logo
Inside the terrifying island where only soldiers and scientists are allowed to visit

Inside the terrifying island where only soldiers and scientists are allowed to visit

Daily Mail​2 days ago

This deadly island is swarming with 4,000 of the world's most lethal snakes and is deemed so dangerous that visiting it was been banned by the Brazilian government.
Ilha de Queimada Grande sits 20 miles (32 km) off the coast of Sao Paolo, and is home to the golden lancehead viper.
Understandably nicknamed 'Snake Island', the piece of land 4.6 million square feet (430,000 square metres) in size is the only place on Earth where Bothrops insularis, also known as the golden lancehead viper, is known to inhabit.
The island is devoid of almost any human visitors, expect for a few scientists who are granted permission to study the snakes each year.
It is also visited on occasion by the Brazilian navy, who tend to the autonomous lighthouse that was built back in 1909 before scampering clear.
The island has come to be known as Snake Island with it being claimed there is one snake for every square metre.
And it's also thought that poachers have been known to visit the island and claim a golden lancehead viper for their own, with their price fetching as high as £17,500 ($30,000) on the black market.
The viper has been been evolving in isolation since rising sea levels cut the island off from the mainland 11,000 years ago, leaving the snakes on the island with limited sources of food.
Migrating birds became the viper's main prey but the problem was, though, that most venoms take a while to act - sometimes as much as a few days.
By the time the snake's venom killed the birds they would have moved elsewhere, so instead the snakes evolved an incredibly strong venom that can kill prey almost instantly.
It is five times more potent than other snakes and can even melt human flesh.
In humans, the bite from a golden lancehead viper carried a seven per cent chance of death.
And before the island was deemed off-limits there were several stories of people succumbing to the deadly predators.
One story tells of a fisherman who lost power in the engines of his boat.
After drifting to the island he ventured inland, unaware of the terrors that lay in wait.
When his boat was eventually discovered, he was found dead in a pool of blood covered in snake bites.
The island has come to be known as Snake Island with it being claimed there is one snake for every square metr
Another story is of the last lighthouse keeper to inhabit the island with his family.
Rumour has it they ran in terror when snakes crawled in through their windows; their bodies were later found scattered across the island.
The name of the island itself tells of its troubled history.
Ilha de Queimada Grande roughly translates as 'the island of the slash-and-burn fire', so-called because of a failed attempt to develop a banana plantation on it.
However, in the last 15 years the population of snakes on the island as reduced by as much as 15 per cent, due to a combination of vegetation removal and disease.
And on the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red List the snakes are currently listed as critically endangered.
With thousands of snakes remaining, however, it's probably still not the ideal holiday destination.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Police find British journalist reported missing in Brazil
Police find British journalist reported missing in Brazil

Reuters

time3 hours ago

  • Reuters

Police find British journalist reported missing in Brazil

SAO PAULO, June 2 (Reuters) - Rio de Janeiro police said on Monday that a British journalist reported missing nearly four months ago had been out of contact with her family voluntarily and the case has been closed. Charlotte Alice Peet, who had worked as a freelance reporter in Brazil for Al Jazeera and British news outlets, went missing in early February. She was located in a Sao Paulo hostel, police said on Monday, adding she "expressed her desire not to have contact with her family."

Major study finds 90p supplement could slash risk of sudden heart death: 'Reverses' signs of deadly disease
Major study finds 90p supplement could slash risk of sudden heart death: 'Reverses' signs of deadly disease

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Major study finds 90p supplement could slash risk of sudden heart death: 'Reverses' signs of deadly disease

A cheap supplement could help prevent potentially deadly heart failure among patients with type 2 diabetes, research suggests. More than 5million people in the UK are thought to suffer from type 2 diabetes, which is often referred to as a 'silent killer', with rates having soared in recent years. But now scientists have found patients taking a substance called mitoquinone—sold as a health supplement for about 90p per tablet—had healthier hearts than those in a control group. Scientists behind the study said the results could save lives given how patients with type 2 diabetes have five times the risk of suffering heart failure compared to someone without the condition. In the trial, patients on mitoquinone even had signs that the damage their hearts had suffered from diabetes had been 'reversed'. However, experts have said while their findings are promising they now need to be backed up by larger trials. Mitoquinone is an artificial antioxidant—a substance that helps protect cells—which is a modified version of an antioxidant naturally found in the body called CoQ10. Dr Henry Procter, an expert in heart health at University of Leeds and lead author of the four month study, said the results were 'encouraging'. 'If the study had continued for longer, it is likely we would have started to see differences in more serious indicators of heart health between the group with mitoquinone and the group without,' he said. 'We hope that a larger study will continue to demonstrate the benefits of this antioxidant, and that one day soon diabetic patients can be prescribed it to help prevent heart failure before it ever affects their lives.' In the trial, the results of which were presented at the British Cardiovascular Society conference in Manchester, involved 70 patients with type 2 diabetes without heart failure. Half were given 40mg of mitoquinone per day in addition to their regular diabetes treatment, while the other half just received their usual medication. Both groups had their heart health assessed at the start of the study and again four months later. At the end of the trial the group on mitoquinone were found to have hearts that performed 15 per cent more efficiently than at the start of the study. The mitoquinone group were also found to have improvements in exercise tests, with their hearts also able to relax more quickly after exertion. Researchers said these were signs that the stress and stiffness the organ suffers from diabetes had been reversed. Diabetes damages the heart by interfering with how the organ processes and uses energy. Over time this interference causes stress and harms the cells of the heart muscle, leading to it becoming stiff and having to work harder to pump blood around the body, increasing the risk of heart failure. Mitoquinone is thought to help protect the cells from this damage. The substance is sold online as a health supplement for about £50 for a jar of 60 pills, which works out at about 86p per tablet. However, these are at doses far lower than those used in the study. Critically, no adverse side effects were reported in the group taking mitoquinone. The scientists are now hoping to run another similar trial with a larger group of patients to add more weight to their findings. If the results are supported by future studies the experts hope diabetes patients could one day be prescribed mitoquinone to help protect their hearts for longer. Heart failure is an incurable condition where the organ can't pump blood around the body as well as it should. The condition tends to get worse over time and is often eventually fatal. Once a diabetes patient is diagnosed with heart failure it triples their risk of dying within the next five years. Reacting to the study, Professor Bryan Willians, chief scientific and medical officer at the charity the British Heart Foundation, said it was a promising start. 'It's still early days for this research and the results will need to be confirmed in a larger scale trial,' he said. 'The study neatly demonstrates why it is so important to continue to support research and look for solutions in a wide variety of places, so that we can continue to offer hope to people living with, and at risk of, cardiovascular disease.' Almost 6million Britons have diabetes, of which 90 per cent is type 2, but charities estimate 1.2million are living with the disease undiagnosed. While nationally, an estimated 8 per cent of the population of England has the disease, this rises to over one in 10 people in some parts of the country. Type 2 diabetes occurs when the body doesn't make enough insulin or the insulin it makes doesn't work properly. Insulin is a hormone critical to controlling blood sugar levels. Having high blood sugar levels over time can cause heart attacks and strokes, as well as problems with the eyes, kidneys and feet. Sufferers may need to overhaul their diet, take daily medication and have regular check-ups. Symptoms of the condition, which is diagnosed with a blood test, include excessive thirst, tiredness and needing to urinate more often. But many people have no signs.

Scientists ‘disprove' one of Jesus Christ's best-known miracles as study claims it was just ‘a natural phenomenon'
Scientists ‘disprove' one of Jesus Christ's best-known miracles as study claims it was just ‘a natural phenomenon'

The Sun

time3 hours ago

  • The Sun

Scientists ‘disprove' one of Jesus Christ's best-known miracles as study claims it was just ‘a natural phenomenon'

A TEAM of scientists claims to have debunked one of Jesus Christ's most famous miracles — saying the Son of God may not have fed 5,000 people with just five loaves and two fish after all. Instead, researchers believe it could have been a freak natural event in Israel's Lake Kinneret — known in the Bible as the Sea of Galilee — that brought a massive haul of fish to the surface for easy collection. 4 4 The story of the 'Feeding of the 5,000' is told in all four Gospels, where Jesus is said to have blessed a small amount of food and miraculously distributed it to feed a vast crowd. But in a 2024 study published in Water Resources Research, scientists monitored oxygen levels, water temperature, and wind speed across Lake Kinneret — and say they discovered evidence of sudden mass fish die-offs caused by unusual weather patterns. Strong winds sweeping across the lake, they say, can churn the water and cause an 'upwelling' of cold, low-oxygen water from the bottom, which kills fish and sends them floating to the surface. According to the researchers, to anyone watching from the shore, it would look like fish were suddenly appearing by the thousands — creating the illusion of a miracle and allowing them to 'be easily collected by a hungry populace'. The team believes this could explain the Gospel passage where Jesus tells his disciples — after a fruitless night of fishing — to cast their nets on the other side of the boat, suddenly hauling in a bounty. However, Biblical scholars aren't buying it. Critics slammed the theory for missing the point entirely, pointing out that no fish were caught during the miracle of the loaves and fishes. The article on hit back, saying: 'Jesus simply took the five loaves and two fish, thanked God, broke the loaves, handed everything to his disciples, and the disciples handed the food out. No fish were caught!' According to Matthew 14:13–21, Jesus 'saw a great crowd, and he had compassion on them and healed their sick.' Brit shares 'proof' he's found Jesus's TOMB & Ark of the Covenant in cave When his disciples told him to send the people away to find food, he replied: 'They need not go away; you give them something to eat.' After blessing the five loaves and two fish, the Bible says: 'they all ate and were satisfied. 'And they took up 12 baskets full of the broken pieces left over.' Despite the backlash, the researchers argue that understanding how fish may have mysteriously appeared in huge quantities doesn't take away from the spiritual message of the event — which many see as symbolic of generosity and faith. Still, religious sceptics say the study adds weight to theories that Jesus' wonders may have had natural explanations — while believers insist some things just can't be explained away by science. It comes after a stunning AI-generated video claims to reveal the true face of Jesus Christ — using images based on the mysterious Turin Shroud. Believers say the Shroud of Turin was the burial cloth wrapped around Jesus after his crucifixion. 4 Now, photos of the ancient linen have been processed through Midjourney, an AI image generator, to create a realistic image and video of Christ. The video shows Jesus blinking, smiling, and praying — potentially as he did before his crucifixion around 33AD. He appears with shoulder-length brown hair, a beard, brown eyes, a straight nose, and high cheekbones. His skin tone is pale, which has sparked debate among academics and online. Last year, The Sun also used AI to recreate the Son of God's appearance. The Gencraft tool was fed the prompt 'face of Jesus based on the Shroud of Turin' and returned images of a man with hazel eyes, a gentle expression, a neat beard, clean eyebrows, and long brown hair. Under his weary eyes, signs of exhaustion were visible. Many researchers agree that the man wrapped in the Shroud appeared to be between 5ft 7in and 6ft tall, with sunken eyes and a full beard. The markings on the cloth also show what some believe to be crucifixion wounds — including injuries to the head, shoulders, arms, and back, consistent with a thorn crown and Roman whips. The Bible recounts that Jesus was scourged by Roman soldiers, crowned with thorns, and forced to carry his cross before dying in agony.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store