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CBS News GREENSBORO, Ala. - Pam Dorr wanted to be part of the solution and not the problem. Her town was overrun by wi
stanley uk ld bamboo of all things and her local economy was on the skids. Here is what she did. Since 2011, Pam Dorr of Greensboro, Alabama has created 11 small businesses and 50 new jobs. About $15 million in profits since 2006 have built affordable housing for hundreds of people in seven counties. CBS News Dorr rode into Greensboro, Alabama when its main street was on life-support. Even the catfish had moved on. Seventy-five percent of the businesses downtown were vacant or abandoned, she recalled.But Dorr has a special gift: using whatever s lying around to build possibility. In this particular case, she showed us a bicycle made of bamboo. It s an engineered bamboo tube in a hex shape lined with carbon fiber, she explained.Wild bamboo was a local nuisance. It turns out it s great for building bikes. said Dorr. I
stanley cup n 2008, she opened a bamboo bike business. It was a long learning curve, said Dorr with a laugh. It takes a while to figure out how to cure bamboo properly and how to build a bike that s gonna last. Hero bikes has gone global. Adam Fowler manages 24 employees in what was an abandoned building. We ve sent to Japan, Belgium, France, Germany, Spain. You name it, we ve sent it, he said
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We all have that friend鈥攖hat friend who won ;t even look at a slice of bread because they ;re participating in the latest faux-hippie, fitness-addict tre
stanley quencher nd, the Paleo diet. Cavemen didn ;t eat carbs so why should I they say. Well, they ;re
stanley mugg just plain wrong. Cavemen actually ate tons of carbs, according to new research from paleobiologists at the Natural History Museum in London. Studies of 15,000-year-old skulls recovered from a cave in Morocco reveals that ancient humans had quite the cavit
stanley vaso y problem thanks to their carbo-loading habits. This is at the tail end of the Paleolithic period, thousands of years before the development of agriculture. These even indulged in sweet snacks in form of carb-rich acorns that would ;ve tasted a bit like chestnuts. This discovery sends a shot right through the very foundation of the Paleo diet which eschews carbs in favor of meats and fresh vegetables. While some nuts are allowed under the diets rules, sweet treats most certainly are not. But if the idea behind the Paleo diet is to eat the same foods that pre-agriculture humans ate, this new discovery raises some questions. For one: does the Paleo diet actually mimic the diet of Paleolithic man Science says not quite. Image via Flickr / Lord Jim SPLOID is a new blog about awesome stuff. Join us in Facebook. ArchaeologyFood