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Search resuls for: "LeBrasseur"


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Sally Froelich has been talking about aging for a long time. Froelich presented "The Sally Froelich Show" on television for 21 years. Do some exercise every dayFroelich started playing golf when she was 24 and now plays three times a week. Experts agree that exercising regularly is one of the best things you can do for healthy aging, especially strength training. She plays canasta and bridge, talks with friends on the phone, and volunteers.
Persons: Sally Froelich, Froelich, there's, Rose Anne Kenny, she's, Sally Froelich Nathan K, LeBrasseur, Robert, Arlene Kogod Organizations: New Yorker, Trinity College Dublin, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Aging, Mayo Clinic, American Cancer Society, Hope, Neuroscience Locations: New, New York City
Hanna, based in Washington State, told Business Insider that when she got the "god-inspired" urge to start sprinting, she turned to her husband for help. By 2011, Hanna was fast enough to compete in the Washington State Senior Games, a sports competition for people over 50. The next year, she competed at the National Senior Games, which she has done three more times since. Hanna and her coach, Marcus Chambers, after she won gold at the 2024 Senior Games. Hanna won gold in the four by 100 metres with her relay team at this year's National Senior Games.
Persons: , Madonna Hanna, Hanna, hasn't, Marcus Chambers, it's, you've, Nathan K, Robert, Arlene Kogod, Bryan Goldberg, Mike Molloy Organizations: Service, Business, Washington State Senior Games, National Senior Games, Washington State, British, of Sports Medicine, Aging, Mayo Clinic, Senior Games Locations: Washington State
Foxes were once humans’ best friends, study says
  + stars: | 2024-04-11 | by ( Mindy Weisberger | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +7 min
Archaeologists originally uncovered the near-complete D. avus skeleton buried alongside a human at Cañada Seca, a site in northern Patagonia, in 1991. Parts of the D. avus specimen were buried alongside a human at Cañada Seca, a site in northern Patagonia. D. avus lived from the Pleistocene Epoch (around 2.6 million to 11,700 years ago) into the Holocene, becoming extinct about 500 years ago. With a similar diet to D. avus, dogs may have helped speed the foxes’ extinction by outcompeting them. Dogs could also have carried and transmitted diseases that sickened the foxes, Lebrasseur added.
Persons: wasn’t, Ophélie, avus, Francisco Prevosti “, Dusicyon avus, , Lebrasseur, Cinthia, ” Lebrasseur, Dr, Aurora, d’Anglade, , Francisco Prevosti, it’s, ” Mindy Weisberger Organizations: CNN, Wellcome Trust, Archaeology Research, University of Oxford’s School of Archaeology, Royal Society Open Science, Argentina’s, Technical Research, Universidade, Oxford, Scientific Locations: what’s, Argentina, South America, Cañada Seca, Patagonia, United Kingdom, Europe, Asia, Spain, Patagonia . Hunter
Ancient Foxes Lived and Died Alongside Humans
  + stars: | 2024-04-09 | by ( Jack Tamisiea | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
But dogs were not the only ancient canines to become companions. Archaeologists have found traces of foxes living among early communities throughout South America. A team of researchers recently examined the fox’s bones, which were unearthed among the remains of dozens of hunter-gatherers. The team’s findings, published Tuesday in the journal Royal Society Open Science, posit that this fox lived alongside the humans it was buried with. “It’s a practice that had been suggested before, but to actually find it is a nice surprise.”
Persons: , Ophélie Lebrasseur, Organizations: Royal Society Open Science, University of Oxford Locations: South America, Patagonia
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