Site icon Peter A. Hovis

Preserving ‘nearly dead’ organs

WHO FOOTS THE BILL FOR CLIMATE CHANGE? VIEW ONLINE
BLURRING THE LINE BETWEEN
LIFE AND DEATH
Friday, November 4, 2022
In today’s newsletter, we cover researchers saving ‘nearly dead’ organs to ease a transplant crisis; consider who will pay for the compounding cost of climate change; discover the mysteries still swirling around King Tut; swim in a lake filled with millions of jellyfish … and meet the other King Tut buried in the U.S. capital.
PHOTOGRAPHS BY MAX AGUILERA-HELLWEG

What is dead and what is living?

Scientists are figuring out how to rescue and resurrect mostly dead organs for transplant. They have to—more than 6,000 patients in the U.S. alone are waiting for a transplant. These preservation strategies may not only ease the organ shortage, but they will open up the broader existential questions. (Pictured above, a blue bag of hemoglobin is used the slow the death of “barely alive” pig brain cells.)

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Getting the heart beating: In this Yale med school operating room, a pig’s heart spontaneously started to beat, hours after the time of death. Read more.
STORIES WE’RE FOLLOWING
PHOTOGRAPH BY ABDUL MAJEED, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Human-caused climate change worsened floods (pictured above) that swept away a chunk of Pakistan’s GNP. Will the nations behind those emissions pay?
Why are so many teen girls getting long COVID? Related: What doctors didn’t tell you about COVID, vaccines
Free Solo, the Panda Helper, and other top photos of this century
These twins may make you rethink your views about race
Famine threatens 37 million people in the Horn of Africa
The teenage brain: Figuring out how and why teens think
Trash the pumpkin? Here’s how our readers help curb pumpkin pollution
What we still don’t know about Tut (Who was his mom? How’d he die?)
Why do we even have daylight savings time?
PHOTO OF THE DAY
PHOTOGRAPH BY ENRIC SALA, NAT GEO IMAGE COLLECTION
Sun-lovers: Dive into a lake with millions of golden jellyfish? Each year, tourists from around the world choose to do just that in Palau’s Jellyfish Lake. Every day the jellies migrate from one side of the lake to the other, following the arc of the sun to power the algae-like organisms in their bodies. In 2014, Nat Geo Explorer in Residence Enric Sala took the plunge on the Pacific island and captured the image above. Hear about Sala’s mission to save the world’s oceans on Nat Geo’s podcast, Overheard.
NO BRAINS, NO PROBLEM
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
PHOTOGRAPH BY NIVAL ANNE-SOPHIE, HANS LUCAS/REDUX
Problematic ‘soil’: It’s called potting soil but in fact, the products gardeners often use to raise beds or start seeds (pictured above) rarely contain actual soil or compost. Instead, most potting soil is a sterile blend of ingredients that contain a whopping carbon footprint. Nat Geo reports on the top three problematic components of potting soil—and how to find alternatives.
SOIL’S DIRTY SECRET
LAST GLIMPSE
PHOTOGRAPH BY HERBERT E. FRENCH, NATIONAL PHOTO COMPANY COLLECTION, LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
The other King Tut: Political advisers thought a picture with King Tut would make the reserved U.S. presidential candidate Herbert Hoover seem more approachable. So they snapped a photo (above) with Hoover’s “Belgian police dog,” Tut, and mailed it to potential voters across the country. As the world notes the 100th anniversary of discovering the pharaoh Tut’s tomb in Egypt, Nat Geo looks to another Tut who now rests in the U.S. capital—in the back yard of Myanmar’s embassy.

Related: Why everyone was so obsessed with the Egyptian pharaoh
And: What we still don’t know about the boy king

A PRESIDENT’S BEST FRIEND
Correction: Yesterday’s newsletter missed the last letter of the author of our story on kids and long COVID. Her name is Priyanka Runwal.

This newsletter has been curated and edited by David Beard, Sydney Combs, Jen Tse, and Heather Kim. Have a great weekend!

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