child's mother became upon their return. After reuniting with her family, the toddler expressed she was ready for a bath and bedtime but was first taken to a local hospital for a thorough check-up. Jeremy praised Freyja's impressive skills during this rescue mission. He proudly shared that she received a new ball and plenty of affection as rewards for her successful efforts.

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What's Good Now!

Wearable Patch Detects Early Signs Of Deadly Skin Cancer, Offering Hope For Easier Home Screening

A Nonprofit Rescued 180 Dogs And A Turtle After Devastating Floods in Alaska

A Fish Named Arnie Just Swam Into The Record Books

80-Year-Old Woman Who Conquered The Appalachian Trail Just Set a New Record

Researchers Make Progress In Effort To Boost Poland’s Only Native Turtle Species

In New Orleans, Brass Bands Don’t Just Play Music — They Carry a City’s Soul

Visitors Flock to Sümela Monastery in Turkey as Restoration Reveals Hidden Treasures

A Cop in Florida Just Reunited With the Warthog He Helped Rescue

Japan Unveils Hydrogen-Powered Self-Driving Tractor To Revolutionize Agriculture

This Hero Dog Just Rescued a Lost 2-Year-Old Girl After Hours in the Cold Woods