A variety of things
Apr. 11th, 2025 02:20 pm'Toad he went a-pleasuring': Toads risk their lives crossing a Somerset road to mate. This year, a patrol rescued thousands:
Charlcombe Lane is closed annually for six weeks in February and March as volunteers patrol every night from dusk to help toads, frogs and newts on their journey to their breeding lake. This toad patrol is one of more than 200 across the country that take part in the national Toads on Roads project run by the amphibian and reptile conservation charity, Froglife. Across the six weeks, more than 50 volunteers on the Charlcombe Toad Rescue group spent more than 648 hours in high visibility jackets, armed with torches, buckets and special gloves, walking slowly up and down the road.
Toads, frogs and newts are carefully picked up and taken safely in buckets to five drop off points to help them on their journey towards the lake.
Awwwww, bless.
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A rather grimmer tale - modern high-tech version of 'ooops the hospital mixed up the babbiez in the nursery and sent the wrong ones home with the parents': Legal and ethical ‘nightmare’ after woman gives birth to stranger’s child due to Monash IVF mistake:
“The evidence of it being an isolated incident is really only because they’ve never had to check or disclose,” said Dawson. “One in 18 births are IVF-conceived children, [and] if these checks and balances are being missed as recently as last year, there needs to be more record-keeping and more information.”
Leading Australian IVF specialist and former Monash IVF director Prof Gab Kovacs said there were over 100,000 IVF cycles in Australia annually, so every few years a mistake is made. “There have been mistakes recognised in the past, it’s more often that the wrong sperm is used when the sperm and the egg are put together,” he told ABC Radio Melbourne.
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More on the problems generated by MODERN SCIENCE!!! in this case: Genetic descent: a new challenge for the management of human remains in museums:
Over the past year, an increasing number of UK institutions have received enquiries from customers of commercial DNA companies about individuals in their care who have been sampled for ancient DNA analysis.
Typically, ancient DNA results are published open-access and the data deposited with online databanks.
International commercial DNA companies who focus on ancestry are now using these datasets to match their customers with archaeological human remains – and advising them that they are a ‘direct descendant’ of this past individual.
Some customers, curious about their ancestry, are accessing the publications and then contacting the institutions curating the human remains. Typically, these enquiries ask for more information about the individual and their archaeological context – a request not too dissimilar from the usual range of questions received by an institution about their holdings.
But these new type of enquiry poses several challenges – foremost, that existing guidance and advice about the management of human remains published by (among others) the Advisory Panel on the Archaeology of Burials in England, does not specifically deal with this issue.
Plus, ongoing impact of budget cuts:
Most institutions in the UK do not have a curator dedicated solely to human remains, and many do not have an archaeology curator.
Institutional knowledge about holdings and research activities has been lost due to staff-cuts, and less well-funded institutions have been unable to continue their membership of specialist networks or other professional bodies, who can provide advice and support.
The situation is compounded by rapid developments in the methods and reliability of ancient DNA studies, which means that without specialist knowledge and access to that scholarship, understanding the issues raised by these enquiries may be impossible without help.
I.e. It's All More Complicated (like most of the issues thrown up by the data produced by these companies).
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Dept, 'More Money Than Sense' x 2:
Influencers 'new' threat to uncontacted tribes, warns group after US tourist arrest:
Social media influencers pose a "new and increasing threat" for uncontacted indigenous people, a charity has warned after the arrest of a US tourist who travelled to a restricted Indian Ocean island.
Mykhailo Viktorovych Polyakov, 24, allegedly landed on North Sentinel Island in an apparent attempt to make contact with the isolated Sentinelese tribe, filming his visit and leaving a can of coke and a coconut on the shore.
And
‘Rachel Reeves is making us move to Italy’. This person is an 'entrepreneur' with 'an MBA and PhD in finance' as well as being a reality TV star, and yet she is terrified that Italian waiters will somehow compel her to ingest pasta and pizza. (Apart from anything else, this suggests a woefully limited knowledge of the range of Italian cucina, no?) Awww, diddums.
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Did I post this before? Seized Books! An online exhibition:
LGBTQ+ books and censorship in 1980s Britain.
On 10 April 1984, Her Majesty’s Customs and Excise raided Gay’s the Word bookshop in London’s Bloomsbury.
'Operation Tiger' saw officers seize over 140 titles, worth thousands of pounds.
Bookshop staff and directors were charged with conspiracy to import so-called ‘indecent or obscene’ material.
But Gay’s the Word and their supporters fought back...
Limited edition catalogue available from Gay's The Word.
no subject
Date: 2025-04-11 02:27 pm (UTC)It may turn out to be precedent-setting for Australian law
as, as of the current date, the legal presumption is that person who physically pushes a child out of their uterus = the custodial parent,
so if the genetic parents of the embryo are found to be the custodial parents instead, that would be a massive legal change in Australia.
no subject
Date: 2025-04-11 11:21 pm (UTC)Of course, they have a reputation for being gratuitously violent, but it turns out that their main interaction with outsiders in the colonial era went badly enough for them that one can understand why.
no subject
Date: 2025-04-11 11:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-04-13 12:48 pm (UTC)Mykhailo Viktorovych Polyakov, 24, allegedly landed on North Sentinel Island in an apparent attempt to make contact with the isolated Sentinelese tribe, filming his visit and leaving a can of coke and a coconut on the shore.
What a fucking idiot.
Thanks for the Seize link!
no subject
Date: 2025-04-14 03:29 am (UTC)Genes are who qualifies as a descendant are going to get more complicated as more and more people embrace the thought of genetic matters, or surrogacy, or other such things. The mistake of gestation is probably something we should think of having at least had a blessing for not having created some kind of complication that would have made the pregnancy difficult or impossible, even if the legal issue of whose child this is will be difficult, and we do not have the ability to cleave the child in two and give one functional half to each set of parents.
Ugh, those people who think that their advertising or influencer clout is more important than the international treaties and the potential destruction wrought by visiting places that have said they want to be left alone. And extra ugh for the person who is packing up and moving because of not getting a tax preference,. even if trying to soften it by saying "I'd pay more tax for this beneficial status that I definitely take advantage of."
Seized books are interesting, and dare I see something like a Tom of Finland drawing on one of those covers?
no subject
Date: 2025-04-14 09:00 am (UTC)Very probably! Though a lot of the works seized by Customs & Excise brought their standards of literacy and general education into disrepute (works by that beloved icon of British drama, O Wilde....) they did include some rather heavier stuff.