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Who was ‘Adam’? Genetic ‘man’-hunt catches eye of Vatican scientists

Who was ‘Adam’? Genetic ‘man’-hunt catches eye of Vatican scientists

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Published January 30, 2014

FoxNews.com
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    Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam.

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    Human sex-determining chromosomes: X chromosome (left) and the much smaller Y chromosome. (University of Arizona)

A pair of scientific studies using the latest genetic evidence are seeking to identify the very first man to walk the Earth, the so-called “Adam.”

The studies delve into phylogenetics, a forensic hunt through the Xs and Ys of our chromosomes to find the genetic “Adam,” to borrow the name from the Bible. And Eran Elhaik from the University of Sheffield says he knows exactly when that first man lived.

“We can say with some certainty that modern humans emerged in Africa a little over 200,000 years ago,” Elhaik said in a press release. That directly contradicts a March 2013 study from Arizona Research Labs at the University of Arizona, which found that the human Y chromosome (the hereditary factor determining male sex) originated through interbreeding among species and dates back even further than 200 millennia.

“Our analysis indicates this lineage diverged from previously known Y chromosomes about 338,000 years ago, a time when anatomically modern humans had not yet evolved,” said Michael Hammer, an associate professor in the University of Arizona’s Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology.

Elhaik published a paper in the January 2014 issue of the European Journal of Human Genetics on his work; he used the opportunity to take a swipe at Hammer’s paper, published in the American Journal of Human Genetics.

“We have shown that the University of Arizona study lacks any scientific merit,” Elhaik claimed. “In fact, their hypothesis creates a sort of ‘space-time paradox’ whereby the most ancient individual belonging to the Homo sapiens species has not yet been born.”

Think of the Michael J. Fox film, Back to the Future. Marty was worried that his parents would not meet and so he would not be born in the future. “It’s the same idea,” Elhaik said.

Hammer told FoxNews.com he stands by his work.

“The paper by Elhaik and colleagues … does not present a convincing argument against our paper and unfortunately at times appears to display a lack of technical understanding of the subject area. We are in the process of submitting a rebuttal,” he said.

Identifying the very first Y chromosome of a genetic “Adam” would not mean scientists had located the Biblical figure Adam, explained Werner Arber, the Vatican’s top scientist, told FoxNews.com.

“Scientific investigations have no means to identify Adam and Eve and to sequence their genomes,” said Arber, current president of The Pontifical Academy of Sciences (PAS), the world’s first exclusively scientific academy, and a Nobel prize winner for his work in physiology. “Therefore, identification of Adam and Eve remains a matter of religious belief.”

Arber and other members of the PAS do closely monitor the field of phylogenetics, which is one of the hottest topics for genetic researchers. Scientists call the most recent common ancestor MCRA or A00 — it’s misleading to call the bearer of that chromosome Adam, noted Joe Pickrell from the New York Genome Center.

“At some point, a population geneticist had the clever idea of calling this common ancestor ‘Adam,’” he wrote on the Pickrell Labs website. “This is a biblical allusion, of course, and it probably was good for a bit of amusement a couple of decades ago. But it’s time to retire this metaphor–not only because it confuses the public … but because it confuses even practicing human population geneticists.”

Indeed, while metaphors are useful in communicating science, modern terminology shouldn’t be conflated with the Bible, explained Marcelo Sánchez Sorondo, chancellor of the PAS.

“Contemporary scientific language is not the language of the Bible,” Sorondo told FoxNews.com in an email. “Therefore, although the Bible adopted an early scientific language, it cannot be read in the light of today’s scientific language…This was clarified during the scientific revolution of Galileo (the founder of our Academy) when Cardinal Cesare Baronio rightly pointed out that the Bible tells us how to reach Heaven but not what Heaven is.”

“Of course this is also true for phylogenetics.”

But in a 2012 address to the Synod of Bishops, Arber said that the Bible story of Adam and Eve details existing scientific knowledge from the time, proposing “a logical sequence of events in which the creation of our planet Earth may have been followed by the establishment of the conditions for life.”

“It is our duty today to preserve (and where necessary restore) this consistency on the basis of the improved scientific knowledge now available. I am convinced that scientific knowledge and faith are complementary elements in our orientational knowledge and should remain so.”

Jeremy A. Kaplan is Science and Technology editor at FoxNews.com, where he heads up coverage of gadgets, the online world, space travel, nature, the environment, and more. Prior to joining Fox, he was executive editor of PC Magazine, co-host of the Fastest Geek competition, and a founding editor of GoodCleanTech.

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Christians killed for faith nearly doubled in 2013, group finds

Christians killed for faith nearly doubled in 2013, group finds

By Joshua Rhett Miller

Published January 10, 2014

FoxNews.com
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    Rev. Faye Pama Musa, 52, was one of 2,123 Christians killed last year due to their faith, compared to 1,201 in 2012. More than half of those reported killings (1,213) occurred in Syria, followed by Nigeria (612) and Pakistan (88). (Courtesy: Open Doors)

Rev. Faye Pama Musa knew immediately why suspected Boko Haram militants burst into his home last year as his wife prepared dinner in the family’s northeastern Nigeria home. His stance against Christian persecution in the divided African nation had long made him a target.

Musa, who served as the general overseer of the Rhema Assembly International Church and secretary of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) in Borno, saw the intruders near the front door of his home in Maiduguri as his wife, Mercy, prepped food. One of the couple’s daughters, Zion, had spotted the armed men just seconds earlier jumping a fence.

“Today you are a dead man,” one of the gunmen reported said on May 14 as he dragged Musa to the porch. “Call your Jesus to help you, Mr. CAN man!”

Zion Musa then begged the attackers to spare her father, a request met with a misfired bullet that caused her to faint. She survived but her 52-year-old father – a man who worked closely with Open Doors, a nondenominational group tracking persecuted Christians worldwide – did not.

Musa, according to the group, was one of 2,123 Christians killed last year due to their faith, compared to 1,201 in 2012. More than half of those reported killings (1,213) occurred in Syria, followed by Nigeria (612) and Pakistan (88).

But North Korea — a country of more than 24 million, with an estimated 300,000 Christians — remained the most dangerous country worldwide for Christians for the 12th consecutive year, followed by Somalia, Syria and Iraq.

“Like others in that country, Christians have to survive under one of the most oppressive regimes in contemporary times,” according to a release on the report issued Wednesday. “They have to deal with corrupt officials, bad policies, natural disasters, diseases and hunger. On top of that, they must hide their decision to follow Christ. Being caught with a Bible is grounds for execution or a life-long political prison sentence. An estimated 50,000 to 70,000 Christians live in concentration camps, prisons and prison-like circumstances under the regime of leader Kim Jong-Un.”

A sub-Saharan African country — Somalia — was ranked second on the organization’s list for the first time. Islamic extremism is the primary source of Christian persecution in the country of more than 10 million and while the capital of Mogadishu is under more moderate Muslim control recently, coverts from Islam are threatened with execution, sometimes by the al-Shabaab militant rebels.

“In Somalia, a Christian cannot trust anyone,” one Christian reportedly told an Open Doors researcher. “One false confidence and you literally lose your head.”

Syria, meanwhile, which had not previously cracked the group’s list of top ten most oppressive places for Christians, ranked third last year. Like in Somalia, Islamic extremism powered the prosecution, according to Open Door officials, and many towns that previously had large populations of Christians have become ghost towns.

“The face of persecution in Syria has changed,” the group’s World Watch List reads, adding that nearly half of rebels in Syria have a jihadist background. “The influence of these groups that are linked to Al Qaeda and other extremist factions has risen considerably in the past year.”

More than 80 percent of people worldwide identify with a religious group, according to 2011 survey by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life. Of those, 2.2 billion, or 32 percent, identified themselves as Christians, followed by 1.6 billion Muslims (23 percent) and 1 billion Hindus (15 percent).

The survey also found that roughly 1.1 billion people, or 16 percent worldwide, have no religious affiliation, making that segment the third-largest religious group globally and roughly equal in size to the world’s Catholic population.

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Scientists film Rudolph’s glowing nose

Caught on camera: Scientists film Rudolph’s glowing nose

Published December 16, 2013

FoxNews.com

The tale of Rudolph’s red nose has long been a Christmas classic — and now researchers in Sweden have caught the reindeer’s glowing nose on camera.

Scientists at Lund University used a thermographic camera to film reindeer at the Zoo of Nordic Animals in Sweden.

They discovered that Rudolph’s nose is “red” due to the rich supply of blood the animal needs to pump to its nose to keep it from freezing.

“When reindeer are feeding, their mules are exposed to very low temperatures as they look for food under the snow,” Professor of Functional Zoology at Lund University Ronald Kröger said in a press release. “They need to maintain sensitivity in order to know what they’re actually eating.”

They do so by sending warm blood to their cold noses — creating the reddish “glow” Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer is named for.

Not all mammals function this way, the researchers said. Kröger is a dog owner and part of the Mammalian Rhinarium Group at Lund University, which studies how mammals obtain sensory information from their specialized, hairless and wet nose tips (called rhinaria).

“Dogs are the exact opposite to reindeer. Nobody knows why their noses are cold and why they have evolved that way. That is what we want to find out,” he said.

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Largest gathering ever of exoskeleton-wearers walk for charity

The bionic bunch: Largest gathering ever of exoskeleton-wearers walk for charity

By Sasha Bogursky

Published November 18, 2013

FoxNews.com
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    ReWalk inventor Dr. Amit Goffer (bottom row) and other ReWalkers participate in a 5K walk in New York City’s Riverside Park.(ARGO MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES)

Using new exoskeleton technology that allows the paralyzed to walk again, the largest gathering ever of ReWalk users from across the world came together in New York City on Sunday to participate in the Generosity 5K to raise money for the Bronx Veterans Medical Research Foundation.

ARGO Medical’s Rewalk suit is living up to its promise: to revolutionize the way paraplegics and other people with disabilities live.

“Regardless of whether it’s from ARGO or another company, it’s a technology that none of us realize how big of a difference it makes in the health of a patient,” ARGO Medical Technologies CEO Larry Jasinski told FoxNews.com.

Although it rained in New York City on Monday, the rain stayed away Sunday while seven ReWalkers and hundreds of supporters successfully made their way through Manhattan’s Riverside Park.

“I think the most important thing was that the ReWalkers completed the walk,” Jasinski said.

Among the participants was the inventor of the suit, Dr. Amit Goffer. Goffer is himself a quadriplegic who became frustrated by the outdated wheelchair and wanted to create something that would allow people with spinal cord injuries to walk again.

“What’s unique about ReWalk is that behind the left elbow of the user is a motion sensor that picks up a user’s movement when they walk,” Jasinski said. “That is attached to a computer that can replicate human gait to create a non-robotic walking step.”

Most other types of technologies cause an unnatural, stiff walk closer to a robot than to the way humans stride. ReWalk helps to create a more natural and human-like step.

“It’s the closest to walking that I can get. It’s a very good feeling,” ReWalker Gene Laureano, a father of four who became paralyzed 12 years ago after falling from a ladder at his construction job, told theNew York Post.

The 44-pound ReWalk suit is composed of two motorized limbs that strap to the legs, hips and trunk. The motion sensors detect when the user leans forward and begins moving.

The suit is currently available only in the Middle East and Europe, but Jasinski says he hopes to have FDA approval to sell the suits in the United States for an approximate $65,000.

“We believe the cost of the device will be more than offset by cost savings in reduction of medication and medical care,” he said.

“When we ask people why they buy the suit, the top five answers do not include walking again,” Jasinski told FoxNews.com. “Reduction in pain, medication and overall improvement in their wellbeing are more important. [ReWalk] is really making a difference in people’s lives.”

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Western Digital unveils 6TB, helium-filled hard drive

Western Digital unveils 6TB, helium-filled hard drive

Published November 04, 2013

FoxNews.com
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    A stack of platters and the read / write arms that pull data off of them in an ordinary hard drive. New helium-filled models from Western Digital pack in more platters yet draw less power. (WESTERN DIGITAL)

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    WESTERN DIGITAL
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    New helium-filled hard disk drives from Western Digital pack in more platters yet draw less power. (WESTERN DIGITAL)

Western Digital had a problem: ordinary air.

Modern hard drives store data on five metal platters that spin at up to 15,000 revolutions per minute, so fast in fact that drag from the tiny amount of air they whistle through is a problem. But at one-seventh the density of air, helium provides far less resistance for those spinning disks, letting the company pack in more disks that require less power and therefore cost less to operate.

The company on Monday unveiled a 6 terabyte hard disk called the Ultrastar He6 that packs seven platters of data filled goodness into the space usually filled by five. The company says these helium-filled hard disks are the future.

“Our mainstream helium platform will serve as the future building block for new products and technologies moving forward. This is a huge feat, and we are gratified by the support of our customers in the development of this platform,” said Brendan Collins, vice president of product marketing, for the company.

Netflix appears to agree.

“We serve billions of hours of streaming video per quarter to over 40 million subscribers,” said David Fullagar, director of content delivery architecture at Netflix. “The high storage density and lower power usage of the Ultrastar He6 hard drives allow us to continue with that goal, and create a great customer experience.”

The new drive consumes 23 percent less power when idle, and it runs quieter. (It weighs less too, of course — fully 50 grams less, the company said.) The drives are hermetically sealed to keep the helium in, something the company said was an engineering challenge.

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10,000-year-old house uncovered outside of Jerusalem

10,000-year-old house uncovered outside of Jerusalem

Digging History

Published November 26, 2013

FoxNews.com
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    Work being conducted at the excavation. (YOLI SHWARZ/ISRAEL ANTIQUITIES AUTHORITY)

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    An aerial view of the large excavation along Highway 38. (SKY VIEW COMPANY/ISRAEL ANTIQUITIES AUTHORITY)

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    The standing stone (mazzevÄ) which is worked on all of its sides. Evidence of cultic activity in the Chalcolithic period. (ZINOBI MOSKOWITZ/ISRAEL ANTQIUITIES AUTHORITY)

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    A 10,000 year old house, the oldest dwelling to be unearthed to date in the Judean Shephelah. (DR. YAÂAKOV VARDI/ISRAEL ANTIQUITIES AUTHORITY)

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    A Chalcolithic period building and the standing stone (mazzevÄ) positioned at the end of it. (ASSAF PERETZ/ISRAEL ANTIQUITIES AUTHORITY)

An archaeological excavation near Jerusalem has revealed a 10-millennia-old house and a 6,000-year-old cultic temple — discoveries that experts called “a fascinating glimpse into thousands of years of human development,” and evidence of man’s transition to permanent dwellings.

The ancient structures were found at the site of a planned expansion the main access road to Israeli city Beit Shemesh, called Route 38. The house is the oldest building ever found in the area and dates back to the time of the earliest known domestication of plants and animals.

‘Up until this period man migrated from place to place in search of food.’

– Excavation directors with the IAA

“We uncovered a multitude of unique finds during the excavation,” said Amir Golani, one of the excavators for the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA). “The large excavation affords us a broad picture of the progression and development of the society in the settlement throughout the ages.”

The oldest artifacts found are of the Pre-Pottery Neolithic period (approximately 10,000 years ago). According to the excavation directors, “whoever built the house did something that was totally innovative because up until this period man migrated from place to place in search of food.”

Golani explained that the find gave archaeologists a window onto a period 5,000 years ago in the Early Bronze Age, when a rural society made the transition into an urban society.

They “can clearly trace the urban planning and see the guiding hand of the settlement’s leadership that chose to regulate the construction in the crowded regions in the center of the settlement and allowed less planning along its periphery.”

Also among the finds were multiple structures from from the end of the Chalcolithic period (the Copper Age) some 6,000 years ago. Archaeologists found a six-sided stone column standing 51 inches high and weighing several hundred pounds.

“The standing stone was smoothed and worked on all six of its sides, and was erected with one of its sides facing east,” the excavator directors said in a press release. “This unique find alludes to the presence of a cultic temple at the site.”

A group of nine flint and limestones axes were also discovered laying side by side near the prehistoric building. “It is apparent that the axes, some of which were used as tools and some as cultic objects, were highly valued by their owners. Just as today we are unable to get along without a cellular telephone and a computer, they too attributed great importance to their tools,” the researchers concluded.

“It is fascinating to see how in such an ancient period a planned settlement was established in which there is orderly construction, and trace the development of the society which became increasingly hierarchical,” said Golani.

The IAA and Netivei Israel Company will open the excavation to the visiting public this Wednesday, November 27.

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Mars was once covered in water

Ancient Mars was once covered in water — and MAVEN will find out where it went

Published November 14, 2013

FoxNews.com

Where did all the water go?

Billions of years ago when the Red Planet was young, it likely had a thick atmosphere that was warm enough to support oceans of liquid water, a critical ingredient for life, NASA believes. Mars today is a barren desert however — so what happened?

NASA aims to solve a piece of that puzzle with the launch of the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) mission, which is set to blast off from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station’s Complex 41 on Monday, Nov. 18 at 1:28 p.m.

The newest Mars explorer will study the thinning of the planet’s atmosphere and the disappearance of surface water over time to possibly explain the discrepancy between then and now.

There are currently several competing theories to explain how Mars was stripped of its thick atmosphere some 4 billion years ago, the space agency said.

“The leading theory is that Mars lost its intrinsic magnetic field that was protecting the atmosphere from direct erosion by the impact of the solar wind,” said Joseph Grebowsky of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.

The solar wind is a thin stream of electrically charged particles or plasma blowing continuously from the sun into space at about a million miles per hour.

“Studies of the remnant magnetic field distributions measured by NASA’s Mars Global Surveyor mission set the disappearance of the planet’s convection-produced global magnetic field at about 3.7 billion years ago, leaving the Red Planet vulnerable to the solar wind,” Grebowsky said.

MAVEN was designed to help study and possibly verify that theory. Ahead of its launch, NASA’s Goddard Conceptual Image Lab created a stunning video showcasing what a water-filled Mars would have looked like. After all, if liquid surface water existed billions of years ago, then the planet’s atmosphere had to have had a different climate that was warmer and a pressure near or greater than it currently is.

The video shows how the surface of Mars might have appeared during this ancient warm period, beginning with a flyover of a Martian lake. It ends with an illustration of NASA’s MAVEN mission in orbit around present-day Mars.

The spacecraft will arrive at the Red Planet on Sept. 22, 2014, and slip into an elliptical orbit ranging from a low of 93 miles above the surface to a high of 3,728 miles. It also will take five “deep dips” during the course of the mission, flying as low as 77 miles in altitude and providing a cross-section of the top of the atmosphere.

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Chinese lunar rover makes first tracks on moon, state media reports

Chinese lunar rover makes first tracks on moon, state media reports

Published December 15, 2013

FoxNews.com
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    December 15, 2013: This image taken from video, shows China’s first moon rover touching the lunar surface and leaving deep traces on its loose soil, several hours after the country successfully carried out the world’s first soft landing of a space probe on the moon in nearly four decades. The writing at the top of the image reads “Surveillance camera C image.” (AP Photo/CCTV VNR via AP video)

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    December 14, 2013: This photo released by China’s Xinhua News Agency, shows a picture of the moon surface taken by the on-board camera of the lunar probe Chang’e-3 on the screen of the Beijing Aerospace Control Center in Beijing, capital of China. (AP)

China’s first lunar rover has successfully separated from the probe that carried it into space has and made its first track upon the surface of the moon, Chinese state media reported Sunday. 

The so-called “Jade Rabbit” rover detached itself from the much larger landing vehicle early Sunday morning, approximately seven hours after the unmanned Chang’e 3 space probe touched down on a fairly flat, Earth-facing part of the moon. The soft landing — the term for a landing in which neither the spacecraft nor its equipment is damaged — was the first on the moon by any nation in 37 years.

State broadcaster China Central Television showed images taken from the lander’s camera of the rover and its shadow moving down a sloping ladder and touching the surface, setting off applause in the Beijing control center. It said the lander and rover, both bearing Chinese flags, will take photos of each other Sunday evening.

Later, the six-wheeled rover will survey the moon’s geological structure and surface and look for natural resources for three months, while the lander will carry out scientific explorations at the landing site for one year.

The mission marks the next stage in an ambitious space program that aims to eventually put a Chinese astronaut on the moon.

“It’s still a significant technological challenge to land on another world,” Peter Bond, consultant editor for Jane’s Space Systems and Industry, told the Associated Press. “Especially somewhere like the moon, which doesn’t have an atmosphere so you can’t use parachutes or anything like that. You have to use rocket motors for the descent and you have to make sure you go down at the right angle and the right rate of descent and you don’t end up in a crater on top of a large rock.”

On Saturday evening, state-run China Central Television showed a computer-generated image of the Chang’e 3 lander’s path as it approached the surface of the moon, saying that during the 12-minute landing period it needed to have no contact with Earth. As it was just hundreds of meters (yards) away, the lander’s camera broadcast images of the moon’s surface.

The Chang’e 3’s solar panels, which are used to absorb sunlight to generate power, opened soon after the landing.

The Chang’e mission blasted off from southwest China on Dec. 2 on a Long March-3B carrier rocket.

The Chang’e 3 mission is named after a mythical Chinese goddess of the moon and the “Yutu” rover, or “Jade Rabbit” in English, is the goddess’ pet.

China’s military-backed space program has made methodical progress in a relatively short time, although it lags far behind the United States and Russia in technology and experience.

China sent its first astronaut into space in 2003, becoming the third nation after Russia and the United States to achieve manned space travel independently. In 2006, it sent its first probe to the moon. China plans to open a space station around 2020 and send an astronaut to the moon after that.

“They are taking their time with getting to know about how to fly humans into space, how to build space stations … how to explore the solar system, especially the moon and Mars,” Bond said. “They are making good strides, and I think over the next 10-20 years they’ll certainly be rivaling Russia and America in this area and maybe overtaking them in some areas.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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X-ray technology to reveal secrets of ‘unreadable’ 15th century scroll

3D X-ray technology to reveal secrets of ‘unreadable’ 15th century scroll

Published December 03, 2013

FoxNews.com
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    The Bressingham roll. (NORFOLK RECORD OFFICE)

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    The Bressingham Roll as unrolled as possible. The section to the right of the image is stuck together. (NORFOLK RECORD OFFICE)

For decades, a 15th century Norfolk, England scroll was believed to be forever unreadable. The water-damaged parchment from Bressingham Manor was thought to be too fragile to be opened and read without causing the scroll to disintegrate.

Now using 3D X-ray technology typically used in dentistry, the scroll is set to be read virtually.

“Having the chance to unlock a part of Norfolk history which has been closed to us for maybe hundreds of years feels very special,” Gary Tuson from the Norfolk Records Office (NRO) told the BBC.

The X-ray system scanned the scroll and created approximately 40,000 images which when pieced together will reveal the text.

The process, called microtomography, process scans the iron and copper in the text’s ink to create a high contrast image of the scroll.

“We have documents from Bressingham Manor dating back to 1273, but when you get to the 15th Century you just can’t get at what it says on the inside of this roll,” said Tuson.

Researchers hope the document, which has been under the supervision of the Apocalypto Project, an effort between the NRO, experts at Queen Mary University of London and Cardiff University, will shed light on everyday life for Norfolk villagers in the 1400s.

“To be able to unlock documents like this, to be the first person to read them in hundreds of years, is fascinating,” David Mills, from the Apocalypto Project said. “As you start to delve through the image you start to see the outline of letters come together – it’s a great feeling.”

The results are expected to be released by Christmas.

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Tongue-controlled wheelchairs

Tongue-controlled wheelchairs prove effective for quadriplegic patients

By Loren Grush

Published November 27, 2013

FoxNews.com
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    Jason DiSanto receives a tongue implant to test the Tongue Drive System. (GARY MEEK)

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    Jason DiSanto tests out the Tongue Drive System (GARY MEEK)

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    Jason DiSanto poses with the sip-and-puff-system (GARY MEEK)

For patients who no longer have the use of their limbs and torso, life must be navigated through a powered wheelchair – which users often control by blowing into a plastic straw to execute basic functions.

But now, a novel technology may soon allow patients with quadriplegia to better control their wheelchairs by utilizing a surprising new body part: the tongue.

Called the Tongue Drive System, the method involves implanting a magnetic stud into patients’ tongues, allowing them to use the muscle as a joystick for their wheelchairs. Sensors in the stud relay the tongue’s position to a headset placed on the patient’s head, which communicates one of six basic functions for the wheelchair to perform.

The system allows users to not only control their wheelchair, but also surf a computer, use a cellphone, turn on a television and much more.

“One of the main advantages of the tongue is that it is directly connected to the brain through cranial nerves, as opposed to the rest of the body,” Maysam Ghovanloo, an associate professor in the school of electrical and computer engineering at Georgia State Institute of Technology and the creator of the system, told FoxNews.com. “Everything from the neck down is controlled through the spinal cord, so if the spinal cord is damaged, everything below that level becomes paralyzed… But even people with the highest level of spinal cord injury, they maintain their tongue motion.”

Currently, the conventional method used by quadriplegic patients for wheelchair control is the sip-and-puff system.  Through a plastic tube mounted on the wheelchair, users either sip or puff air to dictate what they want the chair to do.  However, the sip-and-puff system can only execute four basic commands, and many patients feel it can be cumbersome and awkward.

“The problem with the sip-and-puff system – even though it’s low cost and easy to use – it’s very slow.  It works like a Morse code; you have to enter these commands in a series,” Ghovanloo said.  “…It’s also mounted on the wheelchair, so when a patient is transferred from wheelchair to wheelchair or from wheelchair to bed, it needs to be transferred with them, or they need another one set up there.

To showcase the benefits of the Tongue Drive System, Ghovanloo has teamed up with scientists from the Shepherd Center in Atlanta and the Rehabilitation Center Institute in Chicago, in order to test the technology on quadriplegic patients at the rehabilitation center.  In earlier clinical trials, the researchers tested a removable version of the magnetic stud, which was attached to the tongue through an adhesive.  However, the adhesive was only temporary and had to be reapplied every one to two hours.

But in the most recent trial, published Nov. 27 in the journal Science Translational Medicine, researchers experimented with a more permanent option, by implanting the magnetic stud through a piercing in the tongue.

“It was the first time a tongue piercing had been performed as a medical procedure,” Joy Bruce, manager of Shepherd Center’s Spinal Cord Injury Lab and co-author of the study, told FoxNews.com.  “A lot of extra care was given to the procedure, but what we discovered is that the tongue piercing risks for this population is the same for the general population.”

Jason DiSanto was the first of 11 quadrapleigic patients to get his tongue pierced in order to test the new technology.  DiSanto has worked at the Shepherd Center since 2009, after a diving accident left him paralyzed from the neck down. He said that he is excited about Ghovanloo’s system, as his current system can be difficult to manage.

“My biggest thing is that the current system I’m using is quite limited in functionality, and also it takes a while to get used to the commands, so there’s a big learning curve,” DiSanto told FoxNews.com.  “Whereas the Tongue Drive System does not have such a huge learning curve; it’s quite intuitive. It’s also more functional than my current system.”

The research team had the subjects perform a set of tasks in a controlled hospital environment, including driving a wheelchair through a course, moving a cursor on a computer screen, operating a cellphone and more.  A control group of able-bodied study participants also had the tongue stud implanted and were required to perform the tests as well.

The experiments were repeated over five weeks for the control group and over six weeks for the quadriplegic group.  For the first time, the researchers showed that the patients with quadriplegia could maneuver their chairs much more easily and much faster with the Tongue Drive System than with the sip-and-puff system.

“As a matter of fact, [the patients] were a little upset that they could not use the system after the end of the trial,” Ghovanloo said. “…I know at least two of them have still kept their tongue ring… so they can receive the device as soon as it’s available.  We did a questionnaire at the end of the trail, and their responses were almost unanimously positive.”

While the Tongue Drive System still requires regulatory approval, Ghovanloo has created a startup company called Bionic Sciences in order to move the technology forward.  He has also teamed up with DiSanto, who has worked as an electrical engineer for 17 years, to develop a more internal tongue control system – one that replaces the outside headgear with a sensor-filled retainer that can fit inside the mouth.

DiSanto said he is excited for the future of this technology, hoping that one day he can utilize it outside of the hospital and incorporate it into his daily routine.

“Having one system that can perform multiple functions will be a huge boost of confidence,” DiSanto said. “It will help us feel more like ourselves before we were injured.”

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