The Lazarus effect. Plus, sonar reveals the hidden world of Amazonian “ghosts” and a rare reptile bounces back.
| Tuesday, December 20, 2022 | | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY JANE BARLOW, PA IMAGES/GETTY IMAGES
| | America has failed to stop the frustratingly stubborn increase in opioid deaths. Let’s move fast to get naloxone (pictured above), also known as Narcan, everywhere to help reverse fentanyl overdoses ASAP, addiction experts say. Like, now.
“There’s no downside,” says Yale med school’s Kimberly Sue. “It’s a magical medication that literally has a Lazarus effect that can reverse the opioid effect on people’s brains and give people time to get emergency care.”
Both political parties in California back requiring public schools to keep doses on hand—and requiring managers of bars, gas stations, public libraries, and hotels with high OD rates to post a Narcan kit accessible to employees. What’s being done where you live? What’s the holdup? How many lives are at stake?
Read the full story here.
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| PHOTOGRAPH BY JEREMY HOLDEN, FAUNA & FLORA INTERNATIONAL | | | |
| Where are these salt mines? The mining here predates the region’s legendary Indigenous civilization. The site has roughly 4,500 evaporation ponds and many have been maintained by the same families for generations. Once the pools dry, miners harvest the salt—said by some to heal illnesses and ailments. Where is this? Click here to find out.
Related: Mesmerizing photographs of mining on the Earth’s surface | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY JASON GULLEY | | Locals call them ‘ghosts’: Amazonian manatees are nearly impossible to see. They haunt murky, sediment-laden water in Brazil and researchers catch a glimpse of the mammals only once a year—if they’re lucky. Thanks to new sonar technology, however, researchers are creating the first-ever “videos” of the manatees in their natural habitats, reports Nat Geo Explorer Gena Steffens. (Above, an Amazonian manatee at a rehabilitation center in Peru, photographed by Nat Geo Explorer Jason Gulley.) | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY DAVID MCLAIN | | Eating to live longer in 2023: During the transatlantic slave trade, enslaved West Africans brought native seeds across the water to the eastern coast of the American South. There they blended their cooking styles with Native American traditions to create Gullah Geechee cuisine. The resulting food is renowned—and being hailed as a lifestyle that can extend your life. They even have recipes for the new year to bring wealth and fortune. Check out two of our favorite recipes here. (Pictured above, Carolina Gold rice, which is important to Gullah Geechee cuisine.) Related: These American recipes may extend your life
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We hope you liked today’s newsletter. This was edited and curated by Sydney Combs, Jen Tse, and David Beard. Have an idea or a link for us? Write david.beard@natgeo.com. Happy trails! | | | |
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