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Costa Rica Seizes 8 Tons of Cyanide

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Saturday, January 7, 2023

Costa Rican authorities seized eight tons of cyanide in the north of the country, near the border with Nicaragua, in a “historic” seizure, according to the Ministry of Public Security on Friday. “It would be the largest seizure of this chemical made in the northern border and possibly in the history of the country”, commonly used to process illegally mined gold in that area of Costa Rica, the authorities said in a statement. The seizure occurred early Thursday morning during a police patrol, when a truck was intercepted near the town of El Salto, about 200 km northwest of San José. Inside the vehicle, the police found dozens of drums loaded with cyanide.  Both the driver of the truck and his companion were arrested, informed Eric Lacayo, director of the Border Police Force. He indicated that the mere transportation of this material in such conditions “represents a great risk for the population” due to the high toxicity of the product. Cyanide is a poisonous chemical used to make products such as paper, fabrics and plastics, and is used as a pesticide. Exposure to cyanide can cause serious health consequences and even death, according to scientific and medical sources. Its transport, storage and handling is strictly regulated in Costa Rica.  However, the northern zone is invaded by artisanal miners who have dedicated themselves to extracting gold using these chemicals, which, according to environmental organizations, have caused serious damage to the soil and rivers in the area. Most of the illegal gold mining in Costa Rica takes place in the northern area of Crucitas, near the border with Nicaragua, where the Canadian mining company Infinito Gold intended to develop a gold mining project, but was blocked by the courts due to the environmental impact it would cause. The previous considerable seizure of cyanide was in 2019, in the same area, where almost two tons of the product were seized. The post Costa Rica Seizes 8 Tons of Cyanide appeared first on The Tico Times | Costa Rica News | Travel | Real Estate.

Costa Rican authorities seized eight tons of cyanide in the north of the country, near the border with Nicaragua, in a “historic” seizure, according to the Ministry of Public Security on Friday. “It would be the largest seizure of this chemical made in the northern border and possibly in the history of the country”, commonly […] The post Costa Rica Seizes 8 Tons of Cyanide appeared first on The Tico Times | Costa Rica News | Travel | Real Estate.

Costa Rican authorities seized eight tons of cyanide in the north of the country, near the border with Nicaragua, in a “historic” seizure, according to the Ministry of Public Security on Friday.

“It would be the largest seizure of this chemical made in the northern border and possibly in the history of the country”, commonly used to process illegally mined gold in that area of Costa Rica, the authorities said in a statement.

The seizure occurred early Thursday morning during a police patrol, when a truck was intercepted near the town of El Salto, about 200 km northwest of San José.

Inside the vehicle, the police found dozens of drums loaded with cyanide. 

Both the driver of the truck and his companion were arrested, informed Eric Lacayo, director of the Border Police Force.

He indicated that the mere transportation of this material in such conditions “represents a great risk for the population” due to the high toxicity of the product.

Cyanide is a poisonous chemical used to make products such as paper, fabrics and plastics, and is used as a pesticide. Exposure to cyanide can cause serious health consequences and even death, according to scientific and medical sources.

Its transport, storage and handling is strictly regulated in Costa Rica. 

However, the northern zone is invaded by artisanal miners who have dedicated themselves to extracting gold using these chemicals, which, according to environmental organizations, have caused serious damage to the soil and rivers in the area.

Most of the illegal gold mining in Costa Rica takes place in the northern area of Crucitas, near the border with Nicaragua, where the Canadian mining company Infinito Gold intended to develop a gold mining project, but was blocked by the courts due to the environmental impact it would cause.

The previous considerable seizure of cyanide was in 2019, in the same area, where almost two tons of the product were seized.

The post Costa Rica Seizes 8 Tons of Cyanide appeared first on The Tico Times | Costa Rica News | Travel | Real Estate.

Read the full story here.
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Strange Mars Rocks Could Hold Clues to Ancient Life

NASA’s Perseverance rover has uncovered strange chemical and mineral patterns in Jezero Crater’s Bright Angel formation that may be the strongest hints yet of ancient Martian life. The rocks contain organic carbon, iron, sulfur, and phosphorus arranged in ways eerily similar to microbial processes on Earth. Possible Martian Biosignatures in Jezero Crater A recent study [...]

Rocks in the Bright Angel Formation. NASA’s Mars Perseverance rover acquired this image using its Right Mastcam-Z camera. Mastcam-Z is a pair of cameras located high on the rover’s mast. This image was acquired on May 29, 2024 (Sol 1164) at the local mean solar time of 12:40:40. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASUNASA’s Perseverance rover has uncovered strange chemical and mineral patterns in Jezero Crater’s Bright Angel formation that may be the strongest hints yet of ancient Martian life. The rocks contain organic carbon, iron, sulfur, and phosphorus arranged in ways eerily similar to microbial processes on Earth. Possible Martian Biosignatures in Jezero Crater A recent study led in part by Texas A&M University geologist Dr. Michael Tice points to chemical clues in Martian rocks that may signal traces of ancient microbial life. The evidence comes from samples analyzed by NASA’s Perseverance rover. An international group of researchers reported their results after examining a section of Jezero Crater called the Bright Angel formation. The name was inspired by places in Grand Canyon National Park and refers to the pale color of the rocks in that region. Bright Angel lies within the Neretva Vallis channel and contains mudstones packed with oxidized iron (rust), phosphorus, sulfur, and most importantly, organic carbon. While organic carbon has been detected on Mars before, often from sources like meteorites, this particular mix of elements could have provided an energy supply for primitive organisms. Perseverance rover reached the Bright Angel site on Mars by navigating through a dune field, bypassing large boulders. The rover is now investigating this area’s unique geological features to understand Mars’ past environmental conditions and support future human exploration. Credit: NASA/JPL-CaltechStrikingly Different Rocks in Bright Angel Formation “When the rover entered Bright Angel and started measuring the compositions of the local rocks, the team was immediately struck by how different they were from what we had seen before,” said Tice, a geobiologist and astrobiologist in the Department of Geology and Geophysics. “They showed evidence of chemical cycling that organisms on Earth can take advantage of to produce energy. And when we looked even closer, we saw things that are easy to explain with early Martian life but very difficult to explain with only geological processes.” Tice went on to explain that “living things do chemistry that generally occurs in nature anyway given enough time and the right circumstances. To the best of our current knowledge, some of the chemistry that shaped these rocks required either high temperatures or life, and we do not see evidence of high temperatures here. However, these findings require experiments and ultimately laboratory study of the sample here on Earth in order to completely rule out explanations without life.” The team published its findings in Nature. Texas A&M University astrogeologist Dr. Michael Tice. Credit: Texas A&M UniversityAncient Water-Shaped Sediments The Bright Angel formation is composed of sedimentary rocks deposited by water, including mudstones (fine-grained sedimentary rocks made of silt and clay) and layered beds that suggest a dynamic environment of flowing rivers and standing water. Using Perseverance’s suite of instruments, including the SHERLOC and PIXL spectrometers, scientists detected organic molecules and small arrangements of minerals that appear to have formed through “redox reactions,” chemical processes involving the transfer of electrons. On Earth, those processes are often driven by biological activity. Among the most striking features are tiny nodules and “reaction fronts”— nicknamed “poppy seeds” and “leopard spots” by the rover team — enriched in ferrous iron phosphate (likely vivianite) and iron sulfide (likely greigite). These minerals commonly form in low-temperature, water-rich environments and are often associated with microbial metabolisms. “It’s not just the minerals, it’s how they are arranged in these structures that suggests that they formed through the redox cycling of iron and sulfur,” Tice said. “On Earth, things like these sometimes form in sediments where microbes are eating organic matter and ‘breathing’ rust and sulfate. Their presence on Mars raises the question: could similar processes have occurred there?” Organic Carbon in Apollo Temple The SHERLOC instrument detected a Raman spectral feature known as the G-band, a signature of organic carbon, in several Bright Angel rocks. The strongest signals came from a site called “Apollo Temple,” where both vivianite and greigite were most abundant. “This co-location of organic matter and redox-sensitive minerals is very compelling,” said Tice. “It suggests that organic molecules may have played a role in driving the chemical reactions that formed these minerals.” Tice notes it’s important to understand that “organic” does not necessarily mean formed by living things. “It just means having a lot of carbon-carbon bonds,” he explained. “There are other processes that can make those besides life. The kind of organic matter detected here could have been produced by abiotic processes or it could have been produced by living things. If produced by living things, it would have to have been degraded by chemical reactions, radiation or heat to produce the G-band that we observe now.” Life or Geochemistry? Two Competing Scenarios The study outlines two possible scenarios: one in which these reactions occurred abiotically (driven by geochemical processes) and another in which microbial life may have affected the reactions, as it does on Earth. Strikingly, although some features of the nodules and reaction fronts could be produced by abiotic reactions between organic matter and iron, the known geochemical processes that could have produced the features associated with sulfur usually only work at relatively high temperatures. “All the ways we have of examining these rocks on the rover suggest that they were never heated in a way that could produce the leopard spots and poppy seeds,” said Tice. “If that’s the case, we have to seriously consider the possibility that they were made by creatures like bacteria living in the mud in a Martian lake more than three billion years ago.” While the team emphasizes that the evidence is not definitive proof of past life, the findings meet NASA’s criteria for “potential biosignatures” — features that warrant further investigation to determine whether they are biological or abiotic in origin. Rock Sample for Future Return to Earth Perseverance collected a core sample from the Bright Angel formation, named “Sapphire Canyon,” which is now stored in a sealed tube carried by the rover. This sample is among those prioritized for return to Earth in a potential future mission. “Bringing this sample back to Earth would allow us to analyze it with instruments far more sensitive than anything we can send to Mars,” said Tice. “We’ll be able to look at the isotopic composition of the organic matter, the fine-scale mineralogy, and even search for microfossils if they exist. We’d also be able to perform more tests to determine the highest temperatures experienced by these rocks, and whether high temperature geochemical processes might still be the best way to explain the potential biosignatures.” Earth-Mars Parallels in Ancient Microbial Life Tice, who has long studied ancient microbial ecosystems on Earth, said the parallels between Martian and terrestrial processes are striking — with one important difference. “What’s fascinating is how life may have been making use of some of the same processes on Earth and Mars at around the same time,” he said. “We see evidence of microorganisms reacting iron and sulfur with organic matter in the same way in rocks of the same age on Earth, but we’d never be able to see exactly the same features that we see on Mars in the old rocks here. Processing by plate tectonics has heated all our rocks too much to preserve them this way. It’s a special and spectacular thing to be able to see them like this on another planet.” Explore Further: Reference: “Redox-driven mineral and organic associations in Jezero Crater, Mars” by Joel A. Hurowitz, M. M. Tice, A. C. Allwood, M. L. Cable, K. P. Hand, A. E. Murphy, K. Uckert, J. F. Bell III, T. Bosak, A. P. Broz, E. Clavé, A. Cousin, S. Davidoff, E. Dehouck, K. A. Farley, S. Gupta, S.-E. Hamran, K. Hickman-Lewis, J. R. Johnson, A. J. Jones, M. W. M. Jones, P. S. Jørgensen, L. C. Kah, H. Kalucha, T. V. Kizovski, D. A. Klevang, Y. Liu, F. M. McCubbin, E. L. Moreland, G. Paar, D. A. Paige, A. C. Pascuzzo, M. S. Rice, M. E. Schmidt, K. L. Siebach, S. Siljeström, J. I. Simon, K. M. Stack, A. Steele, N. J. Tosca, A. H. Treiman, S. J. VanBommel, L. A. Wade, B. P. Weiss, R. C. Wiens, K. H. Williford, R. Barnes, P. A. Barr, A. Bechtold, P. Beck, K. Benzerara, S. Bernard, O. Beyssac, R. Bhartia, A. J. Brown, G. Caravaca, E. L. Cardarelli, E. A. Cloutis, A. G. Fairén, D. T. Flannery, T. Fornaro, T. Fouchet, B. Garczynski, F. Goméz, E. M. Hausrath, C. M. Heirwegh, C. D. K. Herd, J. E. Huggett, J. L. Jørgensen, S. W. Lee, A. Y. Li, J. N. Maki, L. Mandon, N. Mangold, J. A. Manrique, J. Martínez-Frías, J. I. Núñez, L. P. O’Neil, B. J. Orenstein, N. Phelan, C. Quantin-Nataf, P. Russell, M. D. Schulte, E. Scheller, S. Sharma, D. L. Shuster, A. Srivastava, B. V. Wogsland and Z. U. Wolf, 10 September 2025, Nature.DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09413-0 Never miss a breakthrough: Join the SciTechDaily newsletter.

EPA Will Keep Rule Designating PFAS as ‘Hazardous’

September 23, 2025 – Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lee Zeldin announced last week that the agency will keep in place a Biden-era policy change that enables the agency to make companies pay for the cleanup of harmful “forever chemicals.” Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, are chemicals that can persist in the environment for […] The post EPA Will Keep Rule Designating PFAS as ‘Hazardous’ appeared first on Civil Eats.

September 23, 2025 – Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lee Zeldin announced last week that the agency will keep in place a Biden-era policy change that enables the agency to make companies pay for the cleanup of harmful “forever chemicals.” Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, are chemicals that can persist in the environment for centuries, accumulate in the human body, and are associated with a range of health harms. “EPA’s reaffirmation of this rule is a win for environmental justice, giving communities poisoned without their knowledge a long-overdue path to relief,” Melanie Benesh, vice president of government affairs at the Environmental Working Group (EWG), said in a statement. In April 2024, Biden’s EPA designated the two forever chemicals associated with the most harm and widespread environmental contamination—perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluorooctanesulfonic acid (PFOS)—as “hazardous substances” under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, the country’s “Superfund” law. That meant the agency could then prioritize the cleanup of sites contaminated with those chemicals and hold companies responsible for the remediation. Since then, agricultural industry groups, including the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association,  National Pork Producers Council, and American Farm Bureau Federation, have challenged the rule in court, arguing that farmers who spread contaminated fertilizer on their land could be on the hook for the cleanup costs. Last week, a broader coalition of farm groups, among them the National Farmers Union, National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition, and American Farmland Trust, released federal policy recommendations for addressing PFAS contamination on farms. In addition to provisions related to assisting farmers with cleanup and the reduction of future contamination, the groups included a section recommending the EPA further clarify and confirm that farmers will not be held responsible for contamination caused by fertilizers. Zeldin put that issue—referred to as “passive receiver liability”— front and center in the EPA’s Sept. 17 announcement. “When it comes to PFOA and PFOS contamination, holding polluters accountable while providing certainty for passive receivers that did not manufacture or generate those chemicals continues to be an ongoing challenge,” he said. “EPA intends to do what we can based on our existing authority, but we will need new statutory language from Congress to fully address our concerns.” But some experts say those concerns have already been addressed. “The 2024 enforcement discretion policy resolved the situation, clarifying that EPA would focus enforcement only on polluters—not farmers and municipalities that received PFAS chemicals,” said Betsy Southerland, the former director of the EPA’s Office of Science and Technology in the Office of Water, in a statement released by the Environmental Protection Network. Southerland welcomed the announcement that the EPA will keep the designations in place. She also warned it will offer little relief to people worried about forever chemicals in drinking water, because of Zeldin’s earlier decision to roll back limits on four other PFAS. The EPA also recently approved four new pesticides that qualify as PFAS based on an internationally recognized definition the EPA does not use. “Let’s be clear,” Southerland said. “Our drinking water is still at risk because Trump’s EPA is recklessly allowing more toxic chemicals in Americans’ drinking water.” (Link to this post.) The post EPA Will Keep Rule Designating PFAS as ‘Hazardous’ appeared first on Civil Eats.

Toxins, tech and tumors: Is modern life fueling the rise of cancer in millennials?

Studies suggest modern life may be fueling the rise of cancer in younger adults, with factors like ultra-processed foods and chemicals under scrutiny.

ST. LOUIS — Gary Patti leaned in to study the rows of plastic tanks, where dozens of translucent zebrafish flickered through chemically treated water. Each tank contained a different substance — some notorious, others less well understood — all known or suspected carcinogens.Patti’s team is watching them closely, tracking which fish develop tumors, to try to find clues to one of the most unsettling medical puzzles of our time: Why are so many young people getting cancer?The trend began with younger members of Generation X but is now most visible among millennials, who are being diagnosed in their 20s, 30s, and early 40s — decades earlier than past generations. Medications taken during pregnancy, the spread of ultra-processed foods, disruptions to circadian rhythms — caused by late-night work, global travel and omnipresent screens — and the proliferation of synthetic chemicals are all under scrutiny.Young women are more affected than men. From ages 15 through 49, women have a cancer rate that is 83 percent higher than men in the same age range.The rise in early-onset cancers has drawn a growing number of scientists into a shared investigation: not into the inherited traits that remain largely unchanged as a cause of cancer across generations, but into the ways modern life might be rewriting the body’s cellular fate. The new research direction examines the “exposome” — the full range of environmental exposures a person experiences throughout his or her life, even before birth — and how those exposures interact with biology.Many researchers are focusing on a window that opened in the 1960s and ’70s and accelerated in the ’80s and beyond, when a wave of new exposures entered daily life.Certain medications taken during pregnancy may disrupt fetal development or programming of gene activity, potentially increasing susceptibility to early-onset cancers.Exposure to environmental chemicals — including those in microplastics that accumulate in tissues after being ingested or inhaled — can increase the risk of hormonal imbalances, genetic mutations, inflammation and other effects that contribute to early cancers.A diet that contains large quantities of highly processed food can influence cancer risk by promoting inflammation, obesity and metabolic changes that may trigger tumorigenesis.Disruption of circadian rhythms may impair DNA repair mechanisms and hormone, metabolic and immune regulation, heightening the risk of early-onset malignancies.The research is sprawling and interdisciplinary, but it is beginning to align around a provocative hypothesis: Shifts in everyday exposures may be accelerating biological aging, priming the body for disease earlier than expected.“We’ve changed what we’re exposed to considerably in the past few decades,” said Patti, a professor of chemistry, genetics and medicine at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.The sheer complexity of modern life makes it difficult to pinpoint specific culprits. But advances in rapid, high-volume chemical screening, machine learning, and vast population datasets have made it possible to look with unparalleled depth and detail into the human body and the world around it. These methods test thousands of variables at once, revealing some never-before-seen patterns.Gary Patti, a biochemist at Washington University in St. Louis, is leading efforts to decode complex data about people’s past chemical exposures. (Photo by Michael Thomas/For The Washington Post)Last year, researchers released findings from a 150,000-person study at the annual American Association for Cancer Research meeting that took the cancer community by surprise. They found that millennials — born between 1981 and 1996 — appear to be aging biologically faster than previous generations, based on biomarkers in blood that indicate the health of various organs. That acceleration was associated with a significantly increased risk — up to 42 percent — for certain cancers, especially those of the lung, gastrointestinal tract and uterus.Much of the work in this area is in its early stages and has not proved a direct cause and effect in humans. The evidence comes from epidemiological studies, which look at patterns of disease in large populations; observational studies, which track people’s behaviors and exposures without intervening; and animal models which are sometimes, but not always, good proxies for people. Such research is difficult to interpret and especially prone to overstatement or misreading of the data.John Ioannidis, a professor of medicine, epidemiology and population health at Stanford University, said research that searches for correlations across large datasets is highly susceptible to producing spurious results. While he believes there is strong and growing data that there are a lot of harmful exposures in today’s environment, he emphasized, “We should not panic and think everything new we live with is toxic.”Identifying the forces behind the rise in cancer among young people is only the first step. Confronting them and developing treatment may be an even more complex task. Microplastics drift through our bloodstreams; synthetic chemicals line our homes, our food, our clothes; and modern medicine depends on many of the same substances that may be contributing to the problem.Researcher say the surge in cancer cases among young adults reflects a deeper trend human health: A number of major diseases, from heart disease to Alzheimer’s disease, aren’t just being detected earlier — they’re actually starting earlier in life.“This is not just about cancer,” said Yin Cao, an associate professor of surgery at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis whose team led the accelerated aging study. “This is a universal problem across different diseases.”Pregnancy iconMaternal medicationsModern medicine has profoundly altered the experience of pregnancy. Women giving birth in the second half of the 20th century were treated with drugs not as an exception, but a new standard. Antidepressants, anti-nausea medications, antibiotics, hormone treatments — even in combinations, sometimes all in one trimester — heralded a new normal of active pregnancy management.At the time, these developments were seen as progress; the pregnancy was safer and more comfortable thanks to science. However, as researchers revisit this era with new methods and by examining how events unfolded over an extended period — and with the discovery of the link between morning sickness drug thalidomide and birth defects in the 1960s — a more complicated story has emerged.What if a drug’s real risk may not be apparent in the days or weeks after birth, but only show years — or possibly decades — later?Caitlin Murphy, a professor and cancer epidemiologist at the University of Chicago, found herself wrestling with exactly this question. While combing through epidemiological data, she noticed a curious trend. The rise in cancer diagnoses tracked with birth year.But rather than a steady increase across the board, cancer rates appeared to spike among millennials. The pattern, Murphy realized, was about a birth cohort, a group of people born during the same period.Caitlin Murphy uncovered a link between an anti-nausea drug used during pregnancy and early-onset cancers. (Courtesy of Caitlin Murphy)“The rates weren’t just increasing with age — they varied dramatically by generation,” she explained.At 37, Murphy had personal reasons to care. Her mother was diagnosed and died of cancer in her 40s. Now, nearing that age herself, Murphy began to wonder whether the mystery of rising early-onset cancers might begin not in adolescence, but in gestation.To find out, she turned to one of the longest-running maternal health studies in the United States — a cohort in Northern California that began collecting blood samples from pregnant women in 1959. The mid-century period, Murphy knew, was a golden age of medical intervention in pregnancy: a time when hormonal treatments, sedatives and experimental drugs were widely prescribed to expectant mothers, often with little long-term follow-up.By linking these prenatal medical records to statewide cancer registries, Murphy determined that children whose mothers had taken bendectin, an anti-nausea drug, during pregnancy were 3.6 times more likely to develop colon cancer as adults, when all other factors were taken into consideration. Even more startling was that children of women who received a different medication to prevent miscarriage, hydroxyprogesterone caproate, had more than double the overall lifetime cancer risk. In this group, about 65 percent of cancers occurred before the age of 50.Bendectin was voluntarily withdrawn from the market in 1983 amid concerns about birth defects. Follow up testing found no link with birth defects. The Food and Drug Administration withdrew its approval for a brand name and generic hydroxyprogesterone caproate in 2023 for preventing preterm birth after a large clinical trial failed to prove the drug works.Diet iconDietBy the 1980s and ’90s, a new kind of diet had become the norm.Shelf-stable snacks, frozen entrées, sugary cereals and reconstituted meats filled lunch boxes, cupboards and grocery store aisles. It was a drastic change in the food habits from generations past, which had grown up with diets made up mostly of meals cooked at home with whole foods.Today, ultra-processed foods account for more than half of the total daily calorie intake in the United States, among other countries. Designed for flavor, convenience, and shelf stability, they have been correlated with rising rates of obesity and metabolic disease — and perhaps a rise in cancer in young adults.A 2023 study published in the BMJ found that heavy consumption of ultra-processed foods was associated with significantly elevated risks of developing several cancers, including colorectal and breast cancer — two of the fastest-rising malignancies in people under 50.According to the Post analysis of the latest data, breast, thyroid, colon-rectum, skin and cancers of the testes are the most common diagnoses for young adults. Young people are more likely to suffer late diagnoses of some of the most common cancers.Types of cancerAndrew Chan, a gastroenterologist at Massachusetts General Hospital and professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, is co-lead of a global research initiative launched in 2024 to investigate the surge in colon cancer among young adults. In May, his team presented early findings suggesting a troubling link. Individuals under 50 who consumed the largest quantities of ultra-processed foods faced a 1.5-fold increased risk of developing early-onset colon tumors.Researchers Etienne Nzabarushimana (l) and Andrew Chan (c) from Massachusetts General Hospital and Yin Cao (r) from the Washington University in St. Louis are part of a group of scientists from the United States, U.K., France, Mexico, and India who have launched a global effort to understand the surprising rise of colon cancer in young adults. (Courtesy Andrew Chan) The association, Chan emphasized, isn’t simply about weight gain.“Ultra-processed foods appear to have independent metabolic effects that could have negative consequences on human health,” Chan said.Scientists are examining a variety of ways these products could possibly cause cancer: chronic inflammation caused by additives, the disruption of gut microbiota by emulsifiers, carcinogenic compounds formed during high-heat cooking and changes to hormones from excess sugar and carbohydrates. Even packaging might play a role, because leaching chemicals, particularly when heated, from plastics may disrupt the balance of hormones in the body.As part of his research, Chan is preparing a clinical trial to test whether the new generation of diabetes and weight loss drugs such as Zepbound can slow molecular changes associated with cancer younger adults. If industrial food has affected a generation’s health, he wonders, can that trajectory be altered?Circadian rhythmNearly every organism on Earth, from bacteria to humans, runs on a biological rhythm shaped by the rotation of the planet. This internal clock — the circadian system — regulates everything from hormone release to cell repair, syncing the body to the 24-hour cycle of light and dark.But over recent decades, the explosion of artificial light, erratic work schedules and 24/7 digital connectivity has fundamentally altered when and how we sleep, eat and rest. As a result, researchers, many of whom have been funded by the National Institute for General Medical Sciences, say the biological processes that rely on the rising and setting sun — like immune regulation, endocrine control and metabolic functions — may unravel.Melatonin, a hormone produced in darkness, plays a crucial role in this system. But in today’s glowing, sleepless world, melatonin production is regularly disrupted.Research has linked chronic circadian misalignment to higher risks of breast, colorectal, lung, liver and pancreatic cancers, all increasingly diagnosed in younger populations. And in 2007, the International Agency for Research on Cancer declared shift work that disturbs circadian rhythms a probable human carcinogen.Katja Lamia, a professor of molecular and cellular biology at Scripps Research, found that mice with lung cancer exposed to conditions that simulate chronic jet lag developed 68 percent more tumors than those that got more regular sleep.Katja Lamia, a professor of molecular and cellular biology at Scripps Research, studies the relationship between circadian clocks and DNA damage which can lead to cancers. (Brendan Cleak)At the University of California at Irvine, Selma Masri found similar effects related to colorectal cancer. Using animal models to mimic the impact of shift work, jet lag and constant light exposure on humans, she found that circadian disruption alters the gut microbiome and intestinal barrier function, potentially making it easier for cancerous cells to spread.“Our bodies need those dark periods for many aspects of homeostasis,” Masri, an associate professor of biological chemistry at the UC-Irvine School of Medicine, explained.Chemicals and microplasticsPatti is a biochemist by training, but his vigilance doesn’t stop at the lab.Married with two young children, his scientific knowledge has deeply shaped his family’s lifestyle. At home, he practices what he calls “exposure remediation” — scrutinizing ingredients on shampoo bottles for questionable dyes, scanning cleaning products for chemicals known to disrupt hormones, and avoiding anything scented or labeled “antibacterial” to reduce exposure to substances that might weaken the body’s natural defenses against disease.Chemical and plastic exposure today is diffuse, ambient and inescapable, unlike legacy toxins such as asbestos or lead, which tended to me more occupational or localized.“There’s still so much we don’t understand about how these exposures interact with our bodies,” he said. “But we do know that small changes, especially early on, can have lasting effects.”The growth in chemical exposure has grown in tandem with the explosion of microplastics. By the 1980s and ’90s, entire generations chewed on plastic toys, ate food wrapped in cling film, and drank from microwaved containers. Microplastics have now been found in the placenta, the lungs and even the brain and heart.These fragments act as sponges for environmental toxins; laboratory studies demonstrate that microplastics can damage DNA, interfere with cell division and promote chronic inflammation, a well-known mechanism in carcinogenesis. In animal models, microplastic exposure has been linked to colon and lung cancer and immune system dysregulation. An analysis of peer-reviewed studies published in December 2024 and led by University of Sydney researcher Nicholas Chartres, scientific lead of the Center to End Corporate Harm, University of California at San Francisco, found repeated evidence linking microplastic exposure to mechanisms indicative of cancer across multiple systems — digestive and respiratory.University of Sydney researcher Nicholas Chartres found repeated evidence linking microplastic exposure to mechanisms indicative of cancer across the digestive and respiratory systems. (Fiona Wolf/The University of Sydney)The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has estimated that 97 percent of Americans have some level of toxic “forever chemicals” — a group of synthetic compounds often found in plastics with negative health effects that persist in the environment and in the human body — in their blood.It’s this hidden complexity that drives Patti’s work.His team is focused on metabolomics — the vast, largely unmapped study of the small molecules coursing through the human body. Using high-resolution mass spectrometry and custom-built computational tools, Patti’s lab has developed a system capable of scanning a single blood sample for tens of thousands of chemicals at once.At Washington University in St. Louis, the Patti Lab is analyzing human samples, tracing past chemical exposures to help uncover what’s driving the rise in colon cancer among young people. (Michael Thomas/For The Washington Post)Traditional toxicology has been reactive, testing chemicals one by one, often after problems emerge. Patti’s approach flips that model — scanning everything first and asking questions later. The goal is to find chemical signatures that appear more often in people diagnosed with early-onset cancers than in those without.“We’re just now beginning to understand the full chemical complexity of modern life,” he said. There are estimated to be more than 100,000 synthetic chemicals on the market. Their global production has almost doubled since 2000.Only a small fraction of these have been studied for links to cancer: The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) puts this number at about 4 percent. But among those examined, many have been shown to have some links to the disease. A 2024 study in Environmental Health Perspectives, for example, identified 921 chemicals that could promote the development of breast cancer.Patti’s zebrafish research explores how diet and chemical exposure interact in cancer development. Beneath the glow of the lab’s cool lights, tiny fish dart through their tanks — some fed a standard, unremarkable diet, others given tightly controlled meals. The study is still ongoing, but early data is starting to raise questions about the role of artificial sugars.He hopes his lab’s work may one day provide access to tests that provide snapshots of a person’s environmental history written directly into the blood, offering clues not just about cancer’s origins, but about how we might finally begin to prevent it.“The data,” Patti added, “is already in us.”

Researchers Solve Decades-Old Color Mystery in Iconic Jackson Pollock Painting

Scientists have identified the origins of the blue color in one of Jackson Pollock’s paintings with a little help from chemistry

NEW YORK (AP) — Scientists have identified the origins of the blue color in one of Jackson Pollock's paintings with a little help from chemistry, confirming for the first time that the abstract expressionist used a vibrant, synthetic pigment known as manganese blue. “Number 1A, 1948,” showcases Pollock's classic style: paint has been dripped and splattered across the canvas, creating a vivid, multicolored work. Pollock even gave the piece a personal touch, adding his handprints near the top. The painting, currently on display at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, is almost 9 feet (2.7 meters) wide. Scientists had previously characterized the reds and yellows splattered across the canvas, but the source of the rich turquoise blue proved elusive.In a new study, researchers took scrapings of the blue paint and used lasers to scatter light and measure how the paint's molecules vibrated. That gave them a unique chemical fingerprint for the color, which they pinpointed as manganese blue. The analysis, published Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is the first confirmed evidence of Pollock using this specific blue.“It’s really interesting to understand where some striking color comes from on a molecular level,” said study co-author Edward Solomon with Stanford University.The pigment manganese blue was once used by artists, as well as to color the cement for swimming pools. It was phased out by the 1990s because of environmental concerns.Previous research had suggested that the turquoise from the painting could indeed be this color, but the new study confirms it using samples from the canvas, said Rutgers University’s Gene Hall, who has studied Pollock’s paintings and was not involved with the discovery.“I’m pretty convinced that it could be manganese blue,” Hall said.The researchers also went one step further, inspecting the pigment’s chemical structure to understand how it produces such a vibrant shade.Scientists study the chemical makeup of art supplies to conserve old paintings and catch counterfeits. They can take more specific samples from Pollock's paintings since he often poured directly onto the canvas instead of mixing paints on a palette beforehand. To solve this artistic mystery, researchers explored the paint using various scientific tools — similarly to how Pollock would alternate his own methods, dripping paint using a stick or using it straight from the can.While the artist’s work may seem chaotic, Pollock rejected that interpretation. He saw his work as methodical, said study co-author Abed Haddad, an assistant conservation scientist at the Museum of Modern Art.“I actually see a lot of similarities between the way that we worked and the way that Jackson Pollock worked on the painting," Haddad said.The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Photos You Should See – Sept. 2025

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