Meat Erased Alzheimer’s Gene Risk

Robert Lufkin MD writes:

As a medical school professor, I teach about APOE4 — the gene that makes you 2.5x more likely to develop Alzheimer’s. We’ve told patients there’s nothing they can do about it.

A new JAMA Network Open study of 2,157 adults just proved us wrong.

Higher meat consumption completely abolished the APOE4 dementia risk.

The data:
-> APOE4 carriers with highest meat intake: 55% lower dementia risk
-> Their typical 2.5x excess Alzheimer’s risk? Gone entirely
-> Cognitive decline reversed: +0.32 standard deviations over 10 years
-> Unprocessed meat was protective; processed meat was harmful regardless of genotype

Researchers propose APOE4 is an evolutionary adaptation to meat-rich diets. The gene isn’t a defect — we just stopped feeding it correctly.

This is personalized metabolic medicine. Your genes load the gun, but your diet pulls the trigger — or puts the safety back on.

Pollution and Alzheimer’s – The Link

  • A nationwide study of 27.8 million older Americans found long-term exposure to fine particle air pollution (PM2.5) is linked to a higher risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease, showing that everyday air quality directly influences brain aging
  • Each increase in long-term pollution exposure corresponded with about an 8.5% higher risk, highlighting how cumulative daily exposure shapes future cognitive health
  • Researchers found most of the Alzheimer’s risk from pollution occurs through direct effects on the brain — including inflammation, oxidative stress, and blood vessel damage — rather than being explained primarily by other diseases
  • People with a history of stroke showed greater vulnerability to pollution-related Alzheimer’s risk, indicating underlying vascular injury amplifies the neurological impact of environmental exposure
  • Long-term exposure patterns — not short pollution spikes — drove the strongest associations, meaning consistent reductions in daily pollution exposure represent a practical strategy to protect brain health over time

Read more: https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2026/04/04/fine-particle-air-pollution-alzheimers-risk.aspx

Quote of the Day

“No one is useless in this world who lightens the burdens of another.” – Charles Dickens, Writer (1812 – 1870)

What The Actual Climate Data Really Shows

Interglacial Ice Core Drill

Between 2007 and 2012, scientists drilled deep into Greenland’s ice as part of the NEEM project to uncover the climate story of the last interglacial around 125,000 years ago. What they found puts today’s climate panic into perspective. Back then, Greenland was around 8C warmer than today. Sea levels were 4 to 8 meters higher. Yet the planet didn’t collapse and Greenland didn’t melt. There were no tipping points and no mass extinctions. The planet was far warmer and life flourished. So when activists claim that 2C of modern warming spells “catastrophe”, the ice, the data and the history all say otherwise.

Video: https://x.com/Electroversenet/status/2040882165190455644?s=20

Inge Lehmann

Inge Lehmann

An earthquake in New Zealand sent data worldwide. Most scientists glanced at it and moved on. Inge Lehmann stared at it for years.

Then she discovered the center of the Earth.

In 1929, an earthquake struck near Murchison, New Zealand. The seismic waves it sent rippling through the Earth traveled thousands of miles, passed through every layer of the planet, and were recorded by instruments on the other side of the world.

Most scientists glanced at the data and moved on.

Inge Lehmann stared at it for years.

She was Denmark’s only seismologist—a quiet, meticulous woman who spent her days maintaining seismograph stations alone, without an assistant, despite requesting one repeatedly.

Her official duties were unglamorous: instrument upkeep, data logging, routine reports. The kind of work that kept institutions running but rarely produced breakthroughs.

But Lehmann had noticed something in the Murchison data that didn’t fit.

Certain seismic waves—P-waves—were appearing in locations where, according to every accepted theory, they simply should not be.

The prevailing scientific consensus held that Earth’s core was entirely molten liquid. If that were true, these waves would have behaved very differently.

They weren’t behaving that way.

Something was down there. Something the textbooks hadn’t accounted for. Some kind of boundary, deep inside a molten core, that was deflecting waves in ways no one had predicted or even imagined.

Lehmann had no supercomputer. No advanced imaging. No institutional support and no research budget to speak of.

She had cardboard oatmeal boxes and index cards.

Working in her spare time—the hours left over after her official duties were done—she built a filing system inside those boxes, tracking earthquake data collected from seismograph stations around the world.

Every wave. Every anomaly. Every reading that didn’t quite make sense.

She recorded them by hand. She calculated by hand. She cross-referenced by hand.

Her nephew would later describe visiting her: Inge outside on the lawn, a large table covered in cardboard boxes, working through the mathematics of the Earth’s interior with the focused patience of someone who had simply decided to find the answer.

In 1936, she published her conclusion.

The paper was titled “P’”—P-prime.

One of the most understated titles in the history of science, for one of the most significant discoveries the field had ever produced.

Lehmann’s mathematical proof showed that Earth’s core was not one thing but two: a solid metal inner core, dense and ancient, surrounded by a molten outer core.

Two distinct layers, separated by a sharp boundary thousands of miles beneath our feet—a boundary that no one had known existed, which no instrument had ever directly reached, which she had found using nothing but seismograph readings and the mathematics she’d worked through on her lawn.

The scientific community didn’t immediately celebrate.

It took years.

Serious geologists reviewed her work, ran their own analyses, looked for the error that would make the conventional wisdom safe again.

But the data kept confirming what Lehmann had found.

One by one, the field’s leading figures—Beno Gutenberg, Charles Richter, Harold Jeffreys—accepted her interpretation.

The inner core was real.

She had been right.

When computer modeling finally caught up to her calculations in the 1970s, it confirmed what Lehmann had established with cardboard and pencil decades earlier.

She didn’t slow down.

After retiring from the Danish Geodetic Institute at sixty-five, she moved to the United States and kept working—for three more decades.

In the 1950s, collaborating with American seismologists, she identified another anomaly: an abrupt change in seismic wave velocities approximately 220 kilometers below Earth’s surface.

A second hidden boundary. Subtle and strange. Its nature researchers are still actively investigating today.

It carries her name now. The Lehmann discontinuity.

The honors came eventually, as they tend to—late, and in numbers that implied the world was making up for lost time.

The William Bowie Medal. Fellowship in the British Royal Society. The Gold Medal of the Danish Royal Society. Honorary doctorates from Columbia University and the University of Copenhagen.

An entire scientific medal established in her honor by the American Geophysical Union, awarded to this day for outstanding contributions to understanding Earth’s structure.

She received them with characteristic directness.

When her nephew asked her about competing in a field dominated by men who received opportunities she was consistently passed over for, Lehmann didn’t soften it:

“You should know how many incompetent men I had to compete with—in vain.”

In 1987, at ninety-nine years old, she published her final scientific paper.

She died in 1993 at 104—one of the longest-lived scientists in recorded history, still sharp, still remembered in the language of the planet she had spent her life reading.

Here is the thing about Inge Lehmann’s discovery that stays with you.

The solid inner core she identified is roughly the size of Pluto.

It sits at temperatures nearly as extreme as the surface of the sun.

It has been there since before life existed on this planet, hidden at a depth no human being will ever physically reach.

And she found it.

Not with a billion-dollar research program. Not with technology that didn’t yet exist.

With patience. With obsessive attention to data that everyone else had decided to stop questioning. And with cardboard oatmeal boxes organized on a lawn table in Denmark.

Think about what that means.

The center of the Earth—a solid metal sphere the size of Pluto, spinning at a slightly different rate than the rest of the planet, generating the magnetic field that protects all life from solar radiation—was completely unknown to science until 1936.

Until a Danish woman working alone, without an assistant, filing data in oatmeal boxes, noticed that earthquake waves weren’t behaving the way they should.

She trusted the numbers when the numbers contradicted the experts.

She kept working when the work was invisible.

She published when the field wasn’t ready, and then waited, quietly, for the field to catch up.

Inge Lehmann didn’t discover Earth’s inner core despite her circumstances.

She discovered it because she was the kind of person who looked at what couldn’t be explained—and refused to look away until she understood it.

The men who doubted her had labs. Assistants. Funding. Titles.

She had better questions.

And here’s the beautiful irony: those men, with all their resources, were studying the same earthquake data. They had access to the same seismograph readings. They had the same numbers in front of them.

They saw nothing unusual.

Inge Lehmann, working alone at a lawn table with cardboard boxes, saw the truth.

She saw it because she was looking for it. Because she refused to accept “that’s just how it is” as an answer. Because she trusted her calculations more than she trusted consensus.

The inner core discovery rewrote geology textbooks. Changed our understanding of how planets form. Explained how Earth’s magnetic field works. Influenced everything from earthquake prediction to our understanding of other planetary bodies.

All because one woman looked at data everyone else had dismissed and thought: “This doesn’t make sense. Let me figure out why.”

She requested an assistant for years. They never gave her one.

She discovered the center of the Earth anyway.

She worked with oatmeal boxes while men worked in funded laboratories.

She was right. They were wrong.

She published at ninety-nine. Most people are retired at sixty-five. Inge Lehmann was still rewriting our understanding of the planet in her tenth decade of life.

She competed against incompetent men—in vain, she said. Because they got the positions, the funding, the recognition.

And she got the truth.

When asked what drove her, she once said simply: “I just wanted to know.”

Not for fame. Not for recognition. Not to prove anyone wrong.

She just wanted to know.

What’s at the center of the Earth? Why are these waves behaving strangely? What boundary could cause this effect?

She wanted to know. So she found out.

Using cardboard boxes. And index cards. And mathematics worked out by hand on a lawn table.

And she was right.

The Lehmann discontinuity. The inner core boundary. Her name is written into the structure of the Earth itself now.

Every geology student learns about her. Every seismologist builds on her work. Every textbook explains the solid inner core she discovered.

Most of them don’t mention the cardboard boxes.

But that’s the detail that matters most.

Because it means you don’t need a billion-dollar lab to change the world.

You need better questions. And the refusal to stop asking them.

Inge Lehmann discovered the center of the Earth at a lawn table in Denmark.

She published her last paper at ninety-nine.

She outlived most of the men who doubted her.

And she was right the entire time.

The men had resources.

She had better questions.

The Roman Aqueduct

Roman Aqueduct

No relationship at all to today’s oil/petrol crisis.

The year is 19 BC, and Marcus Agrippa stands atop the Palatine Hill, his eyes fixed on a marble basin that has remained dry for months.

A crowd has gathered in the searing heat of the Roman summer, their voices a low hum of skepticism and desperation.

Suddenly, a distant rumble echoes through the underground stone conduits, a sound like a coming storm beneath the earth.

Then, the first surge of crystal-clear water erupts from the fountain, cascading over the rim with a roar that drowns out the cheers of the Roman people.

The Aqua Virgo has arrived, stretching fourteen miles from the Alban Hills to the heart of the capital.

This was not just a fountain; it was a declaration of war against geography itself.

In an age before electricity, before steel, and before modern mathematics, Rome achieved the impossible: they made the mountains move.

The engineering challenge was so immense it bordered on the supernatural.

Roman surveyors had to maintain a precise downward gradient of just two feet per mile across dozens of miles of jagged terrain.

If the slope was too steep, the sheer force of the rushing water would erode the stone channels and burst the pipes.

If the slope was too shallow, the water would sit stagnant, turning into a breeding ground for disease before it ever reached the city gates.

Using nothing more than bronze instruments like the chorobates—a long wooden level—and basic geometry, they mapped routes through solid rock.

They were building rivers in the sky, monuments to a civilization that refused to be limited by the land it occupied.

Take the Aqua Marcia, completed in 144 BC, a project that redefined human labor.

Workers were forced to tunnel through six miles of solid mountain rock using only hand-forged chisels and the flickering light of oil lamps.

They worked in suffocating darkness, carving out the veins of an empire inch by grueling inch.

When a valley interrupted their path, the Romans didn’t stop; they built soaring arcades of stone that still stand today.

The Pont du Gard in southern France is the ultimate testament to this obsession with perfection.

Its triple-tiered arches carry water 160 feet above the river below, a structure so sturdy it survived the collapse of the very empire that built it.

By the second century AD, eleven massive aqueducts fed the insatiable thirst of Rome.

The system delivered over 300 million gallons of water every single day.

To put that in perspective, Rome provided more water per capita to its citizens than many modern European cities do today.

Every citizen, from the wealthiest senator to the lowliest laborer, had access to fresh, flowing water at public fountains.

The wealthy took it a step further, paying a ’water tax’ to have private lead pipes divert the flow directly into their villas.

But the true heart of the system was hidden from view.

While the giant arches are what we photograph today, 80 percent of the aqueduct system was buried underground.

These miles of subterranean channels were lined with opus signinum, a waterproof cement that was the secret weapon of Roman construction.

Specialized maintenance crews known as the ’aquarii’ spent their lives in the dark, scrubbing the channels of mineral deposits to ensure the flow never faltered.

They were the unsung guardians of the city’s lifeblood.

This water didn’t just provide drinking supplies; it powered the Roman lifestyle.

The Baths of Caracalla were a sprawling complex of luxury that consumed millions of gallons daily.

Inside, 1,600 bathers at a time could move between heated pools, steam rooms, and cold plunges.

It was a level of hygiene and leisure that the world would not see again for over a thousand years.

But this miracle of engineering also created a catastrophic vulnerability.

Rome had grown so large—over one million inhabitants—that it could no longer survive on its own local wells.

The city was an artificial oasis, kept alive solely by the stone arteries stretching out into the countryside.

In the sixth century AD, the nightmare finally became a reality.

Invading Goth armies, realizing they could never breach the city’s walls, turned their attention to the hills.

They smashed the aqueducts, severing the flow of water and silencing the fountains that had roared for centuries.

Without water, the Great City began to wither almost overnight.

The population collapsed from over one million to barely 30,000 people huddled near the Tiber River.

The grand baths became empty stone husks, and the marble basins turned to dust.

Rome didn’t just lose its empire; it lost its ability to sustain life.

Today, these stone giants remain as skeletal remains across the Italian landscape, a haunting reminder of what happens when the machines of progress finally stop.

They proved that a civilization is only as strong as the hidden systems that keep it breathing.

Frontinus, De aquaeductu / The Smithsonian Institution / University of Virginia School of Architecture

Photo: Wikimedia Commons