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John Scatman 13/05/2026

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13/05/2026


A massive petroglyph complex estimated to be between 4,000 and 8,000 years old has been discovered in northeastern Venezuela, drawing international attention as one of the most significant archaeological finds in the country in recent years 🪨.

The ancient rock carvings were uncovered on January 30 in the highland community of Quebrada Seca, located near San Felix in Cedeño municipality, Monagas state, at an elevation of 647 meters above sea level. The municipality is already widely regarded as the capital of petroglyphs in Monagas, preserving the cultural legacy of Indigenous groups such as the Chaimas and Kariñas who inhabited the region thousands of years ago.

The engravings feature a striking array of spirals, concentric circles, and anthropomorphic humanoid figures. Researchers believe these motifs reflect the cosmology of the region's earliest inhabitants, symbolizing connections to the sun, water cycles, and ancestral spirits. The site may have served as a strategic passageway for migrating groups during the Paleoindian and Mesoindian periods 🌀.

Technical analysis reveals sophisticated craftsmanship. Images were carved using a linear low-relief technique, with grooves averaging 1.24 centimeters deep and 1.71 centimeters wide. Ancient artisans used abrasive stones combined with sand, water, stone hammers, and chisels to achieve precise incisions that survive thousands of years later.

Dating was determined through stylistic and comparative analysis rather than direct laboratory testing, as direct dating of petroglyphs remains notoriously complex. If scientific testing confirms the earlier end of the proposed timeframe, the Quebrada Seca site could significantly reshape understanding of symbolic traditions in eastern Venezuela. Local authorities are now planning an archaeological route to integrate the site into sustainable tourism while ensuring its preservation and scientific study.

13/05/2026

For 40 years, scientists thought they knew what this protein did. They were wrong.

In May 2026, researchers announced that a protein called HSL, which lives inside fat cells and was always believed to simply release stored fat when the body needs energy, has a secret second function that nobody suspected.

HSL doesn't just release fat. It actually controls how fat cells communicate with the rest of the body. It regulates inflammatory signals, metabolic messaging, and energy balance in ways that go far beyond simple fat burning. When HSL malfunctions, fat cells don't just hold onto fat — they actively send the wrong signals to the brain, liver, and muscles, creating a cascade of metabolic dysfunction.

This reframes obesity as a communication failure, not just an energy storage problem. Your fat cells aren't just warehouses. They're signal towers. And the protein running those signals has been misunderstood since it was discovered.

The finding could explain why dieting alone so often fails — if the signalling system inside fat cells is broken, simply eating less doesn't fix the underlying miscommunication. Future treatments might not target calories or appetite at all, but the molecular conversations happening inside fat tissue itself.

(Source: ScienceDaily, May 2026 / Metabolic Biology)

Powerful Experience 13/05/2026

Powerful Experience 174 likes, 4 comments. "Did the Anunnaki Hid the Secrets of the Universe in Our DNA - Joe Rogan and Billy Carson"

P4le Storyy 13/05/2026

P4le Storyy 387 likes, 1 comment. "Cukup Dengan Kain Untuk Latihan Nunchaku!! "

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