Here is an engaging, well-structured blog post for our ENVIRONMENT column. ​Take Two Breaths: The Surprising Truth About Where Our Oxygen Comes From. ​We’ve all heard the phrase since childhood: "The Amazon rainforest is the lungs of the Earth. " ...
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"SURiMOUNT" - 5 new articles

  1. ENVIRONMENT : WHERE OUR OXYGEN COMES FROM
  2. HEALTH WATCH: STOP CANCER IN ITS TRACKS
  3. SELF-IMPROVEMENT
  4. HUMOUR
  5. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY
  6. More Recent Articles

ENVIRONMENT : WHERE OUR OXYGEN COMES FROM

Here is an engaging, well-structured blog post  for our ENVIRONMENT column. 

​Take Two Breaths: The Surprising Truth About Where Our Oxygen Comes From

​We’ve all heard the phrase since childhood: "The Amazon rainforest is the lungs of the Earth." It’s a beautiful, poetic image that highlights the undeniable importance of our global forests. But if you look strictly at the science, this old adage leaves out more than half of the story.

​When it comes to the air filling your lungs right now, the true powerhouse isn't covered in leaves—it’s covered in waves.

​The Invisible Powerhouses of the Deep

​If you want to thank the planet's most prolific oxygen factory, you have to look past the towering redwoods and dense jungle canopies. Instead, look under a microscope at the ocean.

​The 50-80% Rule: Scientific estimates show that marine organisms produce roughly 50% to 80% of the Earth's oxygen.

​The Microscopic Heavyweight: 

A single type of microscopic marine cyanobacterium called Prochlorococcus is responsible for generating up to 20% of the oxygen in our entire biosphere. That is a higher percentage than all the world's tropical rainforests combined.

​This reality has led to a famous scientific analogy: Take two breaths. Thank the ocean for one of them.

​Debunking the "Net Oxygen" Myth

​If land plants and massive tropical forests contribute the remaining 20% to 50% of global oxygen production, why aren't they considered the ultimate net suppliers?

​The answer lies in a fundamental ecological cycle that often gets overlooked: respiration and decomposition.

​The Reality of Mature Forests: 

While a massive jungle like the Amazon produces an astronomical amount of oxygen during the day via photosynthesis, it also hosts a bustling ecosystem. At night, plants breathe. Throughout the day, animals, fungi, and microscopic organisms consume oxygen as they live, die, and decompose dead organic matter.

​Because mature ecosystems consume almost as much oxygen as they generate, their net contribution to the atmosphere over long periods is relatively small. The oxygen we breathe today isn’t a fresh batch made this morning; it is a vast atmospheric reservoir built up over hundreds of millions of years of geological time, largely preserved when organic matter sank to the bottom of the deep sea and was buried without decomposing.

​Why Forests Still Matter (It’s Not About the O₂)

​Saying forests aren't our primary net oxygen suppliers isn't an excuse to undervalue them. Their role in sustaining a livable planet is completely irreplaceable. Forests are vital because they:

​Act as Massive Carbon Sinks: 

They lock away gigatons of carbon that would otherwise accelerate climate change.

​Regulate Global Systems: 

They anchor planetary weather patterns, generate rainfall, and prevent devastating soil erosion.

​Harbor Life: 

Terrestrial forests support over 80% of the world's biodiversity on land.

​Two Sides of the Same Coin

​Our planet's climate systems do not operate in isolation. The warming oceans threaten marine oxygen production; as waters heat up, they stratify, reducing the nutrient mixing that fuels phytoplankton blooms. Meanwhile, destroying forests destabilizes the carbon cycle, accelerating the very warming that puts the oceans at risk.


​The truth is simple: We cannot choose between saving the forests or saving the seas.

​Every tree planted keeps the climate stable. Every piece of plastic kept out of the ocean protects the microscopic organisms keeping us alive. The air we take for granted depends entirely on a healthy planet—both on the land beneath our feet and in the waters far off our shores.

Grateful thanks to Google Gemini for its great help and support in creating this blogpost!🙏
   

HEALTH WATCH: STOP CANCER IN ITS TRACKS

Good morning! This is incredibly inspiring news to share. Here is an engaging, hopeful and  exciting medical breakthrough.

​Stopping Cancer in Its Tracks: The Breakthrough That Could Prevent Brain Metastasis 🧠✨

​For decades, one of the most terrifying diagnoses a family could face is metastatic brain cancer. As the most common type of brain tumor in adults, its statistics have historically been devastating: a heartbreaking 90 percent of patients pass away within just a year of diagnosis.

​But what if we could intercept these rogue cancer cells before they ever have the chance to travel to the brain?

​Thanks to a groundbreaking new study from researchers at McMaster University, that reality might be just around the corner.

​The Breakthrough: Blocking the Escape Route

​Instead of trying to treat brain tumors after they form, a research team led by Professor Sheila Singh is focusing on prevention. They have developed promising new drug candidates designed to act like a biological security checkpoint, locking down cancer cells at their source.

​The secret lies in targeting a specific enzyme called IMPDH2.

​The Target: IMPDH2 acts like a fuel source or a green light for rogue cancer cells looking to migrate.
​The Mechanism: The new drug candidates intercept and block this enzyme.

​The Result: By shutting down IMPDH2, the cancer cells lose their ability to travel, effectively trapping them before they can infiltrate the brain.

​"This could turn metastatic brain cancer from a fatal disease into one that is entirely preventable."
— The Research Team led by Professor Sheila Singh

​Why This Matters: From Fatal to Preventable

​When cancer spreads, it changes the entire trajectory of a patient's battle. For families watching a loved one fight this disease, this research offers something invaluable: real, tangible hope.
​By shifting the medical paradigm from reactive treatment to proactive prevention, this discovery could completely rewrite the survival rates for adult brain tumors.

​Study At A Glance

​Lead Institution: McMaster University
​Principal Investigator: Professor Sheila Singh
​Key Discovery: New drug candidates targeting the IMPDH2 enzyme to stop cancer cell migration.
​Published In: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2026) by Kieliszek et al.

​Looking Ahead 🔬

​While there is still work to be done to bring these drug candidates through clinical trials and into hospitals, the foundation has been laid. Science is getting closer to cutting off cancer's pathways entirely, saving countless lives in the process.

​What do you think about this breakthrough? Let’s celebrate the incredible work of these scientists in the comments below! 👇

Grateful thanks to GOOGLE GEMINI for its great help and support in creating this blogpost!🙏
   

SELF-IMPROVEMENT


HUMOUR

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY


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