Chinese Scientists Develop Saltwater Rice That Could Feed Over 200 Million People

commercial saltwater rice developed in china

Photo: Ronald Tagra

In a stunning agricultural breakthrough, Chinese researchers have stated that they have developed a system for growing rice in saltwater. It’s a revolutionary breakthrough that could help feed over 200 million people and boost China’s rice production by 20 percent.

In the spring over 200 types of rice were planted in a coastal town in eastern China. The researchers flooded the area with diluted sea water to see which varieties could thrive in the environment and were stunned by the results. “The test results were way above our expectations,” said Liu Shiping, professor of agriculture at Yangzhou University

For decades researchers have been attempting to produce commercially viable rice in water with high saline levels. Lead researcher Yuan Longping, who is known as the “godfather of rice” in China, has been developing hybrid rice varieties since the 1970s, when it became apparent that China was due for a population boom. Over the years he has created hybrids that now account for 20% of the rice varieties on the market.

With rice as a staple of the Chinese diet, yet huge swathes of land unviable due to high saline levels, this is a promising sign for a new way to feed the growing population. Growing rice varieties with saline tolerance will open up new areas of cultivation within the country and hopefully incentivize farmers to plant more rice.

There are some varieties of wild rice that tolerate salinity, but they typically produce a low yield of about 1.12 to 2.24 US tons per acre (1.125 to 2.25 tonnes per hectare). Instead, this new rice yielded between 2.9 and 4 US tons per acre (6.5 and 9.3 tonnes per hectare) during the experiment.

“If a farmer tries to grow some types of saline-tolerant rice now, he or she most likely will get 1,322 pounds per acre (1,500 kilograms per hectare). That is just not profitable and not even worth the effort,” said Yuan. “Farmers will have enough incentive to grow the rice if we double the yield.”

And though the rice is pricey—costing about 8 times more than traditional varieties—it’s already making its way into kitchens across China. The distributor estimates that it’s already sold 6.6 US tons (6 tonnes), and prices are expected to drop as commercialization continues. The “seawater” rice also has some built-in benefits. It’s naturally higher in calcium and fewer pesticides are needed, as less insects tolerate the salty conditions.

Best of all, it tastes good. “My boyfriend said it was like the braised rice he had back in his village. It is very good,” a local told the South China Morning Post.

h/t: [IFL Science!]

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Every One of These Geode-Inspired Jigsaw Puzzles is Completely Unique

Best Jigsaw Puzzles by Nervous System

Design studio Nervous System is known for their twist on convention. Last year, they introduced the world to the Infinite Galaxy Puzzle, which is a space-inspired, shape-shifting jigsaw with no beginning or end. They’re now back with another “fiendishly difficult” puzzle that boasts a similarly organic shape to its predecessor. This one, however, focuses on the beautiful bounty of Earth. Called Geode, it’s a series of jigsaw puzzles that are modeled after agate, a colorful banded stone.

Nothing about the Geode is cookie cutter. “Each puzzle is unique,” Nervous System explains, “emerging from a computer simulation that creates natural variations in the shape, pieces, and image.” The result is hundreds of plywood pieces that form a “slice” of rock and a maze-like puzzle.

While the Geode resembles a piece of agate, the conceptual basis for how each puzzle is created is also akin to how the real thing is made; agate typically forms by bubbles of gas that leave pockets in volcanic stone. As it begins to crystallize from the outside in, concentric layers of minerals produce the colorful bands for which the crystal is known.

“Our computer generated agates emerge from a similar process. First, we grow a chamber (this will be the shape of the puzzle). Then we progressively grow the edge inward, perpendicular to the boundary, until the chamber is filled.” The color is determined from a “pool of photographs” that the studio takes as they travel—everything from coral reefs to the New England coast.

Nervous System has created two varieties of the Geode puzzles. One iteration, bearing the same name, is approximately 180 pieces, while Orbicular is larger at 370 pieces. Both are now available in their online shop.

Design studio Nervous System makes some of the best jigsaw puzzles.

Best Jigsaw Puzzles by Nervous System
Best Jigsaw Puzzles by Nervous System

Their latest puzzle is modeled after agate stone.

Best Jigsaw Puzzles by Nervous System

Each puzzle is computer generated and completely unique.

Best Jigsaw Puzzles by Nervous System
Best Jigsaw Puzzles by Nervous System

Learn more about the jigsaw puzzles in the video below:

Nervous System: Website | Facebook
h/t: [The Awesomer]

All images via Nervous System.

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Hello, my name is Tessa, and I’m from Canada (not really, but I’m too ashamed to say I’m from the United States!)

That’s my new mantra for when I travel outside of the United States. Our current dictator in chief, I mean president is bat shit crazy! After the recent terror attack in London, our butt wipe of a president, tweeted not once, but twice to deride the mayor of London. I often wonder how this lunatic […]

via Hello, my name is Tessa, and I’m from Canada (not really, but I’m too ashamed to say I’m from the United States!) — cornfedcontessa

The Perfectionist

Harvey Sachs’s lifelong study of Toscanini has paid off in his gigantic and extraordinary new book about the conductor. Indeed, I cannot think of another biography of a classical musician to which it can be compared: in its breadth, scope, and encyclopedic command of factual detail it reminds me of nothing so much as Robert A. Caro’s The Power Broker.

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It’s better to keep your mouth shut…

It’s better to keep your mouth shut and appear stupid than open it and remove all doubt

Mark Twain

The B&N Podcast: Mohsin Hamid

Every author has a story beyond the one that they put down on paper. The Barnes & Noble Podcast goes between the lines with today’s most interesting writers, exploring what inspires them, what confounds them, and what they were thinking when they wrote the books we’re talking about.

“Everybody is a migrant,” says the novelist Mohsin Hamid. In this episode, Miwa Messer interviews the award-winning author of pathbreaking works of fiction like Moth Smoke, The Reluctant Fundamentalist, and How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia, about his celebrated new novel Exit West, which combines a modern love story, a quirky fable, and a wryly hopeful look at the possibilities for a world in which borders are not walls. They begin the conversation with a lesson from Douglas Adams, about the secret of flying.

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In a country teetering on the brink of civil war, two young people meet—sensual, fiercely independent Nadia and gentle, restrained Saeed. They embark on a furtive love affair, and are soon cloistered in a premature intimacy by the unrest roiling their city. When it explodes, turning familiar streets into a patchwork of checkpoints and bomb blasts, they begin to hear whispers about doors—doors that can whisk people far away, if perilously and for a price. As the violence escalates, Nadia and Saeed decide that they no longer have a choice. Leaving their homeland and their old lives behind, they find a door and step through. . . .

Exit West follows these remarkable characters as they emerge into an alien and uncertain future, struggling to hold on to each other, to their past, to the very sense of who they are. Profoundly intimate and powerfully inventive, it tells an unforgettable story of love, loyalty, and courage that is both completely of our time and for all time.

Click here to see all books by Mohsin Hamid.

Like this podcast? Subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher to discover intriguing new conversations every week.

Photo of Mohsin Hamid by Jillian Edelstein

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Photographer Takes ‘Then & Now’ Photos of Women Met on London Streets 30 Years Ago

Street Photography by Anita Corbin

Margie and Samantha

In 1980, Anita Corbin trekked around London capturing revealing street photography along the way. Venturing into the city’s pubs and clubs, she captured portraits of 56 women from different local subcultures. Her searching culminated into a project called Visible Girls, which documents the various attitudes and attire of groups like the mods, punks, rockabillies, rastas, and others who defied mainstream sensibilities. The women appear confident and proud as they pose in groups of two outside of bathroom stalls and darkened street corners.

Visible Girls was a touring exhibition in the 1980s and 1990s, but eventually, Corbin lost touch with the women in her photos. Thanks to the power of social media, however, some of the women eventually started to resurface in Corbin’s life; BuzzFeed had published a collection of the images in 2014, and it was the catalyst for their reunion—many of “lost girls” were now found.

Finding the subjects was something that Corbin had always hoped for. “It was a bit of a dream that I had,” Corbin explained. “I did try to do it in 1991 but I couldn’t find any of them. All the numbers had changed or they’d moved away, so I let it go dormant for about 25 years.”

Since making contact, Corbin has interviewed and rephotographed many of the women as they are now—and even facilitated gatherings between friends who have lost touch. “So they’re now reconnected through the Visible Girls project, which in a way is what it’s all about,” Corbin reports. “You know, rekindling those old friendships, those strong bonds of young women, that idea of ‘me and her against the world.’”

With the fantastic development in Visible Girls, Corbin is about to launch an exhibition that marks its progress. Called Visible Girls: Revisited, it features then and now photos of the women along with recordings and interviews from both 1981 and the present. It will be on view at the Phoenix Gallery in Exter from Friday, November 17 to Thursday, December 21, 2017.

As of now, not all the women from the project have been found. If you’re one of them, Corbin invites you to contact her to help complete Visible Girls: Revisited.

In 1980, Anita Corbin trekked around London documenting the women of different subcultures through street photography.

Street Photography by Anita Corbin

Quasi and Squasher

Street Photography London Subcultures

Laura and Janet

Called Visible Girls, she eventually lost touch with the women in the project.

Street Photography London Subcultures

Charmaine and Janice

But thanks to the power of social media, Corbin has been reunited with some of the subjects from long ago.

Street Photography London Subcultures

Claire and Sarah

She’s snapping their portraits again for then and now photos called Visible Girls: Revisited.

Street Photography London Subcultures

Helen and Emma

Then and Now Photos by Anita Corbin

Helen and Emma

Street Photography London Subcultures

Ann and Char

Then and Now Photos by Anita Corbin

Ann

Corbin is still looking for more of the women in her project.

Then and Now Photos by Anita Corbin

Nicole and Sue

Visible Girls: Revisited is now an exhibition. It will be at the Phoenix Gallery in Exter, England starting November 17, 2017.

Visible Girls by Anita Corbin
Visible Girls by Anita Corbin

Visible Girls Revisited: WebsiteInstagram

My Modern Met granted permission to use photos by Anita Corbin.

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Man Tracks Down People He Photographed in the Street 40 Years Ago to Recreate Their Pictures

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China’s Silk Road Illusions

The Chinese government’s marketing of the Belt Road Initiative has played upon myths and half-remembered facts about China’s past—“the glory of the silk routes,” in Xi Jinping’s words. And the narrative gives credence to the notion that, until the age of Western aggression, China was the master of the region. But China has enough problems on its own borders without dreams of reliving the achievements of the Ming dynasty master mariner Zheng He. Where will the BRI be in 2030?

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