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ICYMI: Feel-good stories from around the world

An organism comes back to life after 24,000 years and Berlin's (legal) party scene is set to re-open. DW shares some feel-good stories from this week.

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Organism comes back to life after 24,000 years

A microscopi­c organism known as a bdelloid rotifer, which was frozen in time for about two dozen millennia, came back to life after it was extracted from the soil.

It was taken from 3.5 meters (11.5 feet) below the ground under the Russian river Alazeya and was able to reproduce asexually. Previous research believed that such organisms could only survive for ten years when frozen at -20 degrees Celsius (-4 degrees Fahrenheit).

The journal Current Biology said this moment shows that these organisms could potentiall­y reanimate even after staying in "permanentl­y frozen habitats” for hundreds of thousands of years.

Dancing is (not) forbidden in Berlin

Germany's political and nightlife capital, Berlin, will allow outdoor clubbing from June 18, in another sign that the city is slowly coming out of the pandemic.

Party-goers will have to abide by certain rules, including wearing masks and following each club's individual hygiene rules.

Berlin's seven-day incidence rate fell to 16.6 per 100,000 on Friday. The city has already allowed other activities to resume, including re-opening

hotels, eating inside restaurant­s and allowing movie-goers back to the theater.

Turning trash into roads

Spanish contractor Acciona built a stretch of highway near Valencia using paper ash instead of concrete.

The decision to use paper

ash, which cannot be recycled, reduced carbon emissions by 65-75%. Project manager Juan Jose Cepria Pamplona told Euronews that one change "could save up to 18,000 tons of cement per year.”

Juan Jose said he plans to extend paper ash's use across Spain and internatio­nally.

Canadian kayakers save moose

Kayakers traveling down the Sheep River, just outside of Calgary, leapt into action to save a baby moose.

Off- duty firefighte­r Scott Linton and kayaker Benny Clark jumped into the river to save the calf that was fighting to stay alive. Using a rope, the two men pulled the struggling moose to dry land.

"It was really cuddly. It was nice. I would have taken her home…was a nice little moose,” Linton told Global News.

 ??  ?? A microscopi­c animal came back to life, even though it had been frozen well before modern civilizati­on
A microscopi­c animal came back to life, even though it had been frozen well before modern civilizati­on
 ??  ?? The music and hip-shaking are coming back to Berlin
The music and hip-shaking are coming back to Berlin

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