শনিবার, ২৬ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Health answers sought about burned-off war garbage

WASHINGTON (AP) ? J.D. Williams didn't think much about the smoke cloud that often shrouded his air base in Iraq. Not when it covered everything he owned with black soot or when his wheezing and coughing made it difficult to sleep at night.

"We just went about our business because there was a war going on," said Williams, a retired chief warrant officer who was responsible for maintaining some 250 aircraft for the U.S. Army's 101st Airborne Division.

He returned home from that second stint in Iraq in 2006 and subsequently was diagnosed with an irreversible lung disease that his doctor suspects could be related to smoke from one of the hundreds of burn pits that dotted Iraq and Afghanistan during the course of the two wars. The pits were used to burn off the garbage that accumulates at military bases, everything from Styrofoam and metal to paints, solvents, human waste and medical waste.

A new Department of Veterans Affairs registry, mandated by Congress, will be used to try to determine if there is a link between the burn pits and long-term health problems.

Military personnel who were stationed near an open burn pit can sign up. Researchers will use the database to monitor health trends in participants, and the VA will alert them to major problems detected.

Over the long term, the findings could make it easier for veterans who served near burn pits to obtain disability payments.

Williams, 56, of Huntsville, Ala., was initially told that he would have to prove that his illness, diagnosed as constrictive bronchiolitis, was service-related. He walked out of the room. Eventually, after he traveled to Washington and met with members of Congress, the VA increased his disability rating 10 percent.

He said he's hoping the registry will pave the way for other soldiers to avoid a similarly exasperating process. If researchers find certain illnesses are linked to exposure to burn pits, then the VA would be more likely to declare those illnesses a presumptive condition, eliminating the need for a veteran to prove that his or her illness is service-related.

Sixty-three burn pits were still being used in Afghanistan as of Dec. 26; those in Iraq were closed by December 2010. Camps with fewer than 100 people are not required to report the use of a burn pit, so there could be more, but generally much smaller ones. Proponents say the burn pits were so widespread that the large majority of veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan could participate in the registry.

In 2009, the military updated its policies on burn pits to prohibit the burning of hazardous materials such as certain medical waste, batteries and tires, and whenever possible, to situate them where the smoke would not blow over work and living quarters.

"When our service members voice concerns about burn pit exposures as well as other health issues, we take our responsibility seriously to investigate these exposures and possible health risks, and to implement any protective measure that are indicated and feasible," said Defense Department spokeswoman Cynthia O. Smith.

The creation of the burn pit registry has been several years in the making.

Air Force Lt. Col Darrin Curtis said in a memo disclosed by the Army Times in 2008 that he believed a particularly large burn pit at Joint Base Balad, one of the largest air bases in Iraq, was an acute health hazard, and he was amazed that it was allowed to operate without restrictions.

Congressional hearings followed that featured sick veterans, contractors and family members who had lost a loved one from illnesses they attributed to burn pits. The Pentagon said that none of the monitoring conducted at Balad identified an increased risk for long-term health problems. It has maintained that position over the years but also acknowledges that some personnel have persistent symptoms, possibly as a result of elevated exposures to the smoke, existing health conditions or other unknown factors.

An Institute of Medicine study requested by the VA and made public in 2011 concluded there was insufficient data to determine whether burn pit emissions had long-term health consequences. The study found the pollutants measured at Balad were generally present at a concentration so low that it would not be expected to cause any harm, even if a person was exposed to that concentration for a lifetime. The two exceptions were particulate matter and acrolein.

Particulate matter is a mixture of small particles and liquid droplets that can lead to acute respiratory problems. But the high concentrations at Joint Base Balad came primarily from local sources such as traffic and dust storms, rather than the burn pit, according to the institute, which advises the government on health issues.

Acrolein is a liquid primarily used as a herbicide and in making other chemicals. Exposure can lead to eye, nose and throat irritation. Although the concentration exceeded precautionary levels set by the Environmental Protection Agency, it was still far below the concentration that led to nasal and lung damage in laboratory animals, the study said.

The Pentagon said it is continuing to study the potential hazards of burn pit exposure.

The VA opposed the legislation setting up the burn pit registry even though it has registries for those exposed to Agent Orange in Vietnam and for those who served during the Gulf War. The department did not oppose trying to track potential burn pit-related illnesses, just the mechanism proposed.

"We said it was not the best scientific approach for learning about long-term health outcomes and it really wasn't necessary for outreach because we have other programs in place," said Dr. Paul Ciminera, director of the VA's Post-9/11 Era Environmental Health Program.

As to whether the burn pits lead to health problems in soldiers, Ciminera cited the Institute of Medicine report. "We need to do further research to see what the long-term effects could be," he said.

Democratic Sen. Tom Udall of New Mexico, the lead Senate sponsor of the registry legislation, said he pushed ahead despite VA objections because the department seems to instinctively reject concerns that veterans are harmed by their surrounding environment. He cited Agent Orange as an example and said the VA initially resisted a link between the defoliant and the health of soldiers who served in Vietnam.

Many supporters of the registry, including Williams, are also participants in a class-action lawsuit filed against KBR Inc., which contracted with the government to operate several of the burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan. Some 50 lawsuits were consolidated into one case in a Maryland federal court. The plaintiffs are seeking damages for various injuries, emotional distress and fear of future disease. KBR is seeking to dismiss the lawsuits on grounds it deserves the same immunity that prevents the plaintiffs from suing the federal government.

"Every type of waste imaginable was and is burned in these pits," the plaintiffs said in their suit.

Veterans groups were big backers of the registry, and an often-divided Congress overwhelmingly sides with them rather than the VA.

"You've been told since you're a little kid: 'Don't put a Styrofoam cup in a fire and breathe it because it's bad for you," said Ray Kelley, national legislative director for the Veterans of Foreign Wars. "They do that all day long on these stops along with Lord knows what else, from human waste to all sorts of garbage. You're inhaling that on a daily basis. It can't be good for you."

___

Online:

Department of Veterans Affairs: http://tinyurl.com/answdv2

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/health-answers-sought-burned-off-war-garbage-142651434.html

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শুক্রবার, ২৫ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

eSmart Tax Premium


For the last several years, we've reviewed a tax preparation website called CompleteTax. Unlike its competitors, this site did not begin its life as a desktop product; it launched on the Web. CompleteTax's parent company, CCH, has been in the business of supporting taxpayers since 1913, the year the tax code was created. CCH analyzes tax law and publishes voluminous resources. The product still exists, but it's now called eSmart tax?I reviewed eSmart Tax Premium.

The app is now supported by Liberty Tax Service, which has built 4,000 local offices in the U.S. and Canada since its launch in 1997. This tax preparation franchise had used the CompleteTax framework for two years, but this year it is playing a leading role in its website operations. If you need support this year, you'll be dealing with Liberty Tax Service, which also backs your return and e-files it.

I reviewed the Premium version, which costs the same as its competition's Deluxe versions, and is $10 cheaper than last year. If you plan to file a Schedule C, you have to spring for this top-of-the-line offering.

eSmart Tax, as you might expect, provides accurate, comprehensive coverage of the most commonly-faced tax situations, as well as several more uncommon ones. Like the others reviewed here, it asks an exhaustive list of questions as it tries to find all of your income, deductions and credits. eSmart Tax is comparable to its competitors in that sense, but lags behind TurboTax in terms of its user interface and review process. The site's overall help system, though, rivals the leader's; it's at least as comprehensive and context-sensitive.?

A Simple Process
eSmart Tax moves through your return in a fashion similar to its competitors. It gathers your personal information upfront (address, Social Security numbers, dependents, etc.). Here and throughout the tax prep process, you're presented with lengthy lists of questions meant to both feed information to your return and determine which elements of the site should be emphasized. These are yes or no questions, like, "Did you have any deductions such as the following?" (mortgage interest medical expenses, etc.) During this interview process, you'll often have to enter information in fields or select from list of options.

You don't ever see your 1040 shaping up as you go along. But eSmart Tax takes your responses, does any necessary calculating and deposits the information in the correct fields on your return. It really is like sitting in a tax preparer's office answering questions and providing the backup documentation required.

When you've answered every pertinent question, eSmart Tax analyzes your return and either suggests or insists on changes, depending on the issue. Once it's satisfied, you can transfer necessary information into a state return and complete it in the same fashion. After you've breathed a sigh of relief, you can print and/or e-file your return (the latter is recommended, and will be required someday).

Multiple Navigational Options
Simple, obvious navigational tools help you move through the interview. Tabs at the top of the screen display the site's primary sections: Personal, Employment, Deductions, Investments, Retirement, Miscellaneous, and Filing Options. Sub-tabs beneath each further divide those sections into smaller bites.

You can use these for navigation, but you're less likely to miss something critical if you progress through the site using the "Previous" and "Continue" buttons on each screen. These advance you forward or back one page. The "Quick Navigation" link takes you to another option. It presents a tree-like outline of the entire site's screens; you can click on one link to move directly to that page. These are all standard conventions that eSmart Tax's competitors employ.

CompleteTax revamped the user interface a couple of years ago, but the site still lags behind its competition in this area. It doesn't look like a polished, state-of-the-art website yet. Some elements look great, like the main tabs and buttons, but the work windows could use freshening up.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/TB_Dcd0e6mU/0,2817,2414703,00.asp

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'Top Model' winner suffers serious face injuries

Michael Buckner / Getty Images file

Lisa D'Amato, the "ANTM: All-Stars" champ, in September 2011.

By Kristin Dos Santos, E! Online

Lisa D'Amato, who won "America's Next Top Model: All-Stars," has suffered major injuries to her face after a freak accident on the set of a movie in Colorado.

The 32-year-old model-actress posted stomach-churning photos of her injuries, and recovery, on Instagram.?

Male models welcome for Top Model's next cycle!?

According to D'Amato, she broke her nose in several places and lacerated her lips, forehead and chin.?

"We were just kind of monkeying around," she told People, after wrapping production on an indie movie called "Cowboys and Indians." D'Amato explained that she was doing a handstand up against a crew member when they suddenly took a nasty fall. D'Amato landed on her face, crushing her nose, and then the crew member fell on top of her, causing more injuries to D'Amato's face.?

"It was a totally freak accident," D'Amato says. "It wasn't like we were doing back flips off the balcony."?

Smize! Top Model alum Lisa D'Amato gets married?

Fans of "Top Model" may remember Lisa as the outspoken and outrageous season five contestant who would run around in costumes, masks and wigs. She had a conversation with a bush she named Cousin It.?

And she jokes that there may be an upside to her fall. "I didn't have the best nose in the world to begin with. It gave me character," she told People. "Now I have a nice little nose job. I get a super cute nose."?

More in The Clicker:

Source: http://theclicker.today.com/_news/2013/01/24/16684676-americas-next-top-model-winner-seriously-injures-face-in-accident?lite

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El Paso Parks and Rec's trailblazers program helps kids explore ...

Growing up in Greeley, Colo., Samantha Garcia didn't need electronic gadgets or gaming systems.

The great outdoors of her northern Colorado town was all Garcia needed, no joystick required.

"We lived near streams and rivers and beautiful parks," Garcia said. "We didn't spend hours upon hours behind a keyboard or in front of the television. Nature was our playground."

For that reason, Garcia and her husband, Jonathan, find it vital for their two young boys to grow up with a respect for their environment.

The West Side couple have been living in El Paso for more than 10 years and have fallen in love with the Franklin Mountains, the Rio Grande and the many biking and hiking trails in the area.

"We want our

boys to realize that they can have more fun playing outside then wasting their recreation time playing video games," Garcia said.

Last year, the Garcias enrolled their boys -- Gabriel, 10, and Alex, 12 -- in the El Paso Parks and Recreation Department's Trailblazers Outdoor Recreation Program.

"It was fun being outdoors," Alex said. "We got to explore all the fun things to do in El Paso."

This year, there will be two sessions of the Trailblazers Outdoor Recreation Program, which will introduce the "Wise Kids Outdoors" concept.

Trailblazers offers children the opportunity to explore nature while teaching them about the importance of eating right and being physically active.

"We started this program in 2010

and it's been going strong ever since," said Carlos Rodriguez, a recreation specialist who programs the camp. "This year, we have a grant with the Sajai Foundation where we have a curriculum with missions that we do with the kids. Every mission is targeted to something specific with the outdoors."

The free Trailblazers program will be at the Don Haskins Recreation Center from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays, Jan. 29 to March 21, and at the Pavo Real Recreation Center from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Saturdays, Feb. 2 to March 23.

Registration is ongoing so children can join at anytime during the program.

"We set up field trips with the curriculum and our mission in mind," Rodriguez said. "For example, we'll set

up a fishing trip with the Ascarate Fishing Club who will provide the kids with lessons on how to fish. Our main objective is to get kids outdoors. We want to get the kids to experience the great outdoors."

Wise Kids Outdoors is a 20-mission program developed by the Sajai Foundation in partnership with the National Recreation and Parks Association.

The program content focuses on three key learning areas: being prepared to go outdoors, having great outdoor experiences and making it outdoors everyday.

"Sometimes kids are isolated in their own community," said Julian Tarango, who helps guide the tours for Trailblazers. "They need to adventure out of their comfort level and that's one of the things that this program does. It's exciting because it takes the kids outdoors."

The outdoors program encourages children to first learn about nature, stewardship and wellness concepts.

It also encourages them to explore nature through planting seeds, digging for worms and going on scavenger hunts.

"These kids have been introduced to new ideas, new thinking process and it promotes a lot of self-efficacy," Tarango said. "That's one of the things these kids need to be exposed to. Being in this program opens their eyes and it opens their minds and imagination."

When Tarango was growing up, he was entertained by the simplest things like playing marbles.

"You give the kids a bag of marbles today and they'll sit around wondering what to do with them," he said. "They have no idea how to align them, how to use geometry or how to use math when they're hitting an actual marble. That's what I love about the Trailblazer program. Just by adventuring outside and thinking outside of that box is awesome."

The children in the program will have a number of activities to select from.

"Carlos is willing to pick up the kids and drive them to another area of El Paso and expose them to what's available outside their neighborhoods," Tarango said. "That's another thing that I enjoy about the program. Not only are they able to exercise and use their imagination but its a lot of hands-on activity."

Victor R. Martinez may be reached at vmartinez@elpasotimes.com; 546-6128. Follow him on Twitter @vrmart.


Join the fun
  • What: Trailblazers Outdoor Recreation Program introduces the "Wise Kids Outdoors" concept for children 8 to 17 years old.
  • When, where: 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays, Jan. 29 to March 21, at the Don Haskins Recreation Center, 7400 High Ridge; 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Saturdays, Feb. 2 to March 23 at the Pavo Real Recreation Center, 9301 Alameda.
  • How much: Free.
  • Information: elpasotexas.gov/parks
    .
  • Source: http://www.elpasotimes.com/living/ci_22435307/trailblazers-program-helps-kids-explore-outdoors

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    Apple's profit rocket hits air pocket

    (AP) ? Apple Inc. warned Wednesday that the blockbuster sales growth of the last five years is slowing drastically, as iPhone sales are starting to plateau.

    The outlook sent Apple shares plunging by 10 percent, wiping out a year's worth of gains.

    Analysts said the warning suggested that Apple can no longer sustain its growth without some completely new product. Its last revolutionary product launch was the iPad in 2010.

    "It has been an overriding concern with Apple that they would not be able to generate revenue growth just rolling out new versions of old products," said Jeff Sica, president and chief investment officer of SICA Wealth Management. "Now they've proven it in their numbers."

    Apple said it expects sales of between $41 billion and $43 billion in the current quarter, which ends in March. That would usually be little cause for concern, even though analysts were expecting $45.6 billion, because Apple usually lowballs its forecasts. But Chief Financial Officer Peter Oppenheimer said the company is changing its practices and providing a reasonable range rather than a single, easily achievable number.

    That means Apple is looking at sales growth of about 7 percent from last year's January to March quarter, a striking number for a company that's posted double-digit increases in every quarter except one since 2008.

    Apple shares fell $51.48 to $462.59, in extended trading, after the release of the results.

    Apple's enviable profit growth also hit a wall in the October to December quarter. It said net income in the fiscal first quarter was $13.1 billion, or $13.81 per share, flat with a year ago. That still beat expectations, as analysts polled by FactSet had forecast earnings of $13.48 per share.

    Revenue was $54.5 billion, up 18 percent from a year ago. Analysts were expecting $55 billion.

    Apple shipped 47.8 million iPhones in the quarter, about 1 million less than analysts were expecting, and 22.9 million iPads, also about 1 million short.

    Most surprisingly, Mac sales were also 1 million short, at 4.1 million. That's a 22 percent drop from shipments a year ago. Oppenheimer said this was due to difficulties producing enough of the new iMac desktops fast enough.

    Investors have already been concerned that Apple's strategy of keeping the price of the iPhone high means it's losing out on sales, particularly overseas. Consumers are instead opting to buy cheaper smartphones running Google Inc.'s Android software, which has propelled South Korea's Samsung Electronics to the world's largest maker of smartphones.

    There's speculation that the company will produce a cheaper iPhone, but that would cut into its stunning profits, which are the whole reason it's become the world's most valuable company.

    Apple had warned that the holiday quarter's profits would be lower than Wall Street was initially expecting, because it had so many new products coming out, including the iPhone 5 and iPad Mini. New production lines are more expensive to run and yield more defective products that need to be redone or thrown out rather than sold.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-01-23-Earns-Apple/id-4360969323c242359dd0b2204955c3af

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    Air Force general calls sex assaults a 'cancer'

    (AP) ? Sexual misconduct within the Air Force's ranks is a "cancer" that the service is committed to eradicating, the Air Force's top officer said Wednesday at the first congressional hearing into a sex scandal at a training headquarters in Texas.

    "I will never stop attacking this problem," said Gen. Mark Welsh, the Air Force chief of staff, told the House Armed Services Committee.

    But underscoring the challenge that the Air Force faces, Welsh said the service recorded a disturbing number of reports of sexual assault last year. The preliminary figures show there were 796 reports of cases, ranging from inappropriate touching to rape, according to Welsh's testimony.

    The 2012 figure would be a nearly 30 percent increase from 2011, when 614 cases were reported. The number could be much greater, Welsh said, because many cases are never reported.

    "Calling these numbers unacceptable does not do the victims justice," Welsh said. "The truth is, these numbers are appalling."

    The 2012 figures are being audited and reviewed before being included in a report the Defense Department will submit to Congress in April, according to Welsh.

    Even more disturbing than the number of reports of sexual assault is the fact that most of the offenses are committed by fellow airmen, Welsh said.

    The scandal at Lackland Air Force Base near San Antonio continues to unfold nearly two years after the first victim came forward. All U.S. airmen report to Lackland for basic training. The base has about 500 military training instructors for about 35,000 airmen who graduate every year. About 1 in 5 recruits is a woman; most instructors are men.

    The preliminary results of Air Force investigation released in November described abuses of power by instructors who took advantage of a weak oversight system to prey on young recruits.

    The investigation has found that 32 military training instructors allegedly engaged in inappropriate or coercive sexual relationships with 59 recruits and airmen at Lackland, according to the Air Force. Six instructors have been convicted in courts-martial on charges ranging from adultery, rape and conducting unprofessional relationships. Nine more instructors are awaiting courts-martial. Two more received nonjudicial punishments. Fifteen 15 instructors remain under investigation.

    The Air Force has changed the way it selects officers and instructors who train new recruits and created a special unit of lawyers and investigators to assist victims of sexual assault.

    Welsh said he has stressed to the Air Force's officer corps and senior enlisted ranks the importance of eliminating sexual misconduct. As part of that effort, Welsh issued a "Letter to Airmen" this month that said images, songs and stories that are obscene or vulgar are not part of the Air Force heritage.

    Not everyone who commits sexual assault is a predator, but there are predators in the ranks and they have to be found before they act, Welsh said.

    The Air Force also has to identify and stop the activities that can lead to inappropriate actions.

    "A young man who routinely binge drinks and loses control of himself is going to conduct bad behavior," Welsh said. "That bad behavior could result in sexual assault. Let's stop the binge drinking."

    An Air Force veteran who pressed Congress to hold hearings on the misconduct at Lackland said in her statement to the committee there is a sexual assault epidemic in the military. Jennifer Norris said she medically retired in 2010 and was sexually assaulted while serving in the Air Force but not at Lackland. She told the committee she frequently has seen well-intentioned reforms fall short.

    Fundamental reforms are needed "to change a military culture and fix the broken military justice system," said Norris, who serves as an advocacy board member of the group Protect Our Defenders.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-01-23-Air%20Force%20Sex%20Scandal/id-2ed8799f59614e9fb919128734ed26a6

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    বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৪ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

    How The Sweet Potato Crossed The Pacific Way Before The Europeans Did

    A well-traveled root: A vendor sells sweet potatoes at a market near Manila in 2011. The Portuguese brought the root to the Philippines all the way from the Caribbean.

    Ted Aljibe/AFP/Getty Images

    A well-traveled root: A vendor sells sweet potatoes at a market near Manila in 2011. The Portuguese brought the root to the Philippines all the way from the Caribbean.

    Ted Aljibe/AFP/Getty Images

    When it comes to spreading food around the world, Christopher Columbus and his European compatriots get most of the credit.

    Yes, they introduced some quintessential ingredients into European and Asian cuisine. Who could imagine Italian food without the tomato? Or Indian and Chinese dishes without the spicy kick of chili peppers?

    But anthropologists think that a few foods made the 5,000-mile trek across the Pacific Ocean long before Columbus landed in the New World. And their proof is in the potato ? the sweet potato.

    By analyzing the DNA of 1,245 sweet potato varieties from Asia and the Americas, researchers have found a genetic smoking gun that proves the root vegetable made it all the way to Polynesia from the Andes ? nearly 400 years before Inca gold was a twinkle in Ferdinand and Isabella's eyes.

    The findings, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, offer more evidence that ancient Polynesians may have interacted with people in South America long before the Europeans stepped foot on the continent.

    The sweet potato made three independent trips to Southeast Asia. The Polynesians probably introduced it in 1100 A.D. (red). While the Spanish (blue) and Portuguese (yellow) brought other varieties from the Americas around 1500.

    Courtesy of Caroline Roullier/PNAS

    The sweet potato made three independent trips to Southeast Asia. The Polynesians probably introduced it in 1100 A.D. (red). While the Spanish (blue) and Portuguese (yellow) brought other varieties from the Americas around 1500.

    Courtesy of Caroline Roullier/PNAS

    "There's been many kinds of evidence ? linguistic and archaeological ? for contact between these two people," Caroline Rouiller, an evolutionary biologist at the Center for Functional and Evolutionary Ecology in France who led the study, tells The Salt. "But the sweet potato is the most compelling."

    Sweet potatoes originated in Central and South America. But archaeologists have found prehistoric remnants of sweet potato in Polynesia from about A.D. 1000 to A.D. 1100, according to radiocarbon dating. They've hypothesized that those ancient samples came from the western coast of South America. Among the clues: One Polynesian word for sweet potato ? "kuumala" ? resembles "kumara," or "cumal," the words for the vegetable in Quechua, a language spoken by Andean natives.

    But until now, there was little genetic proof for this theory of how the tater traveled.

    Part of the reason why is that modern sweet potatoes are a genetic muddle ? a hybrid of different cultivars that Europeans helped spread around the globe ? so it's hard to decipher their origins from their DNA.

    Rouiller got around this problem by turning to dried sweet potato remains kept in a London museum. Capt. James Cook's crew picked up the vegetables in Polynesia back in 1769, before all this interbreeding took off. Examining the genetic blueprint of Cook's sweet potatoes allowed Rouiller and her colleagues to trace the root's evolution all the way back to Ecuador and Peru.

    So how did the sweet potato make the ocean voyage?

    Its seeds could have possibly hitched a ride on seaweed or gotten lodged in the wing of a bird. But Pat Kirch, an archeologist at the University of Berkeley, California, thinks the Polynesians were well-equipped to sail right across the Pacific to South America and pick up a potato.

    "There's a lot of evidence accumulating over the last 10 years that the Polynesians made landfall in South America," he says. "We think they had sophisticated, double-hulled canoes ? like very large catamarans ? which could carry 80 or more people and be out to sea for months."

    The Polynesians had sophisticated, double-hulled canoes that were built for deep sea voyages. An artist aboard Capt. Cook's ship drew a picture when they arrived in Hawaii.

    Wikimedia.org

    But Polynesians didn't just grab the potatoes and head home. There are clues that they may have introduced chickens to the continent while they were at it.

    "In recent years, there is this baffling evidence that there were chickens in western Peru before Columbus," Charles C. Mann, the author of the book 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus, tells The Salt.

    But the claims have been disputed, he says, because the chicken bones date back to sometime between 1300 and 1400. "This is like three minutes before Columbus arrives," Mann jokes. "It's kind of weird that it's right before the Europeans got there."

    Nevertheless, Mann thinks the sweet potato research offers exciting evidence of contact between Polynesians and people in South America.

    "It would be a mind-boggling voyage," he says. "Suppose you started some place in Easter Island. It's incredible to think that you could go all the way to South America. This is scurvy time. It's a long journey and incredibly dangerous. You'd have to be completely insane ? which people are."

    Insane? Maybe. Then again, you never know the lengths a person will go to for some sweet potato fries.

    Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2013/01/22/169980441/how-the-sweet-potato-crossed-the-pacific-before-columbus?ft=1&f=1007

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