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Ludington ‘mystery house’ reveals many secrets Follow Us Question of the Day Keith and Suzette Kolfage, the owners of 508 N. Robert St., in Ludington, Mich., shown on Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2021, found historical items while renovating during the past few months. When the Kolfages, latest owners of the house started to . more > LUDINGTON, Mich. (AP) - The little house at 508 N. Robert St. is an enigma. The house featured prominently in a Daily News column by Raymond C. Madsen on Aug. 5, 2016. He called it, “A house of historical mystery.” Records showed that it was first recorded in its current location in the 1880s, Madsen wrote. ....
Date Time Advancing gene therapy for new glaucoma treatments When a patient is diagnosed with glaucoma, their treatment will focus on slowing down or stopping the disease to prevent vision loss. Glaucoma causes progressive damage to the optic nerve, the vital transport system which sends visual information from the eye to the brain. “If glaucoma is left untreated or detected late it can lead to irreversible vision loss,” explains CERA Managing Director and world-renowned glaucoma researcher Professor Keith Martin. “Currently, most glaucoma treatment focuses on reducing eye pressure to prevent damage to the optic nerve. “But these treatments don’t work for about 15 per cent of patients and there is nothing we can do to repair the damage to the optic nerve once it has occurred – or to restore vision that has been lost.” ....
Ludington 'mystery house' reveals many secrets - Huron Daily Tribune michigansthumb.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from michigansthumb.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Date Time Can species adapt to a hotter world? New research shows that species evolve faster to adapt to the climate getting colder than to it getting hotter, and that the rise in heat they can adapt to has limits. Red honey ants endure temperatures above 50 °C in the Australian desert, while the springtail survives extreme cold of -30 °C in the Antarctic. A new study, published today in Nature Communications, explores how evolution has prepared some species to withstand these temperatures and how fast different species evolve to changing temperatures. Physiological tolerance to heat and cold determines where on the planet an organism can survive yet we have limited understanding of how this tolerance evolves over time. This is an area of increasing interest as the climate heats up more quickly than ever before. ....