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‘Northanger Abbey’ (1811) by Jane Austen – Buddy Read Master Post

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I‘m going to use this master post to share my thoughts on each chapter of ‘Northanger Abbey’ as I read it. I’ll add the most recent chapter read to the top of the post, so the chapters will appear in reverse order.

Chapter 1

Jane Austen’s tongue was clearly pushed deep into her cheek as she wrote this. Even without having read the Gothic Romances that she is satirising, I can feel the sting of this lampoon as she lists all the ways in which Catherine Morland lacks the attributes necessary to be “an heroine”.

{I love that “an”. I was taught that words starting with an H should be treated like words starting with a vowel and so got an “an” in front of them. Today, Grammerly wants me to “correct my article usage” and use “a” instead. I’m going to stick with the Jane Austen version.}

I like that Austen’s portrait of the ten-year-old Catherine does more than satirise the image of a gothic heroine, it draws a picture of a lively, active, not particularly gifted, young girl whose parents allow her the freedom to have a good time. The message I took from this was that if Catherine is a real girl, then all those gothic heroines are the unreal imaginings of authors with little inclination to introduce reality into their narratives.

Yet Catherine is fated to be the heroine of this story, and so things must change. It begins when Catherine’s perception of herself shifts. I love how Austen descibes the shift:

“At fifteen, appearances were mending; she began to curl her hair and long for balls; her complexion improved, her features were softened by plumpness and colour, her eyes gained more animation, and her figure more consequence. Her love of dirt gave way to an inclination for finery, and she grew clean as she grew smart; she had now the pleasure of sometimes hearing her father and mother remark on her personal improvement. “Catherine grows quite a good-looking girl — she is almost pretty today,” were words which caught her ears now and then; and how welcome were the sounds! To look almost pretty is an acquisition of higher delight to a girl who has been looking plain the first fifteen years of her life than a beauty from her cradle can ever receive.”

I loved that ‘…almost pretty today” and its joyous reception.

Sadly, Catherine’s evolution into an heroine is retarded by the lack of suitable men for her to fall in love with, so she spends two years living out of range of the male gaze.

I like the conspiratorial style in which this is written. Austen is speaking directly to the reader, confident of a shared perception of absurdity and appreciation of suble wit. Austen knows that the reader recognises that Catherine in on what the scriptwriters today are taught to think of as “The Hero’s Journey” and so says:

“But when a young lady is to be a heroine, the perverseness of forty surrounding families cannot prevent her. Something must and will happen to throw a hero in her way.”

So when Catherine is invited to go to Bath with some neighbours, we know her Hero’s Journey has begun.

To me, this direct-to-camera style felt like a very modern approach, not something written in 1811. It’s the sort of thing I’d see in a smart modern comedy that expects the audience to understand all the genre references and applaud the many ways in which they are being made fun of. I found myself imagining Jane Austen writing a satirical story lampooning Star Wars and Star Trek.







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sarcozona
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Canada could cost The Americas its measles-elimination status

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The Americas — North, Central, and South — is the only region of the world that has ever managed to stop endemic transmission of measles. But that hard-won victory against the highly contagious virus is on the verge of being rolled back.

This week an expert committee of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) is meeting in Mexico City to study measles transmission data from the region. Canada’s massive — by contemporary standards — and long-running measles outbreak is almost certain to trigger a finding that the country’s, and thus the entire region’s, status as having eliminated measles has been lost.

Though largely symbolic, losing measles elimination status will smart for the country, which had stopped ongoing measles transmission for more than a quarter century. Canada was declared measles free in 1998; the United States followed two years later, in 2000.

There is perhaps a remote chance the committee — known as the regional verification commission for measles, rubella, and congenital rubella syndrome — will need additional data before reaching a conclusion. But two things are quite clear: The Canadian outbreak, though slowing dramatically, has not stopped, and the virus strain associated with this outbreak has now been transmitting in Canada for more than a year. 

“It’s still going on,” Natasha Crowcroft, Canada’s acting chief public health officer, told STAT in an interview last week. “We’re not surprised by that. It’s obviously disappointing.”

Measles-free countries are always at risk of having the virus introduced from elsewhere, in a sick tourist or traveler; that alone does not lead to the loss of measles elimination status. But if such a spark ignites a chain of transmission that extends for 12 months, the virus is considered to be endemic, meaning the country is no longer deemed to be measles-free. Loss of measles elimination status in one country in a region results in the entire region losing elimination status.

Daniel Salas, executive manager of the special program for comprehensive immunization at PAHO, didn’t want to prejudge the commission’s deliberations. “We’re going to listen to what Canada is going to show, all the evidence, all the research that they have done, investigations of cases and all of that,” he said in an interview.

But experts who have been following the situation and understand the complexities of controlling measles outbreaks believe the writing is on the wall.

“I would say elimination status for the region is probably at risk,” said Paul Rota, who retired as chief of the viral vaccine-preventable diseases branch at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in May, and who serves on the regional verification commission for measles, rubella, and congenital rubella for the World Health Organization’s Western Pacific region. (PAHO is one of the WHO’s six regional offices.)

“That’s my expectation of the outcome of that meeting, unfortunately,” Sarah Wilson, deputy chief of communicable diseases control at Public Health Ontario, told STAT. 

Ontario, Canada’s most populous province, has recorded nearly 2,400 measles cases this year, all but 54 of which were part of the ongoing national outbreak. Ontario believes transmission there has stopped; its outbreak was declared over on Oct. 6.

Canada overall has recorded more than 5,100 confirmed and probable measles cases in 2025, and two deaths of babies born with congenital measles who were infected in utero. The country hasn’t seen this scale of measles transmission in decades.

Chart of annual measles cases in CanadaPublic Health Agency of Canada

“It’s tremendously disappointing,” said Lynora Saxinger, an infectious diseases specialist at the University of Alberta. “I never in my life thought I’d see a massive measles outbreak in Canada. Most of my career in [infectious diseases], there’s been 10 cases a year or less.”

The outbreak began in October 2024, when someone infected abroad attended a wedding in New Brunswick, in eastern Canada. From there, the virus has spread across nine of Canada’s 10 provinces and to the Northwest Territories.

Saxinger is not alone in being surprised by the size of the outbreak, though details of where infections are happening help to put the number of cases and the vast geographic spread into context.

Like the measles outbreak earlier this year in West Texas, the lion’s share of the Canadian cases have occurred among members of close-knit religious communities that eschew contact with the wider world — homeschooling their children and seeking medical care only if it’s urgently needed. 

Public health officials have been hesitant to name the groups, for fear of further alienating them and undermining efforts to gain their help to control spread. But in a memo to Ontario medical officers of health last spring, the province’s Chief Medical Officer of Health Kieran Moore reported that cases were being disproportionately seen in Mennonite, Amish, and other Anabaptist communities.

“I think this has been one of the challenges of this outbreak,” Wilson said. It’s been “a bit of a balancing act between communication about where the outbreak is occurring, the populations at risk, but balancing that with a very real risk of stigmatization of communities. And especially communities in which local public health units are really trying to … build and regain trust.” 

Many members of these communities, which are found in pockets across the country, are under-vaccinated or unvaccinated. There had been no cases of measles reported within these communities in Ontario since before Canada achieved measles elimination status in 1998, Wilson said, meaning the pool of susceptible people was large and included adults as well as children. That has been evidenced by the fact that 51 of Ontario’s cases were in pregnant people.

Wilson said she’s seen some people try to characterize the outbreak as a post-Covid phenomenon — driven by the decline in uptake of vaccines for a variety of illnesses that multiple countries have reported in the wake of the pandemic. But she said in this case, the conditions were years in the making.

“It really predates Covid by not just many years [but] many decades when you look at the ages impacted,” she said.


Rota agreed, noting the same is true of the West Texas outbreak, and a large outbreak in northern Mexico. All three of these outbreaks are believed to be linked. Combined, they have resulted in 28 measles deaths so far this year: 23 in Mexico, three in the United States, and two in Canada.

“In some respect, the susceptibility that’s causing the outbreaks now has actually been there for a while, because these are really being fueled by these under-vaccinated populations,” he said. “They’ve been vulnerable for a while. And … the virus got there.”


Similar outbreaks have occurred in the region in the past. In 2014, there was a large outbreak among Amish communities in Ohio. An outbreak among orthodox Jewish communities in New York City and nearby counties that started in 2018 brought the United States perilously close to losing elimination status in the autumn of 2019.

Should the Americas lose measles elimination status as a result of this week’s meeting, it won’t be for the first time. The region was first declared measles free in 2016, but a large outbreak in Venezuela erased that accomplishment in 2018. Brazil lost its elimination status the following year. Venezuela proved to the regional verification commission that it had stopped endemic spread in 2023. Brazil followed in 2024, allowing the Americas to again claim measles elimination status.

Once the current outbreak is extinguished in Canada, the country could regain its measles-free status if it can show the regional verification commission that it has gone 12 months without endemic transmission. 

Crowcroft, who is also the vice president for infectious diseases and vaccination programs at the Public Health Agency of Canada, thinks the end of the Canadian outbreak is in sight. “We’re pretty confident … we’re at the tail end of it.” But as a former member of PAHO’s regional verification commission, she knows that regaining elimination status isn’t a simple process. It’s not enough to claim that transmission has stopped. A country must show that its surveillance systems are robust enough to detect chains of transmission, if they are occurring.

Asked if she’s worried about the message that could be sent because a country as affluent as Canada couldn’t stop transmission within a year, Crowcroft reframed the question.

“I’m more concerned … that we learn the lessons of this being a reflection of the global situation, and how much we do depend on each other,” she said. “Whether high income, low income, or middle income, wherever, we’re all dependent on each other to get ahead of measles.”

Saxinger sees the milestone as a call to action. 

“I think it’s a big wake-up call. I think we’ve been coasting on luck during a period of drifting vaccine rates for quite a long time now,” she said. “The fact that it’s been really, really difficult to control is just a solid reminder that measles is just really, really hard.”

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sarcozona
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Religion is a deadly virus
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Bad Gums Tied to Big Brain Risks | MedPage Today

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  • Periodontal disease was linked to increased white matter damage, raising concerns for brain health.
  • Poor oral health also raised the risk of ischemic stroke and major cardiovascular events.
  • Neurologists were urged to include oral health as part of comprehensive brain disease prevention.

Gum disease was linked with white matter hyperintensities, an imaging marker of cerebral small vessel disease, data from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) cohort showed.

Among 1,143 ARIC participants, periodontal disease was associated with the highest quartile of white matter hyperintensity volume (adjusted OR 1.56, 95% CI 1.01-2.40), reported Souvik Sen, MD, MS, MPH, of the University of South Carolina in Columbia, and co-authors in Neurology Open Access.

In a parallel study of 5,986 ARIC participants, the incidence of ischemic stroke over a 21-year follow-up period was 4.1% for people with oral health, 6.9% for people with periodontal disease, and 10.0% for people with concurrent periodontal disease and dental caries. Periodontal disease with caries was associated with an increased risk of ischemic stroke (HR 1.86, 95% CI 1.32-2.61) and major adverse cardiovascular events (HR 1.36, 95% CI 1.10-1.69) compared with oral health.

"The most obvious implication of these data is that oral health plays a role in stroke risk, an already well-documented association, and may contribute to white matter hyperintensity pathogenesis, a relationship that is less well explored," observed Leonardo Pantoni, MD, PhD, of the University of Milan.

White matter hyperintensities are a silent expression of cerebrovascular disease, Pantoni noted in an accompanying editorial.

However, they are "in no way a benign neuroimaging finding," he emphasized. "A large body of evidence has shown that severe white matter hyperintensities are associated with an increased risk of dementia, mortality, and various functional deficits."

These two studies strongly suggest that good oral health may help prevent white matter hyperintensity burden and reduce stroke risk, Pantoni pointed out.

"Neurologists, like many other specialists, are probably not accustomed to considering oral health as part of cerebrovascular disease prevention," he stated. "These observations suggest that neurologists should consider incorporating lifestyle interventions such as oral health into stroke prevention strategies, as an adjunct to pharmacologic approaches."

The ongoing ARIC study began in 1987, enrolling nearly 16,000 people ages 45 to 65 years in four U.S. communities. Participants had multiple consecutive follow-up visits since the study began. The Dental ARIC ancillary study was conducted from 1996 to 1998.

In the white matter hyperintensity analysis, 800 ARIC participants were classified as having periodontal disease and 343 had periodontal health. Sen and co-authors divided participants into quartiles based on white matter hyperintensity volume. Those in the highest quartile had a volume of more than 21.36 cm³; those in the lowest quartile had a volume of less than 6.41 cm³.

Imaging measures of cerebral small vessel disease included white matter hyperintensity volume, cerebral microbleeds, and lacunar infarcts. Cerebral microbleeds or lacunar infarcts were not associated with periodontal disease, which "may be explained by a lack of statistical power or by different pathogenetic aspects among these features of cerebral small vessel disease," Pantoni suggested.

In the ischemic stroke analysis, 1,640 people had oral health, 3,151 had periodontal disease only, and 1,195 had concurrent periodontal disease and dental caries. This analysis also showed that regular dental care was tied to lower odds of periodontal disease (OR 0.71, 95% CI 0.58-0.86) and periodontal disease with caries (OR 0.19, 95% CI 0.15-0.25).

The findings suggest that mechanisms involving systemic inflammation from dental disease may play a role in brain health, Sen and colleagues noted. If future studies confirm a link between gum disease and white matter hyperintensities, "it could offer a new avenue for reducing cerebral small vessel disease by targeting oral inflammation," Sen said in a statement.

A limitation of both studies is that oral health was assessed once and changes in dental health over time weren't captured, the researchers acknowledged.

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sarcozona
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Floss abs use a soft toothbrush!
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NOAA cancels funding for data collection crucial to tsunami warning systems

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The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is halting a contract that makes it possible for the federal agency to accurately monitor for potential tsunamis in Alaska – and quickly warn at-risk communities.

The Alaska Earthquake Center for decades has collected data from seismology stations across the state and directly fed the information to NOAA’s National Tsunami Center, in Palmer. If the data indicates an earthquake that could lead to a tsunami, the Tsunami Center sends out a warning message within minutes.

Or at least that’s how it worked historically, including on Thursday morning, when an earthquake struck between Seward and Homer.

But that’s about to change. In late September, the federal agency advised the Alaska Earthquake Center that it does not have funding available for that work.

“We are anticipating direct data feeds to stop in mid-November,” said Mike West, the Alaska State Seismologist and director of the Alaska Earthquake Center, which is part of the University of Alaska Fairbanks’ Geophysical Institute.

The news comes amid the Trump administration’s effort to dramatically slash federal spending – including by proposed cuts to key weather and climate programs within NOAA.

West said the change is a big deal. NOAA’s National Weather Service holds the federal responsibility for tsunami warnings, and has historically been a primary supporter of seismic data collection in Alaska. But the agency doesn’t actually collect much of that data itself.

“Without this contract,” West said, “they lose data from dozens and dozens of sites all around the state, and specifically – or maybe more urgently – a handful of sites out in the Aleutians and the Bering that have been there for decades specifically for this purpose.”

The potential fallout isn’t isolated to Alaska. West provided an example: the 1946 tsunami that originated near the Aleutians, and killed more than 150 people in Hawaii.

“The tsunami threats from Alaska are not just an Alaska problem,” West said.

The contract was supposed to re-start October 1. But after funding did not arrive as expected, West reached out to the agency on Sept. 23. A NOAA official advised him via email a week later that the agency did not have the budget to support the long-standing contract.

West said the Earthquake Center is grappling with the situation but that its NOAA data feeds and tsunami-specific work will wind down in November.

“We are not going to continue operating those stations in the Aleutians that are entirely NOAA supported,” he said. “We’re not going to just keep doing it.”

NOAA did not respond to a request for comment. NOAA Tsunami Warning Coordinator David Snider declined to comment for this story.

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Key Ukraine town faces 'multi-thousand' Russian force, top commander admits

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James LandaleDiplomatic correspondent, in Kyiv

Reuters Artillerymen of the 152nd Separate Jaeger Brigade fire an M114 self-propelled howitzer towards Russian troops near PokrovskReuters

Pokrovsk is a key hub whose capture could unlock Russian efforts to seize the rest of the region

Ukraine's top military commander has admitted his soldiers are facing "difficult conditions" defending Pokrovsk - a key eastern front-line town - against massed Russian forces.

Gen Oleksandr Syrskyi said Ukrainian troops were facing a "multi-thousand enemy" force - but denied Russian claims that they were surrounded or blocked.

He confirmed that elite special forces had been deployed to protect key supply lines which, army sources said, were all under Russian fire.

The defence ministry in Moscow reported that Ukrainian troops were surrendering and 11 of their special forces had been killed after landing by helicopter, something denied by Kyiv.

In Saturday's posts on Telegram, Gen Syrskyi said he was "back on the front" to personally hear the latest reports from military commanders on the ground in the eastern Donetsk region.

In a short video, Syrskyi is seen studying battlefield maps with other commanders, including the head of Ukraine's military intelligence, Kyrylo Budanov.

It is unclear when and where the footage was recorded.

Ukrainian media earlier reported that Budanov was in the region to personally oversee the operation by the special forces.

The deployment of special forces suggests officials in Kyiv are determined to try to hold on to the town, which Russia has been trying to seize for more than a year.

Ukraine's 7th Rapid Response Corps said on Saturday Ukrainian troops "have improved [their] tactical position" in Pokrovsk - but the situation remained "difficult and dynamic".

Late on Friday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky stressed that the defence of Pokrovsk was a "priority".

There have been growing reports of Russian advances around the strategic town to the west of the Russian-seized regional capital of Donetsk.

Reuters Drone shot of Ukrainian forces leaving a helicopter in a muddy field.Reuters

Russia claimed to have killed Ukrainian special forces who landed near the town by helicopter

Images shared with news agencies late on Friday appear to show a Ukrainian Black Hawk helicopter deploying about 10 troops near Pokrovsk, although the location and date could not be verified.

Russia's defence ministry said it had thwarted the deployment of Ukrainian military intelligence special forces north-west of the town, killing all 11 troops who landed by helicopter.

DeepState, a Ukrainian open-source monitoring group, estimates about half of Pokrovsk is a so-called "grey zone" where neither side is in full control.

A military source in Donetsk told the BBC that Ukrainian forces were not surrounded but their supply lines were under fire from Russian troops.

The US-based Institute for the Study of War said Ukrainian forces had "marginally advanced" during recent counter-attacks north of Pokrovsk, but said the town was "mainly a contested 'grey zone'".

Moscow wants Kyiv to cede the Donetsk and the neighbouring Luhansk regions (collectively known as Donbas) as part of a peace deal, including the parts it currently does not control.

Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, and currently controls about 20% of Ukrainian territory, including the Crimean peninsula Moscow annexed in 2014.

Pokrovsk is a key transport and supply hub whose capture could unlock Russian efforts to seize the rest of the region.

But Kyiv also believes its capture would help Russia in its efforts to persuade the US that its military campaign is succeeding - and, therefore, that the West should acquiesce to its demands.

Washington has grown increasingly frustrated with the Kremlin's failure to move forward with peace negotiations - culminating in US President Donald Trump placing sanctions on two largest Russian oil producers and axing plans for a summit with President Vladimir Putin.

Zelensky has publicly agreed with Trump's proposal for a ceasefire that would freeze the war along the current front lines.

Putin is refusing to do so, insisting on his maximalist pre-invasion demands that Kyiv and its Western allies see as a de facto capitulation of Ukraine.

Additional reporting by Jaroslav Lukiv

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sarcozona
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Being America’s proxy or relying on the US will never end well for your country. Look at Canada, burning all its foreign capital on the US’s pyre only to be threatened with annexation
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A major shift in the US landscape: 'Wild' disturbances are overtaking human-directed changes

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Researchers uncover a major shift in US landscape: 'Wild' disturbances are overtaking human-directed changes Land disturbance agent maps across the USA (1988–2022). Credit: Nature Geoscience (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41561-025-01792-3

If it feels like headlines reporting 100 or 1,000-year floods and megafires seem more frequent these days, it's not your imagination.

A project led by researchers from UConn's Global Environmental Remote Sensing (GERS) Lab has yielded surprising insights into land disturbances and disasters in the United States since the late 1980s, including a shift in what drives those disturbances, and how they are increasing with frightening intensity and frequency. Their findings are published in Nature Geoscience.

The research is the result of a decade-long project to perform a CONterminous United States (CONUS)-wide disturbance agent classification and mapping project, explains GERS Director and Associate Professor in the Department of Natural Resources and the Environment in the College of Agriculture, Health and Natural Resources (CAHNR) Zhe Zhu. The ambitious project involved the careful analysis of Landsat satellite data spanning more than 40 years.

Disturbances like hurricanes and fires reshape the landscape and play vital roles in Earth's systems; therefore, understanding what drives these kinds of disturbances is important for projecting what changes may be ahead.

When talking about different types of disturbances, word choice is crucial, because the definition of "natural disaster" can be misleading. The authors are careful to define the trends we are seeing now.

"A lot of disturbances are no longer purely natural, and there is no clear line between human and natural disturbances anymore," says Zhu. "For example, there are so many wildfires, and many are not started by lightning nowadays."

In the case of flooding events, human-directed activities like logging and deforestation, construction, impervious surfaces, or dam failures can amplify these disturbances, and are therefore indirectly influenced by humans as well as anthropogenic climate change. The researchers call this category "wild" disturbances.

"We feel we're no longer able to call these disturbances 'natural disturbances,' so we made this new framework that has human-directed compared to 'wild' disturbances like vegetation stress, geohazard, wind, and fire that we put into another category because they are also greatly influenced indirectly by humans," says Zhu.

Lead author and Department of Natural Resources and the Environment Research Assistant Professor Shi Qiu explains that the study focuses on land disturbance occurring in different land surface types, because much of the research in this area has only focused on forest disturbances.

Using an advanced algorithm called COLD developed by Zhu, the researchers analyzed Landsat data from 1982 through 2023 to better understand the context in which different disturbances happened; for example, when and where the disturbance happened, as well as the causal agents, such as logging, construction, fire, or vegetation stress. You can explore the dataset here.

"For example, we can capture wild disturbances, like wildfires or hurricanes, and we can also capture human-directed disturbances, like logging, construction, and agriculture. We used long-term Landsat satellite data to capture those disturbances in the past decades to see how those disturbances have shifted in the U.S.," says Qiu.

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For the first time, Zhu says, they can distinguish the cause of the disturbance and analyze and quantify the area impacted by different causal agents, and also track trends, which the researchers found quite surprising.

"We found that human-directed disturbance is huge in the U.S., but we observed that human-directed disturbance has decreased in the past decades. Meanwhile, we found that wild disturbance is increasing. That is a major finding," says Zhu.

It is helpful to look at current and ongoing disasters to understand the magnitude of these findings, says Zhu. For example, the recent flash floods in Texas which killed over 100 people, or rapidly growing fires in California and Oregon, to more local examples of years of drought and spongy moth infestations that have impacted the region's trees.

"They're all linked together: changing our land is causing major disasters and landscape change at a scale we haven't seen before," says Zhu. "A lot of them are extreme weather events, but one question we have is what are the drivers causing them? Are they getting larger or smaller in the impacted area? Are they getting more frequent than before? We were able to see the trends, including the acceleration or deceleration of the trends."

The researchers found that wild disturbances are not only increasing in frequency, but also in severity.

"They are going wild and that is why we feel like 'wild' is quite useful for describing those disturbance agents."

To continue this important work, the researchers say they are looking for opportunities to collaborate to implement this method to other regions.

"This is not simple research that one person or a few people can do. We have lots of collaborations with remote sensing experts at other universities and outstanding ecologists. All of us worked together to make this happen," says Qiu. "To analyze this dataset, the UConn High-Performance Computing facility also gave us a lot of support."

The increasing trends the researchers observed are not linear, says Zhu, which makes it difficult to forecast the severity of future disturbances. Now is the time for more research like this to help guide resilience management.

More information: Shi Qiu et al, A shift from human-directed to undirected wild land disturbances in the USA, Nature Geoscience (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41561-025-01792-3.

Citation: A major shift in the US landscape: 'Wild' disturbances are overtaking human-directed changes (2025, September 18) retrieved 1 November 2025 from <a href="https://phys.org/news/2025-09-major-shift-landscape-wild-disturbances.html" rel="nofollow">https://phys.org/news/2025-09-major-shift-landscape-wild-disturbances.html</a>

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