
How I got hooked on tinned fish as sustainable and delicious seafood
Not that I don't appreciate a silky slice of nigiri or hefty tuna sub. My childhood memories of albacore on a slab of crusty Italian bread (with a cream soda, please) remain the best. But I eventually concluded the collateral damage was too high. Rendering these fish — predators equivalent to wolves or tigers on land — into a can of commodity protein didn't sit well with me.

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Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Archaeologists Found the Remains of an Ancient Roman Arts District Buried Underground
Here's what you'll learn when you read this story: Archaeologists working in the ancient Roman city of Suasa discovered a 'main street' full of pottery and coin production. The research team said that the find includes an 'extraordinary quantity of coins' alongside nearly intact vases. Researchers are calling the impressively large area a 'production district.' The ancient Roman city of Suasa may have contained one of Italy's first—and largest—arts districts. Archaeologists uncovered what they deem a 'large production district' that spanned a main street just outside the city center and featured buildings once used for the creation of coins and pottery dipping 16 feet into the ground. The team from the University of Bologna said in a translated statement that they discovered an 'extraordinary quantity of coins and some nearly intact vases' among the excavated ruins, showing off the prominence of the district in an array of production mediums that may have been traded throughout the Roman Empire. Suasa, which was located near the Cesano River, was founded after the Battle of Sentinum in 295 B.C.—a conflict fought between the Roman army and the Picentes against the alliance of Etruscans, Samnites, Senones Gauls, and Umbrians. The Roman victory gave the empire control over central Italy, and Suasa became an administrative center that grew in importance thanks to the well-connected Via Flaminia and Via Salaria Gallica roads passing through. The rapid growth of Suasa continued into the second half of the first century B.C. The city remained linked to Rome, but with an autonomous government and magistrates that led the building of the city, which included a variety of monumental structures. In the ancient city center, past University of Bologna archaeological missions uncovered a mixture of finds, including a commercial forum, a square, a portico, and a mid-Imperial period Domus—an upper-class Roman residence—full of mosaics and wall paintings. Teams then found an amphitheater, considered the largest in the region, and another theater nearby. As work continued, archaeologists at the western world's oldest continuous university located a necropolis. 'The goal of this year's research was to investigate the city's boundaries to better understand the transition between the settlement and the necropolis,' Enrico Giorgi, professor in the Department of History, Cultures, and Civilizations at the University of Bologna and director of the archaeological mission, said in a statement. At the outermost area of that site—between the main settlement and the burial site—the most recent excavations revealed the 'large production district.' The research team began with drone photography and geophysical surveys before moving into the excavation that uncovered the structures, coins, and vases. University experts said that Suasa retained its important role as an administrative and economic center in central Italy for some time, with peak development occuring during the second century A.D. Signs of decline appeared in the second half of the third century A.D., and the city was slowly emptied until completely abandoned sometime in the sixth century A.D., as newer settlements retreated to the hill country. It seems that those leaving the city didn't take their coins and vases with them. You Might Also Like The Do's and Don'ts of Using Painter's Tape The Best Portable BBQ Grills for Cooking Anywhere Can a Smart Watch Prolong Your Life? Solve the daily Crossword


Fox News
2 hours ago
- Fox News
Pope Leo XIV inspires over a million young Catholics at Rome faith gathering
Rome became the epicenter of a global faith movement over the weekend, as more than 1 million young Catholics answered Pope Leo XIV's call for faith and service. "My young brothers and sisters, you are the sign that a different world is possible," the pontiff told the Jubilee of Youth crowd in Tor Vergata, encouraging the sea of young faithful to embrace dialogue over division. Father Michael Tidd, headmaster at the Delbarton School in Morristown, New Jersey, told Fox News Monday that Pope Leo's message deeply resonated with the audience. "I think what Pope Leo says that resonates so well is that he's not afraid to ask hard questions and to challenge young people to live their faith more deeply, more authentically, to go beyond themselves and not just worry about their own concerns, but seek the good of their brothers and sisters," he told "Fox & Friends." According to Tidd, the pope's ability to connect stems from a natural "ease," a way of communicating that is neither overbearing nor condescending. Rather than lecturing the young Christians, he speaks to them personally, with a touch of warmth and wisdom. "He has an ability to engage readily, and you see that in his smaller audiences and the audiences at St. Peter's Square and certainly even here, his ability to catch their attention and to have them listen to him, not as someone who's admonishing them or chastising them, but someone who is encouraging, almost like a coach," Tidd observed. "[He's] encouraging them, motivating them to seek a deeper relationship with Christ, and also to bring the fruits of that relationship to their relationships with their brothers and sisters." The pope presided over a prayer vigil Saturday evening on the outskirts of Rome where he answered questions from young pilgrims, followed by a Sunday mass.
Yahoo
20 hours ago
- Yahoo
Pope Leo XIV urges young Catholics to spread faith at Rome's Youth Jubilee
Pope Leo XIV on Sunday urged more than 1 million young Catholics who gathered in Rome for the Youth Jubilee to "spread your enthusiasm and the witness of your faith" when they return to more than 150 home countries. The closing Mass of the Jubilee at Tor Vergata in the southern suburbs of Rome marked one of the most important events of the holy year, originally initiated by the late Pope Francis. The Sunday event was Pope Leo XIV's first significant encounter with the next generation of Catholics. "Good morning everyone and have a good Sunday. I hope you have rested a little. Now we begin the celebration of the Mass, which is the greatest gift that Christ has left us," the pontiff said as he arrived at Tor Vergata for the second day of celebrations. On Saturday, he held an evening vigil where he crossed the Tor Vergata on the Popemobile and greeted the thousands of faithful who planned to spend the evening on the lawn there ahead of the Sunday Mass. Descending from his helicopter on Sunday, the pontiff was greeted by the faithful with shouts, prayers and flags from all over the world. 'Fragility is part of the wonder that we are' During the homily celebrated with 20 cardinals, 450 bishops and 7,000 priests, the pope invited young people to face their fragility without making it a taboo. "The fragility of which they speak to us is part of the wonder that we are. Let us think of the symbol of grass: is not a meadow in blossom beautiful," Pope Leo XIV said. "It is delicate, made up of slender, vulnerable stems, subject to drying out, bending, breaking, and yet at the same time immediately replaced by others that sprout after them, and of which the former generously become nourishment and fertiliser, with their wear and tear on the soil." "This is how the field lives, constantly renewing itself, and even during the cold months of winter, when everything seems silent, its energy quivers beneath the ground and prepares to explode, in spring, in a thousand colours." "We too, dear friends, are made for this. Not for a life where everything is taken for granted and still, but for an existence that is constantly regenerated in gift, in love," said the pontiff. 'If you are restless, you are alive' The pope invited the faithful gathered in front of him to accumulate feelings of peace. "The fullness of our existence does not depend on what we accumulate nor, as as we heard in the Gospel, on what we possess," he said. Pope Leo XIV also quoted his predecessor, the late Pope Francis. "Each of us is called to confront great questions that do not have a simplistic or immediate answer, but invite us to set out, to go beyond ourselves, to a take-off without which there is no flight." "Let us not be alarmed, then, if we discover ourselves inwardly thirsty, restless, incomplete, longing for meaning and a future. We are not sick, we are alive," he said, recalling the words of late Pope Francis during the 2023 Youth Day in Lisbon. The message for youth afflicted by wars During the Angelus at the end of the Mass, the pope thanked the crowd of young people who had come from all over the world to participate in the Jubilee. "It has been a cascade of grace for the Church and for the whole world, I want to thank you one by one with all my heart". "We are with the young people of Gaza, with the young people of Ukraine and of every land bloodied by war," he added. "You are the sign that another world is possible. A world of friendship in which conflicts are not resolved with weapons but with dialogue." The celebration ended with the official announcement of the next World Youth Day. "The pilgrimage of hope continues and will take us to Asia. Young people from all over the world will gather together with the successor of Peter to celebrate World Youth Day in Seoul, Korea, from 3 to 8 August 2027," the pope said.